Showing posts with label sigourney weaver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sigourney weaver. Show all posts

Monday, 12 May 2025

On the Road: Comfort movies

One of the hazards of being a film critic is the airline entertainment system: scrolling through the hundreds of movies that are on offer looking for something that (1) I haven't seen before and (2) want to watch. Occasionally something that fits this criteria pops up but, on my recent flight to California to spend some time with my family, there wasn't anything. In these cases I tend to turn to favourite comedies or musicals that will amiably pass the time. On this flight, the 1999 classic Galaxy Quest did just the trick. I hadn't seen it in years, and I'd forgotten how great the cast is: including Sigourney Weaver, Alan Rickman, Tim Allen, Sam Rockwell, Tony Shalhoub and Daryl Mitchell (above). This isn't a film you ever get tired of revisiting. I also revisited the 2005 musical Rent, a film that isn't quite as potent as the stage version but still boasts excellent performances. And I watched all eight episodes of The Franchise (it's a long flight!), an amusing comedy series about the cast and crew of a superhero movie. It's likeable and sometimes very funny, but feels a bit random.

Before leaving London I also watched two very small American dramas: Midnight in Phoenix is a micro-budget thriller about two guys who go on the run after witnessing a violent robbery. It's a bit uneven, but has strong emotions and solid characters. Things Like This is a snappy New York romantic comedy that's a little awkward but features nicely complex characters and connections.

While I'm out here, I am hoping to catch Tom Cruise in Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning, and possible also Disney's live-action remake of Lilo & Stitch. But my emphasis is on spending time with my family, and it's nice to have movies take the back seat for a couple of weeks.

BEST NEW FILMS: The Wedding Banquet (9th May cover with Lily Gladstone and Kelly Marie Tran) • Motel Destino • The Extraordinary Miss Flower • Good One (16th May cover with Lily Collias) ALL REVIEWS >


Thursday, 15 December 2022

Critical Week: Feeling grinchy

As movies get increasingly heartwarming, it can be a challenge to ward off that inner Scrooge. Thankfully I have been watching quite a few more disturbing arthouse movies alongside the more warmly emotional wide-audience titles. And then there's A Man Called Otto, the engaging forthcoming Tom Hanks comedy that's a sentimental remake of the much edgier Swedish hit A Man Called Ove. Blockbuster sequel Avatar: The Way of Water also adds an undercurrent of emotion to its visually stunning action violence, as James Cameron creates another epic that entertains on various levels. 

BEST FILMS OUT NOW:
Rimini • The Silent Twins • Lynch/Oz
She Said • Matilda the Musical • Nanny
All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
ALL REVIEWS >
More offbeat movies contending for awards included, appropriately, the UK's international film entry Winners, an enjoyable romp set about an Oscar statuette that takes its own mini-adventure in rural Iran. Ulrich Seidl's Rimini is a riveting pitch-black comedy about a desperate has-been singer in an off-season seaside resort town. Lukas Dhont's moving drama Close traces a pre-teen's harsh coming-of-age through the disruption of his relationship with his best friend. The hugely involving Polish odyssey EO follows a loveable donkey on an incredible journey that's sweet, challenging and often scary. And last year's crowd-pleasing Oscar nominee Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom is set in a gorgeous isolated corner of Bhutan. And outside awards contention were two indie titles: the Italian comedy-drama Marscapone, a warmly intimate look at maintaining your identity within a relationship, and American drama Peridot, an intriguingly loose portrait of a street hustler.

There are still a lot of movies to catch up with as year-end voting deadlines approach, including Will Smith in Emancipation, Lea Seydoux in One Find Morning, Toni Collette in The Estate, Christian Bale in The Pale Blue Eye, the animated adventure The Amazing Maurice, the war epic All Quiet on the Western Front and the David Bowie doc Moonage Daydream.

Saturday, 3 September 2022

Venezia79: Back to nature


The 79th Venice Film Festival continues under sunny skies, as we look for ways to enjoy the location even as we scurry between cinemas and press rooms. I've made a pact to at least have one gelato per day (handy that the festival has its own gelateria), but getting that first coffee in has been trickier with long queues everywhere. But then I also have two 15-minute walks through old Venice each day and 20 minutes on a vaporetto to get some lovely scenery and fresh air. And yes, I remember that I'm here to watch movies. Here are a few more highlights...

Master Gardener
dir-scr Paul Schrader; with Joel Edgerton, Sigourney Weaver 22/US ***
With his usual provocations about accepted morality, Paul Schrader heads to the Deep South for an intriguing drama that plays with a range big ideas while remaining tantalisingly out of reach. The characters are complex and full of their own private secrets, which creates a sense of mystery as the plot dabbles with the elements of a thriller. But this leaves the film feeling eerily incomplete, simply because the people remain so opaque.

Argentina, 1985
dir Santiago Mitre; with Ricardo Darin, Peter Lanzani 22/Arg ****
Including a heavy dose of sharp humour in the screenplay helps make this rather momentous true story unusually accessible. So while it hinges on a procedural investigation and historical courtroom trial, director-cowriter Santiago Mitre continually reveals the humanity of the characters, pulling us in deeper. The case itself is harrowing, a landmark moment when a military dictatorship went on trial for its horrific crimes against the people.

