Showing posts with label meryl streep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meryl streep. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 October 2023

Screen: October TV Roundup

I've watched quite a lot of TV over the summer, episode by episode in between the movies. I look for more escapist fare, although sometimes something serious can work perfectly. I certainly avoid police or medical procedural dramas. And finding a good comedy has been tricky lately...

T H I S   I S   T H E   E N D

Sex Education: series 4
Firing on all cylinders, this show powers into its final season by knowingly shifting the action to a touchy-feely politically correct school where our heroes' shenanigans aren't nearly as revolutionary. Even if plotlines sometimes hiccup, each of the central characters takes their own pointed journey through this new reality, and they bring complexity and engaging nuance to their interaction. Asa Butterfield, Ncuti Gatwa, Emma Mackey, Connor Swindells and Amy Lou Wood have deservedly boosted their stardom over these four seasons. And Gillian Anderson channels Margaret Thatcher from The Crown into her sexologist. There are also several sparky new characters who hint that this show shouldn't stop here. (Netflix)

Physical: series 3
Things continue to ramp up for Sheila (Rose Byrne) as she becomes a minor TV celebrity with her weekly workout segments, expanding her empire. Yet despite doing some work on herself, she has a new inner demon to contend with in the form of arch-rival Zooey Deschanel, whose actual character is miles away from Sheila's imagined version of her. This kind of writing seems a bit uneven, reusing old ideas rather than finding a fresh new direction, and her big revelation and ultimate grounding isn't particularly convincing. But Byrne is terrific in the central role, a complex character whose messiness makes her sympathetic. Her journey is still compelling to watch, even if we care less and less about the people who are in her orbit. (Apple)

A L L   N E W

Juice
Written by and starring bright young spark Mawaan Rizwan, this riotous comedy is made to a very high production standard, with often outrageously colourful sets and costumes and cleverly inventive transitions between scenes. It follows the antics of Jamma (Rizwan), who is described by his boyfriend (Russell Tovey) as a tornado of energy. Indeed, the show is sometimes so chaotic that it's a little exhausting, but it's infused with a huge amount of heart thanks to the endearing performances and writing that digs beneath the hyperactive surface. Terrific costars include Jeff Mirza (as Jamma's surly dad) and Rizwan's mother Shahnaz and brother Nabhaan as gloriously heightened versions of themselves. (BBC)

Ahsoka
When this series recaptures that sense of kinetic energy and snappy camaraderie that made the Star Wars universe hum to begin with, it's remarkably involving. But like other recent series, there's a tendency to turn ponderous and very dark (both thematically and visually) for no real reason other than to heighten the drama about the Jedi and Sith fighting over control of the galaxy. And there's now a second galaxy to worry about. Alongside Rosario Dawson, the solid cast brings scenes to life, especially the late Ray Stevenson and the voice of David Tenant. The show is very well-made, with lovely offhanded moments scattered all the way through, but the mythology is so dense and intrusive that it's difficult to care. (Disney)

Single, Out
From Australia, this comedy-drama traces the coming-of-age of young artist Adam (Will Hutchins), who has his first sexual experience with cute rugby-playing Josh (Adam Mountain), best friend of his brother Clayton (Steven Christou). So Adam decides to come out, then has to navigate this new reality. This includes going to bars, dating and working out who he is and what he wants. There are the usual sitcom elements, such as Adam's witty interaction with his boss and colleagues, and the show definitely has sex on its mind, but shoots anything sexy with a awkward prudishness (it's not about what's shown, but how). That said, the side roles are enjoyably sparky and the humour is wonderfully dry, and there are sharply pointed issues woven through each 20-minute episode. (Cinephobia)

B A C K   F O R   M O R E

Only Murders in the Building: series 3
Things ramp up once again, as our trio of sleuths (Steve Martin, Martin Short, Selena Gomez) investigate the messy murder of an actor (Paul Rudd) by someone in the company of his Broadway show, which includes a hilariously gung-ho Meryl Streep. The stakes feel higher this time around, perhaps because the murder happened (twice!) right within their midst, and all of the suspects are good friends and colleagues. This gives a charge of energy to the show, which is further heightened by fabulous guest stars like Andrea Martin and Matthew Broderick.  Where the plot goes is enjoyably twisty, packed with witty in-jokes about both the mystery genre and theatre culture. And some great songs too. (Hulu)

Star Trek - Strange New Worlds: series 2 
Maybe it's just me, but despite the solid cast and high production values, and writers willing to take on big topics, this show is struggling to hold my interest. This season seems designed to merely hit the usual action beats while making references to the original series, rather than allowing thoughtful drama to drive the episodes forward. And the ever-expanding cast means that no one gets enough screen time to become fully engaging. Even in their relatively short scenes, Anson Mount, Rebecca Romijn, Ethan Peck, Christina Chong, et al are riveting. The Lower Decks crossover episode is fabulous, striking the witty tone the whole series needs. And the musical episode was certainly ambitious. (Paramount)

