Showing posts with label millie bobby brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label millie bobby brown. Show all posts

Friday, 14 March 2025

Critical Week: I've got a bad feeling

It's been another unusually busy week for this time of year in the screening rooms, with a steady stream, of movies to watch. I'd been hoping to get a break after awards season, but we are powering forward at full speed. So any down time will have to wait. Big releases are screening late these days, with three that are coming out this week: Ayo Edebiri leads the cast of Opus, a blackly comical horror film that isn't very scary. But Edebiri makes it very watchable, as does a scene-chewing John Malkovich. Cate Blanchett and Michael Fassbender sizzle in the snaky, intelligent thriller Black Bag, which refreshingly isn't about what you think it's about. And Millie Bobby Brown and Chris Pratt lead an offbeat ensemble in The Electric State, a retro sci-fi adventure that's watchable but also forgettable.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Last Breath
Black Bag • Throuple
PERHAPS AVOID:
The Day the Earth Blew Up
ALL REVIEWS >
Other films included the perhaps too-emotional drama The Life of Chuck, with a superb ensemble led by Tom Hiddleston, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Karen Gillan. The Parenting is an amusing meet-the-parents horror pastiche with Brian Cox, Edie Falco and Lisa Kudrow. It's funny and grisly, but never frightening. Infused with music, Throuple is an offbeat indie romance that knowingly bends the rules. And there were two Chinese films: the epic animated sequel Ne Zha 2 is visually dazzling, while the blackly comical thriller Brief History of a Family is riveting and surprising.

There were also two festival films. From South by Southwest, there was the sharply made teen comedy She's the He, and from WatchAUT, I enjoyed the offbeat drama of Peacock, starring the superb Albrecht Schuch. And I also caught two stage shows: Dear Martin at the Arcola Theatre and Drum Tao: The Dream at the Peacock Theatre.

This coming week I'll be watching two films with Pedro Pascal, the adventure Freaky Tales and the comedy-drama The Uninvited, plus Disney's live-action Snow White, Michel Hazanavicius' animated The Most Precious of Cargoes, Alain Guiraudie's Misericordia and the artificial intelligence doc The Thinking Game. In addition, the remake of The Wedding Banquet, starring Bowen Yang, opens BFI Flare film fest on Wednesday.

Monday, 15 August 2022

Screen: August TV Roundup

After the disruption of the pandemic, we're finally getting to see several delayed series (with more still to come). These long gaps between seasons continue the shift in the way TV shows roll out, so the old network schedule of launching new episodes every autumn feels like it's becoming rare. There's been plenty for me to watch in between my film and theatre work, both enjoyable returning shows, original series and several that are adaptations, spinoffs, reboots or based on existing properties. And that's definitely a trend that is continuing...

Stranger Things: series 4 
With its epic-sized episodes and ramped-up plot, this series powers straight through to set things up for the final fifth season. Since the actors have all aged significantly, they perhaps seem a bit older on-screen than written, but this allows for intriguing nuances in the evolving relationships between them, superbly played by a tremendous cast. Splintering the story into three main strands is sometimes annoying, especially as the Russian plotline, as wildly entertaining as it is, clings to several coincidences. Otherwise, various set pieces produce proper thrills as everything builds to an enormously cathartic intake of breath, then leaves us gasping for more. (Netflix) 

Hacks: series 2  
Pushing these characters further into their rather tense working relationship, this series feels like it gets stronger with each episode. And this is largely due to the towering performance from Jean Smart as Joan Rivers-style comic Deborah, straining to kickstart her career with the help of messy writer Ava (Hannah Einbinder). This series also spirals out to follow Deborah's assistant Marcus (Carl Clemons-Hopkins), which isn't strongly enough developed yet to be involving. But this season's central idea, putting the characters on the road for a series of warmup gigs, is inspired. And having Laurie Metcalf turn up (too briefly) is a stroke of genius. (HBO)

