Showing posts with label tom holland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tom holland. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 August 2023

Screen: August TV Roundup

Long gone are the days when TV series premiered their new seasons in the autumn. Many high-profile shows have new episodes this summer, which gives me something enjoyable to watch in between the movies and stage shows. Some of the best programmes of the year are now sent out in the summertime, right during the TV awards show season. The question is what next year's shows will look like, as the delays from the writers and actors strike begin to shift release schedules. Well, it's started already, as the Emmys have postponed their awards ceremony from September to January. In the meantime, there's plenty to watch...

T H E   S A G A   C O N T I N U E S

The Bear: series 2 
There's a different energy this season, as the characters rally around a sense of purpose, looking to the future rather than simply trying to stay afloat. But the hope is tinged with a real sense of fear that makes each of the characters powerfully sympathetic. This allows the still-naturalistic performances to feel more relaxed and introspective, with stellar work once again from Jeremy Allen White, Ayo Edebiri and Ebon Moss-Bacharach. Generously, each member of the ensemble (plus astonishing guest stars) is given the chance to shine brightly in a nuanced, specific journey as part of the larger effort to reinvent and relaunch the restaurant in an insanely short period of time. Where this goes is funny, thrilling and unusually bittersweet, as the gifted cast and crew refuse to dodge the difficult stuff. (Hulu)

Heartstopper: series 2 
This unspeakably warm and involving series picks up right where it left off, following a group of 16-year-olds who feel like they don't quite belong for one reason or another. The romantic storylines continue to add textures this season, most notably as Nick and Charlie (Kit Connor and Joe Locke) face some very big issues as they grow closer. And Elle and Tao (Yasmin Finney and William Gao) finally confront the unspoken feelings they have. Terrific adult roles remind us that these questions aren't limited to adolescence. The range of serious topics this series deals with is impressive, offering layers of hope to viewers without ever pushing a point. It's also played to perfection by a seriously gifted cast who play teens with all their messiness in tact. Plus the fabulous Olivia Colman. Unmissable. (Netflix)

The Witcher:
series 3 
The amusing tone of the first season is an increasingly distant memory as everything turns almost ludicrously serious, the mythology becomes woefully dense, the plot splinters all over the place and everyone begins to speak in raspy whispers rather than their actual voice. This dialog is also packed with more wacky names than any mere mortal can keep track of. The central plot is still involving, despite the sideroads, layers of villainy and hyper-violent, over-staged battles. Oddly, the romance between Henry Cavill's Geralt and Anya Chalotra's Yennifer is a nonstarter; more involving is the complex link between Jaskier (Joey Batey) and Radovid (Hugh Skinner). While it's rarer now, the offhanded banter still holds the interest because it highlights engaging relationships over dully uninteresting lore. (Netflix)

I Think You Should Leave: series 3 
It's another bone-dry dose of pointed humour from Tim Robinson, taking aim at pop culture with lacerating satire about a range of worthy targets, from dating shows to pharmaceutical adverts, with a special emphasis on squirm-worthy office politics. These are short, sharp sketches with often absurd flourishes, and they're produced impeccably. The way they interweave, reference each other and sometimes overlap is both hilarious and often unnerving. It's the kind of show that provokes nervous giggles rather than hearty laughter. We can see ourselves in these exaggerated characters, which is both amusing and terrifying. (Netflix)

T H A T ’ S   A L L   F O L K S

The Other Two: series 3 
Increasingly wacky, this show has been written and performed from the first episode with lightning-sharp wit. The jokes seem to get broader with each episode, heading in sometimes ridiculous or even surreal directions as the writers ramp up their satirical take on the authentically insane world of celebrity and fame. Helene York and Drew Tarver are excellent as the desperate siblings who are unlikably ambitious but still sympathetic. Molly Shannon continues to steal the show as their now uber-famous mother. And a collection of hilarious side characters (including many A-list cameos) livens up scenes with astute gags and exaggerated absurdities. This show often begins to feel like it will spin out of control at any moment, which makes it unmissable. (Max)

Never Have I Ever: series 4 
For its fourth and final season, this series follows the bright but impulsive Devi (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan) through her fourth and final year of high school, continuing to trace the trail of carnage she generates in both in her friendships and romantically. And it's still inexplicably narrated by a wryly hilarious John McEnroe. The whole point of this series is to watch Devi growing up and forming increasingly serious relationships, and its her connection with her single mother (Poorna Jagannathan) that becomes the strong focal point here. A range of sometimes wildly nutty side characters maintain their own enjoyable trajectories while interacting with Devi's, and there are superbly dramatic, romantic and sexy moments scattered through these episodes, plus a lot of very witty writing. (Netflix)

