Showing posts with label jason sudeikis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jason sudeikis. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 June 2023

Screen: June TV Roundup

This is the time of year when we vote in TV awards, and I'm still making my own shortlists before submitting my nominations for the Dorian Awards. This has meant catching up with various shows, and there will be more to watch once the nominations are announced. But I always enjoy watching an episode or two between movies. And the past two months have featured several terrific new shows, a lot of returning series and three high-profile final seasons...

A L L   T H I N G S   M U S T   E N D

Ted Lasso: series 3 
This season of the almost painfully loveable show feels rather darker and more intense than usual, sending Ted and his cohorts on a rollercoaster journey. Few shows have stronger story arcs for each of their central characters, and several of these episodes are simply sublime (the Amsterdam one is a masterpiece). While some side roles feel a bit cursory, at least they allow the scripts to touch on big themes without too much preaching. And the way Jason Sudeikis, Hannah Waddingham, Brett Goldstein and the whole ensemble brought their characters full-circle was lovely to watch. (Apple)

Succession:
series 4  
Jesse Armstrong's riotously hard-edged series reaches its operatic climax with the long-promised death of imperious patriarch Logan Roy (Brian Cox), which escalates the scramble for, yes, succession. These episodes have densely entangled grief with desperate power-grabbing on so many levels that it's almost overwhelming to watch. Kieran Culkin, Sarah Snook and Matthew Macfadyen are the most powerful players of this season, with staggeringly layered characters who are painful to watch as they squirm. But it's also impossible to look away. The interrelationships are brilliantly played. (HBO)

The Marvelous Mrs Maisel: series 5
More rapid-fire than ever, this furiously busy comedy feels more focussed in on Midge (Rachel Brosnahan) for this final season, thankfully leaving plotlines for the side characters to gurgle in the margins. And Midge is funnier than ever. Along with the revelatory flash-forwards, this season has a remarkable sense of momentum, catching the passage of time in scenes that sometimes get a bit too goofy. Each character takes his or her own journey along the way, with particularly lovely textures between Midge and Susie (Alex Borstein), a relationship that becomes the core through-line for the entire series. (Amazon)

T H E Y ’ R E   B A C K

Dave: series 3 
Somehow still under the radar, this show gets deeper and more powerful with each season, intelligently exploring meaning in life through the lens of offbeat musician Dave Burd. These shows hinge on his search for true love, and the scripts tackle enormous issues with insight, creating an unflinching discussion that grapples with everything from sex to religion. Burd's performance feels effortless, but is packed with nuance. There's a delightful range of A-list guest stars riffing on their own experiences with celebrity. And Burd's witty songs become more knowingly pointed with each episode. (FX)

Schmigadoon: series 2
To energise to their childless marriage, Josh and Melissa (Keegan-Michael Key and Cecily Strong) try to return to the magical musical land, but instead end up in Schmicago, which draws inspiration from gloomier 1960s and 1970s musicals. The returning cast includes Kristen Chenoweth, Alan Cumming, Ariana DeBose and Aaron Tveit in new roles, plus the fabulous Titus Burgess as the narrator. While the producers seriously miss a trick by using a Patti LuPone impersonator instead of the real thing, these six episodes again feature wonderful pastiche Broadway numbers and a thin but likeable storyline. (Apple)

Shadow and Bone: series 2
The fantasy premise put me off initially, but friends encouraged me to catch up for the second season, and I'm glad I did. Less dense than Game of Thrones but equally well-realised, this show is populated by sparky rogue characters who are easy to identify with. They're also played with humour and quirky energy by a largely unknown cast. The plotlines are the usual mix of action chaos, sinister machinations and romantic yearning, but they're also surprisingly complex for a show like this. And the production design is also first-rate, with above-average effects. Looking forward to more. (Netflix)

S O M E T H I N G   N E W

Jury Duty
This exhilaratingly clever reality series is a jaw-dropping experiment on human nature, as one normal guy (Ronald Gladden) is surrounded by actors in a fake courtroom trial, constantly pushed into moral dilemmas to see if he will emerge as a hero. It's a stroke of genius to have James Marsden play a riotously heightened version of himself. The cast and crew are terrific at improvising around Gladden, the only person who doesn't know that there's a script. Rather a lot of footage has been edited into eight brisk, entertaining episodes. And what it reveals makes it a must-see. (Prime)

