Showing posts with label Sebastian Stan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sebastian Stan. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 May 2025

Critical Week: I'll drink to that

In this full week between two short ones, I've been working to get ahead of things before taking a break starting next week. So I've been both attending screenings and watching films at home on links. And there were a couple of big ones along the way. Blake Lively and Anna Kendrick are back for the frothy comedy-thriller Another Simple Favour, this time set in gorgeous locations around Capri. Both silly and violent, it's also very entertaining. Florence Pugh and Sebastian Stan lead a ragtag ensemble in Thunderbolts*, a more character-based Marvel film than usual, with a terrific linear narrative that outs the effects nonsense into emotional context.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Where Dragons Live • Thunderbolts*
Parthenope • Another Simple Favour
ALL REVIEWS >
Nicolas Cage gives one of his wonderfully bonkers performances in The Surfer as a guy who simply wants to return to surf the waves on the Australian beach where he grew up. Then things get outrageously messy. From Scotland, the 18th century samurai-Western mashup Tornado is set in the Highlands, slow and riveting, and superbly played by Koki, Tim Roth, Jack Lowden and more. From Italy, Paolo Sorrentino's Parthenope is yet another sumptuously gorgeous free-spirited epic odyssey, enjoyable and yet oddly out of reach. From Brazil, Karim Ainouz's bracingly colour-drenched dramatic thriller Motel Destino is bursting with passion and yearning. The Argentine drama Most People Die on Sundays has a much lighter tone than the title suggests, and it's a warm exploration of identity and connection. And the British doc Where Dragons Live is a fascinating look at a middle-class family sifting through its personal history.

This coming week, I'll have a few things to watch over the long weekend before heading off to visit my parents for a couple of weeks. Films include the musical drama Midnight in Phoenix, and there's also a stage production of Blood Wedding at the Omnibus in Clapham.

Tuesday, 31 December 2024

The Best of 2024: 44th Shadows Awards

As usual, here's a preview of my annual year-end lists - there is much, perhaps too much more on the site
. It's just too hard to draw that line at 10. I saw fewer films in 2024 than in the previous several years, a conscious effort to slow down a bit while still aiming to catch all of the serious contenders. As always, I love movies that catch me off guard and demonstrate the power of cinema...

FAVOURITE FILM
  1. Kneecap
    (Rich Peppiatt)
  2. The Wild Robot (Chris Sanders)
  3. A Complete Unknown (James Mangold)
  4. Emilia Pérez (Jacques Audiard)
  5. No Other Land (Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Hamdan Ballal, Rachel Szor)
  6. Challengers (Luca Guadagnino)
  7. La Chimera (Alice Rohrwacher)
  8. Anora (Sean Baker)
  9. The Brutalist (Brady Corbet)
  10. The Substance (Coralie Fargeat)

DIRECTOR
  1. Luca Guadagnino
    - Challengers, Queer
  2. RaMell Ross - Nickel Boys
  3. Coralie Fargeat - The Substance
  4. Alice Rohrwacher - La Chimera
  5. Brady Corbet - The Brutalist
  6. Sean Baker - Anora
  7. Payal Kapadia - All We Imagine as Light
  8. Halina Reijn - Babygirl
  9. Denis Villeneuve - Dune: Part Two
  10. Rose Glass - Love Lies Bleeding

SCREENWRITER
  1. Chris Sanders
    - The Wild Robot
  2. Payal Kapadia - All We Imagine as Light
  3. Megan Park - My Old Ass
  4. Alice Rohrwacher - La Chimera
  5. Rich Peppiatt - Kneecap
  6. Levan Akin - Crossing
  7. Brady Corbet, Mona Fastvold - The Brutalist
  8. James Mangold, Jay Cocks - A Complete Unknown
  9. Sean Baker - Anora
  10. Justin Kuritzkes - Challengers, Queer

ACTRESS
  1. Karla Sofía Gascón
    - Emilia Pérez
  2. Demi Moore -The Substance
  3. Mikey Madison - Anora
  4. Mzia Arabuli - Crossing
  5. Marianne Jean-Baptiste - Hard Truths
  6. Soheila Golestani - The Seed of the Sacred Fig
  7. Amy Adams - Nightbitch
  8. Florence Pugh - We Live in Time, Dune: Part Two
  9. Nykiya Adams - Bird
  10. Fernanda Torres - I'm Still Here