F R E S H   &   N E W

The Crowded Room 
While series creator Akiva Goldsman works far too hard to obscure the story with a fragmented narrative, this show is involving thanks to lead performances from Tom Holland and Amanda Seyfried as a criminal suspect and the psychiatrist trying to work out how his mind ticks. The plot's big secret is obvious very early on, and it's a mistake to wait until the sixth episode to confront it. If you stay with it, the show gets much better as it begins grappling with bigger themes about childhood abuse and mental trauma, which makes the second half of the series properly resonant and powerful. Holland and Seyfried play their complex roles beautifully, and the production is packed with clever visual touches that add to the internalised impact. (Apple)

Glamorous 
Kim Cattrall gets a superb starring role as the founder of a high-end cosmetics brand who is trying to reconnect with her loyal customers. Her friendship with perky overachiever Marco (Miss Benny) is refreshingly offbeat and uneven, nicely refusing to progress as expected. Scattered through 10 sparky episodes are plenty of nice surprises in the interaction, narrative and relationships. The show plays out like an updated variation on Ugly Betty, and it feels perhaps a bit pointed in its gender politics, but the underlying ideas are important. This adds a hint of depth to a show that's otherwise unashamedly cartoonish. These are characters who are able to grow and change, so by the end most have taken a proper journey. Bring on season 2. (Netflix)

Secret Invasion
Yet another Marvel product that can't decide whether to focus on big action set pieces or character drama, so it isn't satisfying on either front and it ends up feeling like a plot transition between other movies and series. When the people are at the centre of the scene, this is riveting, played to perfection by the likes of Samuel L Jackson, Olivia Colman, Ben Mendelsohn, Don Cheadle, Emilia Clarke and Kingsley Ben Adir. But each episode seems to require a bombastic action set-piece that's efficient enough but also painfully uninteresting (super-powered people bashing each other is so boring!). And the overall plot, about an alien race warring with itself over whether to annihilate humans to take over Earth, carries absolutely no tension in a Marvelised universe. (Disney)

Fubar 
There's a dopey charm to this silly action comedy starring Arnold Schwarzenegger as a CIA spy who is sent on one last mission before he retires, during which he discovers that his daughter (Monica Barbaro) is also an ace operative. The banter is sharp and goofy between protective father, independent daughter, oblivious family, goofy colleagues and absurdly handsome villainous mastermind (Gabriel Luna). It's one of those shows in which no other spies seem to exist in the agency, so both spycraft and romances are limited within this ensemble. Amid some rather oddly nasty violence, there's plenty of comic relief (mainly from sidekicks Fortune Feimster and Travis Van Winkle). All of which leaves this show as a bit of mindless fun. (Netflix)

Based on a True Story 
Kaley Cuoco, Chris Messina and Tom Bateman are a solid enough central trio to overcome this crime comedy's outrageously contrived story points. The idea is so absurd (struggling couple launches a true crime podcast with a real serial killer) that it's impossible to take anything that happens remotely seriously. Which is fine for a comedy, but becomes a problem when events take some properly serious turns. All of this is assembled and performed with such a chirpy blast of energy that it's easy to simply sit back and enjoy each ridiculous predicament these people get themselves into. The red-herring fantasy sequences are so overdone that they undermine any attempt to get into the groove of the story. But the actors sell it. (Peacock)

C A T C H I N G   U P   W I T H . . .

Somebody Somewhere: series 1-2
I arrived late to this series and found it to be my kind of vibe. The writing and performances are delightfully unforced, creating characters who bring the audience into each scene so we can laugh with them at the absurdities of their lives. Bridget Everett shines as Sam, whose sardonic wit is a survival mechanism in rural Kansas. Her connections are the heart of the show, played out in mini-adventures that bristle with humour and emotion. Sam's interaction with sister Tricia (Mary Catherine Garrison) is played with unusual complexity and texture. And Jeff Hiller is wonderfully bemused as her new best pal Joel. This is a gorgeous show that could run and run. (HBO)

The Last of Us
Having lost my interest in zombies a few seasons into The Walking Dead, I avoided this show when it first came out. Then it was nominated across the board in the Dorian Awards, so I decided to take a look before casting my vote. The first two episodes were as tedious as I thought they'd be, and then episode three came along, deepening the dawning connection between the fabulous Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey while tracing a gorgeous decades-spanning subplot featuring the great Nick Offerman and Murray Bartlett. The banter between Pascal and Ramsey is what kept me watching the series, plus some terrific guest stars (who knew Melanie Lynskey could be so gleefully vile?). This is far more involving than the action nonsense that consumes far too much screen time. (HBO)

GUILTY PLEASURES: Drag Race All Stars, Too Hot to Handle, Love Island.

NOW WATCHING: Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (2), Minx (2), Good Omens (2), And Just Like That (2), The Afterparty (2), What We Do in the Shadows (5), Black Mirror (6).

