Showing posts with label janelle monae. Show all posts
Showing posts with label janelle monae. Show all posts

Monday, 17 October 2022

LFF: The usual suspects

The 66th London Film Festival wrapped up on Sunday night with the European premiere of Glass Onion, the Knives Out sequel. Most of the cast was on-stage to introduce the film and have a post-screening Q&A along with filmmaker Rian Johnson. This was follows by the first LFF closing party I've ever been invited to (thanks, Netflix!) - a huge event themed around the movie. In the end, I saw 40 festival films, which isn't bad at all for not being press accredited. And I have several more screening over the coming weeks. Here's a final list of highlights, plus the award winners and my favourites from the festival...

Glass Onion
dir-scr Rian Johnson; with Daniel Craig, Janelle Monae 22/US ****
After the gleeful chaos of Knives Out, writer-director Rian Johnson returns with another fiendishly well-constructed whodunit for Daniel Craig's lively sleuth Benoit Blanc. This film isn't quite as camp, but it's even funnier as the plot crashes through its crazy twists and turns, subverting the mystery genre itself before giving in to its more enjoyable pleasures: make everyone a suspect before unpeeling a satisfyingly thumping conclusion.

The Inspection
dir-scr Elegance Bratton; with Jeremy Pope, Gabrielle Union 22/US ****.
There's striking artistry in the way filmmaker Elegance Bratton recounts an autobiographical narrative about a Black gay man in US Marines boot camp during the "don't ask, don't tell" years. Never preachy, the film has an earthy, intensely internalised tone that puts its complex characters into a razor-sharp perspective. And its knowing authenticity adds both deep emotion and a textured, vital comment on the nature of bigotry

My Policeman
dir Michael Grandage; with Harry Styles, Emma Corrin 22/UK ***
Because there's such a compelling story at the centre of this British drama, it is packed with strikingly emotional and provocative moments. But the filmmaking is oddly timid, thinning the material in a way that makes it feel soapy. Set in two intriguing periods, the premise raises important issues that deserve attention. So more nuance in the characters and storytelling could have provided an even more potent kick... FULL REVIEW >

Getting It Back: The Story of Cymande
dir Tim MacKenzie-Smith; with Patrick Patterson, Sam Kelly 22/UK ***.
Unsung and hugely influential, the British group Cymande is overdue for a documentary, and this beautifully assembled film is a superb overview. Shot and edited with the same soulful groove the band injected into the music industry, the movie features an entertaining collection of interviews, music and archival film. Director Tim MacKenzie-Smith clearly has a lot of affection for the band. And so do we after watching his film.

A W A R D S
  • Best Film: CORSAGE
  • Audience Award: BLUE BAG LIFE
  • Documentary: ALL THAT BREATHES
  • First Feature: 1976
  • Immersive: AS MINE EXACTLY
  • Short Film: I HAVE NO LEGS AND I MUST RUN
  • Audience Award - Short: DROP OUT
  • Surprise film: THE MENU

R I C H ’ S   B E S T   O F   F E S T
As I have time, full reviews of London Film Festival films will be linked to SHADOWS' LFF PAGE >

Wednesday, 23 September 2020

Critical Week: Mommie dearest

I had two press screenings this past week, as well as two open-air events: a screening and a stage play. So it felt like another step in the right direction, especially as it was accompanied by great weather. But then new restrictions came in, so here we are. The biggest film of the past week was a streaming release, Enola Holmes. Millie Bobby Brown stars as the younger sleuthing sister of Sherlock and Mycroft (Henry Cavill and Sam Clafin, having a lot of fun), with Helena Bonham Carter (above with Brown) as their mum. It's a rambunctious franchise-launcher. And then there was Janelle Monae in the freak-out drama Antebellum, which has too little energy to be a classic but shows plenty of invention and passion. 

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Little Girl • Monsoon
PERHAPS AVOID:
Ava

FULL REVIEWS >
More independent films included 23 Walks, a gentle late-in-life romance with the reliable Alison Steadman and Dave Johns; Becky, a violent thriller about a plucky teen taking on a malevolent Kevin James; Miss Juneteeth, an extremely low-key mother-daughter drama with Nicole Beharie; and Shortcut, a decent thriller about five teens trapped in tunnels with a slimy monster. There were also three French films: Francois Ozon's Summer of 85 is a complex and intimate teen drama. Two of Us is a provocative, involving romance between two 70-year-old women. And Little Girl is a seriously gorgeous doc about a mother fighting for her 8-year-old's right to be herself.

Coming up this next week are virtual screenings of the all-star remake of The Boys in the Band, Julianne Moore in The Glorias, Sally Hawkins in Eternal Beauty, Aya Cash in Scare Me, Harry Melling in Say Your Prayers, Aunjanue Ellis in Miss Virginia, the Danish drama A Perfectly Normal Family and the Turkish horror-thriller The Antenna.


