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RIP The Amazing Cicely Tyson, Age 96, Award Winning Actress, Activist, Epitome of Ageless Grace and Elegance

“I have managed Miss Tyson’s career for over 40 years, and each year was a privilege and blessing,” her manager, Larry Thompson, said in a statement. “Cicely thought of her new memoir as a Christmas tree decorated with all the ornaments of her personal and professional life. Today she placed the last ornament, a Star, on top of the tree.”

Cicely Tyson was 96 years old. There are going to be stories everywhere about her remarkable life. She was married at one time to Miles Davis. How she survived it is probably a movie unto itself. She will be remembered for so many roles over her life time, but the greatest was probably “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman.” She won two Emmys for that one, was nominated for an Oscar for “Sounder.”

She secured five Emmy nominations in a row playing Viola Davis’s mother on “How to Get Away with Murder” from 2015 to 2020.

Like Cloris Leachman, who died yesterday, Miss Tyson won tons of awards, all deserved, she was the essence of elegance and grace.

Two stories. Two years ago, in March, I ran into her on the Upper West Side. I wrote about it. She was dragging a rolling cart with files and had stopped into Maison Kayser across from the Beacon Theater. I re-introduced myself, we’d met many times. I asked what was in the cart. “Papers concerning my next play,” she said. Did she want any assistance, I asked? She said, sweetly, “Oh no, why would I?” The rest of the story is here.

A few years earlier Cuba Gooding and I were talking about Miss Tyson. He was in “The Trip to Bountiful” with her on Broadway. She was 88, was telling people she was 90, anyway, how could she be doing 8 performances a week? “She’s sleeping in the theater from Friday to Sunday,” Cuba said, that’s how. The production had built her an apartment. Made sense.

When she opened in “Bountiful” there was a lot of discussion about her age. On opening night I asked her about it. She was, yes, 88, and had the energy of four 22 year olds.

I don’t know what she was like when she was younger. But when I started seeing her in the audience at shows at the Apollo, or when she came to Aretha Franklin’s birthday parties, Cicely Tyson played it low key. She was not a diva. People flocked up to this bird like woman, overwhelmed that they were in her presence. She was shy, she wasn’t demanding, she was truly walking in grace.

PS She won the Tony Award in 2013 for “Bountiful.” It was her first and her first nomination, too. She’d started on Broadway in 1959 and had a run of shows in the 60s. She’d done more show in the early 80s, and then not returned again for 30 years! After she won for “Bountiful,” she came back one more time in 2016 to star in “The Gin Game” with James Earl Jones, who just turned 90 himself. What amazing fortitude. Bravo!

Era of Pandemic Filmmaking: Documentary Submissions for the Oscars Set a Record with 238 Eligible Features

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This is a story of filmmaking in the time of a pandemic. Entries for the Academy Awards’ Best Documentary have set a record on number of submissions. Try 238.

That’s considerably higher than the record high of 170 in 2017, or last year’s 159. So what’s going on?

First of all, people are making “documentaries” on cell phones and all kinds of media. Also, all you have to do this year is say you expect a theatrical release, and you can make the long list.

But making the short list of 15, and then the top 5 nominees, is a different situation. The Academy says in a press release: “Some of the films have not yet had their required qualifying release and must fulfill that requirement and comply with all the category’s other qualifying rules to advance in the voting process.”

And the reality is, only a handful of these entries really have a shot. The leaders are “Time” and “Crip Camp,” followed by “The Dissident” and “The Truffle Hunters.” Here’s the list, there’s plenty of good stuff to watch here.