ACTOR
  1. Sebastian Stan
    - A Different Man, The Apprentice
  2. Colman Domingo - Sing Sing, Drive-Away Dolls
  3. Timothée Chalamet - A Complete Unknown, Dune: Part Two
  4. Payman Maadi - Opponent
  5. Jesse Plemons - Kinds of Kindness, Civil War
  6. Josh O'Connor - Challengers, La Chimera
  7. Adrien Brody - The Brutalist
  8. Nicholas Hoult - Nosferatu, Juror #2, The Order
  9. Andrew Garfield - We Live in Time
  10. Hugh Grant - Heretic, Paddington in Peru, Unfrosted

SUPPORTING ACTRESS
  1. Zoe Saldaña
    - Emilia Pérez
  2. Isabella Rossellini - Conclave, La Chimera, Problemista
  3. Lesley Manville - Queer
  4. Isabelle Huppert - The Crime Is Mine, A Traveller's Needs
  5. Margaret Qualley - Kinds of Kindness, The Substance, Drive-Away Dolls
  6. Monica Barbaro - A Complete Unknown
  7. Guslagie Malanda - The Beast
  8. Ilça Moreno Zego - Ama Gloria
  9. Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor - Nickel Boys
  10. Divya Prabha - All We Imagine as Light

SUPPORTING ACTOR
  1. Kieran Culkin
    - A Real Pain
  2. Edward Norton - A Complete Unknown
  3. John Magaro - September 5, Day of the Fight
  4. Marcel Otete Kabeya - Omen
  5. Jonathan Bailey - Wicked: Part I
  6. Guy Pearce - The Brutalist
  7. Scoot McNairy - Nightbitch, A Complete Unknown, Speak No Evil, The Line
  8. Clarence Maclin - Sing Sing
  9. Yura Borisov - Anora
  10. Fred Hechinger - Thelma, Nickel Boys, Gladiator II, Kraven the Hunter

WORST FILM
  1. Borderlands
    (Eli Roth)
  2. The Garfield Movie (Mark Dindal)
  3. Reagan (Sean McNamara)
  4. The Exorcism (Joshua John Miller)
  5. Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire (Adam Wingard)
  6. Strictly Confidential (Damian Hurley)
  7. The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim (Kenji Kamiyama)
  8. Bad Boys: Ride or Die (Adil El Arbi, Bilall Fallah)
  9. Cellar Door (Vaughn Stein)
  10. Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F (Mark Molloy)

TV SERIES
  1. Somebody Somewhere (Max)
  2. Hacks 3 (Max)
  3. The Bear 3 (FX)
  4. Shogun (Hulu)
  5. The Sympathizer (Max)
  6. Fargo 5 (FX)
  7. Disclaimer (Apple)
  8. Jerrod Carmichael Reality Show (Max)
  9. Ripley (Netflix)
  10. Only Murders in the Building 4 (Hulu)

SINGLES
  1. APT. - Rosé & Bruno Mars
  2. Lose Control - Teddy Swims
  3. Beautiful Things - Benson Boone
  4. A Bar Sony (Tipsy) - Shaboozey
  5. Good Luck, Babe! - Chappell Roan
  6. Kiss the Sky - Maren Morris
  7. Illusion - Dua Lipa
  8. Too Sweet - Hozier
  9. Birds of a Feather - Billie Eilish
  10. Espresso - Sabrina Carpenter

Friday, 18 October 2024

Critical Week: Backstage glamour

The 68th London Film Festival continues into this weekend with a range of terrific movies. I'm taking it easy this year, just seeing some of the top titles during these days, often including Q&As and receptions where we can chat with the filmmakers and actors. So it's been a lot of fun (see my Insta for pics!), and there's a bit more to come this weekend. One of the bigger titles was Jason Reitman's Saturday Night, a rollercoaster ride of a film recounting a tense 90 minutes before the first SNL show went live in October 1975. The cast is excellent, and it's skilfully written, shot and edited to be both funny and moving, although perhaps only for fans. It was also the surprise film at LFF this week.