The Umbrella Academy: series 3
This rather madcap action show continues to play with both alternate realities and the end of the world, as the Umbrellas have returned to the present and find themselves replaced by the Sparrows. Clashes, romances and lots of mayhem ensue, as reality begins collapsing in on itself and these oddly supercharged antiheroes need to once again rescue humanity. The actors are what makes this unmissable, as each character is such a bundle of nutty quirks that it's a wonder they get anything done at all. There isn't a weak link in the excellent ensemble, and the writers make sure each gets plenty of chaotic development along the way. Bring on a fourth season. (Netflix)

Physical: series 2 
Carrying on with the story, this new season continues the extremely slow evolution of Sheila Rubin (Rose Byrne), an intelligent wife and mother who keeps her personal demons secret, then punishes herself by becoming a fearsome 1980s aerobics expert. The narrative focusses on tiny shifts rather than momentous changes, and the cast goes all-in to each twist and turn, most notably Rory Scovel, Paul Sparks and Murray Bartlett, who arrives with a lot of promise but never gets to fully deliver on it. That's kind of how the whole show feels, as so little seems to happen. But the underlying thoughts and feelings make it entertaining and even important. (Apple)

The Boys: series 3 
Things continue to escalate for the rather awful people who populate this show, and this time the eponymous superhero-battling team dabble with their own temporary powers, ramping up clashes enormously. The writers cleverly put key characters in real danger, although we have to wait quite a while to see if they'll bump anyone off. It's a rare show in which both the good and bad guys are abrasive and often unlikeable, and most of them have the ability to kill someone without trying too hard. So it's violent and nasty, but also wry and knowing. And all of the lead actors are terrific at layering vulnerabilities and emotions in unexpected ways. (Prime)

The Marvelous Mrs Maisel: series 4 
A huge step up from the uneven third season, this new series is much more sharply focussed on both the characters and the overarching themes. So Rachel Brosnahan is able to both broaden and deepen Midge, while also remaining genuinely hilarious in her stand-up performances. Meanwhile, the side roles aren't merely spiralling aimlessly this time around: each narrative thread weaves together cleverly to offer meaty scenes for the actors while pushing this extended family further forward. And Alex Borstein just gets more intriguing with each episode, building her business on hilariously fragile foundations. And you can never go wrong with the fabulous Jane Lynch. (Netflix)

M O S T L Y   N E W

Ms Marvel 
Lively and engaging, this Marvel origin series has Pakistani culture and history engagingly woven through it, similar to Moon Knight's Egyptian connection. But this one's an American high school sitcom, as lively junior Kamala (Iman Vellani) engages in banter with her goofy friends and hilariously insistent Pakistani parents. Then a bangle taps into her grandmother's ancestral power, sending Kamala on an odyssey as she realises that she's a superhero connected to ancient folklore. The comical vibe helps make the more violent plot elements easier to take, and the characters are so vivid that we can't wait to see more of them on either big or small screens. (Disney) 

Obi-Wan Kenobi 
Filling in a gap in the Star Wars timeline, this six-episode series returns Ewan McGregor to his eponymous role as the now-jaded Jedi, while Hayden Christensen's Darth Vader marauds across the galaxy trying to finish him off. It feels oddly ill-imagined from the start, focussing on edgy action scenes that are bereft of tension due to the usual prequel issue: we know none of the main characters is in any real danger. A more dramatic approach and some more central (expendable) new characters would have given the series a much stronger sense of intrigue. Still, it's produced to a gloriously high standard, and McGregor and his ensemble of costars are excellent. (Disney)

Uncoupled
Essentially writer-creator Darren Star has created an out-gay remake of his earlier show, Sex and the City, this time starring three New York men grappling with love-life issues. It's equally underwritten and over-designed, but it's also hugely likeable, thank to the up-for-it Neil Patrick Harris as Michael, newly single after a 17-year relationship. His pals (Tisha Campbell, Emerson Brooks and Brooks Ashmanskas) offer the usual mix of good and bad advice/support, mainly for comical effect. Plus the great Marcia Gay Harden as another new singleton who worms her way into Michael's life. It's also actually funny, even if the humorous edges are superficial. (Netflix)

