The Wall Street Journal - 06.03.2020

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A10| Friday, March 6, 2020 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


Mrs. Clinton’s 2016 race for the
presidency is recounted in the fi-
nal episode, there are the pictures
to bring it all home.
This story began not long be-
fore Election Day, when word came
of a breathtakingly strange twist
in the tortuous saga of the Clinton
emails. Some of these had been
discovered on the personal laptop
of former Democratic Rep. An-
thony Weiner—remember him?—
whose taste for emailing sexually
explicit pictures of himself to un-
derage girls had made news
around the world, and not only be-
cause he was a member of Con-
gress. He was, in addition, the hus-
band of Mrs. Clinton’s longtime
top aide, Huma Abedin, who was,
as another member of the Clinton
team describes it, nearly out of
her mind with grief over the
emails on her now-estranged hus-
band’s laptop: yet another threat
to the campaign.
Mrs. Clinton’s response to the
mess is to put aside worries about
the campaign to concentrate on
comforting the distraught woman.
She insists on everyone having
ice-cream sundaes, a directive en-
thusiastically received by glum
staff members who get the idea
and begin organizing amusements.
There they all sit on the campaign
plane, the pictures show, deter-
minedly cheerful, their candidate
in their midst.
It’s an incident in keeping with
the dauntless and confident char-
acter that emerges from this por-
trait of Hillary Clinton, who with-
stands endless interrogations
about her use of a personal com-
puter while secretary of state—no
use pointing out that Colin Powell
had done the same. And about her
destroyed emails and other alleged
high crimes, including dereliction
of duty in the Benghazi terror at-
tack. The accusations about her

BARBARA KINNEY/HULU

IF IT OFFEREDnothing else, “Hil-
lary” (Friday, Hulu) would merit
honors for the remarkable frank-
ness of this four-part chronicle of
Hillary Clinton‘s life, career and
marriage—a buoyant history, its
gut-wrenching aspects notwith-
standing. It’s difficult to think of
any film that speaks to our mo-
ment as strikingly as this docu-
mentary does, a quality evident
early on.
Here’s Mrs. Clinton, battling
Bernie Sanders for the 2016 nomi-
nation, which requires slogging
around wintry New Hampshire. It’s
a place that’s not been particularly
receptive to her before, but she’s
not ready to leave the field—she
never is. Amid the crowds, she’s
confronted by a group of teenage
girls hurling questions, one of
whom challenges her to say
whether she would “pledge to ban

fracking like Bernie Sanders.”
She would not, comes the an-
swer. “A president cannot ban
fracking. That’s not the way our
system works,” she tells the girls.
This consideration doubtless
came as news to her young audi-
ence, aware only of the vital im-
portance of banning fracking, as
Sen. Sanders had pledged to do.
Mrs. Clinton left unsaid, at least
here, her views on Sen. Sanders’s
grasp of the requirements of our
system, though the point of her
answer hung nicely in the air.
As “Hillary” shows, she can be el-
oquent on the matter of Sen. Sand-
ers’s capacities and general charac-
ter. In one scene she holds forth on
the subject at length—though noth-
ing equal to the venom, charges of
corruption, and accusations of tak-
ing money from Wall Street he di-
rects at her daily, generous footage

of which the film provides.
Then there are the Bernie devo-
tees shown disrupting Mrs. Clin-
ton’s speeches at her rallies. About
this, a member of the Clinton team
thoughtfully tells the filmmaker,
“there’s an underlying vitriol in
some percentage of the Bernie
supporters.”
There’s a touch of discovery in
his tone that would likely not be
there now. The vitriol of some per-
centage of Bernie’s supporters is,
today, too established a fact to
cause wonderment.
None of this is to say that the
powers of this work (filmmaker,
Nanette Burstein) are rooted
mainly in political battles—though
the impact of the up-close treat-
ment of the campaigns, delivered
via a remarkable stock of footage,
can’t be underestimated. When
one of the more bizarre events of

TELEVISION REVIEW| DOROTHY RABINOWITZ


‘Hillary’: Inside the Campaign


A24 FILMS (3)

John Magaro as Cookie Figowitz with Evie the cow, above; Orion Lee as King-
Lu, left; a scene from ‘First Cow,’ directed by Kelly Reichardt, top

emails, though, would have an en-
during life all their own, much like
a conspiracy theory of an espe-
cially irresistible kind.
You can be investigated again
and again, she muses in the film,
and be found innocent of any
wrongdoing, but the accusations
remain, they live on always. She
speaks without rancor—it’s the
statement of a hard fact she’s ac-
customed to.
She’s become accustomed, too, to
a view of her as hard, untrust-
worthy, conniving and generally
reprehensible. She’s presented with
this question in the film: How is it
that people go around talking about
their intense hatred of Hillary Clin-
ton but, when asked what it is they
hate, they have no answer?
Neither does she, and it’s clearly
not a matter that disturbs her.
One of her aides contributes a
possible clue—this about all the
women she met who expressed
bitter resentment of Mrs. Clinton
for staying with the husband who
had so betrayed her. This would
not, of course, explain all the men
who express hatred of Mrs. Clinton
yet find it impossible to say why—
as opposed to those who claim to
have come upon proof that she’s a
master criminal.
All of this is too complicated to
blame on gender bias. But the
film’s scenes of howling males
shouting as Mrs. Clinton addresses
crowds during her first presiden-
tial primary contest; the signs
reading “Hillary, Iron My Shirt”;
the TV comedian displaying a fun
item called “The Hillary Nuts
Cracker”; and complaints about,
for instance, the pain of having to
listen regularly to a woman’s voice
are in their hellish way priceless
and not to be missed.
The same goes for all four hours
of this never less than mesmeriz-
ing film.

