LBJ
I know exactly three things about LBJ: he took over as president after JFK was America'd, he passed the Civil Rights Act either out of loyalty or pragmatism, and then fumbled Vietnam as a coup de grace. The movie covers the first two things. It's primarily interested in LBJ as a pragmatic but insecure man, and the oxymoron that is "Southern progressive", to be forever overshadowed by his younger, infinitely more charismatic boss - both in life and in death. When he finally succeeds him we're 30 minutes into the big finale, which consists of LBJ retaining JFK's cabinet, telling the Southern good old boys to get with the program and delivering a reassuring and impactful kinda eulogy, kinda inauguration speech. I learned in the end that, until Biden bowed out in 24, he was the last sitting US president to not seek reelection, which should put Johnson's popularity into perspective. Stars a great Woody Harrelson in SNL makeup. Directed by Rob Reiner.
Albert Brooks: Defending My Life
Documentary about absurdist comedian Albert Einstein. I haven't seen any of the movies he directed and only know him as Hank Scorpio and from supporting parts, but the documentary made me a fan, which I think is the biggest compliment I can give it. As writer/director/protagonist he seems to have had the filmography Ricky Gervais has always strived for, mixing poignant satire with corny feelgood drama. The documentary is also directed by Rob Reiner, who structures it around a dinner conversation between him and Brooks. It is perhaps inevitable that this now feels as much about Brooks as it does about Reiner, especially as the two of them start waxing melancholically about legacy and mortality. We see them walking around tombstones and speculating about the hereafter, and how Brooks would be too envious of the living after dying ("I don't want to die and then have to watch the living and go 'Huh, Rob's doing pretty good'").
At another point Brooks is on the Daily Show promoting his novel called 2030: The Real Story of What Happens to America and jokes: "I feel, and I can see it in my own children, that in a number of years these younger people are going to try to kill us".