And Just Like That: series 2 
More focussed than the first season, this sequel show carries on both reinventing its characters and refusing to allow them to grow in any meaningful way. It's an odd concoction in which Sarah Jessica Parker tries to play Carrie as if she's still 35, rather than almost 60, which might add a more meaningful kick to everything. Parker, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis don't get a lot to do here, and most of the side roles remain oddly thankless. Cameos from the original series continue to pop up from episode to episode, adding enjoyable colours. So it's always watchable, even if it never quite feels like anything interesting is happening. And like the original series, it never feels remotely believable. (Sky) 

Lupin: part 3
Even more tightly written and directed than the first season, this heist thriller series gleefully plays with the narrative, flickering around in time to conceal plot secrets and then reveal them at just the right time to keep the audience on board.  Although the villain's motive remains obscure for far too long. The central plotline about Assanne being blackmailed into stealing things is a little tedious, but it plays out with pizzazz. This is hugely entertaining to watch, with a steady stream of satisfying payoffs. Omar Sy is terrific as the charming super-thief at the centre, with his bright smile and lanky swagger. And the supporting cast have had their roles deepened and textured to add even more interest. (Netflix)

Minx: series 2 
Leaning more intently into female power dynamics with the arrival of moneybags boss Elizabeth Perkins, this show continues the now-rising fortunes of a magazine editor (Ophelia Lovibond) who finds success with her publication centred around naked men. As before, the show is a mix of business struggles, personal challenges and flashy shenanigans. And most of the trouble is caused by scruffy publishing genius Doug (Jake Johnson), while more interesting characters played by Oscar Montoya, Jessica Lowe and Idara Victor take pointed side journeys of their own. Snappy pop culture references and an overall sense of narrative momentum keep us watching, even if characters and plotlines are somewhat underwhelming. (Starz)

The Afterparty: series 2 
And we're back with another murder that takes place during an afterparty, this time a wedding. Tiffany Haddish returns to the scene as the no-nonsense detective, and each partygoer's account of the fateful event is rendered in another genre style, including romcom, period drama, noir mystery and a Wes Anderson film. It's also just as messy and pointless as it was the first time around, with the frantic pace and scattershot approach making it difficult to care much about whodunit. That said, it's skilfully well-made, and the cast is always watchable, including returnees Sam Richardson and Zoe Chao, plus Elizabeth Perkins, Jon Cho, Jack Whitehall and Paul Walter Hauser. (Apple)

Good Omens: series 2
Even more bonkers than the first season, this show is infused with a hilariously quirky sense of humour as our best pal outcasts, angel Aziraphale (Michael Sheen) and demon Crowley (David Tenant), find themselves in the middle of a supernatural battle when the amnesiac archangel Gabriel (Jon Hamm) turns up. Wacky antics ensue, augmented by an amusing collection of nutty flashbacks scattered throughout eternity. Plus the tremendous chemistry Sheen and Tenant have developed here and elsewhere (see Staged). So even if it all feels faintly pointless, it's a lot of fun to watch inept angels and demons trying to force order into the universe, while Sheen and Tenant remain outside the fray. (BBC)

The Wheel of Time: series 2
Making most of the worst mistakes of fantasy TV series (and movies), the dialog in this show has far too much mythology in it, including endless people, place and thing names that are impossible to understand or remember if you haven't read the books. But the production quality is much stronger this season, including more eye-catching special effects, even if many action sequences take place murkily in the night. It remains watchable because the ensemble cast members deliver nicely offhanded performances, let by the reliable Rosamund Pike. So when the show concentrates on their interrelationships, we can get involved in the story and ignore the gibberish. (Prime)

What We Do in the Shadows: series 5 
Twisting the story further, these endearingly ridiculous characters enter a new dynamic when Guillermo (Harvey Guillen) breaks the rules to realise his dream of becoming a vampire. This adds an intriguing new mix of tension and emotion to the usual silliness. The storylines are expertly crafted to build amusingly on threads from previous seasons as Guillermo's secret spirals increasingly out of control, although where it ends up feels like a cop-out. Still, these characters seem to have no end of hilarity built into them, as they continually misunderstand even the most basic things while assuming their centuries of existence make them the smartest people in the room. (FX) 

P L A Y I N G   C A T C H - U P

Starstruck: series 1-3
Rose Matafeo created and stars in this comedy as Jessie, a seriously disastrous 30-ish woman trying to make sense of her aimless life in London when she falls in love with famous movie star Tom (Nikesh Patel). Their on-off relationship is the spine of this series, and they spend most of the episodes at an awkward distance, grappling with lingering feelings that make it difficult to move on. Jessie is such a relentless self-saboteur that she's not easy to like, but then she only has one proper friend (the fabulous Emma Sidi). She continually stirs up drama and wrecks her connections with friends, then blames them for it, which is exaggerated and not remotely funny. But the dialog crackles with wit and honest emotion. (BBC) 

