Saturday, 29 April 2023

Stage: Across the universe

Supernova
by Rhiannon Neads
dir Jessica Dromgoole
with Rhiannon Neads, Sam Swann
Omnibus Theatre, Clapham • 25.Apr-13.May.23

Exploring very deep themes with an unusually light touch, this two-person drama is strikingly well-written by Rhiannon Neads, and beautifully played by Neads with costar Sam Swann. It's a warm, funny and ultimately emotional romantic tale, and it's staged with an inventive charm that evokes a sense of the vast universe that surrounds the characters. Because one of the characters is dealing with depression in a complex way, it has a resonant impact.

During a fancy dress party, Harry (Swann) notices Tess (Neads) in her astronaut costume and starts a conversation. Their connection is quick, bonding over their mutual curiosity, and before they know it they're romantically involved. Their life together is deliriously happy, as they grow closer and create a life together. But Tess is dealing with clinical depression, and she is unable to express herself to Harry, who desperately wants to help her.

Sharp dialog keeps the story moving at a brisk pace, cleverly observing details in both the characters and the life they create as a couple. Scenes shift seamlessly into each other, revisiting motifs that range from galactic adventures to costume parties. Both Neads and Swann create strikingly vivid characters who are easy to identify with. Even when Tess' illness begins to cause problems between them, it's clear that her inner desires are at war with her actions. So Harry's helplessness becomes hugely sympathetic.

These are unusually complicated characters and situations, so it's particularly impressive that the script is able to maintain such a brightly humorous tone even as it delves under the surface. It helps that the staging is so bracingly simple, a white circle on the floor with outer-space flourishes and props placed in orbit around the action. Within this, the actors are able to use their physicality to express a range of scenarios that highlight the central issue without overstating anything. And since the script never preaches, this is a play that makes us see depression through a fresh perspective that's honest and also hopeful.


For details, visit
CLAPHAM OMNIBUS >

photos by Jack Sain • 27.Apr.23

Thursday, 27 April 2023

Critical Week: Under pressure

It's been another lightish week film-wise, and we have three big weekends up ahead. First is the May Day holiday, followed by the three-day Coronation weekend, and then there's Eurovision, which Liverpool is hosting on Ukraine's behalf. Meanwhile, I've been watching movies and writing about them this week. Filmmaker Ari Aster is back with Beau Is Afraid, an unhinged three-hour odyssey starring an astonishing Joaquin Phoenix. It's ambitious, indulgent and fairly impenetrable, and its packed with moments of genius. Big George Foreman is a by-the-numbers biopic about the great boxer. Its sanitised, anecdotal, relentlessly inspiring approach is frustrating, but Foreman's story is riveting. And Khris Davis is solid in the demanding role.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
The Eight Mountains
Love According to Dalva
Little Richard: I Am Everything
ALL REVIEWS >
And then there's Last Sentinel, a nicely contained thriller set in 2063 on an isolated outpost where Kate Bosworth and three men grapple with paranoia and other dangers. It's engaging but a bit thin. From Greece, the drama Broadway looks great, and has a fascinating premise that involves quirky outcasts surviving with a performance art/crime scam. But it's superficial and aimless. For contrast, there was dancer-choreographer Siobhan Davies' mesmerising autobiographical film Transparent, which screened at the Lillian Baylis Studio at Sadler's Wells, followed by a terrific Q&A with Davies. Also at Sadler's Wells, I covered this spring's stunning performance by the exceptionally talented Nederlands Dans Theater.

This next week, aside from enjoying some downtime over the three-day weekend, I'll be watching Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 3, Jim Parsons in Spoiler Alert, the small-town comedy-drama 5-25-77, Irish drama Lakelands, French drama Mother and Son and Tunisian drama Harka. And there's also the stage show Supernova at the Clapham Omnibus (review here soon).

Monday, 24 April 2023

Screen: April TV Roundup

I'm always amazed at how watching an episode or two every now and then adds up so quickly: these are the shows I saw over the past few months in between the movies and stage shows. I use TV as an amuse bouche to reset my brain between work, which is why I won't watch anything based around death (I avoid shows about detectives, doctors, lawyers or cops). I'm also not a huge genre fan, but I do get into some fan series now and then...

W H A T   A   D R A M A

The Mandalorian: series 3
Folding this show's narrative in line with other series is showing some strain, as writers abandon what made it so special to begin with. No longer a series of little adventures, it's now a big, overly complicated mega-plot with random action beats and far too much murky conspiracy-mongering. Plus stunt cameos. There are still small joys to be found, thankfully. And it does eventually bring story threads together in a meaningful, even exciting way. But Disney's cinematic universe-building has snuffed out this show's charm. (Disney). 

