PRIDE
⋆⋆⋆ out of four stars
Rating: R for language, brief sexual content.
Theater: Edina.
Those cagey Brits. As they did with "The Full Monty," "Brassed Off" and "Made in Dagenham," they've once again taken a labor crisis, smarmed it up shamelessly and turned out a thoroughly enjoyable movie. This time it's the true story of a group of gay activists in 1980s London coming to the aid of a small Welsh townful of striking miners in the midst of Thatcher's redundancy crackdown — and the dawn of the AIDS epidemic.
Marquee names including Paddy Considine, Bill Nighy and Imelda Staunton as supportive villagers make due-diligence appearances, but this show really belongs to lesser-known actors Ben Schnetzer and George MacKay as two of the earnestly determined young men who raise money for the miners and, even more unbelievably, win them over in an era when homophobia was 10 times as socially acceptable as it is today.
Tip of the hard hat to director Matthew Warchus, who has helmed only one other movie, the forgettable, 15-year-old "Simpatico," but has been a multiple Tony nominee for his work on Broadway, including a win for "God of Carnage" in 2009. He recently succeeded Kevin Spacey as creative director at the Old Vic in London.
kristin tillotson
MEET THE MORMONS
⋆⋆ out of four stars
Rating: PG for some thematic elements.
Theater: Eden Prairie.
This slick, upbeat Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints-backed documentary aims to answer what it insists are false images of the church, "shaped by the media and popular culture."
The film's fresh-faced, blue-eyed, blond narrator informs us that Mormons "come in all shapes, sizes and colors." We meet nonwhite Mormons from Atlanta to Nepal. Their wholesomeness is refreshing. Their optimism, and the film's, is boundless. But from the cherry-picked "stereotypes" to the sins of omission that follow, "Meet the Mormons" is nothing but propaganda.
The film addresses the church's reputation for "racism" without mentioning the long history in which that was true. The same gloss-it-over approach is used on the church's sexist, patriarchal heritage. And nobody brings up the homophobia that stormed out of the closet when Mormon money and organizers pushed California's anti-gay Proposition 8.