Also this week, I finally caught up with the animated adventure The Wild Robot, which I saw preview footage from in June when I hung out with the creative team at Annecy Animation Film Fest. So expectations were very high, and the film more than lived up to them. It's one of the most gorgeously animated movies I've ever seen, and the story has unusual depth and textures.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Anora • The Wild Robot
The Crime Is Mine
The Summer With Carmen
 In Restless Dreams
ALL REVIEWS >
There were lots of good festival movies this week. Amy Adams goes for broke in Nightbitch, a seriously clever film that's deliberately uncomfortable. Sebastian Stan and Jeremy Strong are astonishing as Donald Trump and Roy Cohn in The Apprentice, a biopic that never takes a cheap shot but leaves us chilled. Thomasin McKenzie shines in Joy, a rather typical lively true British drama, this time about the development of IVF. Jesse Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin spark amazing chemistry as cousins in A Real Pain, a smart road movie set in Poland. The Indian comedy Superboys of Malegaon provides a lot of fun as a group of guys create a mini-film industry in their town. 

Outside LFF, there was the always watchable Alex Wolff in rather over-familiar fraternity drama The Line. And there were two docs: Mark Cousins' fascinating collage-style doc A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things, about artist Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, and the lively Studio One Forever, exploring the iconic Los Angeles nightclub.

Things are clearly getting back to normal for me, as I have a final flurry of LFF films this weekend: Elizabeth Banks' Skincare, the animated Memoir of a Snail, Walter Salles' I'm Still Here, Mati Diop's Dahomey, Indian drama All We Imagine as Light and more. Then next week it's Tom Hardy in Venom: The Last Dance, Eddie Redmayne in The Day of the Jackal and Jordana Brewster in Cellar Door.


Thursday, 16 February 2023

Critical Week: A walk in the park

London's cinema community is gearing up for this Sunday's British Academy Film Awards, which will be hosted by Richard E Grant at the Royal Festival Hall with all the stars in attendance. And this year the Baftas will air some of the awards live (but only a handful). I'll watch it at home, but I'm attending a few parties over the weekend, which should be fun ... and rather glamorous. More about all that on Monday, after the dust settles.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
The Inspection • Framing Agnes
Marcel the Shell With Shoes On
PERHAPS AVOID:
Devil's Peak
ALL REVIEWS >
Meanwhile, we're starting to see movies released early in the year, far from awards consideration. Sharper is a thriller about con artists, so it's no surprise that it's packed with twists, turns and revelations. All of that is fun, even if it's a bit predictable, but it helps that the film stars Julianne Moore, Sebastian Stan and (above) Briana Middleton and Justice Smith. Also sticking to the formula is Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, the latest slice of Marvel mayhem. The action largely swamps Paul Rudd's superb sense of humour, but the film does have its moments, and Jonathan Majors is seriously good as the villainous Kang. And then there's Devil's Peak, a backwoods thriller that sinks completely under the weight of its cliches, even as strong actors like Billy Bob Thornton and Robin Wright do what they can.

A little further afield, 88 is a political thriller with a nicely complex plot, although the dialog is overstuffed with lectures. From Italy, Nostalgia is an involving drama about a man trying to return home even as his past warns him to leave. From Spain, 8 Years artfully mixes colourful energy with thoughtful emotion as a man ponders the good and bad in a broken relationship. Chase Joynt's astonishingly inventive doc Framing Agnes works on many levels to explore trans experiences and social justice. And Gaspar Noe has rearranged his shocking 2002 classic as Irreversible: Straight Cut, which becomes something very different chronologically.

In addition to British Academy Film Awards events this weekend, this coming week I'll see the nutty thriller Cocaine Bear, Michael Shannon in A Little White Lie, Kore-eda's drama Broker, the Argentine drama Wandering Heart and the climate activism thriller How to Blow Up a Pipeline.

Thursday, 6 January 2022

Critical Week: Killer heels

HAPPY NEW YEAR! Amid growing covid-related issues in the UK, London-based critics have had our first press screening of 2022: a masked-up full house enjoying pre-film cocktails, popcorn and photo ops before watching the globe-hopping action movie The 355 on a huge Leicester Square screen. The movie has its moments, thanks to the far above-average cast (above are Penelope Cruz, Jessica Chastain, Lupita Nyong'o and Diane Kruger), although the lazy script and choppy-shaky action scenes let it down rather badly.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
A Hero • Writing With Fire
Licorice Pizza • Ailey
Munich: The Edge of War 
ALL REVIEWS >
Other films seen this week were an eclectic bunch. Minyan is a thoughtful, insightful drama set in 1980s Brooklyn as a teen struggles with the tension between his tight Russian-Jewish family and his newfound homosexuality. From Kosovo, Hive is a superbly understated true story of a woman taking on her sexist society. Mads Mikkelsen is terrific as a burly soldier in Riders of Justice, an unusually smart and engaging Danish variation on the Taken vengeance formula. Quentin Dupieux is back with another endearingly bonkers adventure, Mandibles, about two chuckleheads who find a gigantic housefly. And from Spain, More the Merrier is a multi-strand comedy set around a club for swingers. Sometimes very sexy, the film struggles to escape from the usual prudish attitudes.