COMING SOON: The Continental, Ashoka, Only Murders in the Building (3), The Morning Show (3), Physical (3), Sex Education (4).

Previous roundup: JUNE 2023 > 


Thursday, 10 February 2022

Critical Week: Go ahead jump

Oscar nominations this week threw the awards season into some chaos, and put some races into focus. There will be lots of conjecture before the ceremony at the end of March. Then after several weeks with a drip-feed of big releases, three come along all at once. All three had late press screenings this week in London just before they opened. The most fun was Uncharted, a lively adventure that just about gets away with its simplistic script because Tom Holland is so ludicrously charming. And Mark Wahlberg almost keeps up with him, which is pretty impressive. Kenneth Branagh is back with another lavish but underwhelming Agatha Christie adaptation, Death on the Nile, which has lovely (mainly digital) Egyptian settings and an all-star cast that includes Gal Gadot, Armie Hammer, Letitia Wright, Russell Brand and an underused French and Saunders. And Jennifer Lopez and Owen Wilson find surprising chemistry in Marry Me, a romcom that never veers form the formula, but has some fun with it.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Flee • Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy
ALL REVIEWS >
More offbeat films included Johnny Depp in the biopic Minimata, about a noted photojournalist raising awareness of toxic waste in 1970s Japan. It's well-made but a bit dull. Give or Take is a charming little drama about two men who share a grief and little else. Watching them find friendship is nicely underplayed. Small Body is a bold fable from Italy about a woman on an epic quest from the sea to the mountains. It's packed with provocative themes, and is deeply haunting. And I also watched the six short films featured on The French Boys 3, another collection of terrific small dramas that grapple with masculinity.

This coming week I'll be watching Naomi Watts in The Desperate Hour, Zoe Kravitz in Kimi, Jason Isaacs in Streamline, Max von Sydow in Echoes of the Past, the French coming-of-age drama A Night in the Fields and the surreal drama Strawberry Mansion. I'll also be at the press night for the London stage musical production of Saturday Night Fever.

Friday, 31 December 2021

A Year in Shadows: 2021


Featured on 52 covers
were the Oscars, Bafta rising star Bukky Bakray and 50 films, in order of appearance: Pieces of a Woman, Blithe Spirit, The White Tiger, Dig, Malcolm & Marie, Judas and the Black Messiah, I Care a Lot, The Mauritanian, The US vs Billie Holiday, Cherry, Minari, Zack Snyder's Justice League, Chaos Walking, Godzilla vs Kong, Wild Mountain Thyme, The Mitchells vs the Machines, Oxygen, Sound of Metal, A Quiet Place Part II, After Love, The Father, In the Heights, F9, No Sudden Move, Black Widow, Space Jan" A New Legacy, The World to Come, Jungle Cruise, The Suicide Squad, Free Guy, Snake Eyes, The Nest, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, Respect, Everybody's Talking About Jamie, The Green Knight, No Time to Die, The Harder They Fall, The Last Duel, Dune, Last Night in Soho, Spencer, Belfast, Ghostbusters: Afterlife, Encanto, Boxing Day, Being the Ricardos, Spider-Man: No Way Out, The King's Man, The Tragedy of Macbeth.

TRIVIA ALERT!

The most covers: Emily Blunt (three shared) and Tom Holland (one solo, one shared, one as Spider-Man).

On two shared covers: Jamie Dornan, Ralph Fiennes, Vanessa Kirby, Zendaya (one shared, one as the voice of Lola Bunny).

The most crowded: The Suicide Squad (17), Boxing Day (15), Encanto (13).

Solo on one cover: Adarsh Gourav, Anya Taylor-Joy, Audra MacDonald, Daniel Craig, Dev Patel, Henry Golding, Jennifer Hudson, Joanna Scanlon, Jodie Comer, Kristin Stewart, Max Harwood, Melanie Laurent, Riz Ahmed, Rosamund Pike, Ryan Reynolds, Simu Liu.