Star Trek - Picard: series 3 
This show gets bigger with each season, and this one sends Patrick Stewart's ageing admiral on an epic adventure as he takes on old but newly fearsome foes, all while being a fugitive from Starfleet justice. Over these episodes, he reassembles virtually the entire cast of The Next Generation (as well as the score), which is thrilling even without the enormous action set-pieces they are thrown into. The plots are properly mind-bending, which may make us long for more simplicity. But the show's ambition is impressive and hugely satisfying. (Paramount)

His Dark Materials: series 3
Philip Pullman's trilogy of novels come to their on-screen conclusion with a remarkable faithfulness to the material. Impressively produced to a high standard, this fantastical story reaches a powerful, startling conclusion. The excellent ensemble cast is led by the terrific Dafne Keen and Will Parry, as two young people pulled into a parallel-world adventure. And where it goes is remarkably mature, never speaking down to teens in the audience. It of course helps to have the likes of James McAvoy and Ruth Wilson on board. (BBC)

Welcome to Chippendales
Skilfully written by Robert Siegel, this series centres on the pioneering male-stripping venue and its shocking history of murders and suicides. It boldly takes on the American dream with complex, surprising results. And it features stellar performances from Kumail Nanjiani as businessman-founder Steve Bannerjee, Murray Bartlett as his creative genius cohort Nick Dei Noia and Annaleigh Ashford as Steve's brilliant wife Irene, plus ace support from the likes of Juliette Lewis, Robin de Jesus and Andrew Rannells. The show also cleverly mixes pitch-black elements with 1980s glitter. (Hulu)

Extrapolations
Ambitious and smart, this show challenges the viewer to think about the future as the episodes skip years ahead in time, from the 2030s to 2070. Loose connections along the way are clever, as are observations and conjecture. Although there are some undercooked elements, most notably the tech (clear glass screens look cool but are ludicrously impractical) and fashion. And some of the science sounds a bit iffy. But the stories have a strong kick to them, and the terrific A-list cast finds moving emotions along the way. (Apple)

Pretty Baby:
Brooke Shields
There's an astonishing honesty to this two-part documentary. A model virtually from birth, Shields was sexualised by the media from a very young age, treated as either a slut or a goody-goody, and never allowed to be either a complex person in her own right. She speaks openly throughout, accompanied by interviews with family and friends and an excellent archive of photos and footage. Through all of this, Shields is articulate and never afraid to explore even the darkest chapters of her life, from rape to postpartum depression. Which leads to a powerfully insightful conversation with her daughters. (ABC)

I T ' S   C O M I C A L

Beef
Steven Yeun and Ali Wong star in this pitch-black comedy about two angry people whose road rage incident blossoms into a full-on family feud. As it gets messier and messier, the show is sometimes very hard to watch, but the characters are so vivid that we can't look away. The writers sometimes push things into cartoonish territory, but the terrific cast keeps it grounded, including ace supporting players Joseph Lee, Young Mazino, David Choe and Maria Bello. Watching this is a harrowing experience, but it's packed with insight into human nature. (Netflix)

Shrinking 
Jason Segel brings his hangdog brand of comedy to this smart sitcom about psychologists who take their personal issues to work. As a recent widower with a sparky teen daughter (Lukita Maxwell), Segel is as likeable as ever. And his banter with colleagues Harrison Ford (who's hilarious) and Jessica Williams is a lot of fun. Coming from the team behind Ted Lasso, the tone is warm and gentle, which can leave scenes feeling like they need some edge. But the characters get increasingly endearing over the course of these 10 episodes. So it's good news that more are coming. (Apple)

That 90s Show
Rebooting That 70s Show with a new era of nostalgia, the writers cleverly bring back most of the original cast in cameo appearances, but centre around returning scene-stealers Kurtwood Smith and Debra Jo Rupp, now dealing with the antics of their granddaugher (Callie Haverda), who makes charming idiot friends while visiting for the summer. Most jokes and sight gags are the same, but by shifting everything by two decades there's a whole new perspective, plus an endless supply of things to make fun of. And the new characters are great. (Netflix)

History of the World: Part II 
Mel Brooks' 1981 movie History of the World: Part I finally gets a sequel. And it's as uneven as ever. Once again, all-star cameos populate the sketches, which usually simply take a historical event and overlay it with jokes based on either Jewishness, social media or both. It's not particularly clever, and some sequences are too silly to elicit a laugh, but it does have enough witty moments to make it worth a look. And some recurring performances are memorable, from Wanda Sykes as a sassy Shirley Chisholm to Jay Ellis as a super-cool Jesus. (Disney)