Queen Charlotte:
A Bridgerton Story
Shamelessly entertaining, this lavishly produced spin-off takes real elements from the life of Charlotte and George III and adds plenty of fiction. The cast is excellent at bridging the gap between the two, cleverly blending present-day sensibilities in a 18th century setting, plus flash-forwards to Bridgerton's Lady Whistledown era. Most intriguing is how Shonda Rhimes weaves a gentle exploration of mental illness into the plot, taking a new look at King George's legendary "madness". This adds some proper emotional resonance, as well as some challenging themes amid the watchable romance. (Netflix)

Bupkis 
While mixing in some thinly veiled fiction, Pete Davidson dramatises his own life in this sometimes astonishingly honest comedy-drama. With Edie Falco as his mother and Joe Pesci as his grandfather, plus a continual parade of A-list costars, everything here feels exaggerated for comical but pointed effect. But there's also the sense that some things have been toned down, perhaps for legal reasons. It's a superbly assembled show, eager to unsettle the audience in all kinds of provocative ways. And Davidson's performance is almost startlingly raw, offering an unusually clear-eyed view of celebrity. (Peacock)

White House Plumbers 
Based on the astonishing true story behind the Watergate break-in, pretty much everything in this series feels stranger than fiction. Events are recounted with a freewheeling slapstick sensibility, as swaggering ex-CIA operative Howard Hunt (Woody Harrelson) teams up with trigger-happy ex-FBI nutcase Gordon Liddy (Justin Theroux) to orchestrate a series of "dirty tricks" to guarantee Richard Nixon's re-election in 1972. The things they do are shocking, revealing deep-seated bigotries and a callous disregard for democracy. Playing this for laughs sometimes feels horrific, but it's hugely entertaining. (HBO)

Mrs Davis 
A bonkers premise and wildly ridiculous visual panache keeps this action-comedy enjoyably unpredictable. It centres around nun Simone (Betty Gilpin), who is avoiding contact with Mrs Davis, the pervasive artificial intelligence that has achieved world peace. And now Mrs Davis wants Simone to take her down by, well, finding and destroying the Holy Grail. It's utterly nuts, but has an eerie resonance in the characters' quirky spiritual yearnings. Performances from the entire ensemble are terrific, including Jake McDorman, Elizabeth Marvel, Ben Chaplin and the great Margot Martindale. (Peacock)

The Big Door Prize 
For some reason, the title of this comedy-drama never reveals itself. This is a warmly engaging comedy about a small town populated by eccentrics who are thrown off balance by an arcade game that presents you with your true life purpose. The solid ensemble cast, led by Chris O'Dowd, creates charmingly offbeat characters who are amusingly entangled with each other. And the way everyone begins to change is fascinating, because the machine's pronouncements are cleverly enigmatic. But the show builds the mystery without answering anything in 10 episodes, leaving it hanging for a potential season 2. (Apple)

Citadel 
Clearly designed to launch a franchise, this globe-hopping adventure is mindless fun that patches together spy movie elements with little connective logic. Richard Madden, Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Stanley Tucci and Lesley Manville are on peak form in a tale of amnesia, double-crossing, world-domination, and so forth. It's flatly ridiculous but plays out with a straight face, so you either have to give up or go with it. International locations add textures, and seductive actors make it worth the ride, most notably Tucci and Manville in rare intense roles, plus the dashing Madden auditioning for Bond. (Amazon)

GUILTY PLEASURES: Queer Eye, Britain's Got Talent, Selling Sunset, RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars, I Kissed a Boy.

NOW WATCHING: Fubar, The Other Two (3), I Think You Should Leave (3), Never Have I Ever (4).

COMING SOON: The Crowded Room, Based on a True Story, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (2), And Just Like That (2), The Bear (2), Black Mirror (6).

Previous roundup: APRIL 2023 >

Tuesday, 21 December 2021

Screen: December TV Roundup

There's been a lot on television to distract me from work over the past few months, and as always I particularly enjoy mindless fun to reset my brain in between serious movies. Obviously, I can't watch everything, and I do tend to avoid gritty police/hospital dramas in lieu of shows that keep me smiling. Although occasionally I like to be challenged on the small screen, I usually leave that for the big one...