Loot 
Maya Rudolph is terrific in this comedy about a pampered, newly single billionaire who hasn't a clue how to engage with the real world, but wants to try by getting involved in her foundation. Many of the jokes are rather ridiculous, but the Rudolph is so good at playing endearingly naive that we can't help but love her, especially as she begins to connect with others. The wonderful Michaela Jae Rodriguez is terrific as her main foil, plus the absurdly endearing Joel Kim Booster as her hyperactive assistant and Adam Scott as her smarmy ex. The range of subplots are a bit uneven, but if one isn't working the attention quickly shifts to one that is simply genius. (HBO)

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 
Now that Discovery has leapt into the distant future, this spin-off reverts to the past to follow Captain Pike (Anson Mount) in the years before the original series, complete with a younger Spock (Ethan Peck) and a rookie Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding). The idea here is to mimic the first series' exploratory episodic style, although the showrunners can't resist wallowing in those murky over-arching plot threads. This allows for some character depth, but it also makes the show feel a bit gimmicky, never fully diving in to the adventure of the week because everyone is preoccupied with their larger stories. Thankfully it's sharply well made, and very watchable. (Paramount)

Queer as Folk
Russell T Davies' landmark show gets a second reboot, this time set in New Orleans. The writing cleverly captures present-day attitudes, as sexuality is much blurrier than it was in the 1999 British original or 2000 American remake. Even as characters echo earlier versions, the plot strikes out in new directions, with a group of people whose lives are entangled in the wake of a nightclub shooting. The cast has a sparky freshness, anchored by the Devin Way as likeable disaster Brodie. The range of characters around him feels a bit overly curated, but each one engages with their messy decisions as they try to both fit in and find someone to love. (Peacock)

T H A T ’ S   A   W R A P

Love, Victor: series 3 
With its final season, this warm-hearted teen sitcom carries on with the likeable Victor (Michael Cimino) and friends. In these episodes, Victor ping-pongs between three smart, adorable guys -- Benji (George Sear), Rahim (Anthony Keyvan) and Nick (Nico Greetham) -- as he faces the usual foibles of the dating scene. It ends in the expected bearhug, but along the way, the story veers through some remarkably open-handed themes. Each cast member is particularly strong at playing vulnerability, especially in the face of genuine obstacles, so the pointed explorations of religion (both Catholicism and Islam) and sexuality feel inspiring and important. (Hulu) 

NOW WATCHING: Surface, Black Bird, Only Murders in the Building (2), Kevin Can F**** Himself (2), Never Have I Ever (3), What We Do in the Shadows (4).
COMING SOON: Andor, House of the Dragon, The Rings of Power, Reboot, She-Hulk, The Handmaid's Tale (5).



Wednesday, 7 April 2021

Critical Week: Fight the power

As lockdown slowly eases and London descends into a late-winter chill, the most striking film I saw this week came from Russia. Andrei Konchalovsky's Bafta-nominated Soviet drama Dear Comrades is a viscerally relevant story of profound injustice. It's unmissable. Otherwise, the week's big movie was a very late online screening of the monster mash-up Godzilla vs Kong, after it had already been released online in the USA, and therefore was already on all the pirate sites. It was an enjoyable action blockbuster, with above-average effects (even on a laptop screen) and a great cast running around pointlessly in the background. Really can't wait to be able to see these kinds of movies on enormous screens where they belong, but there's still around five weeks before cinemas in the UK reopen.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK
Palm Springs • The Truffle Hunters
Moffie • Rose: A Love Story 
Sequin in a Blue Room 
PERHAPS AVOID
Love, Weddings & Other Disasters
ALL REVIEWS >
Everything else was tiny by comparison. Christopher Smith's The Banishing is an above-average horror, with a solid script that deepens characters to make us care, and then to scare us. Sensation is a rather thinly written British sci-fi thriller about a guy who discovers he has some sort of sense-manipulative powers, although it's never terribly clear. Also a bit tentative, the underpowered British romcom I'm Not in Love is a well-played look at a key relational turning point. From Argentina, A Common Crime is a tricky thriller told in an uncanny low-key, often silent style. And the documentary The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend a Broken Heart tells the remarkable story of the Gibb brothers, along with a strikingly relevant look at the music industry over the past half-century, plus of course a lot of great music. I also finally caught up with this documentary, which has been nominated for a Bafta on Sunday...