Young Royals:
series 1-2
Essentially a more grounded Swedish variation on the sexy Spanish teen soap Elite, this show is also set at a posh private school. Here, 16-year-old Crown Prince Wilhelm (Edvin Ryding) causes all kinds of drama simply by being present. These spotty teens are realistically messy in their romantic entanglements, and there's meaningful commentary about race, class, politics and economics along the way. But of course the most engaging thing here is the romance between Wilhelm and townie Simon (Omar Rudberg), a cutie with the voice of an angel. And Malte Gardinger is particularly good as conflicted villainous senior August. The question is whether they can keep this going as the actors begin to look 30. (Netflix)

Glow: series 1-3
I'm not sure why I missed this show, but the presence of Betty Gilpin and Alison Brie made me want to take a look, plus a starry lineup of directors. Strong characters kept me watching over the 30 episodes, even with some rather annoying plot lines (such as the unlikely romance between Brie and her boss Marc Maron). And there's a sense that after the sparky opening set-up season, the writers attempted to drastically slow things down, moving from the creation of a ladies wrestling TV show to a Vegas extravaganza that isn't nearly as interesting. There actually could have been more wrestling on-screen, as it's hilariously choreographed and staged. Getting back to basics might have saved this show. (Netflix)

I   G I V E   U P

One Piece
While this has been a big hit, it's difficult to know who it's made for. The humour seems aimed at an audience around the same age as the teen protagonists. But it's also relentlessly dark and violent. This might have worked with half-hour episodes, but at an hour this is simply too much, especially since everything is so hammy. I only made it through two episodes. (Netflix)

The Full Monty 
Catching up with the characters from the 1997 movie 25 years later, this show isn't easy to get into. It feels like the first season of a Sheffield-set soap opera about people struggling to survive due to societal issues and bad decisions. The cast is good, but their connections feel contrived, which gives the show no sense of direction. I stuck it out for four episodes. (Hulu)

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GUILTY PLEASURES: Drag Race (UK/Down Under), The Great British Bake Off, Strictly Come Dancing, Selling the OC.

NOW WATCHING: The Continental, Still Up, Gen V, Our Flag Means Death (2), The Morning Show (3), Black Mirror (6).

COMING SOON: Frasier, Lessons in Chemistry, All the Light We Cannot See, Loki (2), Invincible (2), Upload (3), Elite (7).

Previous roundup AUGUST 2023 >


Wednesday, 15 December 2021

Critical Week: Suit up

Awards season is cranking up with various bodies chiming in on the best films of 2021. Indeed, the London Critics' Circle announces its nominations tomorrow! As chair, I've had quite a bit of work to do this week to make that happen, so it will be nice to enter the holiday season while the members are considering the nominees for the final round of voting in January. I have a couple of nominees to catch up with myself. In the mean time, there were two big movies screened to critics this past week. The King's Man is Matthew Vaughn's 100-years-earlier prequel to his Kingsman films. A great cast helps make it watchable, but the tone varies wildly between hyperviolent action and serious war thriller. Spider-Man: No Way Home is even more audacious, but manages to stir its chaos into a coherent, entertaining romp through the multiverse with Tom Holland, Benedict Cumberbatch, Zendaya and others. Spoilers abound, so writing that review was tricky.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Swan Song • Cyrano
Spider-Man: No Way Home
Lola and the Sea
ALL REVIEWS >
Even more starry, Don't Look Up is a smart, funny social satire about two astronomers (Jennifer Lawrence and Leonardo DiCaprio) trying to warn a wilfully disbelieving world that the planet is about to be obliterated. Mahershala Ali is terrific in the lightly futuristic Swan Song, an elegant exploration of memory and identity. Comedians come together for A Clusterfunke Christmas, a silly and occasionally hilarious pastiche of TV holiday movies. Berlin Film Festival winner Happening is a very serious French drama about a teen in the 1960s, when abortion is illegal. From Belgium, Lola and the Sea is a thoughtful, observational film about a young trans woman and her deeply bigoted dad. And from Turkey, Not Knowing is a bracing look at the dangers of self-involvement, tapping into a range of big topics.

This coming week, I'll be watching Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza, Romola Garai's Amulet, and awards contenders including The Worst Person in the World, Minyan, Great Freedom and Mass.

Wednesday, 16 December 2020

Critical Week: Ask tough questions

London has been shifted back into severe third-tier restrictions. But cinemas are closed again, as are theatres and restaurants (all places where it's easy to remain distant), but inexplicably not shops, schools, gyms (where it isn't). Thankfully, I had a few actual cinema screenings in between lockdowns, including Kevin Macdonald's superb The Mauritanian, starring Jodie Foster (above) along with Tahar Rahim, Shailene Woodley and Benedict Cumberbatch. It's the powerful true story of a Guantanamo detainee. An even bigger screening was WW84 (that's the film's only title on-screen), the Wonder Woman sequel, which was screened to us on the huge BFI Imax screen. It's a lot of fun, if a bit messy in the final act. What a shame that it can't open in London cinemas as planned this week.
 
BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Education • The Prince
American Utopia
PERHAPS AVOID:
Come Away • Modern Persuasion
ALL REVIEWS >
Steven Soderbergh's all-star comedy Let Them All Talk is also good fun, with a lively ensemble led by Meryl Streep improvising dialog while sailing from New York to London. And George Clooney dons a Santa beard to save the world in The Midnight Sky, which isn't a Christmas movie: it's a smart sci-fi adventure that's intriguing and moving.