Sharing one cover: Aja Naomi King, Alan Kim, Aml Ameen, Anthony Hopkins, Anthony Ramos, Ben Affleck, Bukky Bakray, Carey Mulligan, Carrie Coon, Celeste O'Connor, Chris 'Ludacris' Bridges, Daisy Ridley, Dan Stevens, Daniel Kaluuya, Denzel Washington, Djimon Hounsou, Don Cheadle, Dwayne Johnson, Edgar Ramirez, Ezra Miller, Finn Wolfhard, Florence Pugh, Frances McDormand, Gal Gadot, Gemma Arterton, Henry Cavill, Han Ye-ri, Harris Dickinson, Idris Elba, Isla Fisher, Jack Whitehall, Jason Momoa, Javier Bardem, Jesse Plemons, Joel Kinnaman, John Cena, Jodie Foster, John David Washington, Jordana Brewster, Jude Hill, Jude Law, Judi Dench, Kathrine Waterston, LaKeith Stanfield, LeBron James, Leigh-Anne Pinnock, Leslie Mann, Logan Kim, Margot Robbie, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Mckenna Grace, Melissa Barrera, Michelle Rodriguez, Millicent Simmons, Nathalie Emmanuel, Nicole Kidman, Noah Jupe, Noel Kate Cho, Olivia Colman, Oscar Isaac, Paul Giamatti, Paul Rudd, Ray Fisher, Rebecca Ferguson, Regina King, Rhys Ifans, Robbie Gee, Scarlett Johansson, Sheyi Cole, Shia LaBeouf, Stephen Dillane, Steven Yeun, Tahar Rahim, Timothee Chalamet, Tyrese Gibson, Vin Diesel, Youn Yuh-jung, Zazie Beetz.

Appearing as animated characters they provided the voice for: Abbi Jacobson, Angie Cepeda, Bob Bergen, Carolina Gaitan, Danny McBride, Diane Guerrero, Eric Bauza, Gabriel Iglesias, Jeff Bergman, Jessica Darrow, John Leguizamo, Maria Cecilia Botero, Mauro Castillo, Maya Rudolph, Michael Rianda, Ravi Cabot-Conyers, Rhenzy Feliz, Stephanie Beatriz, Sylvester Stallone, Wilmer Valderrama, Zendaya ... mostly as humans, but also as a duck, rabbits and a manshark.

While many cover films were seen in 2020 and had their releases delayed until 2021, only one unused draft from 2020 was reworked: A Quiet Place Part II.

And there were only two drafts that were never used: Without Remorse in May and The Lost Daughter in December. They were discarded when late-arriving press screenings came through for The Mitchells vs the Machines and Spider-Man: No Way Home, respectively.



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, 10 March 2021

Critical Week: Yet another night in

Aside from a certain royal interview and the evolving lockdown situation, the biggest news this week was the most diverse list of Bafta Film Awards nominations in history, a remarkably varied collection of movies, filmmakers and performances that breaks from their tradition of trying to predict Oscar. Attention to British gems and filmmakers outside the system is particularly notable this year, even with some surprising omissions. BAFTA 2021 NOMINEES >

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
The Human Voice
Judas and the Black Messiah
The Dissident • Verdict
ALL REVIEWS > 
As for movies this week, I caught up with two films recently out in US cinemas. Silk Road stars Jason Clarke and Nick Robinson (above with Alexandra Shipp) in a true story about the dark web that's fascinating but rather lacking in nuance. And Tom Holland and Daisy Ridley star in Doug Liman's conceptual sci-fi thriller Chaos Walking, a well-made Western-style adventure that fails to deepen its themes or characters.

Further afield, the prison drama Luz is an American independent film infused with Latin culture as it recounts an unusually introspective, tender romance between two inmates. From Germany, Undine is another seriously clever film by Christian Petzold starring Paula Beer and Franz Rogowski, this time a fantastical, whimsical, darkly moving romance. From Australia, Sequin in a Blue Room is an artful coming-of-age drama about a young man on a journey of self-discovery and connection.From Bosnia, Quo Vadis, Aida? is a flatly stunning, unmissable drama about the Srebrenica genocide told from a powerfully involving perspective. From the Philippines, Verdict is an absolutely riveting drama about a woman navigating a torturous legal system. And I decided to catch up with this documentary on the day it received its Bafta nomination...

My Octopus Teacher
dir-scr Pippa Ehrlich, James Reed
with Craig Foster, Tom Foster 
release US/UK 7.Sep.20
20/South Africa Netflix 1h25 *****

Beautifully shot and edited, this documentary recounts an involving story in a way that's enormously engaging as it traces the extraordinary connection between a man and an octopus over nearly a year. It's a riveting exploration of the nature of student and teacher, friend and foe, predator and prey. And as both of them transform their perceptions of each other, the film becomes both moving and inspirational.

Struggling with burn-out, and worried about his ability to be a good father to his teen son Tom, filmmaker Craig Foster turns to the ocean for inspiration, drawing on his childhood in the ocean near his home at the tip of South Africa. In an effort to feel amphibious and to eliminate barriers, he eschews a scuba tank or wetsuit and returns into the kelp forest every day. And he becomes fascinated by an octopus, building trust that leads to an unexpected back-and-forth relationship with her. Their ongoing adventures are simply awesome, revealing the inter-connections between living things.

