Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Going Out Movie Reviews

‘Untouchable’ review: A look at the fall of Weinstein

The documentary is an all-too-real intro to a chilling chapter of Hollywood history



One by one, the women suffer for us. Pinned by the camera as if they were butterflies, they retell their stories. The narratives share a thread: A hopeful younger self just breaking into show business meets a big-name moviemaker, and the encounter devolves into threats, exhibitionism, unwanted physical contact or violence. Fighting back tears or shaking with anger, they talk about being trapped, disgusted, about freezing up, dissociating, hearing their career prospects are dead. When they speak, we squirm in sympathy.

They are a handful of the accusers of Harvey Weinstein, who is to be tried in January on charges of rape and other sex crimes in what will probably be the next moment of reckoning in the #MeToo movement. (Weinstein denies having ever had nonconsensual sex.)

‘Untouchable’, a documentary by Ursula Macfarlane, now streaming on Hulu, credibly reviews the revelations thus far and effectively pieces together the words of the accusers, former Weinstein employees and the journalists who brought the story to light. Notably, Macfarlane presents the recorded voice of a cornered-sounding Weinstein pleading with a woman and a series of voicemail messages he left in connection with one encounter that ended in a settlement and nondisclosure agreement.

Male employees also acknowledge his flamethrower temper. One calls Harvey Weinstein an “equal opportunity abuser,” while another says he has dodged missiles his boss hurled, including a five-pound marble ashtray.

The ultimate documentary on the subject — if one film can encompass it all — will be deep and sweeping. It will offer nuanced insights into women’s struggles with a man who could snap them in two professionally and perhaps physically. It will examine the pathology of power in the service of self-gratification and self-protection — from the law and from accountability.

Advertisement

At this point, as the film rightly notes, the problem is not over. The #MeToo movement is too new for us to know if it will bring lasting change. But for now, we have ‘Untouchable’, a respectable and all-too-real introduction to a chilling chapter of a Hollywood horror story.

___

Don’t miss it!

‘Untouchable: The Fall of Harvey Weinstein’ is showing at Cinema Akil.

(FILES) In this file photo taken on July 11, 2019 Movie producer Harvey Weinstein departs from New York Supreme Court with his new legal team for a hearing July 11, 2019 to ask for another delay in the start of his rape trial. A US court on October 3, 2019, rejected Weinstein's attempts to have his sexual assault trial, due to start in January, moved out of New York city. The 67-year-old's attorneys asked for the venue change, arguing that intense coverage in New York's tabloids meant Weinstein would not get a fair trial. / AFP / TIMOTHY A. CLARY

1 of 2

Advertisement