Alicia Silverstone is terrific in Sister of the Groom, a likeably odd concoction that feels like it should be a romcom but is actually a serious family drama. Alicia Witt leads a nutty ensemble in Modern Persuasion, a present-day take on Jane Austen that's actually another rather corny romcom. From Argentina, The Weasels' Tail is a madcap play on old-world cinema glamour defending itself from corporate sharks. From Mexico, I Carry You With Me is a beautiful drama about connections between people and cultures. And The Boy Is Mine is a collection of five well-made shorts from five countries, each tackling an aspect of youthful masculinity.

This coming week I have another eclectic bunch of films to watch, including the Roald Dahl biopic To Olivia, Celia Imrie in Love Sarah, Rupert Everett in The Warrior Queen of Jhansi, the Kiwi drama Savage, the Swedish drama Are We Lost Forever, the Mexican drama Identifying Features and probably a few more awards season contenders, as they're coming in by the minute.

Thursday, 10 December 2020

Critical Week: Learn that dance

It's awards season, so I had two more virtual screenings this week accompanied by cast and crew zoom-style Q&As. Ma Rainey's Black Bottom is a faithful adaptation of the acclaimed August Wilson play, and it's somewhat overplayed and stagebound. But the actors are superb, including the late Chadwick Boseman (all other actors should abandon Oscar hopes this year) and Viola Davis. And Carey Mulligan and Ralph Fiennes star in The Dig, an unusually earthy period film about a history-changing archaeological discovery. Without the accompanying Q&As, I also caught up with Soul, in which Pixar outdoes even themselves with flat-out awesome animation and a staggeringly deep story, and Steven Soderbergh's Let Them All Talk, in which a starry cast (Streep! Bergen! Wiest!) explores deep themes in an offhanded shipboard comedy.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
The Stand In • Alex Wheatle
Funny Boy • The Prom
Song Without a Name
ALL REVIEWS >
The final two episodes of Steve McQueen's unmissable Small Axe series screened: Alex Wheatle is a superb biopic about the awakening of an acclaimed novelist, while Education is an exhilarating drama that takes on racism in Britain's school system. Riz Ahmed is simply stunning as a drummer dealing with deafness in Sound of Metal. Tessa Thompson transcends the muted period vibe in the romance Sylvie's Love. And Sienna Miller shines in the moody odyssey Wander Darkly

I also caught up with two excellent foreign films: Funny Boy is a moving, gorgeously made drama from Sri Lanka by ace filmmaker Deepa Mehta, while Cocoon is a German coming-of-age drama that catches an intimate perspective. And there was also one film screened in a cinema, and the freaky British horror Saint Maud is definitely worth seeing on a huge screen with a rumbling sound system.

This coming week, I have two more screenings in actual cinemas: delayed blockbuster Wonder Woman 1984 and the true conspiracy drama The Mauritanian starring Tahar Rahim, Jodie Foster and Benedict Cumberbatch. There's also Diane Lane in Let Him Go, Alicia Silverstone in Sister of the Groom, Alicia Witt in Modern Persuasion, the dance-based romance Aviva and the shorts collection The Boy Is Mine.

Thursday, 3 December 2020

Critical Week: Dancing in the aisles

Being awards season, there are quite a few screenings that include a Q&A with the cast and crew - all held virtually this year. I had three of these this past week: Promising Young Woman is a vicious, blackly comical thriller with a terrific Carey Mulligan (pictured above with Bo Burnham). It's sharply pointed and darkly entertaining. The Prom is a glittery musical concoction from Ryan Murphy starring Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman, James Corden, Andrew Rannells and Kerry Washington, among others. It's over-the-top in many ways, but has nicely serious undercurrents. And Pieces of a Woman is a very dark drama starring Vanessa Kirby and Shia LaBeouf. It's involving and beautifully put together, but rather grim.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Red, White and Blue
Nomadland • Ammonite
Falling • Black Bear • Host
 
PERHAPS AVOID:
Buddy Games
Love, Weddings & Other Disasters
 
FULL REVIEWS>
Otherwise it was the usual eclectic bunch. Drew Barrymore has both lead roles in The Stand In, a comedy that's not as silly as it looks, knowingly skewering show business myths. This week's Small Axe movie by Steve McQueen is the breathtaking Red, White and Blue, starring John Boyega as a young cop with a conscience. Viggo Mortensen writes, directs, stars in and composes the score for Falling, a pungent drama about a man dealing with his senile, increasingly bigoted father (a terrific Lance Henricksen). Parallel is a crowd-pleasing sci-fi concoction with a twisty plot and a hint of thematic depth, while Muscle is a gritty British drama that takes an unsettling dive into toxic masculinity. There was also Jack and the Beanstalk, a deliciously hilarious traditional British panto shot in back gardens during the pandemic. And The American Boys is a collection of six sensitive coming-of-age shorts, all very well made.