This coming week I'll finally catching up with Ben Affleck in The Tender Bar, Shawn Ashmore in Free Fall, the Swiss drama La Mif, and the documentary Taming the Garden.


Tuesday, 1 June 2021

Screen: June TV roundup

There's been rather a lot to watch lately on episodic television, handily filling in some free time between watching movies. These are the shows I've followed over the last month or so, and another handful of series are coming to a close in the next few weeks. Basically, there's always something to watch...

Mare of Easttown
Skilfully written by Brad Ingelsby and directed by Craig Zobel, this murder mystery is much more about its small-town Pennsylvania community than the convolutions of the murder/kidnapping case(s). At the centre, Kate Winslet delivers another textured powerhouse performance as a local police detective whose life seems is not so quietly unravelling. She's absolutely riveting: engaging, tenacious, compelling and, as an actor, generously allowing ace costars like Jean Smart, Evan Peters, Angourie Rice and Guy Pearce to steal their scenes. Best of all is that it doesn't matter whodunit: this is a story about resilience, connection and healing. It's rare to see a TV show produced at this level of quality across the board; this is essential viewing. (Sky)

Hacks
The fantastic Jean Smart continues to subvert every genre on television, triumphing in a range of dramatic roles (see Watchmen and Mare of Easttown). And now she reminds us that she's a queen of comedy too with a storming, scene-chomping role as a veteran Joan Rivers-style Las Vegas stand-up. She's so good that you hardly notice that the cast around her are experts as well. Co-lead Hannah Einbinder is solid in an oddly thankless role, but others are more likeable, most notably Carl Clemons-Hopkins. Meanwhile, Smart continually surprises us with her on-point delivery of devastating punchlines. And the writers keep quite a lot going on in this show, with emotional undercurrents and sharp commentary about show business. (HBO)


Halston
Ewan McGregor is terrific in this glossy series about the iconic American designer who rose to fame in the 1970s and then vanished in the 1980s. It's beautifully produced, creating intriguing characters with seriously spiky interaction. And it certainly never shies away from the darker angles of the story, including Halston's turbulent relationships, rampant drug use and a stubborn streak that ultimately cost him the right to use his name. It's perhaps a bit slick and flashy, focussing on the glamorous highs rather than the emotional lows, and rushing through his final years. But there are a few grittier sequences, from outrageous arguments to wrenching grief, that make it resonate. (Netflix)


The Falcon and the Winter Soldier
A lot more like standard Marvel fare than WandaVision, this series features the usual witty banter, too-dense plotting and outrageously over-produced action. I was tempted by stars Anthony Mackie, Sebastian Stan and especially Wyatt Russell, playing against type as the new Captain America. The actors kept me watching to the end, even when the writing had me rolling my eyes with frustration. There are some intriguing plot elements, but everything is so painfully obvious, quick to violence and ludicrously momentous that it might have worked better as a spoof. And even the adjusted title at the end is wrong: clearly it should be Captain America and the White Wolf. Still, fans will eat it up. (Disney)


Girls5eva
From the makers of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, this comedy has the same absurd, lightning-fast sense of humour as it follows the four surviving members of a girl band who are making a comeback attempt at 40. This quartet is superbly written and played (by Sara Bareilles, Busy Philipps, Renee Elise Goldsberry and Paula Pell), with a constant stream of riotous gags. And big-name cameos adds witty touches, including producer Tina Fey as Dolly Parton. Thankfully, the silliness is grounded in knowingly funny observations on everything from the vicious music industry to the perils of ageing, with pointed nods to themes relating to gender and sexuality. (Peacock)


