Showing posts with label manchester by the sea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label manchester by the sea. Show all posts

Monday, 23 January 2017

37th Critics' Circle Film Awards: words and pictures...

These three ladies were the stars of Sunday night's 37th London Critics' Circle Film Awards, held at the May Fair Hotel. I'm the chair of the event, so spend most of the year organising it with a hard-working committee, lots of helpers and some great sponsors. And we spread the winners around this year. Above: Kate Beckinsale won British/Irish Actress, Isabelle Huppert won both Actress of the Year for Things to Come and the Dilys Powell Award for Excellence in Film, and Naomie Harris won Supporting Actress for Moonlight.

Here's the team: me, our actor-filmmaker hosts Alice Lowe and Steve Oram, and Critics' Circle President Anna Smith.

When Isabelle Huppert was presented with the Dilys Powell Award - an honour we have wanted to bestow on her for years - the audience rose for a standing ovation.

Tom Bennett won Supporting Actor for Love & Friendship, Ken Loach won British/Irish Film of the Year for I, Daniel Blake.

Lewis MacDougall won Young British/Irish Performer for his work in A Monster Calls, while writer-director Babak Anvari won Breakthrough British/Irish Filmmaker for Under the Shadow.

Naomie Harris poses with her award alongside her Moonlight costar Alex Hibbert, who accepted the Supporting Actor award for Mahershala Ali. And on the right, director Brady Hood with his lead actress Jessica Barden - winners of British/Irish Short Film of the Year for Sweet Maddie Stone.

Accepting the Documentary prize for Fire at Sea were editor Jacopo Quadri and producer Donatella Palermo. And here's an intriguing couple: will we see Isabelle starring in Ken's next movie?

Some winners who couldn't be with us recorded video messages. These included Casey Affleck, who won Actor of the Year for Manchester by the Sea, and Andrew Garfield, who was named British/Irish Actor of the Year. Two winners sent written messages: Kenneth Lonergan for Screenplay accepting Manchester by the Sea, and Maren Ade accepting Foreign-Language Film for Toni Erdmann.

Damien Chazelle recorded his video to accept Film of the Year for La La Land on his phone just after landing on a flight to China. Laszlo Nemes sent thanks for Director of the Year for Son of Saul from the middle of pre-production on his new film in Hungary. And cinematographer Sturla Brandth Grovlen thanked the critics for his Technical Achievement Award for Victoria from Montserrat.

Nominees celebrating with us for the evening included Dave Johns (I, Daniel Blake), Sennia Nanua (The Girl With All the Gifts) and Ferdia Walsh-Peelo (Sing Street).

More nominees: writer-director Mia Hansen-Love (Things to Come), filmmaker Otto Bell (The Eagle Huntress) and composer Mica Levi (Jackie).

Special guests with us included Love & Friendship costars Morfyd Clark and Emma Greenwell, as well as George MacKay.

And finally, here are a couple of snaps of me - on the left with Kristina Rihanoff and Ben Cohen, and on the right with Kate Beckinsale. The Sun ran this photo hinting that I was her "dapper" date for the evening. Hmmm!


Saturday, 8 October 2016

LFF 3: Can't stop this feeling

There's no pause for the weekends for journalists covering the 60th BFI London Film Festival. In fact, it feels a bit more intense, perhaps because I have the feeling that I need a rest! Red carpet events continue every evening in Leicester Square with a parade of A-list stars and acclaimed lesser-known actors and filmmakers. And I'm sure there are parties going on somewhere. Here are some films for Saturday...

Trolls
dir Mike Mitchell; voices Anna Kendrick, Justin Timberlake 16/US ****
Almost ludicrously happy, this colourfully animated musical comedy makes up for a thin plot with quick wit. It's fairly impossible to wipe the smile off your face from start to finish, even in the movie's deliberately feeble attempt to generate some dark tension. And as Justin Timberlake's pathologically bouncy theme tune says, you can't help but want to dance.

Manchester by the Sea 
dir-scr Kenneth Lonergan; with Casey Affleck, Lucas Hedges 16/US ****
Anchored by the cast's raw performances, this drama is packed with big themes that everyone in the audience can identify with, from strained family connections to the lingering effects of grief. It sometimes feels like writer-director Kenneth Lonergan has dumped rather a lot of misfortune on these beaten-down characters, but the film maintains a strong sense of hope simply because none of them will give up.

Christine
dir Antonio Campos; with Rebecca Hall, Michael C Hall 16/US ****
The true story of Christine Chubbuck is turned into an eerily intense personal odyssey that grows increasingly uncomfortable to watch. Director Antonio Campos vividly explores Christine's growing stress without trying to explain it away, which makes it resonant as a depiction of the cumulative effect of the daily struggles everybody experiences. And Rebecca Hall is quite simply awesome in the role.

Toni Erdmann 
dir-scr Maren Ade; with Peter Simonischek, Sandra Huller 16/Ger ****
A riotously astute look at modern life, this German comedy holds the attention by simply refusing to be even remotely predictable. As writer-director Maren Ade follows a father and daughter through a twisty series of events, she not only highlights some pungent issues facing Europe, but she more importantly digs deep inside to reveal the prankster in all of us. And to remind us that we need to laugh more.

The Handmaiden 
dir Park Chan-wook; with Kim Min-hee, Kim Tae-ri 16/Kor ****
Korean maestro Park Chan-wook adapts Sarah Waters' novel Fingersmith into a stylish, twisty drama set in Korea and Japan during WWII. It's a visually ravishing film about passion and subterfuge, told in three chapters that flip the perspective in unexpected directions. So even if the themes are a little thin, the film looks so amazing and has such a wickedly labyrinthine plot that it's thoroughly riveting.

And from Venice, Amat Escalante's controversial dramatic monster horror movie The Untamed is also screening in London.