Only Murders in the Building
Smart and witty, this comedy-mystery series reteams dynamic duo Steve Martin and Martin Short, plus Selena Gomez, as murder podcast obsessed neighbours who team up for some amateur sleuthing when someone is killed in their apartment block. While the pacing is quaint and silly, there are deranged twists galore. Martin and Gomez play their characters with a straight face, leaving Short to expertly steal every scene. While starry guests (Nathan Lane, Jane Lynch, Amy Ryan, Sting) provide plenty of pizzazz as the mystery unfolds. And the final moments are either a massive cliffhanger or a teaser for the second season. (Hulu)

Nine Perfect Strangers

Timing wasn't kind to this series, which came out too close to The White Lotus, a more astute, grounded drama set in a resort. But this show is worth a look, with its adept cast including Nicole Kidman, Melissa McCarthy, Michael Shannon, Manny Jacinto. It's set at a wellness retreat with guests who have been mysteriously curated by the owner (Kidman), who experiments with microdosing acid to push psychological buttons. It's slightly over-constructed, which makes things far less surprising than they should be, but the general nuttiness of the story holds the interest, as the actors bring offbeat layers to each character. (Prime)


Acapulco

Drawing on the nostalgic comedy traditions of shows like The Wonder Years or Young Rock, this lively comedy-drama features Eugenio Derbez reminiscing about his time as a chirpy teen (Enrique Arrizon) working in a fancy resort in the Mexican seaside town. Each of his adventures has a little moral message, which feels a bit pushy, as does the way the script somewhat simplistically depicts rich people exploiting locals who in turn are conning them. But the show's flamingo-coloured approach is thoroughly charming, and the cast is fresh and likeable, hinting at all kinds of secrets and revelations that are still to come. The bilingual approach is also superb. (Apple)


The Big Leap

A lively drama set around a dance-based reality show, this series features terrific characters in a tangled mess of over-egged soap-style storylines as a group of wannabe dancers try to stage a new production of Swan Lake. It's concocted and safe, including the romances, dark dramas and sassy challenges involving both the dancers and the crew members. But the actors are solid, anchored by Scott Foley as the semi-ruthless show-runner. Each of the interlinked plot threads is deeply silly, the kind of mindless nonsense that's perfect for escapist television, which the script knowingly acknowledges. And the dancing is strikingly good, especially Raymond Cham Jr's spinning, popping Justin. (Fox) 


Invasion

Yet another series that kicks off with a bunch of random, disconnected scenes, characters who mean nothing to the audience and forced suspense based only on the musical score. It looks great, and the excellent international cast manages to draw out some interest in a wide range of people facing a mysterious worldwide alien invasion. But the lazy, indulgent writing and directing make no attempt to pull a viewer in, allowing the story to unfold in out-of-sequence flashbacks that are both repetitive and inadequate. Even the random moments of insight are simplistic. I only barely resisted giving up. Set up for season 2, I doubt I'll return for more. (Apple) 


Mr Corman 

An inventive mix of comedy, drama and satire, this show centres on the terrific Joseph Gordon-Levitt as a fifth grade teacher who is feeling squeezed in by his day-to-day life, something very easy to identify with. Gordon-Levitt (who also writes and directs) is so likeable that he makes the title character deeply sympathetic even when he makes terrible decisions. The episodes are hugely uneven, spinning off into unexpected and sometimes indulgent directions that include long sideroads, fantasies and some darkly provocative twists. It's tricky to engage with it as a series, but it maintains a nicely provocative tone. I almost gave up, but stuck with it to the end. (Apple)


B A C K   F O R   M O R E


Ted Lasso: series 2 
Instead of repeating the breezy comedy of the first season, Jason Sudeikis goes deeper with his now-iconic American football coach in London, pushing him with a team psychologist (Sarah Niles), unexpected conflicts and corporate issues, plus the slow transformation of his protege (the brilliant Nick Mohammed) into a supervillain. And in most of these areas, his down-home aphorisms don't quite have the intended effect. This season has featured a few inventively themed episodes, but instead of being gimmicky they've maintained the same open-handed but earthy emotionality that pushes the story and characters further and further. It's a rare show that manages to balance realism and optimism. (Apple)


The Morning Show: series 2 

Going even darker, this drama starts exactly where the first season ended, with everyone in chaos following the revelations of harassment at a big network. Then it cuts to January 2020, as the breakfast TV show's cast and crew are blithely unaware of what sporadic reports about a virus in China might mean. This adds an underlying tension to everything, as do the chaotic US presidential primaries and the increasing melodrama between characters finely played by Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Aniston and Billy Crudup, with added Steve Coogan who's in hiding with Valeria Golino in Italy. Where it all goes is perhaps a bit too shocking. (Apple)