Hillary
Friday, Hulu

Barack Obama chats with Hillary
Clinton backstage after a campaign rally

reptitiously wise. Cookie has the
skill while King-Lu has the mer-
cantile impulse. Together they
constitute a start-up venture,
based on theft, that swings be-
tween shrewdness and folly, daring
and greed. Seldom does a small
film with laconic dialogue have so
much to say, indirectly, about busi-
ness, human nature and history.
And so much to show—a mingling
of whites, blacks, Native Ameri-
cans and Asians, most of them
working at tasks, making things,
scratching out livings, forging a fu-
ture they can’t imagine. “History is
coming but it isn’t here yet,” King-
Lu says. It’s the frontier life
summed up in a sentence, in a film
that’s too lovely for words.

Cow” is bright and funny until it
turns dark. Unlike the prospectors
who struck gold in the Yukon de-
cades later, Cookie and King-Lu
strike milk from Evie’s udders. It’s
the crucial ingredient in the bis-
cuits and so-called oily cakes that
Cookie whips up as if by magic, de-
licious delicacies that tickle dulled
palates in a populous trading post.
“I sense opportunity here,” King-Lu
tells hispâtissier. Both of them
sense danger, since the bovine’s
owner, a wealthy landowner played
by Toby Jones, doesn’t know
they’re pilfering Evie’s precious
bodily fluid, though he’s starting to
wonder why his prized possession
isn’t more productive.
All of this is delightful, and sur-

S


ome movies feel dead
from the first shot, with
or without star power,
spectacular vistas or the
false energy of hurtling
pace. “First Cow” is viv-
idly alive on arrival and grows into
pure enchantment, although it
starts at a saunter and its physical
scale is small. (Even before the
lights go down the old-fashioned
shape of the nearly square screen
announces that visual grandeur
won’t be on the agenda.)
Kelly Reichardt’s vision of fron-
tier life circa 1820 summons up a
real cow, a wide-eyed creature
named Evie who’s been shipped
north from California to become
the first of her species in the Ore-
gon Territory, where several of Ms.
Reichardt’s previous features were
set. Evie makes her rather stately
entrance on a Columbia River
barge, then turns into a cash cow
for a couple of scruffy wanderers
after they meet in a forest by
chance and become friends and
business partners. The film, photo-
graphed luminously by Christopher
Blauvelt, is mainly but not only
about friendship, a beguiling fable
of harshness and kindness with a
haunting afterglow.
If you’re familiar with this film-
maker’s work you know she hasn’t
been big on conventional dramat-
ics. In the 2008 “Wendy and
Lucy” a young drifter, accompa-
nied by her Labrador mix, gets
stuck in small-town Oregon on her

way to Alaska in search of a job.
Most of the action consists of
Wendy losing Lucy, then searching
for her all over town. In “Meek’s
Cutoff,” a minimalist epic from
2010, three families in a wagon
train move slowly toward Oregon;
the essentially inward drama
turns on whether the pioneers’
mountain-man guide can be
trusted or is leading them astray.
In “First Cow” the suspense
builds slowly and subtly,
but then inexorably to
a level that’s new for
Ms. Reichardt;
what’s at stake is
the fate of two
immensely lik-
able men in
heedless pursuit
of elusive success.
One of them,
Cookie Figowitz
(John Magaro), has
been on the move for
most of his life. He’s a cook, as
his nickname implies, and a really
good one, as it develops. But he
can’t do much for the half-starved
band of fur trappers he’s traveling
with because they’re trudging
across a land that offers little
nourishment. Cookie is one of the
most touching characters to have
graced the screen in a very long
time, someone you take instantly
to your heart. That’s due to Mr.
Magaro’s poignant, exquisitely nu-
anced performance, Ms. Reich-
ardt’s direction and Jon Ray-

mond’s screenplay, which he and
the director adapted from his
2008 debut novel, “The Half-Life.”
Cookie’s goodness shows in deeds
and words. Walking through the
woods, he finds a little lizard stuck
on its back and stops to turn it
over. Milking Evie—illicitly, in the
dead of night—he talks to her
soulfully, intimately, unselfcon-
sciously: “Sorry about your hus-
band. I hear he didn’t make it all
the way.” (The film is en-
hanced by William Ty-
ler’s distinctive score.)
Cookie’s new
friend, King-Lu, is
played by Orion
Lee, a quietly char-
ismatic actor with
an economical style
and a mellifluous
voice. Mr. Lee man-
ages to make the inex-
plicable seem plausi-
ble—that a penniless
Chinese-born sailor of great elo-
quence and sophistication should
be hiding, buck naked, in a clump
of vegetation after running for his
life from a bunch of murderous
Russians. Cookie gives him shelter,
and good fellowship as well. Be-
fore long the two men are collabo-
rating in the most intriguing por-
trayal of nascent capitalism since
Robert Altman’s 1971 “McCabe &
Mrs. Miller,” a brooding, rain-
swept masterpiece that’s also set
in the Pacific Northwest.
The emotional weather of “First

FILM REVIEW| JOE MORGENSTERN


‘First Cow’: Making


Magic From Milk


LIFE&ARTS

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