I have watched four movies over the last week and want to share some thoughts on them with you. Two are older movies, and two are brand new, released just this month on Netflix.
Marty, Life Is Short
This is a documentary about actor and comedian Martin Short, directed by Lawrence Kasden. Short, of course, came to the attention of most people in the United States when he was a part of Canadian SCTV back in the late 1970's/early 1980's. He went on to greater things on television (one season as regular on Saturday Night Live), guest appearances on talk shows and acting roles in movies and countless television series. I remember him in movies like "The Three Amigos" and "Father of the Bride", but I had no awareness of just how prolific an actor that he is (116 acting credits in IMDB), including his latest huge success in the streaming series "Only Murders In The Building".
This documentary includes home movies that Short himself made of both his family growing up and of his own family and friends. And those friends are a Who's Who of show business today: Steve Martin, Stephen Speilberg, Catherine O'Hara, Tom Hanks, and many, many more. The movie also tells of Short's resilience in the face of tragedy: his oldest brother was killed in an accident when Martin was 12, his mother died when he was 18, and his father died two years later. Then, he lost his wife of thirty years, Nancy Dolman, to cancer in 2010. His words about what he went through at that time and in the time that followed were particularly meaningful to me. Not included in the film was the news of his daughter Katherine's suicide earlier this year, which occurred after the film was finished. It is dedicated to her.
Two great lines from the film that sum up Short perfectly:
Steve Martin: "Say you're having a dinner party and you invite Marty. Then Marty tells you that something came up and he can't make it. You then cancel the party."
Tom Hanks: "Marty operates at the speed of joy."
You will laugh a lot watching this movie, and you will fell pain as well, but, ultimately, you will feel the "joy" to which Hanks refers.
Four Stars from The Grandstander.
Remarkably Bright Creatures
Back in March, I wrote THIS PIECE about movies that will turn fifty years old in 2026. While researching for that post, one of the movies that I found on every list for that year, but that I had never seen, was this western that starred and was directed by Clint Eastwood, and I finally got around to seeing it, fifty years after the fact.


