Unstable 
Rob Lowe teams up with his son John Owen Lowe to play, yes, father and son in this over-goofy sitcom set in a biotech company. Written by Lowe Jr, the script cleverly and mercilessly pokes fun at Lowe Sr, who plays a handsome-genius scientist who, working with his nutty scientists, might be able to save the planet from climate change. Each character is so broadly ridiculous that they're not particularly believable, but they're fairly hilarious, and well-played by Sian Clifford, Aaron Branch, Rachel Marsh, Emma Derreira and Frank Gallegos. (Netflix)

Young Rock:
series 3

Dwayne Johnson continues mining his childhood for amusing anecdotes, and it's beginning to look like he will never run out of material. Not only is he a lot of fun in the framing scenes with Randall Park (and Dawnn Lewis in this season), but the actors playing his younger self (Adrian Groulx, Bradley Constant and Uli Latukefu) continue to grow on us. They also continue to grow up, which adds an extra zing to the overall narrative arcs. The little sermons tucked inside each episode are corny, but they add to the charm. (NBC)

Abbott Elementary: series 2
This sitcom is never as sharp or original as it could be, but it's hugely watchable thanks to its smart setting in an underfunded state school populated by teachers who love their jobs. The chemistry between the cast members keeps it engaging, even if the will-they-won't-they situation between Quinta Brunson and Tyler James Williams never quite builds up steam. And some token characters feel oddly underdeveloped. But Janelle James is hilarious as the scene-stealing principal, and Sheryl Lee Ralph is a national treasure. (ABC)

The Conners:
series 5
 
This extremely long-running sitcom, which began as Roseanne in 1988, continues to take on current issues with unapologetic honesty, finding earthy humour in unexpected places while deeply developing each of its lively characters. The ensemble cast is as strong as ever, and it's a rare series that has allowed the shape of the family to grow and change over the years, reflecting real life through an astute and refreshingly amusing perspective. Which allows comments about things like fractured politics and the rising cost of living to have real bite. (ABC)

I   G I V E   U P

Poker Face: This is a very well-made show, with clever writing and a terrific cast made largely of scene-stealing guest stars. But I'm simply not a fan of series that hinge around murders, and barely made it through three episodes. (Peacock)

Marie-Antoinette: Sharply written and produced, this show struggles to feel like anything new amid a sea of more inventive period costume dramas. It has terrific wit, and a solid Euro-cast, but it never quite held my interest. (BBC)

CURRENTLY WATCHING: Mrs Davis, Schmigadoon (2), Ted Lasso (3), Dave (3), Succession (4), The Marvelous Mrs Maisel (5).
COMING SOON: Citadel, Bupkis, White House Plumbers, The Afterparty (2), The Other Two (3).

Previous roundup: DECEMBER 2022 >

Saturday, 22 April 2023

Dance & Film: Juxtapositions

Transparent
dir-scr Siobhan Davies
in collaboration with David Hinton, Hugo Glendinning
with Siobhan Davies, Andrea Buckley, Lindsey Butcher, Charlie Morrissey, Annie Pui Ling Lok, Paul Douglas, Linda Gibbs, Jeremy James, Lucy Suggate, Marina Collard, Matthias Sperling, Laurent Cavanna
prd Pinky Ghundale
22/UK 35m 
Lillian Baylis Studio, Sadler's Wells, London • 20.Apr.23

In this biographical film, Siobhan Davies examines her life over the past 50 years as a dancer, choreographer and artist. Her approach is insightful and observant, so rather than tracing details, she explores thoughts and feelings. What emerges is a revelatory look at the experience of a dancer that will resonate for anyone who has ever considered what it means to be human.

The film unfolds in three chapters. Animal Origins uses still images to consider raw physicality, especially where Davies sees similarities between herself and other creatures. A Lived In Circle brings movement into the picture, as four dancers walk in concentric rings that echo throughout nature and art. And Transparency reflects the way Davies prefers to work using acetate and tissue paper, so she can overlay images with each other to find commonality, which helps her further understand her own connection with people, places and history.

"Dance involves movement and constant change," Davies says, "and the see-through nature of my note-taking helped me to experience ideas and images as less fixed in time or place but rather on the way to becoming something else or emerging out of what came before."