Tuesday, 11 August 2020

Screen: August TV Roundup

As the lines blur between how we watch television and the movies, I continue to use series to break up my feature film watching. Here's what I watched over the past month or so...

The Umbrella Academy: series 2
Kicking off with that same slightly out-of-control tone, this show's second season has almost the exact same plot as the first one did. This time, the siblings have found themselves trapped in 1963 Dallas just before JFK's assassination. But the real problem is another impending apocalypse, and once again they need to learn how to work together and get over their daddy issues. The cast is terrific as ever (Robert Sheehan is still insufferable, Aidan Gallagher still annoying), and the swirling mess of their interrelationships are far more intriguing than the overarching story. But the early-60s setting offers some issue-based humour and drama. And the final two episodes are spectacular. (Netflix)

I May Destroy You 
Complex and challenging, this is a sometimes very bleak drama that plays out with a blast of fresh, authentic humour. It also occasionally feels almost too real to watch, and the scenes crash into each other to keep us on our toes. Actor-writer Michaela Coel is a serious talent, and she plays the central character Arabella so unapologetically that she's often difficult to like, even as we sympathise with her mental anguish after a sexual assault. It's a shattering performance with a lot to say about human connections. The script is sharp and astute, tackling the idea of consent with no holds barred, dropping in pungent references and mind-spinning twists. It's a rare show that refuses to put anything into an easy box. Essential. (BBC)

Snowpiercer
Set a decade before the events of Bong Joon Ho's now-iconic 2013 thriller, this series has a compelling throughline that holds the interest as it shifts from a murder mystery into a class-based revolution. Even so, the plot feels somewhat over-egged, trying a bit too hard to play up the allegorical layers of the premise, which makes the story feel far too dense and abrasive for its own good. But the show is boosted by a razor-sharp cast led by Daveed Diggs and Jennifer Connelly. It also looks terrific, with inventive sets and effects work. And each episode's twists and turns provide terrific wallops, adding layers to the social dynamics at work in the train, which of course are eerily recognisable. (Netflix)

Homecoming: series 2
Expanding on the first season, these seven tightly contained half-hour episodes cover just a few days in the lives of several characters, but they're seriously momentous. Janelle Monae, Hong Chau, Stephan James, Chris Cooper and the awesome Joan Cusack are excellent in complex roles as people coping with the fallout from experiments relating to an all-natural memory-erasing juice. The story starts, then circles back inventively before moving forward to a fiendish conclusion that has massive ramifications, leaving us with plenty to think about. It's finely written and directed, but it's the actors who make it a must-see. (Prime)

The Luminaries
Set in 19th century New Zealand, this show is far more demanding than it needs to be, swirling somewhat erratically between at least three timelines to recount a complex murder mystery. But paying attention pays off, as the characters develop unexpected depth along the way, leading to a fiendishly intelligent conclusion that solves the case with a wink and a nudge. It's also superbly well-played by a cast that includes Eve Hewson, Himesh Patel, Eva Green, Marton Czokas and Ewen Leslie. And in addition to the pitch-black drama and gloriously picturesque settings, the show is packed with pointed observations about imperialism that are still relevant today. (BBC)

Life Is Easy
From New Zealand, this short-form sitcom follows two best friends from school as they navigate young adulthood with a body-swapping twist. It's fast, sexy and enjoyably silly, even if the snappy pacing and multi-screen editing make it tricky to get a grip on it. But scenes are packed with knowing wit as best pals Jamie-Li and Curtis (Chye-Ling Huang and Cole Jenkins) discover themselves in each others' bodies during an eclipse. Since this is a straight woman and gay man, the show is able to explore all kinds of gender and sexuality issues through wacky comedy, including body image, homophobia, racial issues and various kinds of sexual harassment. Which adds a point to the nuttiness. (Revry)

Brave New World
This series drastically simplifies Aldous Huxley's iconic novel. For example, the gender roles, clothing and styling are far more 20th century than 25th, when it's set. (They're wildly misogynistic even by today's standards.) Basically, the writers have taken the concept and created a cool-looking series that pretends to be edgy and sexy, but isn't at all. The unambitious writing is moralistic and almost childish, sidelining any salient ideas about social engineering or control. At least the cast is excellent, led by Jessica Brown Findlay, Alden Ehrenreich and Harry Lloyd, with added Demi Moore. Each provides just enough nuance to their characters to keep us watching. But it's a missed opportunity. (Peacock)