Cinematographer Roger Horrocks gloriously captures how it feels to float through an underwater forest amid a wide range of creatures. This is augmented by Foster's own work behind the camera, revealing the extravagant diversity, balance and beauty under the sea. Meanwhile, the narrative is grabbing hold of us as we watch these two very different creatures begin to interact in unexpected ways. And the ultimate message is simple and provoctive: "She taught me to feel that I'm part of this place, not a visitor."
9.Mar.21



Next week's films include the new four-hour cut of Zack Snyder's Justice League, Robin Wright's Land, the romantic comedy Me You Madness, the comedy drama Shoplifters of the World and the acclaimed Russian drama Dear Comrades. There will also be press screenings for the forthcoming edition of BFI Flare, with the festival itself kicking off virtually on Wednesday 17th March. Reports to come!

Thursday, 4 February 2021

Critical Week: Isolation blues

It's becoming clear that this extended third lockdown is making Londoners a bit loopy, especially as it has no end in sight. Although we keep hoping that as the pandemic numbers improve slightly, relief is on the horizon. But being able to get back into a cinema seems like a distant hope! I've been rather swamped with preparations for the London Critics' Circle Film Awards on Sunday night, which has involved lots of email communication with Los Angeles - something an eight-hour time shift makes rather tricky. As a result, I only watched four movies this past week.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Falling • Another Round
Two of Us • Malcolm & Marie
 
ALL REVIEWS >
By far the biggest film I saw was the Russo brothers' Cherry, starring Tom Holland (above) as an Army veteran who becomes a junkie to deal with his post-traumatic stress. It's 2 hours 20 minutes long, and feels like an operatic epic. It would look amazing on a big cinema screen. Ambitiously taking on the same theme in a very different way, Mike Cahill's Bliss stars Owen Wilson and Salma Hayek in a fantasy-style thriller about a parallel reality. It's provocative and engaging. The Australian remake of the Icelandic gem Rams stars the superb Sam Neill, Michael Caton and Miranda Richardson, and finds earthy humour in a dark situation. And the pitch-black Argentine thriller 4x4 traps lead actor Peter Lanzani inside an SUV, becoming a seriously harrowing ordeal.

Coming up this week, I need to catch up on quite a few films, including the true thriller Murderous Trance, the British comedy Running Naked, the Argentine romcom A Skeleton in the Closet, the Chinese drama Twilight's Kiss and the short film collection Desire in the Dark.

And if you want to watch the 41st London Critics' Circle Film Awards, our virtual ceremony goes live at 7pm Sunday night 7th Feb and will also be rewatchable on the CRITICS' CIRCLE YOUTUBE CHANNEL >

Wednesday, 16 September 2020

Critical Week: Take a stand

The world seems to be falling further apart by the day, with insane chaos within the governments of both the UK and the US (which has the added nightmare of an imminent election). So it's been nice to have a tiny bit of normality return with more press screenings, including the international premiere of The Eight Hundred, China's biggest blockbuster ever, which looks awesome on the Imax screen. It's a thrilling battle epic on a jaw-dropping scale. The other big movie this week was The Devil All the Time, an epic backwoods morality tale featuring formidable performances from Tom Holland, Robert Pattinson and Riley Keough.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK
Spiral • Rocks • I Used to Go Here 
For They Know Not What They Do

FULL REVIEWS >>
Other films this week included the collection of to-camera monologs in Coastal Elites, which is a bit preachy for its own good; David Cross on an intrepid and rather charmingly hapless true-life wilderness adventure in The Dark Divide; Ciaran Hinds traversing France in the quirky and almost silent comical road movie The Man in the Hat; and the stylish and rather nutty The Wall of Mexico, a nicely blurred satire about culture and ethnicity.

This coming week's films include Millie Bobbie Brown in Enola Holmes, Kevin James goes villainous in Becky, Alison Steadman in 23 Walks, Nicole Beharie in Miss Juneteenth, Francois Ozon's Summer of 85, the teen adventure Shortcut, the romantic drama Two of Us and two documentaries: Little Girl and The Painter and the Thief. I also have my first theatre press night - review coming soon.


Wednesday, 4 March 2020

Critical Week: The plane! The plane!

That'll be me tomorrow - flying off to paradise. Well, to see my parents, who happen to live in Los Angeles (not tropical, but can't complain). Anyway, that's a photo from the new film adaptation of the classic 1970s TV series Fantasy Island. Although the filmmakers seem unsure what they wanted to achieve, including some of the show's cheesy humour alongside corny melodrama and grisly horror. It never settles into one thing, and the story never comes together. A real waste of a solid cast that includes Michael Peña, Maggie Q, Michael Rooker and Austen Stowell. But hopefully the cast and crew had a nice holiday on that lovely island.