Jupiter's Legacy
Based on a comic by Mark Millar (Kick-Ass/Kingsman), this darkly shaded superhero series has similarities with The Boys, but isn't quite as deliberately nasty. The central conflict is fascinating, pitting traditional rule-based morality against today's more reactionary ethics. Although the writers never really take this anywhere. And while the cast is strong across the board, no one emerges as a vivid central figure to rally around. The most interesting people (like Andrew Horton's loyal son Brandon) are oddly sidelined in favour of less nuanced characters (like Josh Duhamel's self-righteous patriarch). More adventurous writing might make this better in seasons to come. (Netflix)


Frank of Ireland 
Almost infuriatingly bonkers, this Dublin comedy starring Gleeson brothers Brian and Domhnall is far too cartoonish to properly engage with. But it's very funny as these chucklehead buddies embark on a series of crazy antics centring on family, girls and their community. Nothing much grabs hold as all of the characters are noisy, over-the-top nutcases, led by the painfully dim and self-involved Frank (Brian) and his even dopier best pal Doofus (Domhnall). Frank's mother Mary (Pom Boyd) is just as ridiculously obtuse, while the only vaguely sensible person is Aine (Greene), as she's desperately trying to escape Frank's orbit. You would too. (C4)


Invincible
With a Scooby-Doo tone and a premise similar to The Boys, this adult-aimed animated series is funny, violent and exhilarating. The animation is generic but eye-catching, while the voice cast is extraordinary, featuring the powerhouse likes of Steven Yeun, JK Simmons, Sandra Oh, Mahershala Ali, Zachary Quinto, Andrew Rannells and Mark Hamill, for starters. They make even the smaller side characters burst with personality. The story of father-and-son superheroes has plenty of wrinkles and textures to it, bringing out much bigger themes about the nature of humanity through recognisable relationship issues. And the writers have room to get much more daring (more queerness, less blood) in future seasons. (Netflix)


Why Are You Like This
This politically incorrect comedy from Melbourne takes a few episodes to find its footing, and then it's over (there are only six half-hour instalments). The three self-absorbed 20-somethings at the centre are very difficult to like at first, but actors Naomi Higgins, Olivia Junkeer and Wil King find ways to deepen them in a series of rather pathetic attempts to get on with their lives. The main problem is that they blame everyone and everything for their own problems, causing misery everywhere they go. But their antics are also rather endearing, and the themes deepen over the course of this season. (Netflix)


Paradise City 
A bit of a mess, this cheesily written soap set in the hard-rock music industry has a wide array of characters, many of whom are superfluous, and lots of arch storytelling touches, including supernatural wackiness with camp angel and demon figures. More problematic is a strong undercurrent of misogyny in both the imagery and male-centred plot points (even when a woman is involved, it's all about the man). There isn't an unsubtle moment on the screen, but it's still watchable simply because of the intriguing premise and full-on approach. Also, the rock-n-roll vibe is strong, and the lead actors are solid even when their characters are strangely inconsistent. (Prime)


BACK FOR MORE


This Time: series 2
Alan Partridge is back for another hilarious season of painfully well-observed awkwardness. Steve Coogan plays this role so effortlessly (and so unapologetically) that he has become a part of Britain's national culture over three decades. Coogan's understanding of this character is so deep that it provides laughs at every level, from big slapstick silliness to riotously witty details (watch his field reports carefully). It's almost shocking that Alan can still be so enjoyably squirm-inducing after all these years. And this particular incarnation of him also offers a wonderfully fresh pastiche of glib TV news-chat shows. (BBC)


Everything's Gonna Be Okay: series 2 
Josh Thomas is a talented guy, but his character in this sitcom (a young guy who has become guardian of his teen sisters) is so insufferable that he's difficult to believe, especially in the self-involved way he mistreats his ridiculously gorgeous and nice boyfriend (Adam Faison). And he's only able to see problems faced by his sisters (Maeve Press and Kayla Cromer) as part of his own story. The offbeat approach makes the show watchable, especially with characters who refuse to fit into the usual boxes. But it's very difficult to engage with Nicholas on any level. (Freeform) 


The Neighbor: series 2 [El Vecino]
The goofy residents of a Madrid apartment block are back, as Javier (Quim Gutierrez) now has to share his superpowers with ex-girlfriend Lola (Clara Lago). There's also a global threat from some sort of reptilian race, and a galactic civil servant (Javier Botet) struggling to make sense of what's happening amongst these idiots. These eight brisk episodes are very easy to watch, eliciting a lot of smiles and a few solid laughs as they skewer corrupt politicians and messy relationships. But there isn't much else to it, and the broadened cast leaves the central characters feeling thinner than before. But the cliffhanger finale promises more to come. (Netflix)