“Acasa, My Home”
“Addicted to Ralphie”
“Aggie”
“All I Can Say”
“All In: The Fight for Democracy”
“The American Sector”
“American Selfie: One Nation Shoots Itself”
“America’s Forgotten”
“The Antidote”
“Apocalypse ’45”
“The Art of Living in Danger”
“The Art of Political Murder”
“Assassins”
“Aswang”
“Athlete A”
“Babenco – Tell Me When I Die”
“Be Water”
“Beastie Boys Story”
“Beautiful Something Left Behind”
“Becoming”
“Bedlam”
“Belly of the Beast”
“Belushi”
“Beyond the Visible: Hilma af Klint”
“The Big Scary “S” Word”
“Billie”
“Black Boys”
“Bloody Nose, Empty Pockets”
“The Booksellers”
“Born to Be”
“Boys State”
“Bulletproof”
“Bully. Coward. Victim. The Story of Roy Cohn”
“Capital in the Twenty-First Century”
“Chicago: America’s Hidden War”
“Childhood 2.0”
“Chuck Berry”
“Circus of Books”
“City Dream”
“City Hall”
“Coded Bias”
“Collective”
“Colombia in My Arms”
“Coming Clean”
“Coronation”
“Coup 53”
“Created Equal: Clarence Thomas in His Own Words”
“Creem: America’s Only Rock ’n’ Roll Magazine”
“Crip Camp”
“Crock of Gold – A Few Rounds with Shane MacGowan”
“The Curve”
“Dads”
“Dave Grusin: Not Enough Time”
“David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet”
“Days of Cannibalism”
“Dear Santa”
“Death Protocol”
“Descent”
“Desert One”
“Diana Kennedy: Nothing Fancy”
“Dick Johnson Is Dead”
“Disclosure”
“The Dissident”
“The Dog Doc”
“The Donut King”
“Dope Is Death”
“Down a Dark Stairwell”
“Downstream to Kinshasa”
“The Earth Is Blue as an Orange”
“Elementa”
“Ending Disease”
“Epicentro”
“Erased,___Ascent of the Invisible”
“Escape from Extinction”
“Everybody Flies”
“F11 and Be There”
“Fandango at the Wall”
“Father Soldier Son”
“Feels Good Man”
“The Fight”
“Find Your Groove”
“Finding Yingying”
“Fireball: Visitors from Darker Worlds”
“First Vote”
“First We Eat”
“Flannery”
“For They Know Not What They Do”
“The Forbidden Reel”
“40 Years a Prisoner”
“Freak Power: The Ballot or the Bomb”
“Freedia Got a Gun”
“The Ghost of Peter Sellers”
“Giving Voice”
“A Glitch in the Matrix”
“The Go-Go’s”
“Gordon Lightfoot: If You Could Read My Mind”
“Gunda”
“Harry Chapin: When in Doubt, Do Something”
“He Dreams of Giants”
“House of Cardin”
“The Human Factor”
“Human Nature”
“I Am Greta”
“I Am Not Alone”
“I Owe You a Letter about Brazil”
“iHuman”
“In My Skin”
“Indian Space Dreams”
“The Infiltrators”
“Influence”
“(In)Visible Portraits”
“Irmi”
“Irradiés (Irradiated)”
“Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President”
“John Lewis: Good Trouble”
“Journey to Royal: A World War II Rescue Mission”
“Kate Nash: Underestimate the Girl”
“A Kid from Coney Island”
“Kingdom of Silence”
“Kings of Capitol Hill”
“Kiss the Ground”
“La Madrina: The Savage Life of Lorine Padilla”
“Lance”
“Landfall”
“The Last Blockbuster”
“Last Call for Tomorrow”
“Lennox: The Untold Story”
“Lessons of Love”
“The Letter”
“Libelu – Down with the Dictatorship”
“Life Is Deadly”
“Lift Like a Girl”
“Lost Course”
“Lost in Face”
“Love Child”
“MLK/FBI”
“Made You Look: A True Story about Fake Art”
“Man in the Arena”
“Martin Margiela: In His Own Words”
“Mayor”
“Mighty Ira”
“Miss Americana”
“Mr. Soul!”
“The Mole Agent”
“The Monster inside Me”
“A Most Beautiful Thing”
“Mother to Earth: The Untold Story of Earth Bound”
“Mucho Mucho Amor: The Legend of Walter Mercado”
“My Darling Supermarket”
“My Darling Vivian”
“My Octopus Teacher”
“My People: The Jews of Greece”
“My Psychedelic Love Story”
“My Rembrandt”
“Napoli Eden”
“Narciso Em Férias”
“Nasrin”
“The New Corporation: The Unfortunately Necessary Sequel”
“9/11 Kids”
“915”
“9to5: The Story of a Movement”
“Notturno”
“Oliver Sacks: His Own Life”
“Olympia”
“On the Record”
“Once upon a Time in Venezuela”
“Once Were Brothers: Robbie Robertson and the Band”
“Ottolenghi and the Cakes of Versailles”
“Our Time Machine”
“Pahokee”
“The Painter and the Thief”
“A Pandemic: Away from the Motherland”
“The Phenomenon”
“Planet of the Humans”
“The Plot against the President”
“The Pollinators”
“The Power of Movement”
“Pray: The Story of Patrick Peyton”
“Public Trust”
“Queen of Hearts: Audrey Flack”
“The Reason I Jump”
“Rebuilding Paradise”
“Red Penguins”
“Reunited”
“Rewind”
“The Right Girls”
“Ringside”
“Rising Phoenix”
“River City Drumbeat”
“River Tales”
“Runner”
“Searching for Mr. Rugoff”
“Self Portrait”
“17 Blocks The Final Cut”
“76 Days”
“Sky Blossom”
“Slay the Dragon”
“The Social Dilemma”
“Softie”
“Some Kind of Heaven”
“Songs of Repression”
“Soros”
“Spaceship Earth”
“Stars and Strife”
“The State of Texas vs. Melissa”
“Stray”
“Strip Down, Rise Up”
“System K”
“They Call Me Babu”
“This Is Not a Movie”
“This Is Paris”
“A Thousand Cuts”
“Through the Night”
“Time”
“The Times of Bill Cunningham”
“Totally under Control”
“Transhood”
“The Truffle Hunters”
“Trust Me”
“Uncle Tom”
“#Unfit: The Psychology of Donald Trump”
“Us Kids”
“WBCN and the American Revolution”
“The Walrus and the Whistleblower”
“The Way I See It”
“We Are the Radical Monarchs”
“We Don’t Deserve Dogs”
“Welcome to Chechnya”
“White Noise”
“Who Is Gatsby Randolph”
“Wild Daze”
“Wim Wenders: Desperado”
“With Drawn Arms”
“A Woman’s Work: The NFL’s Cheerleader Problem”
“Women in Blue”
“You Cannot Kill David Arquette”
“Yusuf Hawkins: Storm over Brooklyn”
“Zappa”