Much better was Onward, Pixar's new brother-centred animated adventure that's packed with comedy, action and, yes, emotion. It's simply gorgeous, perhaps more aimed at boys than girls. Daniel Radcliffe continues to eschew Hollywood with Guns Akimbo, a bonkers action movie from New Zealand that has great energy and rather a lot of gratuitous gore. Showing at Cinequest and Outfest Fusion over the next week or so, Breaking Fast is a superbly thoughtful comedy-drama about a gay Muslim who finds love unexpectedly.

I didn't have time to watch any other films this past week - other than revisiting Orlando (1992), for the first time on a big screen. It was screened at BFI Southbank as part of the Tilda Swinton season, and it was introduced on-stage by Swinton and writer-director Sally Potter, who offered a hilarious unscripted stream-of-conscience commentary (see below). A real joy. And the film hasn't aged at all - it still feels bracingly present-day.

There are several films I'm hoping to catch up with in cinemas while in California, including Emily Blunt's A Quiet Place Part II, Ben Affleck's The Way Back, Annette Bening's Hope Gap, Javier Bardem's The Roads Not Taken, and the cycling comedy The Climb. Whether I'll have time for any of those is yet to be seen...


Thursday, 12 December 2019

Critical Week: Drop the mic

Another rather crazy week at the movies for critics, with screenings of forthcoming releases mingled with awards contenders and catch-up screenings of films I've missed this year. Plus the first of my voting deadlines in year-end awards, as big prizes like SAG and the Golden Globes announced their nominees. And also rather a lot for me to do as chair of the London Critics' Circle Film Awards! Plus the UK general election, which tonight will decide the fate of the nation (not feeling hopeful). So it's clearly not just another week.

The biggest new release screened is Spies in Disguise, an action-packed animated spy adventure voiced by Tom Holland and Will Smith. Adam Sandler veers wildly off-type (in a very good way) for the bold, in-your-face drama Uncut Gems, which is unforgettable cinema. Justin Long stars in the prickly but very timely comedy drama After Class. And Hugh Jackman and Zach Galifianakis voice the lead roles in the gorgeously animated global romp Missing Link.

France's official Oscar contender is Les Miserables, a present-day drama about cops patrolling a rough Parisian suburb. It bristles with life, and nails its themes skilfully. Also from France, Amanda is a gentle, rather sweet drama about everyday people in the wake of an unthinkably horrific event. And there were two docs: Asif Kapadia's sharply edited archive bio Diego Maradona and the entertainingly star-packed filmography doc QT8 Quentin Tarantino: The First Eight.

This coming week there are more awards contenders to catch up with before further voting deadlines. These include Isabelle Huppert in Frankie, Jonathan Majors in The Last Black Man in San Francisco, the animated Weathering With You, and the drama Long Day's Journey Into Night. As for regular release screenings, there's Daniel Radcliffe in Escape From Pretoria and Gary Oldman in The Courier. And since studios are refusing press screening requests, I'll be at the cinema to see Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker and the musical Cats with the fans.

Thursday, 27 June 2019

Critical Week: In stealth mode

This week's blockbuster press screening was for Spider-Man: Far From Home, a refreshingly enjoyable blockbuster starring the hugely engaging Tom Holland. It continually undermines the usual overserious nonsense of superhero movies, and is relentlessly good fun. Benedict Cumberbatch, Michael Shannon and Nicholas Hoult star in the stylish historical drama The Current War, as Edison, Westinghouse and Tesla, respectively. It's a riveting story, nicely told. Alicia Vikander and Eva Green play sisters in Euphoria, a drama about mortality that's beautifully shot and acted, but eerily elusive. And nearly 25 years after Braveheart, Angus Madfadyen returns to the role of Robert the Bruce, a solidly produced film from a choppy script. And Peter Strickland's In Fabric is an enjoyably bonkers stylised horror movie about a murderous dress.

From abroad, we had The Shiny Shrimps, a French comedy drama based on the true story of a gay water polo team. It's funny and involving, but ultimately uneven. Also from France, Amin is an edgy immigration drama that's very sharply observed. From Mexico, Fireflies also centres on immigrants, this time an Iranian in Veracruz, and his story is strongly moving. From India, Photograph is a beautifully involving love story with some unexpected touches. From Canada, the provocative, engaging Roobha centres on an offbeat relationship between a middle-aged married man and a young trans woman. And there were two from Bangladesh: Saturday Afternoon is a tense and sharply pointed one-take thriller set during a terrorist standoff, while Sincerely Yours, Dhaka is a collection of seven superbly well-made shorts exploring pungent issues that resonate strongly.

I also caught a few documentaries. Memory is especially gripping for film fans, as it traces the origins of Alien, which was released 40 years ago. Marianne & Leonard: Words of Love is a fascinating bio-doc about Leonard Cohen centring on his relationship with his muse Marianne Ihlen, with filmmaker Nick Broomfield adding himself into the story as usual. Political activists, not devil-worshippers, are the focus of Hail Satan, a witty doc about how the Satanic Temple exists mainly to provoke and challenge pompous injustice. And the warm, personal Southern Pride follows two bar owners in Mississippi as they try to celebrate LGBTQ culture.

