Sorry/Not Sorry movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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Sorry/Not Sorry movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (1)

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Produced by The New York Times's video division, and depending heavily on its own reporting, "Sorry/Not Sorry" is a primer on the rise, fall and reinvention of Louis C.K. A respected standup comic who remade himself as a low-budget arthouse confessional filmmaker, he becamethe writer, director, producer and lead actorof the semi-autobiographical FX series"Louie," about a divorced single father who was also a standup comic.At the show's peak of popularity, C.K. washailed as being the kind of earthy New York intellectual entertainerthat Woody Allen's fans used to unabashedlyenjoy, before his luster was tarnished by scandal.

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Although the movienever convincinglyanswers the unspoken question that dogs manyNew York Times-produced long-form videos—"Is this topic better suited to a newspaper article, or perhaps a podcast?"—it ishandsomely assembled, with crisp and thoughtfulcinematographyby Robert Richmond and an insistent underscore by Kyle Scott Wilson that would have fit right into a network TV drama about likable people doing bad things.Co-directors Cara Mones and Caroline Suh try to make the total packageas cinematic as possible. They do it mainly by buildingthe storyaroundinterviews with women who went on the record with the Timesto say that C.K. had abused his power as an A-list clubcomedian (and later, a king- or queen-makingTVproducer) by putting them in situations where they felt as ifthey had to watch or listen to him masturbat* or make sexually explicit remarks because if they objected, their careers would suffer.

There are also interviews with C.K. colleagues like Andy Kindler and Michael Ian Black andclips of non-interviewees like Jon Stewart and Sarah Silverman grappling with the knowledge that their friend did something bad and wondering what it says about them if they suspected or knew but didn't act.(Full disclosure: comedy scene chronicler and "Good One" podcasterJesse David Fox, a colleague of mine at New York Magazine, appears briefly as a commentator.)

The main characters are three comedians—Jen Kirkman, Abby Schachner, and Megan Koester—who experienced that side of C.K. and initially either decided to keep it to themselves for career reasons or were placated into staying quiet. Apparently, C.K. had a habit of forthrightly contacting people he believed had anonymously accused him online and apologizing in a non-specific wayor asking if he could talk to them on the phone or meet with them in person (to do damage control). Sometimes, he'd invoke the pitiful specter of his daughters finding out what he did, to shame accusersinto backingoff.

One of the moreconfounding and sinister aspectsof C.K.'s behavior was that he'd ask people'spermission before doing wildly inappropriatethings. Thiscreated the outward impression of consent, even though the women subjected to his behavior were nowhere near as powerful as C.K. and feared that if they said, "No, I don't want to hear this" or "No, I don't want to watch you masturbat*," or just turned and walked away,they'd be blacklisted from everythingC.K. was involved in. (Cara Buckley, one of theTimesreporters who worked on the piece that nailed down most of the accusations against C.K., says that they solved the problem of contextualizing his behavior by asking whether the same acts would be considered acceptable in a non-showbiz workplace, such as a bank.)

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C.K.'s public statementconfirming the accusationssaid pretty much everythinga person in his situation was expected to say. It concludedwith, "I’ve brought pain to my family, my friends, my children, and their mother. I have spent my long and lucky career talking and saying anything I want. I will now step back and take a long time to listen."

Did he, though? One of the binding motifs in "Sorry/Not Sorry" is C.K. seeming as if he's not actually seeking forgiveness or making amends, but tamping down the possibility of lastingconsequences, in a way that ultimately seems a variation ofdanger-seeking behavior, where the main goal is to see how far you can push or how low you can go without losing everything forever. C.K. pushed things very far, hid for a few months, then returned to work.If you look at his career through that lens, thepost-apology era feelslike the ultimate escalation of risk, as well as the ultimate trickster's victory.

In my review of C.K.'s film "I Love You,Daddy," I compared him to a flasher, in that a sizable portion of the perpetrator's adrenaline rush comes from making others doubt that they're seeing what they are indeedseeing because they simply can't imagine that anyone would be sodisgusting and blatant in public. In that spirit, “I Love YouDaddy"stars C.K. as a father of a nubile daughter who loves wearing bikinis, and JohnMalkovich as a Woody Allen-like director who becomes her lover. There's also a scene where another character loudly pretends tomasturbat* and ejacul*te in front of a woman in an office.

The moviewas shot and completedin 2016 and early 2017, when a contentious election capped by Trump's inauguration and assorted charges of predatory behavior were all over the news, and anonymous accusations against C.K. were swirling around the Internet. The finished film debuted at the Toronto Film Festival in September, 2017, as the Times investigation was being finished, and slated for national release Nov. 17, 2017. The Times piece and C.K.'s confession/apology ran Nov. 9, scuttling the release. The picture painted by "Sorry/Not Sorry" makes you wonder ifthat two month periodwas the most anxious of C.K.'s life or the most thrilling. Possiblyboth? Interviewees express incredulity not justat the movie's timing but itsexistence. Itreally did seem as if C.K. was daring people to name the ugliness he waswagging in their faces.

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The use of clips of C.K. miming masturbation or sexonstage and in episodes of "Louie" (plus a scene ofattempted rape) would ordinarilyseem like piling-on or manufactured evidence in a film like this,just as in the "evidentiary" deploymentof moments in Allen's films where characters treat pedophiliaas a punchline canseem specious and forcedeven if one believes the worstaccusations against Allen. (Put it this way:just because Martin Scorsese's films have a lot of murdersdoesn't prove he's killed anyone.)

But here, too, C.K. is a bizarrely special case, because you can't argue that he didn't do it. He flat-out said he did it. Every last bit. And you can't say that the women his behavior affected could've easily said no and/or walked away because C.K.'s ownstatement admits he put them in a position where it was hard to do what should've been done.

The last act of the movie is the most subdued, but also the freshest: after publicly admitting everything he was accused of doing (Timesreporter Jodi Kantor says this is a rare case where the subject of an investigation corroborated everything) C.K. reinvented himself as a slightly cuddlier version of a standard-issue, right-wing pandering standup comic—the kindwhose act validates grievances against progressives who've "gone too far" and are stifling free speech with their killjoy ways. C.K.'s "listening" period was not long. Hiscomeback is seven years old and selling out arenas.What a singularly weird, gross tale this turned out to be.

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Film Credits

Sorry/Not Sorry movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (9)

Sorry/Not Sorry (2024)

90 minutes

Cast

Jen Kirkmanas Self

Michael Ian Blackas Self

Michael Schuras Self

Aida Rodríguezas Self

Wesley Morrisas Self

Andy Kindleras Self

Louis C.K.as Self (archive footage) (uncredited)

Director

  • Caroline Suh
  • Cara Mones

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Sorry/Not Sorry movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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