The film is a kaleidoscopic collection of images intriguingly juxtaposed with each other. It features artwork, antiquities, sketches and photographs, including a series of striking pictures of the young Davies in a dance studio. She also appears in new video sequences as she discusses how all of this has fed into her career as a dancer and choreographer. And the ideas lead to observations about her young granddaughter's pure relationship with her body, a feeling Davies only recalls experiencing once as an adult.

Davies is encouraging the viewer to explore what it means to move, to be part of the world and to create shapes and possibilities with our bodies every day. It's a mesmerising collision of images, words, music and sound. And it leaves us looking at our own movements through a new perspective.




For details, visit
TRANSPARENT FILM >

photos by Siobhan Davies Studios • 20.Apr.23

Thursday, 20 April 2023

Critical Week: Take the wheel

It's been another week of movies here, and I'm enjoying how things are back to a relatively normal schedule after months of intensity. The biggest movie this week was an online feature: Ghosted is an engaging action romcom that reteams Ana de Armas and Chris Evans. Rather a lot mopier, To Catch a Killer stars Shailene Woodley as a troubled cop pulled into an FBI investigation into a mass-shooter. It's dark and timely, but feels somewhat undercooked.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
A Thousand and One
The Three Musketeers: D'Artagnan
PERHAPS AVOID:
Padre Pio
ALL REVIEWS >
The best surprise this week is The Three Musketeers: D'Artagnan, a familiar story sharply well told with a first-rate French cast and properly thrilling action. The latest in the franchise, Evil Dead Rise is never very scary but will please fans with its outrageously excessive gore. And then there's the inventive and hugely engaging Filipino comedy I Love You Beksman, which kicked off the Queer East Fest in London on Tuesday. 

Outside the cinema, I loved the Nederlands Dans Theater programme at Sadler's Wells. And this was my first year attending the Critics' Circle Theatre Awards as a voting member (I am a member of the Critics' Circle Theatre Section, in addition to being chair of the Film Section). These awards are great fun, held at @sohoplace, the first new theatre built in the West End in 50 years. And most winners were in attendance, so it was great to celebrate them.

This next week I'll be watching the biopic Big George Foreman, Jay Baruchel in the story of BlackBerry, Kate Bosworth in Last Sentinel, the Greek drama Broadway, the Swedish comedy RSVP and the dance art film Transparent.


Dance: Life is but a dream

Nederlands Dans Theater
Gabriela Carrizo / Jiří Kylián /
Crystal Pite & Simon McBurney 
dancers Alexander Andison, Fay van Baar, Anna Bekirova, Jon Bond, Conner Bormann, Pamela Campos, Emmitt Cawley, Isla Clarke, Thalia Crymble, Cesar Faria Fernandes, Scott Fowler, Surimu Fukushi, Boston Gallacher, Aram Hasler, Nicole Ishimaru, Chuck Jones, Genevieve O’Keeffe, Kele Roberson, Yukino Takaura, Luca Tessarini, Lea Ved, Theophilus Vesely, Tess Voelker, Jianhui Wang, Nicole Ward
voices Simon McBurney, Mamie McBurney, Max Casella, David Annen
music Raphaëlle Latini, Dirk Haubrich, Owen Belton
puppets Jochen Lange
Sadler's Wells, London • 19-22.Apr.23

The NDT brings three pieces to Sadler's Wells this spring, each featuring a distinctive style of liquid choreography. Dancers move with an almost supernatural physicality in these performances, while conveying bigger ideas that will resonate in distinctive ways throughout the audience. It's a magical evening packed with dazzling moments.

First up is Gabriela Carrizo's provocative La Ruta, set along a surreal Lynchian highway where gravity and time seem to have no meaning. A variety of figures appear from the mist, expressing their internalised angst and attempting to assist each other. But in this dreamscape, things continue to take shocking twists and turns. All of this is visually spectacular, with inventive lighting and sound that evokes a pungent sense of the isolated, imaginative setting. And the performers move in ways that are often brain-bending, seemingly shifting forward and backward in time at different speeds and with a varying weightlessness that brings out a stunning scream of internalised longing.


Gods and Dogs is subtitled "an unfinished work" because choreographer Jiří Kylián finds beauty in something that is incomplete. It starts with a single lamp on stage as dancers appear on their own or in pairs, cleverly playing with balance as they intertwine in a series of scenarios. While centring on the astonishing physicality of the performers, this piece echoes the arc of birth, life, partnership and death, tapping into essentially human feelings and expressions. The stage is simple, expanding through light and projection into a mesmerising shimmering backdrop. And the choreography mixes modern movement with classical dance in ways that are both jaw-droppingly complex and simply beautiful.