The Social Dilemma
dir Jeff Orlowski
scr Vickie Curtis, Davis Coombe, Jeff Orlowski
with Skyler Gisondo, Vincent Kartheiser, Jaron Lanier, Tristan Harris, Tim Kendall, Jeff Seibert, Shoshana Zuboff, Bailey Richardson
release US/UK 9.Sep.20
20/US Netflix 1h34 ****

Exploring the impact of big tech, this essential documentary opens with a quote from Sophocles: "Nothing vast enters the life of mortals without a curse." The filmmakers interview pioneers who built big platforms like Facebook, Google, Twitter and Instagram, who speak of how they're now frightened of the consequences. The central question is why the world seems to be going crazy at the moment, and why tech giants are so resistant to ethical design. And it's shocking to see how much control these companies have over their users.

The issue isn't easy to define, as social media impacts society in such a wide variety of ways, often hard to see. Platforms were deliberately designed to be addictive, and to implant subconscious thoughts users would never have on their own. So the point is that advertisers are clients, and the user's attention is the product that they're buying. Fine details about our lives and habits are fuelling huge profits, because advertisers are desperate for data that predicts our actions. This film lifts the curtain on exactly how all of this works, as well as the unintended consequences of letting this cat out of the bag.

Interviews and clips are framed with a knowing family drama (featuring Gisondo) that acts these things out, accompanied by whizzy, sci-fi effects sequences with Kartheiser as algorithmic puppet-masters. The raw truth is that these companies don't want to make our lives better, and they're not evil either; however, they're exploiting our psychology to make unprecedented profits without regulations or competition. And the impact is clear: anxiety levels have exponentially increased among young people, leading to a marked rise in self-harm and suicide. And since we're only seeing news that targets us, we're believing lies and building an increasingly polarised society.

This lucid, fascinating film outlines all of this clearly, including how these systems were designed to learn and evolve on their own, to the point that even the people who manage them don't know how they work and don't yet have the will to correct them, because capitalism demands increased profits. Which is deeply terrifying as persuasive technology magnifies conspiracy theories and makes people willing to kill for them, literally threatening civilisation. So simply being aware that this isn't a fair fight is a positive step. As is taking steps to break the addiction. More importantly, never get your news from online-only outlets. And watch this film.

12 themes, language, violence • 6.Apr.21


Coming up this next week, I'm planning to watch Dustin Hoffman in Into the Labyrinth, Dakota Fanning in Effie Gray, Ed Westwick in Me You Madness, and the docs Gunda, Steelers, Truman & Tennessee and Henry Glassie: Fieldwork.

Friday, 7 June 2019

Critical Week: Feel the roar

I've hit the cinemas in California this week trying to catch up on press screenings I missed while away from London. Godzilla: King of the Monsters is a deeply unsatisfying follow-up to Gareth Edwards' 2014 reboot. Millie Bobby Brown (above) is terrific in the best role, but the script is choppy and simplistic. The effects are also rather murky, as they are in Dark Phoenix, the fourth in the X-Men First Class cycle. It feels oddly melodramatic, with a superb cast that livens up a dull script that never quite connects the dots. By contrast, Brightburn is another superhero genre twist from James Gunn (see also The Specials and Super). It's a rare horror movie that's scary and involving, because it takes time to build the characters and situations. And these two documentaries are released this week...

