海角大神

'RBG' is a love letter to Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Directors Betsy West and Julie Cohen trace Ginsburg鈥檚 life and career from girlhood through marriage and law school to her current position as perhaps America鈥檚 least likely pop icon.

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg applauds after a performance in her honor after she spoke about her life and work during a discussion at Georgetown Law School in Washington on April 6, 2018.

Alex Brandon/AP

May 4, 2018

鈥淩BG鈥 is ostensibly a documentary about 85-year-old Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, but it feels more like a love letter. Directors Betsy West and Julie Cohen trace Ginsburg鈥檚 life and career from girlhood through marriage and law school to her current position as perhaps America鈥檚 least likely pop icon 鈥 the Notorious RBG, as she is affectionately nicknamed by a vast legion of youthful progressives.

The film makes clear that the soft-spoken, diminutive Ginsburg fought early and hard for gender equality in the courts聽in her own steadfastly clearsighted way. She鈥檚 the opposite of a late bloomer. The roll call of on-camera idolators, including Gloria Steinem, NPR鈥檚 Nina Totenberg, and Bill Clinton (who appointed her to the Supreme Court in 1993), is predictable, but we also hear praises from the likes of Orrin Hatch and a contingent of other conservatives. And then there is her famous friendship with the expansive Antonin Scalia, her legal and temperamental antithesis, which is a wonder to behold. It鈥檚 nice to know that, even in the upper reaches of today鈥檚 Washington, D.C., friendship can still eclipse ideology. Grade: B (Rated PG for some thematic elements and language.)