Norman Lear Joins Jane Fonda as Golden Globes Lifetime Achievement Award Honoree

The great producer-writer-philanthropist Norman Lear will receive the Carol Burnett Award from the Golden Globes next month.

Lear, 98, joins Jane Fonda as one of the Globes’ two Lifetime Achievement winners this year. Maybe it’s a real sign of the times. These are the two most liberal Hollywood eminences. It’s a great rebuke to the last four miserable years.

Norman, like Jane, is a force of nature. We all know his TV credits from “All in the Family” and “The Jeffersons” to “Maude” and “One Day at a Time.” He’s made many fortunes. But he’s used his money and time and wisdom to do great things for the world. His People for the American Way has been a philanthropic giant for smart causes.

I can’t believe the Hollywood Foreign Press Association waited this long to give him an award. Like Dick van Dyke and the Kennedy Center– he’s 95 — they really rolled the dice on this one. But Norman and Jane will give amazing speeches, and I’ll be at home giving them standing ovations!

The Globes are on NBC February 28th. We’ll hear the nominations for their awards on February 3rd.

PS I never do this, but Leah Sydney took this picture of me with Norman last year in Los Angeles. It’s pretty nice.

Andra Day Releases “Tigress and “Tweed” New Single from “United States vs. Billie Holiday” Film

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Andra Day is about to become an overnight sensation after a decade, at least, making beautiful music as a jazz and R&B singer. Isn’t that what always happens?

She’s releasing a new single today called “Tigress and Tweed,” which she wrote and recorded for the end credits to the movie she’s starring in, “The United States vs. Billie Holiday.” The video is below.

There are more opportunities on YouTube to hear Andra sing as Billie Holiday but I’d wait to see the movie and this extraordinary performance. It is her first ever movie and she is brave, brave, brave in that there is abundant nudity. In a Robert DeNiro or Meryl Streep way, Andra threw herself into this film. She absorbs Lady Day.

“Billie Holiday” doesn’t open for another couple of weeks on Hulu etc. so why is Andra taking the time to talk to us? She’s a big part of The Celebration of Black Cinema which will take place, virtually, on Tuesday, February 2, 2021 hosted by Bevy Smith. This will be the Third Annual Celebration of Black Cinema presented by the Critics Choice Association, honoring some of the most visionary films, actors, producers, and directors and their ongoing commitment to telling Black stories on film.

