Los Angeles Times

Gentle, quiet and ‘Loving’

- By Noel Murray

New on Blu-ray

Loving Universal DVD, $29.98; Blu-ray, $34.98; also available on VOD

Ruth Negga garnered a well-deserved Oscar nomination for playing Mildred Loving in writer-director Jeff Nichols’ historical drama, and yet the film has been a tad underrated, perhaps because it’s more realistic than f lashy. Negga and co-lead Joel Edgerton (playing Richard Loving) get deep inside an unassuming married couple who just wanted to be left alone but instead ended up at the center of a civil rights struggle. Nichols builds to the Supreme Court case about interracia­l relationsh­ips that made the Lovings into household names in the 1960s, though he’s really more interested in their daily lives in Virginia and Washington, D.C., where they raised their kids and worked and socialized alongside white and black people. The subtle point of this lovely film is that the Lovings weren’t demanding some utopia. They were living freely, as Americans are meant to. Special features: A commentary track and featurette­s

VOD

David Brent: Life on the Road Available Friday on Netflix

Ricky Gervais revives David Brent, the character he first played on the original British version of “The Office,” for the Netflix original movie, which sees the socially awkward salesman emptying out his savings and retirement accounts to hire a band and pursue his rock ’n’ roll dreams. Brent has always been something of a wreck as a human being: a man who communicat­es in half-remembered catchphras­es and well-meaning sentiments that are muttered and giggled at people who find him insufferab­le. Gervais plays up the pathos of his most famous creation. Still, this film really comes to life in the musical sequences, where the hero warbles wince-inducing social-protest songs like “Please Don’t Make Fun of the Disableds.”

TV set of the week

Vice Principals The Complete First Season HBO DVD, $19.98; Blu-ray, $24.98

The creative team behind HBO’s brilliant comedy “Eastbound & Down” returned to the channel last year for this scarily prescient political satire about how Americans tend to mistake their selfish desires for noble ideals. “Eastbound” star Danny McBride (who cocreated both shows with writer-director Jody Hill) play Neal Gamby, a North Carolina high school vice principal who teams with his archenemy Lee Russell (Walton Goggins) to take down their new boss, Dr. Belinda Brown (Kimberly Hebert Gregory). The humor in “Vice Principals” is dark and at times painful to watch, yet few contempora­ry television programs have been as incisive about how the authoritar­ian impulse manifests in everyday life, even in someplace as mundane as a public school. Special features: A blooper reel and commentary tracks on selected episodes

From the archives

Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man Lionsgate Blu-ray, $14.99

The death of Leonard Cohen late last year has revived interest in the Canadian singer-songwriter-poet, which probably explains the overdue-but-welcome arrival on Blu-ray of Lian Lunson’s 2005 documentar­y. The movie covers an Australian tribute concert where musicians like Nick Cave, Beth Orton and Rufus and Martha Wainwright performed Cohen’s songs onstage and talked about his influence backstage. The performanc­es aren’t always presented in full, which can be frustratin­g. But Lunson compensate­s with long quotes from the man himself, who makes allusive comments about how his doom-laden music sprung from his fascinatio­ns with comic books and the synagogue, and how he worked to wring something divine from his personal hell. Special features: A Lunson commentary track, a featurette and bonus fulllength performanc­es

Three more to see

Camerapers­on Criterion DVD, $29.95; Blu-ray, $39.95 The Eagle Huntress Sony DVD, $26.99; Blu-ray, $30.99 Justice League: Dark Warner Bros. DVD, $14.99; Blu-ray, $19.99 calendar@latimes.com

 ?? Ben Rothstein Focus Features ?? OSCAR NOMINEE Ruth Negga and Joel Edgerton in the low-key, underrated civil rights film “Loving.”
Ben Rothstein Focus Features OSCAR NOMINEE Ruth Negga and Joel Edgerton in the low-key, underrated civil rights film “Loving.”

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