I have a lot to watch over the coming week, including the final two Small Axe films Alex Wheatle and Education, Riz Ahmed in Sound of Metal, Tessa Thompson in Sylvie's Love, Sienna Miller in Wander Darkly, Laura Dern in Trial by Fire, and acclaimed foreign titles Funny Boy, The Weasel's Tale and Cocoon. I also have an actual physical catch-up screening of the British horror Saint Maud. Yes, cinemas are open again, again.

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...

Sunday, 3 November 2019

Contenders: Four dramas

I've been catching up with movies released earlier in the year that are eligible in the upcoming awards season. Whether they're worthy of consideration is another thing...

The Laundromat
dir Steven Soderbergh
scr Scott Z Burns
with Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman, Antonio Banderas, Jeffrey Wright, Melissa Rauch, Nonso Anozie, Matthias Schoenaerts, Rosalind Chao, David Schwimmer, Robert Patrick, James Cromwell, Sharon Stone
release US/UK 18.Oct.19 • 19/US Netflix 1h35 **

Weaving together a series of true stories, this financial comedy-drama seeks to explore the secret life of money. It's ambitious, silly and deliberately absurd, narrated by two dandy lawyers (Banderas and Oldman) in Panama. But the script follows so many threads and delivers so much information that it never comes to meaningful life. The themes are vitally important, the film makes some very strong points, and the performances are excellent, but the wildly flailing barrage of detail is numbing.

After a personal tragedy, Ellen (Streep) begins looking into the fraudulent insurance company in Nevis that has shortchanged her. She discovers it's linked to a Panama law firm helping the world's wealthiest people hide their money in shell companies. Their globe-spanning clients include murderous drug kingpins, an African billionaire (Anozie) who knows he can buy anything, and a British businessman (Schoenaerts) who arrogantly challenges his contact (Chao) in China. And the story is about to break, implicating everyone from movie stars to governments.

The film is essentially about the astonishingly thin line between illegal tax evasion and legal tax avoidance. But it's very difficult to care, or even to pay attention, amid endless conversations about finance, insurance, lawsuits, and so on, especially when the tone is so glib. The cast tries to spice things up with personality, screenwriter Burns keeps the words sparky, and director Soderbergh keeps things visually whizzy. But it still feels dull and unfocussed. There's too much effort to create witty cause-and-effect metaphors and colourful explanations, when a coherent, involving central story would have done this much more efficiently.
29.Oct.19



The Man Who Killed Don Quixote
dir Terry Gilliam
with Adam Driver, Jonathan Pryce 18/Sp ***. 
Terry Gilliam spent more than 25 years working on this project (a previous attempt to film it was documented in Lost in La Mancha), and getting the film released wasn't easy either. The plot is wacky and meandering, but Gilliam infuses it with a gleefully freewheeling tone, taking flights of fancy at every turn. So even if its defiantly original style can be challenging, it's both raucous good fun and sharply pointed... FULL REVIEW >



The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind
dir-scr Chiwetel Ejiofor
with Chiwetel Ejiofor, Maxwell Simba, Aissa Maiga, Lily Banda, Lemogang Tsipa, Philbert Falakeza, Noma Dumezweni, Rophium Banda, Raymond Ofula, Joseph Marcell
release UK/US 1.Mar.19 • 18/UK BBC 1h53 ***.

For his writing-directing debut, Chiwetel Ejiofor ambitiously takes on a true story from rural Malawi. Beautifully shot in the actual locations, the narrative unfolds in a relatively straightforward way, which doesn't allow for a lot of subtext. But it's a thoroughly involving tale, populated by lively characters. And it's also seriously inspirational as it follows a young teen whose curiosity changed his world.

In a small farming village plagued by cycles of drought and flooding, it's getting more and more difficult to manage the grain harvest. Farming a small plot of land, Trywell (Ejiofor) finds his crops either over-soaked or parched. His wife Agnes (Maiga) is an educated woman who wants the best for their teen children Annie (Banda) and William (Simba). Annie hopes to go to university and is secretly seeing a schoolteacher (Tsipa), while William is a voracious student worried because his parents can no longer afford his school fees. So keeping access to the school library becomes a problem as he begins to figure out a way to solve their irrigation problems using wind-power.

The dramatic conflicts in this story feel a little contrived, as they pit the observant, inventive William against his pointlessly stubborn father. Surely Trywell would understand by now that his son might have ideas beyond his age. But he digs his feet in, flails against nature and prays for rain, while ignoring the solution right in front of him. On the other hand, this provides some meaty conversations, and terrific scenes between Ejiofor, Simba and Maiga, who flesh out their characters beautifully. So in the end, it's a skilful retelling of an important story, and aspects of the film are impressive, such as how Ejiofor learned the local language. It also looks gorgeous, and its emotional kick is very strong, as is the way it encourages us to seek outside-the-box solutions to things like political corruption and natural disasters.
23.Oct.19



Ma
dir Tate Taylor
scr Scotty Landes
with Octavia Spencer, Diana Silvers, Juliette Lewis, McKaley Miller,  Corey Fogelmanis, Gianni Paolo, Dante Brown, Luke Evans, Allison Janney, Missi Pyle
release US/UK 31.May.19 • 19/US Universal 1h39 **.