This year’s honorees are Yahya Abdul-Mateen II (Breakthrough Award), Kingsley Ben-Adir, Eli Goree, Aldis Hodge, and Leslie Odom, Jr. (Ensemble Award), Chadwick Boseman (Performance of the Year Award), Andra Day (Special Honoree Award), Shaka King (Director Award), John Legend & Mike Jackson (Producers Award), Delroy Lindo (Career Achievement Award), Tommie Smith (Social Justice Award), Tessa Thompson (Actor Award), and Zendaya & John David Washington (NextGen Award)

Presenters include Nnamdi Asomugha, Lee Daniels, Michael Ealy, Dominique Fishback, Taraji P. Henson, Daniel Kaluuya, Jonathan Majors, Kemp Powers, Aaron Sorkin, LaKeith Stanfield, Jesse Williams, and George C. Wolfe.

The virtual event is invitation-only, but the ceremony will be aired in a special presentation on KTLA in Los Angeles on Saturday, February 6, 2021.

Presented by the Critics Choice Awards, I do hope major market stations air this show. It’s too important.

“Promising Young Woman”: Emerald Fennel is More than That After Directing Carey Mulligan, Running “Killing Eve,” and Acting in “The Crown”

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Carey Mulligan stars as Cassie, a woman out for revenge in “Promising Young Woman.” Directed, produced and written by female director Emerald Fennell, the film is a twisty, dark-comedy that’s also a thriller. But Cassie’s weapon of choice is not a gun or knife. It’s words. Text messages.

Recently at a virtual Q&A for BAFTA, Fennell, who is making her directing debut and is better known as a show runner for “Killing Eve” and an actress (Camilla Parker Bowles in “The Crown”), explained, “I suppose something I’m so interested in is how women express rage. It’s not really usually the way we see it in films like this, which is pop on a pair of sexy hot pants and get a machine gun.”

She added, “I really wanted to look at how a real woman might go about something like this. So you always think what would I do? What could I do? I certainly wouldn’t be much good in a fight. I definitely wouldn’t know how to use a gun. I wouldn’t trust myself with a knife. And it’s important that the moment that a weapon is introduced the thing that happens, happens. But what I could do is fuck with people. And I could plan. And I could do the thing which I did at school which was do my homework diligently. The trouble is with this film and with Casey’s journey is that she’s been keeping a lid on it for a long time, not looking at the thing, the reason for this… It becomes increasingly out of control I would say as the film goes on.”

Nearing 30, Cassie still lives with her parents (a hilarious Jennifer Coolidge and Clancy Brown) — to their chagrin— in their California suburban house decorated in pink and plastic that has a 90’s sitcom aesthetic. A barista at day in a coffee shop owned by her own friend Gail (Laverne Cox), Cassie trolls bars at night on the hunt. Blackout drunk, when she’s barely able to stand, “nice” guys come up to her and chivalrously offer to escort her home. Unsurprisingly they have other things in mind.

Asked what she wanted to make the film about, Fennell said, the idea came “from thinking a lot for a long time about the culture I grew up in. It was one where alcohol and drugs was used very, very freely as a way of sort of, I don’t know, greasing the wheels” of sexual encounters. “It just always felt like there was often this kind of awful grey area and lack of empathy comes to men and women in this kind of stuff and I wanted to explore it.”

Her process of writing is that a scene or a moment will come into her head and she goes from there. “For this movie it was a drunk girl lying on a bed, somebody undresses her and she’s drunkenly saying, ‘What are you doing?’ And then she’s sitting up sober and saying, ‘What were you doing?’”

This scene occurs early in the film. A man in a business suit (Adam Brody) is at the bar laughing and letting off steam with his buddies. He spots Cassie, her legs splayed and barely able to walk, and offers her a ride home. Instead he detours to his apartment where he begins to ply her with more alcohol. He maneuvers her to his bed and when she seems passed out he starts to take off her underpants. She sits upright, demanding to know: “What were you doing?” Fennell said once she visualized that scene the story came together. “At least I had an idea who she was and what kind of film it was going to be.”

Cassie dropped out of medical school after her best friend, Nina, was raped, too drunk to know what was going on, while his friends laughed and looked on. Even though it was seven years earlier, Cassie can’t move on.

“It’s always struck me as being about grief,” Mulligan said. “About being someone who’s stuck in a moment. To her it’s an act of loyalty. There’s something sort of childlike about it, her absolute refusal to let it go… Emerald and I talked and talked about all that kind of stuff the whole way…and that process continued in between scenes in between takes, in the evening we’d be texting.”