The Other Two: series 2

It's been two and a half years, but this superbly written and played comedy is finally back for a second season, and this time siblings Brooke and Cary (Helene Yorke and Drew Tarver) find themselves in the shadow of their talkshow host mum (Molly Shannon), in addition to their popstar little brother Chase (Case Walker). The comedy feels a lot broader this time around, which makes it sillier and perhaps less endearing. But the central theme is still strong, playing on how frustrating it can be to watch seemingly untalented people succeed while you struggle. And once again, the pop culture gags are continual and skilfully right on the nose. (HBO)


Love Life: series 2

William Jackson Harper takes over the central role as this gently comical drama returns to follow another person's romantic rollercoaster journey. Opening with some bad decision-making that quickly leads to a divorce, Harper's Marcus is a likeable guy who struggles to get his life back on track. This includes some painfully awkward encounters, stressing out his friends and family and launching himself into a series of relationships. All of this happens while he's circling around the hugely likeable Mia (Jessica Williams), who is clearly too good for him, but we can't help but hope they work out their messiness. Harper is particularly terrific in a demanding role. (HBO)


Succession: series 3

Continuing without taking a breath from the last episode, this intense media family drama never gives the audience break from these intense people who circle around each other like sharks. Patriarch Logan (Brian Cox) is now in all-out war with his son Kendall (Jeremy Strong), with siblings Roman and Shiv (Kieran Culkin and Sarah Snook) vying for control and everyone else trying to cling to what little influence they may have. It's absolutely brutal, and riveting, to watch this family so aggressively engage in vicious power games. And the complexity of the roles gives each actor a lot to chew on along the way. Once again, the ending is a stunner. (HBO)


Sex Education: series 3 

This show continues to broaden its scope by bringing more characters into the focal zone, and it works because all of them are fierce, strikingly well written and played individuals. The spiralling relationships between family, friends and lovers are thoroughly entertaining, even if the careful plotting makes it fairly clear where things are heading. And the sparky cast, led by Asa Butterfield and Gillian Anderson, is hugely engaging. With added Lola Kirke as the villainous new headmistress of the season. Even she is given a bit of perhaps uncharacteristic shading under her relentless nastiness. (Netflix)


What We Do in the Shadows: series 3 

Things continue to ramp up in this season, as this household of four clueless vampires take the place of the council that was taken out by their vampire-hunting familiar Guillermo (Harvey Guillem), who continues to take care of them without them noticing. This adds a whole new angle to their relentless obliviousness, and each episode mines ridiculous situations for genuinely hilarious laughs. But even more important is how the writing and acting make us care about these idiots, especially as the final few episodes of this season change things so drastically. Any future episodes will feel very different indeed. (FX)


Brooklyn Nine-Nine: series 8

I was very late to this show, catching up with the first seven seasons during lockdown, and I enjoyed these final 10 shows as they appeared two per week. This is the kind of comedy I love, with nutty character-based humour that simply never pauses to let the audience catch their breath. It's silly, sharp and even has some political resonance, and the jagged relationships between these police precinct colleagues add engaging angles to the jokes. A few characters feel a little muted by time, but each of them has the power to surprise us. And the show's anchors Andy Samberg, Andre Braugher and Terry Crews are fabulous. (CBS)


GUILTY PLEASURES: The Great British Bake-Off (C4), Strictly Come Dancing (BBC), RuPaul's Drag Race UK (BBC), We're Here (WoW), I Like the Way U Move (BBC).


I GAVE UP: Foundation (Apple) was just too dense and choppy for me.


NOW WATCHING: Hawkeye, Landscapers, The Great (2), The Witcher (2), Star Trek: Discovery (4), The Conners (4), And Just Like That (7), Dexter: New Blood (9).


COMING SOON: The Woman in the House Across the Street From the Girl in the Window, The Book of Boba Fett, Pam & Tommy, Euphoria (2), Killing Eve (4).


Monday, 5 October 2020

Screen: Autumn TV Roundup

Even with all the movies I'm watching, I still have a bit more time than usual to catch episodes of series television, mainly because I don't have the normal travel time getting into town for physical screenings. The challenge is finding shows that are a tonic after a heavy film - most series at the moment seem to be so serious! So the rare comedy is hugely welcome. This is what I've been watching over the past couple of months...

