Awards season is in full swing now that the actors strike has ended, and I've had a couple of nice Q&A screenings this week (see
Insta for pics). Big year-end movies are beginning to appear too. Zac Efron, Harris Dickinson, Jeremy Allen White, Lily James and writer-director Sean Durkin came along to present
The Iron Claw, their astonishingly involving, powerfully moving true drama about a family of wrestlers. And Joaquin Phoenix, Vanessa Kirby and Ridley Scott were on the red carpet for the Leicester Square premiere of
Napoleon, a first-rate epic biopic about the French leader that looks properly amazing on the biggest screen possible.
Meanwhile, Colman Domingo is excellent in the biopic
Rustin, about the unsung Civil Rights organiser. Alexander Payne's
The Holdovers is a 1970s-style wintry delight starring Paul Giamatti and Da'Vine Joy Randolph. Julia Garner and Jessica Henwick are fierce in the harrowing Aussie Outback thriller
The Royal Hotel. Taika Waititi's true-life comedy
Next Goal Wins is a gently witty story about the world's worst football team, starring Michael Fassbender. Jesse Eisenberg turns into a meathead for
Manodrome, a very dark drama that doesn't always work but gets us thinking. From New Zealand, the drama
Punch is thoughtful and moving. Hayao Miyazaki's
The Boy and the Heron is even more spectacular than expected.
Godzilla Minus One is a beefy prequel set in post-war Japan. The doc
American Symphony finds surprising emotion while following Jon Batiste as he composes an orchestral piece. And the Powell and Pressburger classic
The Red Shoes is even more dazzling in a new restoration. I also caught up with this one...
Dance First
dir James Marsh; with Gabriel Byrne, Fionn O'Shea 23/UK ***
While director James Marsh adds considerable visual flourish to this imaginative biopic about Samuel Beckett, there's a nagging feeling that the story is incomplete, as if it is skipping across the surface of a darkly complex figure. So while the script and performances add nuance in the characters and relationships, everything feels eerily out of reach. Thankfully, superb performances as Beckett from Gabriel Byrne and especially Fionn O'Shea give the film layers of insight and context.
Films this coming week include Disney's new animated feature
Wish, Michael Mann's
Ferrari, Tilda Swinton in
The Eternal Daughter (a full 15 months after I missed the screening in Venice!), Mexican thriller
Lost in the Night, Australian drama
A Stitch in Time, deep-fake doc
Another Body and arthouse cinema doc
Scala!!!, plus
LoveTrain at Sadler's Wells and
Connor Burns: Vertigo at Soho Theatre.
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