Showing posts with label sean penn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sean penn. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 December 2021

Critical Week: Shape your reality

HAPPY CHRISTMAS! My special gift today was a positive covid test, despite being triple-jabbed and always wearing a mask, so I'll be isolating through the holidays this year. This won't be much of a change from the past few weeks - but I'll miss being able to meet people in person for a week or so. And I don't have another in-cinema screening until January 5th, so I'll keep watching things at home on screener links. 

This past week, the bigger films I watched included The Matrix Resurrections, a 20-years-later sequel that has some enjoyably brain-bending nonsense in it and a refreshing refusal to take itself seriously. Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss are superb, plus the always watchable Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Jonathan Groff, Neil Patrick Harris, Jessica Henwick and several returnees.  Paul Thomas Anderson's latest is freeform comedy Licorice Pizza, an enjoyably loose slice of 1970s nostalgia starring Cooper Hoffman (son of Philip Seymour) and Alana Haim (of the pop group). Plus starry scene-stealers like Bradley Cooper and Sean Penn.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Parallel Mothers • Sing 2
The Matrix Resurrections
ALL REVIEWS >
Smaller movies included the unsettling, atmospheric British horror Amulet, actor Romola Garai's writing-directing feature debut. The Worst Person in the World is a wonderfully complex drama from Norway following a young woman (the superb Renate Reinsve) over four years as she tries to find herself. From Austria, Great Freedom is a stunning prison drama that traces the lingering legacy of a cruel Nazi law outlawing homosexuality. And the autobiobraphical odyssey HipBeat is a bit preachy but makes some nice observations along the way.

I also caught up with a couple of movies for fun. The hugely entertaining doc Rita Moreno: Just a Girl Who Decided to Go for It traces the astonishing career and personal life of the iconic actress who's still going strong at 90. And the Christmas comedy Single All the Way is an enjoyably silly holiday romance with an above average cast including Michael Urie, Kathy Najimy and Jennifer Coolidge.

And this coming week, as I am in forced isolation, I'll be catching up with a few more awards contenders, including I'm Your Man, The Summit of the Gods, Mandibles and Writing With Fire. And I have a few links to watch as well for films coming out soon, including the thriller Borrego and the shorts collection The Last Days of Innocence.


Thursday, 9 May 2019

Critical Week: Dress to impress

With another long weekend, it's been a shorter than usual week of screenings. But I still kept pretty busy. The biggest release screened to the press, barely before it opened, was The Hustle, a remake of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels starring Anne Hathaway and Rebel Wilson. As a comedy it's rather weak, but has some funny moments all the way through. There were also two British period biopics. Tolkien is an impeccably produced look at the early life of JRR Tolkien (Nicholas Hoult), although it's a bit dry since it takes place before he wrote anything. The Professor and the Madman follows the tenacious work of James Murray (Mel Gibson) to define the English language and produce the first Oxford English Dictionary, with the help of an in-patient at Broodmoor asylum (Sean Penn). Despite the troubled production, it's a fascinating story, strikingly well acted.

Further afield we had the moving, dark British indie drama Last Summer, about young teens in small-town Wales dealing with a wrenching community crisis. And the even darker American indie drama Just Say Goodbye takes on teen suicide with a perhaps too-provocative story about friendship and parenthood. We also caught the superb documentary XY Chelsea, which closely follows whistleblower Chelsea Manning between two incarcerations. It's involving and even inspiring, taking on those who label her a traitor. And since it's finally out for streaming/etc in the UK, here's a longer take on this doc I saw a few weeks back...

Fahrenheit 11/9
dir-scr Michael Moore; with Michael Moore, Timothy Snyder, Jenifer Lewis, Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, Emma Gonzalez, David Hogg 18/US 2h08 ****

Michael Moore was one of the only pundits who predicted the Trump presidency. So this long but watchable and important doc opens with the massive upset of election night 2016, from Clinton supporters' pre-voting revelry turning into gloom to the shocked faces of Team Trump, which clearly didn't expect to win. From here, Moore spins back to look at how Trump accidentally got into the race while trying to increase his profile in contract negotiations with NBC. His racist comments backfired (NBC fired him), but he touched a nerve with a segment of the American public. Masterfully manipulating the media, which was making a fortune from covering his antics, Trump had a long history with Russian mobsters and the media leaders taken down for abusing women. Moore also documents his overt racism and misogyny over many decades, all of which was public knowledge. Similarly, his treasonous behaviour since taking office has also been out in the open.

As usual, Moore connects this to his hometown of Flint, Michigan, where Governor Rick Snyder (a Trump buddy) declared a fake emergency to essentially privatise the poor, black city, callously poisoning it then covering up the escalating disaster. This takes up a good chunk of the film, and rightly so. Back to the main topic, Moore's dissection of the US electorate is fascinating: the truth is that liberal '60s values reflect the average American today; the Republicans have only won the popular vote in one presidential election in the last 30 years ("You can't call it a democracy if the person who wins the most votes doesn't win"). Moore also covers the fraud among the Democrats, such as how anyone who breaks from the centrist line is suppressed (as was Bernie Sanders), and how in many ways Obama paved the way for Trump. So it was no wonder people were willing to break the system with a protest vote.

Finally, Moore dives into gun control in the wake of the Parkland shootings an teens who refused to sit quietly and accept "thoughts and prayers". The salient point here is that candidates are representing their donors, not the voters. And Moore's most powerful message is that we need to ignore attempts to divide us against each other, rise up and create the government we deserve. History tells us that the US is becoming less democratic and more despotic by the day. So this film's carefully documented conclusions should chill us to the bone.



This coming week, we'll be watching Keanu Reeves in John Wick Chapter 3: Parabellum, Julianne Moore in Gloria Bell and the documentaries Apollo 11, General Magic, The Lavender Scare and Nomad. Plus a couple of stage shows, just for a change of scenery.

Tuesday, 10 March 2015

Critical Week: Up on the roof

Press screenings this past week included Spooks: The Greater Good, the first big-screen adventure for the long-running BBC TV spy series (titled MI-5 in the USA). Comments on the film are embargoed until closer to the May 8th release, but the cast includes Kit Harington (above), Jennifer Ehle, David Harewood and series actors Peter Firth, Tim McInnerny and Lara Pulver. And there were two other action movies this week: Sean Penn is The Gunman, an oddly dull and brutal Euro-thriller with the spark of a topical theme, while Jason Statham leads Wild Card, an oddly dull and brutal Vegas thriller with a jazzy undertone.

There were also four comedies: Noah Baumbach's engaging but contrived While We're Young features Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts facing the early flares of middle age; Mae Whitman is terrific in The Duff, a smartly written and played teen comedy that keeps the audience laughing; from the same producers, the perhaps too-snappy meta-comedy Playing It Cool stars Chris Evans as a screenwriter trying to write a rom-com while resisting romance; and Andrew J West leads a starry cast as Walter, a likeable young guy who thinks he's God's messenger and takes a surprisingly engaging journey back to reality.

And two superbly well-made but essentially plotless art films were a tonic to critics worn out by too-literal commercial movies: the rural British coming-of-age drama The Goob and the Colombian class-clash drama Gente de Bien are both beautifully observed studies of people grappling with life in their specific cultures.

Coming up in the next week, we have screenings of the Divergent sequel Insurgent, Liam Neeson in Run All Night, Russell Crowe in The Water Diviner, Elizabeth Moss in Listen Up Philip, James Franco in I Am Michael, sirs Ben Kingsley and Michael Caine in Stonehearst Asylum, the animated adventure Home, the Swedish drama Something Must Break and the finally uncensored 54: The Director's Cut.