Ted Lasso 
The premise for this sitcom looks lame: earnest American football coach is hired to manage a cynical English football (ie, soccer) team. But it stars Jason Sudeikis and several under-the-radar British comedy assassins (Brett Goldstein, Hannah Waddingham, Nick Mohammed), so I decided to take a look. And this is the best surprise so far this year, one of the smartest, funniest shows out there, subverting expectations at every moment with characters who are a lot more than the usual types. It's also a rare show that takes a positive approach to life in general, making you feel empowered even as you laugh at a wicked joke. (Apple) 

Ratched 
A rather unconnected prequel to One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, this series is beautifully designed, with a fierce cast. It takes awhile to get going, but the story tightens over these eight episodes, as the eponymous nurse (Sarah Paulson) goes on a deeply personal mission and becomes embroiled in several other nasty events. Performances are terrific, particularly from iconic divas Cynthia Nixon, Judy Davis and Sharon Stone. But the main thing here is the production design, soaked in primary colours, arch architecture and horrific grisliness. The themes feel rather pushy, but it's enjoyably nasty. (Netflix)

A Suitable Boy 
Vikram Seth's acclaimed novel gets the period-epic BBC treatment, directed by the terrific Mira Nair, who always brings a blast of colourful energy to her depictions of Indian culture. Set in the early 1950s shortly after independence, the series recounts a series of interwoven romantic storylines that connect four families, complicated by the fallout from the nation's partition. As usual, Tabu steals the show as a singer of ill repute who falls for a young man played by the magnetic Ishaan Khattar. But the entire cast is frankly gorgeous, beautifully dressed in vivid costumes and bursting with emotion and energy. (BBC)

I Hate Suzie
This provocative British black comedy plays with a number of real-life elements while unflinchingly exploring a tricky issue. Billie Piper stars as a singer-actress whose intimate photos are hacked from her phone, causing mayhem in her personal and professional life. But her reactions often make things worse, which gives her character a startlingly complexity, a famous person who is deeply flawed yet has a public persona to maintain. The approach is inventively stylised, with writing that never takes the usual route for a TV show. And what it says about both society and the industry is astonishing. (Sky)

Hitmen 
The terrific comedy duo Mel Giedroyc and Sue Perkins put their snappy chemistry into a goofy sitcom, and the fact that they're playing assassins keeps the humour very black indeed. The writing is random and generally hilarious, although the show is awkwardly directed and edited to flatten some of the more outrageous gags. Still, Mel & Sue are so funny that they keep us watching, and their interaction with a range of side characters, from each episode's target hit to their riotous nemeses/cohorts Charles and Liz (Asim Chaudhry and Tonya Cornelisse) leaves us looking forward to a second season. (Sky)

Five Bedrooms
This Australian comedy-drama centres on five young people on the singles table at a wedding, each of whom is at a different point in his or her life, and they decide to buy a big house together. What follows is pretty ridiculous, really, as episodes progress from one carefully scripted catastrophe to the next, including farcical romance, surprise revelations, bankruptcy and even cancer. What makes it addictive is the cast, who manage to make these neurotic people very likeable, even as they continually sabotage their own lives. The question is whether they'll survive a second season of disasters. (Peacock)

Insatiable: series 2 
Full-on and deliberately over-the-top, this lurid comedy continues to centre more on murder than sex, which is odd considering that it's about the obsessive people who participate in beauty pageants. But even if the snaky plot continually takes the more obvious, often less interesting direction, the relentless pile-up of soapy twists and turns is riotous and often downright hilarious. And the wildly out-of-control characters are oddly endearing, sharply played by the likes of Dallas Roberts, Debby Ryan, Alyssa Milano and Christopher Gorham. It's not smart enough to be a classic, but it's a lot of messy fun. (Netflix)

The New Legends of Monkey: series 2
This insanely cheesy adventure series is oddly addictive, the definition of a guilty pleasure. It's not even particularly well-made, with its cheap sets and costumes, plus actors who never quite seem like they're taking their roles with even a grain of seriousness. But the goofiness is a lot of fun, and there are some sharply witty moments along the way, including genuinely hilarious dialog and plot points, throwaway one-liners and amusing mistakes. The plot is also so freewheeling that literally anything can happen at any moment. So it's impossible to predict what kind of idiocy is coming next. (Netflix)