Finally, Figures in Extinction [1.0] by choreographer Crystal Pite and theatre director Simon McBurney is a thoughtful and wrenchingly emotional exploration of the impact of climate change on animals, glaciers, lakes and humanity. It travels through a series of tableaux in which dancers perform pieces that echo specific extinct species or vanishing places, interrupted by a lively climate-change denier (who is also cheekily designated for extinction). These are gorgeously designed scenes that bristle with tactile imagery, recreating natural movements through an extremely clever use of light, physicality and puppetry. What emerges is a celebration of life as well as an elegiac comment on how humans change the world. And the quickening momentum provides a striking sense of urgency.


For details, visit SADLER'S WELLS >

photos by Joris-Jan Bos and Rahi Rezvani • 19.Apr.23

Thursday, 13 April 2023

Critical Week: Eye of the tiger

It's a busy but short week here in London, and I've been running around catching the usual eclectic variety of movies at press screenings. I've been a fan of Henry Golding since his excellent work in Crazy Rich Asians and Monsoon, so I was willing to set Snake Eye aside and look forward to Assassin Club. Alas, this one's a generic, poorly written thriller. At least he's good in the first act, before things get truly nutty. Nicolas Cage and Nicholas Hoult are gleefully over-the-top from the start of Renfield, and they're the best thing about the movie, which mashes-up horror, comedy, romance and drama in ways we've seen before. But at least it's good fun.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Suzume • Everything Went Fine
Private Desert • Cairo Conspiracy
PERHAPS AVOID:
Assassin Club
ALL REVIEWS >
Jim Broadbent and Penelope Wilton are of course excellent in The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, a very British road movie about a man who decides to walk the length of England. Thankfully, it avoids sentimentality for something darker and more resonant. Teyana Taylor is a force of nature in A Thousand and One, an unusually realistic New York drama that traces a mother and son over a decade that's as tumultuous for the city as it is for them. And the Norwegian pitch-black comedy Sick of Myself, which lampoons how everyone is vying for attention, is so bone-dry that it makes us feel uncomfortable in all the right ways.


This next week I'll be watching Eva Green in The Three Musketeers: D'Artagnan, Jim Gaffigan in Linoleum, the Polynesian epic Pacification and the Filipino drama I Love You Beksman, which opens the Queer East Film Fest (reviews here soon).


Friday, 7 April 2023

Exhibition: Take another look

Ai Weiwei: Making Sense
The Design Museum, London • 7.Apr-30.Jul.23

An expert provocateur, Ai Weiwei brings a show of everyday items to London's Design Museum for a four-month show that looks deceptively simple but continually challenges us to see human history from new angles. The exhibition is mainly in one large room, with a few items scattered around outside, and the juxtaposition of the various elements adds layers of intense meaning. So it's well worth paying attention.

All of Ai's various forms of expression - as an artist, activist, filmmaker, architect and collector - come together here, set out in three sections... 

Evidence features five fields of man-made objects on the floor: Stone Age tools, Song dynasty (960-1279 CE) porcelain tea spouts, ceramic cannon balls from the same era, broken sculptures from Ai's studio (destroyed by Chinese officials) and Lego blocks. It's fascinating to see the ancient items as everyday things that once weren't special at all. And an electrifying touch is the shape of an iPhone carved out of a Neolithic era jade axe, connecting the whole of human history.



Construction/ Destruction
plays with both architectural ideas and natural and political upheaval. This includes images that document the building of the Beijing Bird Nest Stadium for the 2008 Olympics, which Ai helped design. Coloured photos aim rude hand gestures at various buildings that represent power and culture. Two dragons snake along the wall, one made of backpacks dedicated to students who died in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake (their names are also stamped in frames on the wall) and one made of live vests representing refugees coming to Europe. Through deconstructs Qing dynasty temple (1644-1911 CE), which is rebuilt into something new. And Monet's panoramic Water Lilies is re-created with more than 600,000 Legos.



Ordinary Things recasts objects we deal with on a daily basis out of new materials, from a glass toilet roll and jade handcuffs to a crystal hangar and marble takeout box. Two marble armchairs are in front of the museum. And then there's the brain-bending 2000-year-old Han dynasty vase emblazoned with a Coca-Cola logo.

While each of these pieces is powerful on its own, the way they are interact makes this exhibition extraordinary. Ai Weiwei is forcing us to look at ourself in the context of our own history, to see what humans have always been and what we have made of the world. It's a show that alters how we see everything around us. The question is how this might change the way we interact with the world we live in right now.

For information, visit DESIGN MUSEUM >

5.Apr.23