Down to Earth
Zac Efron gallivants around the globe exploring important issues and trying out local food with vegan friend Darin Olien, who can't eat any of it. The main focus is on environmental themes, particularly sustainability, which is somewhat simplified for American audiences, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Efron has a nicely unpolished charm as a host, genuinely enthusiastic about what he's discovering, and he has terrific camaraderie with Olien, the crew and everyone they meet along the way. Each episode is gorgeously shot in a spectacular place that's packed with mind-bending ideas and positive approaches to today's world problems, if only someone will listen. (Netflix)

PLAYING CATCHUP

The Plot Against America
Philip Roth's prescient 2004 novel describes an alternate autobiographical history as Charles Lindbergh becomes US president in 1941 and makes an deal with Hitler not to interfere in the European war. Which effectively roots antisemitism into US society. The show is sharply produced, with a solid cast (led by Zoe Kazan, Morgan Spector, Winona Ryder and John Turturro) playing a Jewish Newark family facing this shift in culture. The script is insightful if a bit flabby, padding out each hour-long episode with scenes that don't always feed into the larger story. But it's packed with present-day parallels, and chilling observations about American culture and politics. (HBO)

I Know This Much Is True
Tackling an important topic, filmmaker Derek Cianfrance takes an indulgent storytelling approach with this dark drama, demanding a lot of the audience. It's not easy to watch, as each scene spirals into shouty chaos, often for no apparent reason, and the narrative heaps misery on the characters. That said, Mark Ruffalo is on peak form as twin brothers, one a hothead and the other with schizophrenia, neither of them remotely sympathetic. And the supporting cast is excellent (Rosie O'Donnell is particularly good). But there's barely a moment of peace, as Cianfrance shoots impatient outbursts in gritty close-up. Still, there are undercurrents of raw emotion, and the final episode makes it worth sticking with it. (HBO)

The Witcher
This fantasy series has a fiendishly clever structure that doesn't resolve itself until the final episodes, when the actual timeline comes into focus. It's made up of three connective story strands that have properly epic moments dotted through them. Like Game of Thrones with a sense of humour about itself, it's packed with riveting situations and unusually complex characters, anchored by Henry Cavill in the title role (a deeper performance than it seems on the surface), Anya Chalotra as a rogue mage and Freya Allan as a portentous orphan. It takes the misstep of staging a climactic battle at night, but the show is wonderfully entertaining. Bring on season 2. (Netflix)

UnReal: series 1-4
This show ran for four seasons, but I only just discovered it. It's the kind of premise I love, lifting the curtain on the backstage antics at a lusty reality dating show. The way these producers shamelessly manipulate contestants and each other is probably understated, so every single character is loathsome. The horrible things they do are gripping and blackly funny. Although the show digs into nasty melodrama rather than more entertaining cheesy antics, tipping a cynical nod at some big themes. It's also one of those American series that pretends to be sexy but is actually timid and prudish. (Prime)

NOW WATCHING: A Suitable Boy, Muppets Now, Insatiable (2), You (2), The New Legends of Monkey (2), Eastsiders (1-4).
LOOKING FORWARD: I Hate Suzie, Ratched, The Third Day, Away, The Boys (2).


Thursday, 14 November 2019

Critical Week: Great American hero

This week's screenings featured rather a lot of strong women, starting with Harriet, in which Cynthia Erivo plays the tough-minded slave rescuer Harriet Tubman. The film's a bit too reverent for its own good, but Erivo is terrific. Frozen II reunites sisters Elsa and Anna for an even more thrilling adventure that has huge action beats and some properly developed emotion too. Greta Gerwig offers a new adaptation of Little Women, with a strikingly good cast (Saoirse Ronan, Florence Pugh, Timothee Chalamet, Meryl Streep) and a refreshingly sharp tone, although the structure is a bit problematic. And then there was the haunting Appalachian drama Them That Follow, starring Alice Englert and Olivia Colman as members of a freaky snake-handling church.

Further afield, there was the offbeat British comedy-thriller Kill Ben Lyk, which amusingly combines a whodunit with a slasher horror romp. The dark British drama Into the Mirror is an involving, internalised exploration of identity and gender. From Hong Kong, Adonis is a fascinating and somewhat over-sexed exploration of fate and art. And Romeo and Juliet: Beyond Words creates a strikingly inventive new genre, moving the ballet into real-world sets to recount Shakespeare's timeless story with physicality and music rather than dialog. It's beautiful.

Coming up this next week, we have Chadwick Boseman in 21 Bridges, Aaron Eckhart in Line of Duty, Edward Norton in Motherless Brooklyn, Patrick Schwarzenegger in Daniel Isn't Real, and The Amazing Johnathan Documentary. I'm also chasing several year-end awards-worthy titles before voting deadlines, which are looming less than a month away now...