PLAYING CATCH-UP

The Neighbor (El Vecino)
From Spain, this goofy comedy has a Green Lantern-like plot about the hapless Javier (Quim Gutierrez) who is given superpowers and a whizzy suit and charged with protecting the galaxy. And his dorky neighbour Jose (Adrian Pino) tries to help him become a better superhero. The joke is that everyone in Javier's life would make a better hero than him, and indeed he's a bit too self-involved, so it's no wonder that his relationship with unambitious journalist Lola (Clara Lago) collapses. But watching his transformation is fun. And the show's low-fi special effects make it even more charming. (Netflix)

Chewing Gum: series 1-2
After I May Destroy You, I realised that I had missed Michaela Coel's previous series, an equally complex and clever comedy about a young woman trying to escape her fiercely religious upbringing and explore the previously forbidden real world. It's all a bit broad and sometimes downright manic, but Coel is terrific as the hapless late bloomer Tracey, making witty comments to-camera as she barrels through a series of madcap experiences. And as the series continues, the side roles become better defined, which makes them both funnier and more emotionally involving. (BBC)

Lucifer: series 1-3
I've inched my way through this show, a terrific tonic when I need something mindless. The concept is witty (the devil fights crime in Los Angeles!), and the comical tone keeps it vacuously enjoyable. The preposterous murder-of-the-week plots, on the other hand, are essentially reworked from old episodes of Hart to Hart. It's also one of those shows that pretends to be sexy and raunchy while shying away from anything remotely realistic. But the characters are vivid enough to hold the attention, and their twisted inter-relationships make the show consistently watchable. Let's hope it finds some edge as it moves to Netflix. (Fox)

Eastsiders: series 1-4
This show was recommended for its writing, and it's well worth catching up with because the scripts are unusually strong. Over four seasons, the show focusses on a group of people who live in a queer L.A. bubble (no native Angeleno would ever think of Silverlake as "east"). The characters are siblings, neighbours and couples, many are gay, and all are dealing with the usual crises. But this is written and played with remarkable insight. Not only are the actors honest and messily real, but the dialog pops with lines like: "Let people be who they are, and then they will do for you the same favour." (Netflix)

I GIVE UP

Away: With this talented cast, it's shocking how bad the writing is, a cliched soap full of improbable melodrama. There's no way Nasa would send this bickering crew to Mars, complete with Russian and Chinese disruptors, facing a silly calamity each week. I made it through the second episode before giving up. (Netflix)

Muppets NowThe Muppets are back once again in another format that seems carefully concocted for the times: namely a computer screen. Some segments are amusing, especially offhanded moments with the starry guests. But it's trying too hard, and the writing fails to make anything of these iconic characters. (Disney)

NOW WATCHING: The Boys (2), Fargo (4), Lovecraft Country, The Third Day, The Duchess, The Comey Rule, We Are Who We Are, Long Way Up.

LOOKING FORWARD: The Mandalorian (2), The Crown (4), Star Trek: Discovery (3), Adult Material, NeXt, The Undoing.


Wednesday, 21 August 2019

Critical Week: See you later alligator

With the 20th FrightFest coming this weekend, it's feeling a bit like Halloween around London. In addition to watching four FrightFest horror movies (more about those next time), I also saw two freak-outs that are both at the festival and in UK cinemas this weekend. Crawl stars Kaya Scodelario (above), trying to survive a mob of massive alligators in her family home as hurricane floodwaters rise. It's relentlessly terrifying and a lot of fun too. Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark comes from producer Guillermo del Toro, and features teens who find a haunted book that begins killing them one by one with new stories. It's dark and enjoyably yucky.

Director Sam Taylor-Johnson and her actor husband Aaron Taylor-Johnson wrote the script themselves for A Million Little Pieces, adapting James Frey's controversial memoir detailing his time in rehab. It's beautifully made, raw and wrenching. Set in the late 70s and early 80s, Driven recounts the story of John DeLorean (Lee Pace) through the eyes of his shifty neighbour (Jason Sudeikis). It's uneven, but lively and very entertaining. And French filmmaker Francois Ozon shifts gears again for By the Grace of God, a powerful, sharply well made fact-based drama about men taking on the Catholic Church because they were abused as boys.