Ordinary Failures [Běžná Selhání]

dir Cristina Grosan; with Tatjana Medvecka, Nora Klimesova 22/Cz ****
Set in the very near future, this Czech drama will be instantly identifiable to anyone who feels like they are barely hanging on amid the varied pressures in their lives. And in this case, the world literally is collapsing around the characters. With Klara Vlasakova's insightful satirical script and Cristina Grosan's glacially sharp directing, the film quietly provokes the audience with a series of injustices, deliberate and accidental. All of this combines gorgeously to create a riveting story that has an important, timely and deeply moving impact.

Eismayer

dir-scr David Wagner; with Gerhard Liebmann, Luka Dimic 22/Aut ***.
Based on true events, this Austrian drama traces an unexpected relationship between two men at a military service boot camp. Filmmaker David Wagner traces the narrative with remarkable focus, avoiding distracting subplots to bring out details and intimate feelings. It may seem a little simplistic, but it's fascinating to see a story like this in a place where men have to be tough, without emotions or weaknesses. And later, when power and bravado begin to shift, this becomes an inspiring exploration of honesty, resilience and tenacity.

Full reviews will be linked at Shadows VENICE FILM FESTIVAL page, eventually! 

 

Wednesday, 5 May 2021

Critical Week: Get the party started

There's definitely a sense in London that this lockdown is finally coming to an end, with the promise that we'll soon be able to meet up in person again. Cinemas are re-opening in about 10 days after a long five-month closure, so press screenings will start up as well (I already have a few theatre press nights in the diary). In the mean time, I'm still watching everything using online links. The past week was another extremely mixed bag, from the loose, low-fi fun of the indie drama The Get Together, a messy romantic comedy centred around a chaotic house party, to the fabulous animated adventure The Mitchells vs the Machines, which has vividly developed characters and properly moving themes to add to its nutty action mayhem.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Cowboys • Apples • Undergods
ALL REVIEWS >
Each movie brought its own mood: My New York Year (aka My Salinger Year) is a warmly comical take on the same story as The Devil Wears Prada, but set in a fusty literary agency (with a superb Sigourney Weaver in the scene-stealing role). The Killing of Two Lovers is a gritty independent drama that's somewhat indulgent in its storytelling but has a raw emotionality to it. The Reckoning is unintentionally camp 17th century British horror, riddled with cliches and some painfully awkward makeup and hairstyling choices. From South Africa, Fried Barry is a gleefully squalid odyssey about a junkie who's taken over by aliens. And the extremely low-budget action comedy In Action proves that just about anyone can make a movie if they have imagination and a sense of humour.

Films I need to watch over this coming week include Kelvin Harrison Jr in Monster, Colin Farrell in Voyagers, Melanie Laurent in the thriller Oxygen, the Slovakian drama Servants and the horror comedy Psycho Goreman.


Thursday, 6 October 2016

LFF 1: Unroll the carpet

The 60th London Film Festival kicked off last night with the UK premiere of Amma Asante's biopic A United Kingdom. Rosamund Pike (above) ruled the red carpet, making the most of a wardrobe malfunction. And her costar David Oyelowo hit the headlines today as host of a symposium on race issues in movies. And so it begins, with an exhausting schedule of nearly 250 movies over the next 12 days. I'm packing as many in as possible, and still will be missing several big titles on my list simply because there isn't time. Here are some highlights for today...

A United Kingdom
dir Amma Asante; with David Oyelowo, Rosamund Pike 16/UK ***
This is a great true story with a huge present-day relevance, and it features robust, engaging performances from both David Oyelowo and Rosamund Pike. So it's a shame that the screenplay lets it down so badly. Not only are characters painted with broadly cartoonish strokes, but the structure drains any sense of momentum from the narrative. So if it's not hugely compelling, at least it's still a worthy biopic packed with important themes.

A Monster Calls
dir JA Bayona; with Lewis MacDougall, Liam Neeson 16/UK ****.
This may look like a fantasy adventure, but it's actually a staggeringly resonant emotional journey that will connect with audience members of all ages. As it explores enormous themes from loneliness to grief, the film builds an earthy authenticity that even carries through its big effects sequences. Not only is it shot with skill and care, but it's anchored by a terrific performance from the young Lewis MacDougall.

Into the Forest
dir Gilles Marchand; with Jeremie Elkaim, Timothe Vom Dorp 16/Fr ***
Clearly a riff on Zvyagintsev's The Return by way of Kubrick's The Shining, this dark thriller evokes considerable dread, mainly in its sound mix. But director Guy Marchand also has some visual tricks up his sleeve to freak out the audience. There doesn't seem to be much to the film beyond insinuated nastiness, but it's enjoyably spooky.

Ma' Rosa
dir Brillante Ma Mendoza; with Jaclyn Jose, Julio Diaz 16/Ph ****
Shot with handheld urgency and extended real-time sequences, this Filipino drama grabs hold of the audience from the start and never lets up. Filmmaker Brillante Mendoza skilfully immerses us in the rain-soaked bustle of Manila, focussing on a low-level drug dealer whose concern for her family makes her enormously sympathetic. And while the drama is more than enough to hold the attention, the film also has some harrowing things to say about justice in the Philippines.

And two films I saw in Venice were also screening in London today: the French drama Heal the Living and the Italian drama Indivisible.