Sunday 18 October 2020

LFF: Make history

Well, that was a first and hopefully a last as well: the 64th BFI London Film Festival was an almost entirely virtual event, with a few in-person screenings just to keep the atmosphere alive for the lucky few who managed to get tickets. For me it was an intense two weeks of watching movies at home on my computer - but they're some of my favourites so far this year. Going through this makes me long even more for a time when things can return to normal, even if that's hard to imagine at the moment. Will the world still even exist a year from now? The signs aren't good, but there's still some hope. Here are my last two highlights, plus my best of the fest...

Ammonite
dir-scr Francis Lee; with Kate Winslet, Saoirse Ronan 20/UK ****
With a remarkable attention to detail, this beautifully observed drama recounts an unexpected relationship that crosses various boundaries in 19th century England. Writer-director Francis Lee takes an elemental approach, underscoring a low-key narrative with passion, earth and grit. At its core, this may be a moving love story, but it also carries with it a range of ideas that are strongly resonant nearly two centuries later... FULL REVIEW >

Lovers Rock
dir Steve McQueen; with Amarah-Jae St Aubyn, Micheal Ward 20/UK ****
Bristling with energy and colour, this 1980-set drama unfolds to the beats of the eponymous musical genre. Without a pushy narrative, this is pure cinematic bliss, a blast of happiness in a safe space away from the racism and riots in the streets. Steve McQueen, with cowriter Courttia Newland and ace cinematographer Shabier Kirchner, skilfully depicts one Saturday night, and into Sunday morning, when the world belongs to hopeful youth... FULL REVIEW >

~~~~~~~ ~~ ~~~ ~~~~
M Y   B E S T   O F   T H E   F E S T
  1. Mangrove
  2. Nomadland
  3. After Love
  4. One Night in Miami...
  5. Notturno
  6. Never Gonna Snow Again
  7. The Salt in Our Waters
  8. Time
  9. Ammonite
  10. The Reason I Jump
Special mentionLovers Rock, Another Round, Possessor, Limbo, African Apocalypse, David Byrne's American Utopia, The Painter and the Thief, Supernova, I Am Samuel, Wolfwalkers. 

NB. My anchor page for the LFF is HERE and full reviews are all linked there, with winners of the audience awards to come soon.

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