I also caught up with Adam, a New York-set drama that's been generating controversy because it dares to have a central character who makes a terrible mistake and learns from it. Since it's dealing with trans and queer issues, it's understandably touchy. But the film is also important, and very nicely made. And from Mexico, the 80s-set drama This Is Not Berlin is a sharply observant, skilfully shot and acted coming-of-age journey with vividly resonant themes. By contrast, the offbeat British crime thriller Killers Anonymous is a choppy mess, so it's a mystery how they lured Gary Oldman, Suki Waterhouse and Jessica Alba to be in it (albeit clearly filmed apart from the main plot).

This is a long weekend in London. I'll be blogging about FrightFest, and since the weather looks good I may brave the Notting Hill Carnival as well. Screenings include Henry Cavill in Night Hunter, Matthias Schoenaerts in The Mustang, the Norwegian drama Phoenix and the Argentine drama Rojo.

Wednesday, 3 May 2017

Critical Week: Scary monsters

It's a third short week this spring here in Britain, so there have been fewer than usual screenings. But I did manage to catch up with Colossal, the genre-defying movie starring Anne Hathaway and Jason Sudeikis. It's funny, scary, harrowing and very well-made. And then there was Sleepless, an almost painfully predictable cop thriller livened up by an adept cast that includes Jamie Foxx, Michelle Monaghan, Dermot Mulroney and Scoot McNairy.

A hybrid crime thriller and arthouse drama, Away is a small British drama starring Timothy Spall and Juno Temple as two desperate people who meet in Blackpool. It's nicely shot and acted, but jarringly edited. And Last Men in Aleppo is the prize-winning documentary about the White Helmets, rescue workers in war-torn Syria. Skilfully shot on the ground during the fighting, it's utterly devastating to watch, and urgently important.

Screenings coming up this week include Ridley Scott's Prometheus sequel Alien: Covenant, the comedy The Big Sick, the action movie Stratton, the road movie Folk Hero & Funny Guy, the period drama Interlude in Prague and the animated adventure Spark.

Tuesday, 22 December 2015

Critical Week: A winter's tale

Quentin Tarantino's latest epic The Hateful Eight has finally bowed to critics, and it's an oddly uneven film - an intriguing idea with moments of skilful inventiveness and a solid cast, but the nagging sense that it's all rather pointless and indulgent.

Also screening this week: Robert DeNiro and Zac Efron in the rude road comedy Dirty Grandpa, Jason Sudeikis and Alison Brie in the enjoyably edgy rom-com Sleeping With Other People, Matthias Schoenaerts in the fiendishly clever and unsettling Belgian PTSD drama Disorder, and the irritatingly fragmented Romanian sculptor biopic Brancusi From Eternity.

Meanwhile, I still have a bunch of films to watch before the next round of voting in critics awards. Since I have no more press screenings until January 4th, I should have time to catch up with screeners of awards-worthy movies, plus binge-watching TV series I've been saving up. I'll also be finalising my year-end lists over the next week. So it should be a nice Christmas! Hope yours is good too...

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

Critical Week: Under the sea

Before I left London last Thursday, the biggest film screened was Kevin Macdonald's submarine thriller Black Sea, starring Jude Law as an unemployed guy trying to reclaim some dignity by salvaging Nazi gold out from under the Russian fleet. It's fast-paced and enjoyably ludicrous. Horrible Bosses 2 is a sequel no one asked for, and the writers haven't bothered to be even remotely clever, but there are some decent gags and a solid cast (Chris Pine steals the show, randomly). Much better, JC Chandor's A Most Violent Year is a clever vice-grip of a drama set in 1981 New York starring the excellent Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain. An inventive, soft-spoken spin on the mob thriller, the film is clammy and haunting.

And on the flight over to Los Angeles, I caught up with the enjoyable doc Elaine Stritch: Shoot Me, following the indefatigable showbiz veteran through her paces in both TV and theatre (the film was completed before her death in July). I also revisited Moulin Rouge, as you do, one of my all-time favourites and one of those rare films that I can get caught up in completely every time I see it. And once here I  rewatched The Theory of Everything, marvelling even more at Eddie Redmayne's astonishing performance as Stephen Hawking.

Here in California for a couple of weeks, I am hoping to catch up with the animated spin-off Penguins of Madagascar,  the idiotic sequel Dumb and Dumber To, the all-star musical Into the Woods, Mark Wahlberg in The Gambler, Bradley Cooper in American Sniper and the civil rights drama Selma.