Starting as a rather typical slickly made smalltown comedy-drama, director Tate Taylor begins from the start to undermine the usual forced Hollywood-style levity with elements from horror movies. But while Octavia Spencer keeps it watchable, the script and production are far too smoothed out to actually generate any suspense, including the way the screenplay uses important topics to offer simple explanations for the nastiness that erupts later on.

Erica (Lewis) and her teen daughter Maggie (Silvers) are settling into life in a new town. Trying to fit in at high school, Maggie hangs out with a group of cool kids including popular girl Haley (Miller), nice guy Andy (Fogelmanis) and jocks Chaz and Darrell (Brown and Waivers). After friendly Sue Ann (Spencer) buys booze for them, she stalks them online and befriends them ("Call me Ma!"), turning her basement into party central. But is she only pretending to be a cool adult?

There are interesting layers to the story, such as Ma's insecurities, which date back to her school days, when her classmates included Maggie, Andy's dad Ben (Evans) and his mean-girl girlfriend Mercedes (Pyle). Taylor overstates these themes loudly, making each wrinkle in the story so painfully obvious that the actual surprises seem anticlimactic. And many sequences feel badly compromised (surely Ma did something else to Ben in the first draft, and her own teen humiliation is botched in a pitch-black gloom). Thankfully, Spencer is skilled at believably navigating Ma's whiplash tonal changes from sweet to party girl to psychopath. But even she can't sell the hyper-grisly climax.
31.Oct.19

Thursday, 31 October 2019

Critical Week: On the warpath

Since I've seen most of movies that were screening to the press this past week, I've been catching up on awards season films like Steven Soderbergh's The Laundromat, a bizarrely comical farce circling around the Panama Papers scandal. The material is strong, but even an A-list cast (led by Meryl Streep, above) can't ground this kind of overambitious approach. Also somewhat uneven, Terry Gilliam's The Man Who Killed Don Quixote boasts great performances from Adam Driver and Jonathan Pryce and fabulously freewheeling production design, with deep themes running under a meandering narrative.

The low-budget Spell was a nice surprise, a scruffy horror romp about a quirky American in Iceland. From Netherlands, Bloody Marie is an internalised drama that takes place during a freaky crime thriller. From Brazil, the bracingly naturalistic Copa 181 explores people who live on the fringe of decency, and are quite happy there. There were also three docs: packed with awesome archival material, Sid & Judy is a lovely look at Judy Garland's life through the eyes of third husband Sid Luft; American Factory is a striking exploration of the cultural collision between China and the US in Ohiol and Anton Corbijn's Depeche Mode: Spirits in the Forest is a superbly engaging blend of concert film and fan doc.

Coming up next week are screenings of Paul Feig's holiday rom-com Last Christmas, Helen Mirren and Ian McKellen in The Good Liar, Shia LaBeouf in Honey Boy, the all-star war action Midway, Terrence Malick's A Hidden Life, the British drama Into the Mirror, the rather self-explanatory The Amazing Johnathan Documentary and a reissue of the landmark 1985 Aids drama Buddies.

Saturday, 19 October 2019

Screen: Autumn TV Roundup

Watching an episode or two of a TV show in between movies, or between writing a review and proofreading it, seems to help reset my brain. So the more escapist, the better! This summer summer felt a bit thin for good television, so I'm surprised to see how much I watched over the past four or five months...

ALL NEW

The Boys
Taking a bracingly honest approach to the superhero genre, this show dares to present these heroes as deeply flawed humans who have let their power go to their heads, even as they're being manipulated by the giant corporation that's making a fortune off of them. The characters are complex and messy, and the escalating nastiness of the plot is superbly unpredictable. So it's a shame that the show has such a generic title, smug attitude and frenzied love of grisly violence. The relentless toxic masculinity begins to feel oppressive by the end, on both sides of the battle. And much of the more provocative material feels like it was designed to shock rather than to build characters or story. But the show's driving central narrative is riveting.

Euphoria
Because it dares to break rules, this show stands out from the crowd. Its depiction of that teen sense of immortality is frankly astonishing, showing sex and drugs in ways that are frighteningly honest while refusing to vilify the way young people use devices and social media. It's rare to find a movie or TV series acknowledge so skilfully that the world has changed and the older generations need to get up to speed rather than pointlessly trying to drag everyone back. The cast is note perfect, both teens and adults. And the show is gorgeously well shot and edited, even if its structure sometimes becomes indulgent as it over-explains the cause of each character's vices. This was most noticeable in the season finale, which was edited into a chaotic jumble to leave each plot thread dangling at just the right angle. It's occasionally stunning, but also naggingly pretentious.