Coming up over the next week, we have Florence Pugh in the horror thriller Midsommar, Colin Firth in Kursk: The Last Mission, Sylvester Stallone back for Escape Plan: The Extractors, the Sundance-winning comedy Brittany Runs a Marathon, the French coming-of-age drama Love Blooms, and the doc Varda by Agnes.

Wednesday, 2 August 2017

Critical Week: The boys of summer

It's been another eclectic week for London-based film critics. One of the more intriguing films we watched was the Sundance award winner Beach Rats, a remarkably thoughtful, personal exploration of identity featuring a star-making performance from Harris Dickinson. At the other end of the cinematic spectrum is The Emoji Movie, an uneven animated comedy adventure that has its moments but isn't good enough to be memorable. Mothers cut loose in Fun Mom Dinner, which has a strong cast (Kate Aselton, Toni Collette, Molly Shannon, Bridget Everett) and a nicely believable approach to outrageous antics, but is perhaps too similar to recent movies like Girls Trip.

Further afield, the effectively creepy Irish thriller Pilgrimage is given some oomph with the casting of Tom Holland, Jon Bernthal and Richard Armitage in its grisly 13th century tale of religious fervour. From Hungary, On Body and Soul is the involving, offbeat Berlin-winning romantic drama about a one-armed businessman and an obsessive-compulsive quality-control scientist. InSyriated explores a claustrophobic situation in Damascus in the style of a real-life horror movie we can't help but resonate with. Kept Boy is a rather awkward black comedy about a strained gay relationship. And I watched two documentaries to discuss on a TV chat show: Get Me Roger Stone is a chilling profile of the man who essentially created every Republican president from Nixon onwards (it's reviewed on the site), and then there's this one...


Warriors From the North
dir Nasib Farah, Soeren Steen Jespersen; with The Shadow, Abukar Nuur, Nasib Farah, Abdi Aziz, Mohamed Ali Omar, Sheikh Sharif Ahmed 
15/Den ****
This haunting, rather grim hour-long documentary skilfully avoids sensationalism as it explores the incendiary issue of young immigrants in Europe who are caught up in radicalisation. It's framed as the story of a young man who travelled to Somalia from Copenhagen, leaving his friend and father (Nuur) looking for him, which makes the film startlingly personal. The friend calls himself "The Shadow", and vividly describes how it feels to be an aimless youth drawn into the brotherhood of al-Shabab. His narration provides an angle we rarely hear behind the shouty, fear-based headlines. The filmmakers include horrific footage of bombings, as well as training films and suicide videos, plus another telling account from a British man (Omar) who went to Somalia but left al-Shabab when he saw that they were more interested in killing civilians than soldiers. The film is beautifully shot and edited, and taps vividly into the vulnerabilities of young migrants who are marginalised in society and singled out by police, making them easily manipulated into believing that their religion condones murder, which it doesn't.


Coming up this week, we have Charlize Theron in Atomic Blonde, Jamie Bell in 6 Days, the hockey-antics sequel Goon: Last of the Enforcers, the Tel Aviv drama In Between and the musical odyssey London Symphony.

Thursday, 29 June 2017

Critical Week: Nuns on the run

There were a few big blockbusters screened to the London press this past week. The Hitman's Bodyguard is a riotous action-comedy starring Ryan Reynolds and Samuel L Jackson; Spider-Man: Homecoming is the hugely entertaining and surprisingly hilarious Marvel movie that finally puts the gifted Tom Holland front and centre; War for the Planet of the Apes concludes the prequel trilogy starring the awesome Andy Serkis with a remarkably thoughtful and involving thriller; and Despicable Me 3 is the manic continuation of the entertaining animated action-comedy series featuring Steve Carell and Kristen Wiig.

Less tentpole-ish: The House is a feeble comedy starring Will Ferrell and Amy Poehler that only has a few amusing touches. Final Portrait is a riveting but over-stylised true story anchored by a career-best performance from Geoffrey Rush; and Hotel Salvation is a remarkably sensitive Indian comedy-drama that knowingly tackles issues of religion and mortality.

Coming up this next week, we've got screenings of the Pixar sequel Cars 3, Tilda Swinton in Okja, Joel Edgerton in It Comes at Night and Luke Hemsworth in Hickok, plus a few catch-up films to watch at home. Meanwhile, both the Edinburgh International Film Festival and the East End Film Festival in London come to a close this weekend.