Asked her inspiration for the look and feel of the film, the director said, “I think probably really the obvious ones that I know lots of filmmakers use, sort of ‘Sweet Valley High,’ lots of ’90s TV series, Ms. magazine…There was a ton of stuff, but mostly just wanted to create a super, super, almost sickeningly, cloyingly feminine world, something that felt familiar and looked beautiful, but also, like Cassie, wasn’t what it seemed, was inviting but would bite you back. So a lot of the references, from ‘To Die For,’ ‘Virgin Suicides,’ even sort of ‘Mother, May I Sleep with Murder?’ Those kinds of slightly gaudy ’90s made-for-TV movies that I love. Yeah, it needed to feel safe until it wasn’t.”

Asked if there was ever another title for the film, Fennell said, “There was some other titles that were a bit more sort of ambiguous maybe, but I think that it’s difficult with titles,” Fennell said. “It needed to represent the film in some way. So it needed to be slightly wry and ironic maybe, and to have a kind of knowingness about it, perhaps. I think it made sense that the film is about the promising woman that Cassie was, that Nina was. It was really interesting that whenever people abbreviate, and this still happens all the time, whenever people abbreviate the film, which they often do because the title is so long, they abbreviate it naturally to PYM because of the saying promising young man. It took me ages to work out why it was, because it was called to on files while we’re working on the film or people would send emails. And then I realized, ‘Oh God, of course,’ it’s a natural thing to say promising young man.”

Importantly, did she think the movie can change men’s views on women?

“I don’t know about that but I do hope it might make someone think twice about whether they might have a crack on a girl who’s had too much to drink. I think it’s going to be harder now for people who have seen it to play dumb anymore, I think… I hope.”

God Bless Cloris Leachman: Oscar and Emmy Winning Actress Known for Caustic Hilarious Performances Dies of Natural Causes at Age 94

She won every award. She was hilarious, caustic, a genius actress, and will be so sorely missed. Cloris Leachman has died of natural causes in Los Angeles at age 94. I really thought of her as living forever.

An Oscar winner in 1972 for Peter Bogdanovich’s “The Last Picture Show,” she was already a star, especially on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.” There she played Phyllis Lindstrom as if she were Stradivarius himself. She won 7 Emmy Awards, with a total of 19 Emmy nominations. Three of her wins for playing Phyllis. She won twice for guest spots on “Malcolm in the Middle” and just kept working and winning. She was spun off of “Mary Tyler Moore” in her own sitcom, “Phyllis,” that was flawed but hilarious and ran for one crazy season.


Cloris was married to the late George Englund from 1953 to 1978 and had five children including former “Guiding Light” actor Morgan Englund. They had a wild marriage. George famously had an affair with Joan Collins, who left him for Warren Beatty while George was married to Cloris. George– who was a great pal to me– was best friends with Marlon Brando. These people were at the center of Hollywood, and loved it.

Cloris had a wicked sense of humor, and would tell you anything. I remember a night at Morton’s for the Vanity Fair party where she literally bent my ear with tales of the great days with all these people. She was vicious and fun, and loved to gossip.

She was also just enormously talented. Her success didn’t come until she was 40, but then it was everywhere. She’s voice now in the current “Croods,” and has two more movies set for release. She was recently in 10 episodes of the “Mad About You” revival.

And then there’s Cloris and Mel Brooks. She was the immortal Frau Blucher in “Young Frankenstein,” a signature role. Her performance is literally genius, it can’t be compared to anything else.

What a career! What a life! She will be so sorely missed. Condolences to her family. No age is enough, even 94. And now it’s hard to believe that Phyllis, Mary, and Rhoda are all gone.

The Jeopardy! Audience Likes Ken Jennings: First Week Ratings for Successor Host Top All Syndicated Shows

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It turns out the “”Jeopardy!” audience likes Ken Jennings. A lot.

Jennings’ first week of new shows since the death of  Alex Trebek was a hit. The show scored over 6 million viewers average per show. That’s just 6% down from Trebek’s final week of new shows that preceded Jennings.

Jennings is just a temporary host at the moment. Producers will put us through a bunch of guest hosts next, just to make it seem like they’re looking for someone. But Jennings was hired as a special consultant almost a year ago and groomed for the position. He’s done a great job, too. He’s affable, relaxed, personable, knowledgeable. He seems very comfortable.

The top 10 syndicated shows for the week of January 11th follow. No talk show finished in the top 10, not even “Live with Kelly and Ryan.” And “The Ellen Show” is having issues.