The Lavender Scare
dir Josh Howard; with David Johnson, Lillian Faderman, John D'Emilio, Frank Kameny, Jamie Shoemaker
voices Glenn Close, David Hyde Pierce, Cynthia Nixon, Zachary Quinto, TR Knight
release US 7.Jun.19 • 17/US 1h17 ****

After taking office in 1954, President Eisenhower ordered the firing of all homosexuals working for the government. The worry was that they could be seduced by Russian spies, even though there wasn't a single documented case of this happening. FBI agents aggressively uprooted every aspect of a suspected gay employee's life in invasive investigations, often on the basis of one informant. The accused had no recourse: they were threatened and then fired as "undesirable" by the tens of thousands, their careers ended, often driven to suicide. All of this came as a shock, as society before this had been much more open and accepting. The film carefully traces how this came about, a perfect storm combining McCarthy's communist witchhunt and a fear of homosexuality sparked by Kinsey's report. Director Howard uses a snappy combination of expert interviews, firsthand accounts and archival material. This includes a number of strikingly involving personal stories, including Frank Kameny, the first person who didn't go quietly after he was fired. He formed an activist society in the early 1960s, which led to a series of protests against discrimination and abuse, including the Stonewall riots at the end of the decade. This continued into the 1990s, when Kameny finally saw President Clinton overturn Eisenhower's law. This is a remarkably important documentary, covering an angle of the civil rights movement that is rarely explored with such honesty. The intimate approach, accompanied by a terrific range of archival material, makes it deeply involving and often powerfully moving. It almost ends on a note of triumph, as if all of the nastiness is in the past, which already feels eerily optimistic and perhaps a bit naive in the face of renewed bigotry and persecution around the world. But this also reminds us that there will always be people willing to stand up for what's right.



This One’s for the Ladies
dir Gene Graham; prd Gene Graham, Paul Rowley
with Momma Joe, Raw Dog, Tygar, Fever, Blaze, Satan, Mr Capable, Young Rider, Poundcake, C-Pudding
release US 7.Jun.19 • 18/US 1h23 ***.

There's an intriguing depth to this documentary, which tackles some big issues using firsthand commentary rather than research or expert opinions. The topic is the urban struggle, encompassing racial injustice and poverty, and the filmmakers simply observe people who speak about an unexpected way they've found to escape the cycle of criminality. The setting is Newark, where beefy black men (and one muscled woman) strip down to a, well, single sock for lively audiences. Filmmaker Graham interviews several members of the New Jersey Nasty Boyz, as well as their loyal fans and family members. They speak a lot about their shared childhoods in the projects and their respect for the community, which is expressed through charity work and fundraising shows. They avoided a life of crime by staying in education and relying on their faith and close relationships, tapping into their African tribal roots as they do erotic dance. The film takes a simple, unfussy approach, letting the sassy attitudes emerge in both captured conversations and sweaty, lusty dance routines. "It's not about sex," says Momma Joe, whose sons Raw Dog and Tygar perform as a double act. "It's the illusion of having sex!" When the filmmakers are focussing on the dancers and their work, the energy is riveting. So the film kind of drags when it drifts gently into the larger themes. But the stories these people tell are powerful, as is the insight they can offer into a society that never gave them a chance due to inadequate schools and below-poverty wages. No wonder it's so difficult to avoid crime. And no wonder stripping offers both the dancers and the audience members an escape, a chance to control their fates. "It's therapy," one guy says. "It's our way out."




I'm heading back to London this weekend, so will be in catch-up mode on films opening over the next few weeks. I have Julianne Moore's Gloria Bell to watch on the plane. And back in London, my diary over the next week includes Danny Boyle's musical Yesterday, the reboot Men In Black International, the indie British drama Bait, and the documentary Marianne and Leonard: Words of Love...