Catch-22
Joseph Heller's spiralling WWII novel is adapted into a beautifully focussed miniseries set mainly around the experiences of a young officer (Christopher Abbott) at a US airbase in Italy. The continual ironies make it well worth a look, as it adopts a snappy M*A*S*H tone with added dark absurdities. It's a lacerating look at the true nature of war, in which no one is a winner. And it features some superb supporting actors (Kyle Chandler is particularly notable), plus a continual stream of heart-stopping moments. George Clooney and Grant Heslov led the charge on this show, directing and appearing in various episodes, and the high production values make it feel timeless.

The Other Two
Sharply well written and played, this comedy hilariously scrambles the idea of celebrity. It's about two 20-something siblings (Drew Tarver and Helene Yorke) who are still struggling to find their way in life, and now they also have to grapple with the sudden viral fame of their younger 13-year-old brother (Case Walker). All three actors are perfect, with impeccable comic timing. And the great Molly Shannon shines as their hilariously involved mother, who takes a journey all her own (and deserves awards-season attention). These episodes go down so smoothly that the season ends far earlier than we want it to. But the writers finish on a very funny twist that sets things off in a new direction for the second series.

What We Do in the Shadows
Basically transplanting the hilarious New Zealand spoof film to Staten Island, this witty documentary pastiche follows a group of over-earnest vampires as they fail to grasp the complexities of modern society. Each of the half-hours features yet another ridiculous challenge for people stuck in the middle ages. And the addition of energy and emotional vampires is a stroke of genius. Performances are spot on, never winking at the camera even as they acknowledge the presence of the crew, which gets itself into trouble now and then. It's all a bit fluffy and absurdly silly, but that's just what you want from a TV comedy.

The Name of the Rose
With its medieval setting and triumphant opening theme, it's clear that the producers were going for a Game of Thrones vibe. Sure, it's packed with oddly named characters who are impossible to remember, but the story is more singular, zeroing in on brainy monk William (a wonderfully lively John Turturro) trying to solve a series of murders in a monastery. With its shifty characters and maze-like library, the show pulls us into the mystery through the eyes of William's young novice Adso (Damian Hardung), who's in love with a peasant girl (Greta Scarano) in the woods. Then the vicious papal henchman (Rupert Everett) arrives to complicate things dramatically. 

STILL GOING STRONG

Pose: series 2
Shifting the story forward to 1990, and diving right into the Aids epidemic, this show starts strong but quickly begins to get bogged down in special conceptual episodes (including far too many maudlin after-death fantasies that are overwritten and overplayed). By contrast, when the show focusses on its characters and their everyday issues, it shines. The period is the moment this subculture hit the mainstream with Madonna's Vogue, and the cast is incandescent as ever, with compelling storylines and riveting performance pieces. Moving forward, let's hope the showrunners remember that it's the smaller, personal moments that provide the sharpest observations and emotional high points. And frankly, Patti LuPone should sing in every episode of every TV show ever.

Big Little Lies: series 2
This is a lot more soapy than the first season, simply because the writers are now trying to stretch things out. Thankfully, the cast is so good (with an added powerhouse performance from Meryl!) that it never feels trite. Indeed, the entangled drama expands in unpredictable directions that continually keep the viewer on his or her toes, as each of the central characters faces surprising situations that shake them to the core. This offers plenty of grist for the almost obscenely talented likes of Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Laura Dern, Shailene Woodley, Zoe Kravitz, Adam Scott and more. But this is The Meryl Show all the way. There's even a great cliffhanger.

Stranger Things: series 3
Progressing even further into horror, this third season is a full-throttle adventure that once again cleverly maintains a character focus while a high-concept plot unfolds. Alliances are shifted around now that we're in 1985, with the older and younger teens working together on two fronts to figure out what's going on: one group chasing a monster and the other spying on Russians. Meanwhile, Joyce and Jim (Winona Ryder and David Harbour) are on their own trajectory. It's a beautifully produced show with an attention to detail that goes far beyond production design. And the cast is excellent, bringing these realistically messy people to vivid life.

The Handmaid's Tale: series 3
This show continues in thriller mode, while the pressure of stretching one book into an ongoing series sends plots spiralling out to cover more characters in increasingly melodramatic gyrations. This waters down the show's kick, because the first season was so astonishingly focussed. But it's still bold and provocative, with storylines that twist and turn through some genuinely nasty and emotionally devastating events. As ever, the cast is excellent, anchored by a powerhouse Elizabeth Moss in full-glowering superhero mode. And the wonderful Ann Dowd gets some back-story this time, even as she's less central.

Easy: series 3
This comedy-drama ensemble is back with their separate, occasionally loosely connected dramas. Sometimes creator Joe Swanberg's offhanded attempts to shock feel pushy, for example presenting an open marriage as an everyday situation. But a moralising undercurrent gives away the game. The Chicago setting at least makes the show look different from other things on the air, and the actors bravely tackle the roles without worrying that all of these people are deeply unlikeable. They're realistic, so there are things about each of them that we can sympathise with, but it's difficult to care. 