Lucifer: series 5b
This nutty season wraps up with a few oddly tame episodes that are too plot-heavy to allow us to enjoy the gleefully ridiculous antics of the sexy characters. Even the murder-of-the-week storylines are part of a bigger narrative arc that pushes everyone toward a major confrontation, leaving Lucifer (the increasingly over-the-top Tom Ellis) in a whole new place. For a show that's basically just mindless fun, these episodes feel rushed and serious, and they also feature even more of this series' trademark fragmented conversations in which characters neither listen nor say what they truly think. Although any show that adds Dennis Haysbert to its cast (as God no less) is worth a look. (Netflix)


IT'S ALL OVER


Younger: series 7
This dopey sitcom (in which the situation never provided much comedy) is finally wrapping up the scrambled romantic lives of its characters. It's become increasingly saccharine season by season, while the actors look like they've been severely nipped and tucked, except star Sutton Foster, who's now styled as a 50-year-old for some reason (after pretending to be in her 20s for the years). But all of the actors are hugely watchable, including Hilary Duff, Nico Tortorella, Debi Mazer and the great Miriam Shor, who sadly only occasionally skypes in this season. So I've decided to stick it out, even though the writers are clearly determined to offer the wrong happy ending. (MTV)


Shameless: series 11 
This epic comedy-drama wrapped up its run with 12 momentous episodes, as the extended Gallagher family finally faces up to the gentrifying forces in South Chicago, and Frank (the awesome William H Macy) begins to suffer alcohol-induced dementia. It's a clever way to bring things to a close, playing on the characters' quirks to push them in new directions and force some big decisions. And while the show's wilder impulses have been tamed somewhat over the years, each of these colourful characters gets to go out with a bang. And some well-earned emotion too. (Showtime)


CATCHING UP


The Queen's Gambit 
I put off watching this because, well, chess and drugs. But when I had a bit of time, I quickly realised why the whole world was caught up in the series. It's bracingly well-written and beautifully directed with some seriously clever flourishes. And it features yet another stellar performance from Anya Taylor-Joy, plus a terrific cast of fellow Brits. I particularly loved the clever way chess comes to life on-screen, without ever getting bogged down in the details. And the personal odyssey Beth takes through the narrative arc is properly epic, and very moving too. (Netflix)


I GIVE UP


Dad Stop Embarrassing Me • About 10 minutes into the first episode it's clear that this is a turkey slathered with inane dialog and awkwardly insulting slapstick. The cast (led by Jamie Foxx) is promising, but it feels like like one of those painfully unfunny SNL sketches that just won't end. (Netflix)

