Page 10 April 11, 2018 Arts & ENTERTAINMENT Documenting the Human Experience C ontinued froM P age 5 Showdogs is a full service salon. We do baths, all over hair cuts, tooth brushing, nail trims, soft claws, flea treatments, mud baths, and ear cleaning. We also have health care and grooming products to keep your pet clean in between visits. Show Dogs Grooming Salon & Boutique 926 N. Lombard Portland, OR 97217 503-283-1177 Tuesday-Saturday 9am-7pm Monday 10am-4pm Yo dawg is gonna look like a show dawg and your kitty will be pretty. C annon ’ s r ib e xPress 5410 NE 33rd Ave, Portland, Or Call to Order: 503-288-3836 Open (hours) Sun-Thurs: 11a-8p Fri-Sat: 11a- 9p Cannon’s, tasty food and friendly neighborhood atmosphere. RaMell Ross began filming af- ter spending time teaching in the community and making friends with two young men who are the film’s major subjects. The time Ross spent building those relation- ships yields him access that would be hard to come by otherwise, al- lowing him to capture the small- est of moments with the greatest of empathy -- a toddler doggedly running circles in his living room, a young man practicing his jump shot; high school cheerleaders moving in unison. The result is a portrait of life among black people in the rural south that is uncommonly specific and com- passionate. The film won special jury prizes at both Full Frame and Sundance. “Owned: A Tale of Two Amer- icas” examines the story behind middle-class home ownership in the U.S., revealing the concept of the “American dream” to be mean- ingfully available almost exclu- sively to white people as the result of a deliberate program of insti- tutionalized racial exclusion. Di- rector Giorgio Angelini connects a surprising number of narrative threads, including some clever use of archival ads and individual stories, to illuminate the links be- tween the rise of the suburbs, the creation of urban housing projects, and the periodic displacement of people of color to build highways and, most recently, to make room for gentrification. It’s an ambi- tious and surprisingly entertaining examination of patterns of struc- tural bias that aims to bring us to a more accurate shared history that might yield better solutions. “The Judge” offers a fascinat- ing window into Shari’a law and life in the West Bank. Judge Kh- oloud Al-Faqih is the first woman to serve as judge in the Shari’a courts in the Middle East, which cover family law in Islamic so- ciety. (Women have served as judges since the 1970s in the civil courts, which include criminal and civil matters.). She is a compelling focus for the current state of life in the West Bank and Islamic so- ciety generally, as she walks (with equal parts joy and courage) a fine line of fully embracing her culture and seeing where it needs to shift in order to confront the most in- convenient and challenging parts of its truth. Director Erika Cohn (an American Jew) does fine and respectful work here which aims to help particularly those of us in the West round out our picture of a culture about which we under- stand little, including aerial shots of the West Bank and the com- plex perspective of the male Chief Judge who was brave enough to appoint Judge Kholoud but is also a conservative Muslim with three wives. Fine, mind-expanding work. It will have a limited theat- rical release and will also be avail- able on PBS’s Independent Lens and Amazon later this year. ‘Of Fathers and Sons” feels important but is, in many ways, into a community we understand very little, and leaves the viewer to wonder what sort of future chil- dren like these can envision. My least favorite film of the first two days—though I expect I am an outlier in that regard—was “RBG,” a biographical doc about Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. It is certainly a well-constructed com- pendium of her life story and legal significance, but presented with an entirely uncritical stance by two white directors, Julie Cohen and Betsy West. Taking nothing away from Ginsburg’s undeniably RaMell Ross directs “Hale County This Morning, This Evening,” a new documentary that gives an intimate look at life in a mostly black, rural Alabama town. almost unwatchable. Director Ta- lal Derki returns to his former Syr- ian homeland and imbeds himself with the family of a jihadist man, Abu Osama, yielding an intimate portrait of a person who is both an extremist and, in his way a fam- ily man. He dotes on his young sons while clearly rearing them to be future jihadists, singing songs about glorious martyrdom, pun- ishing them for shows of emotion. One of his young sons captures and “slaughters” a bird, compar- ing its beheading to his father’s own actions, and his oldest son is sent off to alarmingly brutal military training at age 13. In 98 minutes, hardly a woman or girl is seen at all, until Osama threatens to bring the roof down on one of his wives if she doesn’t stop cry- ing when he comes home with a serious injury, and you realize that she (and likely other women and girls) have been there all along. Later he jokes of shooting a two- year-old girl who neglects to wear a hijab. Derki offers rare insight significant contributions to wom- en’s rights and liberal thought, I was frustrated by the film’s lack of awareness around Ginsburg’s place inside of second-wave fem- inism, its unquestioning eleva- tion of her vantage point as the ultimate defender of the rights of women and minorities, and its lack of critical analysis of her failure to seriously consider step- ping down while President Obama might have appointed a successor for her, given her age and the im- portance of her seat on the Su- preme Court. There is an under- lying arrogance in both Ginsburg and in the liberal dominant culture view that happily drowns out an array of perspectives, including my own. Darleen Ortega is a judge on the Oregon Court of Appeals and the first woman of color to serve in that capacity. Her movie re- view column Opinionated Judge appears regularly in The Portland Observer. Find her movie blog at opinionatedjudge.blogspot.com.