Black Mirror: series 5
There are only three episodes in this season, and the high quality of the productions will leave the audience wanting more. Charlie Brooker happily pushes his characters to the brink with the help of on-the-edge technology that feels like it might be introduced tomorrow. Anthony Mackie and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II play out a fiendishly clever variation on the usual bromance. Andrew Scott has a harrowing stand-off with the cops, which gets increasingly entwined technologically. And Miley Cyrus is terrific as popstar Ashley Q, whose life is hijacked by her assistant, while a loyal fan (Angourie Rice) has an unexpected connection with an artificial-intelligence toy. They way these two strands converge is fiendishly clever.

Younger: series 6
A guilty pleasure, this dopey comedy continues to be just right when you don't want to think: hot people angsting about inane dilemmas in situations that bear no resemblance to the real world. And the way the show tries to be hip about social media is deeply amusing. Watched this way, there's quite a lot of fun to be had in the quirky characters, even if it's impossible to care what happens. But it doesn't help that the show's star (Sutton Foster's Liza) is the dullest character, and her romance with Peter Hermann's Charles is a non-starter. She's clearly destined for Nico Tortorella's gorgeous young single-dad tattooist. So just get on with it.

ON A BINGE

The OA: series 1-2
Created by and starring Brit Marling, this show is a clever prism of reality that's challenging but never tries to outfox the audience. It's rare to find such a mind-bending premise that's so bracingly coherent, packed with sequences that send exhilarating tingles up the spine. And where this season ends makes it even more essential, so it's sad that the plug was pulled. 

Derry Girls: series 1-2
This raucous half-hour comedy is perhaps a bit too broad for its own good, but it is amusing as it follows a group of Catholic teens as the conflicts of early 1990s Northern Irish unfold in the background. The girls (and one boy) are pretty ridiculous in their naivete, but their interaction is generally hilarious. But this knowing, funny show is stolen by Siobhan McSweeney as the deadpan Sister Michael.

Call My Agent: series 1-3
Not sure why I hadn't discovered this French comedy (now made by Netflix) before, but it's seems made for me! At a top Paris talent agency (with clients playing themselves, often riotously so), the out-of-control staff members get more engaging with each episode. It's a terrific combination of snappy humour, soapy plotlines and knowing industry pastiche. The Isabelle Huppert episode is essential.

Superstore: series 1-4
Over the dog days of summer, I was in need of a half-hour comedy to fill in the corners between work projects. And it didn't take long to get through all four seasons of this breezily silly sit-com set in a Walmart/Target like warehouse store, anchored ably by America Ferrera. It tackles big issues (immigration, un-liveable wages, sexism) but is refreshingly offhanded about pretty much everything. 

Succession: series 1
The cast and sharp writing make this show essential. There's a bit too much swaggering masculinity on display (the female characters need to be beefed up), and the mashup of Murdoch, Ailes and Disney sometimes feels a little forced. But it's fast and ruthlessly nasty, which is something rare on television. The question is whether they can sustain this pace into another season.

The Haunting of Hill House: series 1
Bearing almost no resemblance to the source Shirley Jackson novel, this series spin an elaborate horror story over several timelines, This Is Us-style. It's beautifully put together, with a superior cast, although everything is rather too scary-looking. Still, it's packed with solid freak-outs. Some of the cast will return for the second season, a variation on Henry James' iconic The Turn of the Screw.

REALITY BITES

Clearly the most escapist of all TV genres, reality shows are such vapid fun that they help provide a break from, and some perspective on, actual life events. I enjoyed Love Island this summer for its collection of too-beautiful people who aren't stupid but don't seem to understand what's actually important. I'm currently keeping an eye on guilty pleasures The Great British Bake Off and Strictly Come Dancing, two shows that feature big personalities and nothing else I'm remotely interested in. See also The X Factor: Celebrity, which just launched, and I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here, coming soonish. RuPaul's Drag Race UK is off to a great start, combining huge characters with social importance and sassy colour. But the best reality show this year, perhaps ever, is A Very Brady Renovation, reuniting all six iconic child actors with an army of renovation show hosts to merge the exterior of the famed house with the 1969 interiors that only ever existed on a soundstage. It's the perfect combination of nostalgia and ingenuity, and staggeringly well put together. And now that house exists for real. This was pure television joy!

I GIVE UP

Sometimes you get into a show and begin to wonder why you're wasting your time, so I stop watching. Russian Doll was not my cup of tea from the start, with its abrasively heightened drama, pushy convolutions and acting that's too deliberately over-the-top. Brassic is a shameless variation on, well, Shameless that's far too wacky to be engaging, so the strong underlying themes ring hollow. Lodge 49 had a meandering, loose first season, but the show-runners went bigger with season 2, and the overly messy structure leaves the superb Wyatt Russell with nothing coherent to do. And I only made it through a couple minutes of the dryly overserious The Hot Zone.

NOW WATCHING: The Politician, Unbelievable, Living With Yourself, Succession (series 2), The Conners (2), Bless This Mess (2), The Good Place (4), This Is Us (4), Superstore (5), Mom (7), Modern Family (11).

COMING SOON: His Dark Materials, The Mandalorian, The Loudest Voice, War of the Worlds, State of the Union, The End of the F***ing World (2), Castle Rock (2), The Crown (3)...