Cinema Toast • This anthology series starts with a great idea: re-editing public domain film footage with a new soundtrack to tell different stories. Each episode takes nuttiness to the extreme in a way that's experimental rather than entertaining. Far too indulgent. (Showtime)

~~~~~~~ ~~ ~~~ ~~~~
NOW WATCHING: The Underground Railroad, The Mosquito Coast, The Upshaws, Star Wars: The Bad Batch, Special (2), Pose (3), The Handmaid's Tale (4), Younger (7).

LOOKING FORWARD: Blindspotting, Physical, Kevin Can F**k Himself, Dave (2), Lupin (2), Love Victor (2), The Kominsky Method (3), Master of None (3), Elite (5).


Wednesday, 28 April 2021

Critical Week: On a mission

Well, the 93rd Oscars managed to completely reinvent their ceremony for the pandemic era, although the severely simplified structure left it feeling a bit awkward. A host would have helped provide some humour, context and connectivity. The one comedy bit didn't work at all (aside from Glenn Close's apparently not-so-impromptu jig), and the order shuffle at the end left it ending on a dry note. But the winners were all hugely deserving, and it was great so see people celebrating in one place together.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Limbo • About Endlessness • Laddie
The County • Truman & Tennessee
Heavy Trip • The Outside Story
PERHAPS AVOID:
Without Remorse
ALL REVIEWS >
Back to the movies, the big movie this week was Without Remorse, Michael B Jordan's take on the Tom Clancy franchise-launcher. Jordan delivers the goods, but the film is rather tough going. More intriguing is the sci-fi drama Stowaway, with its low-key approach and philosophical themes, plus a terrific four person cast led by Toni Collette and Anna Kendrick. Much bigger still, Mortal Kombat is a big-scale battle epic that holds the interest in a guilty pleasure way, despite the simplistic plot.

A bit higher brow, Benedict Cumberbatch stars in the Cold War biopic The Courier, a tautly written, directed and acted thriller about a normal guy pulled into the spy game. Bob Odenkirk is solid in the derivative but engaging action thriller Nobody. Sebastian Stan and Denise Gough really go for it in the uneven Americans-in-Greece romance Monday. China's maestro Zhang Yimou brings his stunning visual approach to the riveting 1930s spy thriller Cliff Walkers. Veteran filmmaker Agnieszka Holland finds some superb textures in the fact-based 1950s Czech drama Charlatan. The dryly funny and enormously violent Dutch thriller The Columnist has its moments. And the stylish doc Some Kind of Heaven explores the lives of residents in America's most enormous retirement community, basically Disney World for pensioners. Hint: it isn't heaven for everyone.

Films to watch this coming week include the animated adventure The Mitchells vs the Machines, the marital drama The Killing of Two Lovers, the house party comedy The Get Together, the moviemaking action comedy In Action and the horror comedy Fried Barry.


Wednesday, 16 September 2020

Critical Week: Take a stand

The world seems to be falling further apart by the day, with insane chaos within the governments of both the UK and the US (which has the added nightmare of an imminent election). So it's been nice to have a tiny bit of normality return with more press screenings, including the international premiere of The Eight Hundred, China's biggest blockbuster ever, which looks awesome on the Imax screen. It's a thrilling battle epic on a jaw-dropping scale. The other big movie this week was The Devil All the Time, an epic backwoods morality tale featuring formidable performances from Tom Holland, Robert Pattinson and Riley Keough.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK
Spiral • Rocks • I Used to Go Here 
For They Know Not What They Do

FULL REVIEWS >>
Other films this week included the collection of to-camera monologs in Coastal Elites, which is a bit preachy for its own good; David Cross on an intrepid and rather charmingly hapless true-life wilderness adventure in The Dark Divide; Ciaran Hinds traversing France in the quirky and almost silent comical road movie The Man in the Hat; and the stylish and rather nutty The Wall of Mexico, a nicely blurred satire about culture and ethnicity.

This coming week's films include Millie Bobbie Brown in Enola Holmes, Kevin James goes villainous in Becky, Alison Steadman in 23 Walks, Nicole Beharie in Miss Juneteenth, Francois Ozon's Summer of 85, the teen adventure Shortcut, the romantic drama Two of Us and two documentaries: Little Girl and The Painter and the Thief. I also have my first theatre press night - review coming soon.


Thursday, 4 June 2020

Critical Week: Hearing voices

Another week of lockdown, another unusual collection of movies released into the streaming networks. At least the weather has been glorious, tempting me outside in between the films. The best thing I've seen in several weeks, The Vast of Night is a low-budget sci-fi thriller by first-time filmmaker Andrew Patterson that skilfully nods to 1950s classics while echoing present day issues.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Guest of Honour
The Vast of Night • You Don't Nomi
The Uncertain Kingdom
PERHAPS AVOID:
A Clear Shot • The Accompanist
The Dinner Party
The highest profile film was The High Note, starring Dakota Johnson, Tracee Ellis Ross and Kelvin Harrison in an enjoyable but trite romantic comedy-drama set in the music world. The Last Full Measure has a powerhouse cast and an inspiring story, but is belittled by its over-worthy tone. David Thewlis is superb in Guest of Honour, Atom Egoyan's perceptive drama about identity and connection. And Willem Dafoe gives a full-bodied performance in Tommaso, Abel Ferrara's Rome-set dark drama about a filmmaker who's losing the plot.

Steven Berkoff puts his one-man-show version of Edgar Allan Poe's Tell Tale Heart on the screen as a moody freak-out. Three micro-budget indies are somewhat underpowered: The Departure is a sharp but abrasive dating drama, The Dinner Party is a bonkers cultish horror romp, The Accompanist is a quirky overserious romantic drama. And for Pride month, HomoSayWhat is a fascinating, provocative doc about the origins of societal homophobia.

Coming up this next week, there's another offbeat collection of movies, including the British comedy Dating Amber, the futuristic thriller The Last Days of American Crime, the award-winning Chilean drama The Prince, the Italian comedy Citizens of the World and the football doc The Australian Dream.