“Live” actually dropped to 1.8 million, tying with Dr. Phil. Ellen DeGeneres returned from reruns a little up, to 1 million, tied with Kelly Clarkson and crap fest “Maury.”

1) “Jeopardy!” (CBS Media Ventures – CMV): 6.2 rating 2) “Wheel of Fortune” (CMV): 5.8 3) “Family Feud” (CMV) and “Judge Judy” (CMV): 5.4 each 5) Weekend Adventure (Disney/ABC-Litton): 3.7 6) “Dateline” – Weekly (NBCUniversal): 3.2 7) “The Big Bang Theory” (Warner Bros.): 2.6 8) “Inside Edition” (CMV): 2.4 9) “Entertainment Tonight” (CMV): 2.2 10″ “Wheel of Fortune” – Weekend (CMV): 2.0

Cannes 2021: Hope Springs Eternal as Famed Film Festival Plans for July, Not May, on the Croisette

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Hot, hot, hot.

Let’s hope heat and sunlight kill COVID because that will be the weather for this year’s Cannes Film Festival.

The famed film fest is moving from mid-May to July 6-17 on the sunny Mediterranean. That’s because COVID is rampant right now, especially in Provence and southern France.

Will this really happen? Hope springs eternal. In the summer. the Cote d’Azur is filled with tourists on vacation. Hotel rooms are scarce and traiffque is imposible!

So how will this work? And what about the Venice Film Festival, which is two months later? Sacre bleu! Stay tuned…

Again, let me reiterate, it is HOT in July down there.

 

Billie Holiday’s Signature Song, “Strange Fruit,” Has a Strange Backstory Tying Her to Executed Spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg

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As we prepare for Lee Daniels’ “The United States of America vs. Billie Holiday,” here’s a little backstory almost no one knows.

Holiday’s signature song, of course, is “Strange Fruit.” A song about lynching, “Strange Fruit” was Billie’s original hit. As we see in the movie, singing it caused her a lot of trouble with the FBI. The song was considered subversive as it lamented the killing of black people for no reason.

The author of “Strange Fruit” wasn’t Holiday. It was a Jewish schoolteacher from Brooklyn named Abe Meeropol. He wrote the song in 1940 for his wife. A friend slipped it to Holiday, who turned it into her social cause.

If the name Meeropol is at all resonant, that’s because Abe Meeropol became famous for something else in 1953: he and his wife adopted the two sons of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, convicted spies who were executed after a harassing trial prosecuted by Roy Cohn. Yes, the same Roy Cohn who died of AIDS, and in disgrace, after being Barbara Walters’ best friend and Donald Trump’s mentor. He’s played by Al Pacino in “Angels in America.”

Talk about six degrees of separation.

PS David Margolick wrote a book about Strange Fruit, check it out.

Catch Up Review: “Never Rarely Sometimes Maybe” Is an Intimate, Indie Gem with Knockout Performances

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Eliza Hittman’s “Never Rarely Sometimes Maybe” came out literally as the pandemic hit. It went around me, over me, by me, but I don’t think I ever understood what it was. Now it’s been 10 months, and this intimate, indie gem is getting a lot of awards activity. So I watched it.

In rural, blue collar Pennsylvania, Autumn, who is 18 and a senior in high school, is pregnant. It’s possible, but never specified, that her stepfather, Ted (Ryan Eggold, from “New Amsterdam”) may have raped her or forced her into a relationship. Her mother, with some little kids in tow, is clueless. Since parental consent is required in Pennsylvania, Autumn and cousin Skylar, pocket some cash from the supermarket where they’re checkout girls, and take the bus to New York to get an abortion.

That’s about it. Except that Hittman’s direction of the two girls, Sidney Flanigan and Talia Ryder, is exceptional. You feel as if you’re on this grim, miserable journey with them. The girls are simultaneously blank faced and delivering layers of emotion as they proceed along this inevitable path. Hittman keeps them from cliches, but still follows them, almost in cinema verite, as they navigate New York and this constant, not so subtle, barrage of if not sexual violence, culture torture. There’s no situation in which they are not objectified. There’s no Gloria Steinem to help them. Their fates seem sealed, doomed, and dead ended.

This is no “Lady Bird.” There is no fun, so be warned. But it’s an accomplishment for everyone involved. You’d almost like to see a sequel to learn what happens when they get home. Except I think we know the answer.