Monday, 2 September 2013

Critical Week: Into the blue

This week, London critics caught up with this year's Palme d'Or winner, Abdellatif Kechiche's Blue Is the Warmest Colour, a staggeringly involving romance starring Adele Exarchopoulos and Lea Seydoux. The film has had a lot of press for its three-hour running time and explicit lesbian sex scenes, but it's also an unnervingly honest relationship movie. It deserves the prizes. And there will be more to come.

More in the mainstream, we had a late-scheduled screening of the concert documentary One Direction: This Is Us, which is a lot of fun, and sharply well made, although calling it a documentary is stretching the definition of the word, as it's actually a 90-minute promo for Syco Records. Saoirse Ronan stars in How I Live Now, based on the book about teens trying to start their lives over in WWIII Britain (an embargo means I can't say more). Halle Berry stars in The Call, a more-involving than normal thriller about an emergency phone operator who gets caught up in a nightmare. The ending is contrived, but it's utterly riveting.

From Korea we had Pieta, the new drama from Kim Ki-duk, who delights in making audiences squirm - and this is no exception as it cleverly tells a twisted story of redemption and sacrifice centred on a mother and son. Sort of. From Britain, the Indian-subculture drama Jadoo is lively and engaging, and packed with delicious food from Leicester's Golden Mile. And we also saw the restored final cut of Robin Hardy's 1973 cult classic The Wicker Man, which hasn't really aged well but is still pretty freaky.

This coming week I've got: Robin Wright and Naomi Watts in Adore, Harrison Ford in the baseball drama 42, Ryan Reynolds in the ghostly action-comedy R.I.P.D., Hirokazu Kore-eda's acclaimed Like Father Like Son, the Seoul Olympics doc 9.79*, the Aids medication doc Fire in the Blood, and the BFI's restoration of the 1924 expedition doc The Epic of Everest. We also have the launch event for the 57th London Film Festival (9-20 Oct), where we'll finally get our hands on this year's programme.

Monday, 21 January 2013

33rd London Critics' Circle Film Awards

It wasn't just another Critics' Circle ceremony for me: this year I was chair of the awards committee, so the whole evening was my baby. And it was odd to see every tiny detail I've agonised over for the past few months slot into place so nicely, despite some significant obstacles. We lost four nominee attendees at the last minute due to the snow (Tom Hooper) and the flu (Andrea Riseborough, Will Poulter and Jacqueline Durran), and others couldn't come because they were working far, far away. But everyone who made it had a great night.

The day started on Sunday morning as I looked out the window to see snow falling. It's been a snowy week in London, with the usual travel chaos any change in the weather brings. But we were in motion, and couldn't be stopped. I headed from home via replacement bus (my Tube line was helpfully closed) to the May Fair Hotel in Mayfair, where the production team ran through the show in the theatre at noon. Then there were fine-tuning adjustments, printing up the winners cards for the envelopes, collating the speeches from those who couldn't be there to accept their award, and of course changing into our finery for the show. The critics who were presenting awards arrived at 5pm to run through their parts of the presentation with our host Richard Herring (who has blogged brilliantly about his experience).

By 5.30pm the first attendees were assembling on the red carpet and facing the press line. The cameramen of course latched on to the glamorous women, including Helena Bonham Carter (recipient of our top honour, the Dilys Powell Award for Excellence in Film), Emily Blunt (nominee for British Actress), Samantha Barks (nominee for Young Performer) and Olivia Colman (last year's British Actress winner, who generously came to help me present the award this year).
Also very popular with the press was young Jack Reynor, nominated as Young Performer, who has just been named as the star of Transformers 4. He had a great night, knowing he was heading home to Dublin in the morning to begin four months of physical training for the film. Although I told him he really needs to take a break to celebrate his 21st birthday this week!
I had a chance to talk to all of our special guests as they arrived, including Ben Drew (nominated for Ill Manors), Charlie Creed-Miles and Dexter Fletcher (nominatees for Wild Bill), and three nominees from the superb British film My Brother the Devil: writer-director Sally El Hosaini, actor Fady Elsayed and cinematographer David Raedeker. At 6.30pm the champagne reception was shifted into the theatre for the awards ceremony, which clipped along thanks to Richard Herring's snappy hosting. Several early winners weren't present: Anne Hathaway's Supporting Actress award was accepted by Les Miserables producer Debra Hayward, and Philip Seymour Hoffman was unable to be here to get his Supporting Actor award, Emmannuelle Riva sent a lovely video message from Paris to accept Actress, and Joaquin Phoenix wrote the thank-you note of the night* to accept Actor.
But most of the British winners were on hand to collect their prizes. Above: The Impossible's Tom Holland with his Young Performer trophy, Rafe Spall turned up to accept the Director award for his Life of Pi director Ang Lee, and The Imposter's Bart Layton took home the award for Documentary. Below: Alice Lowe and Steve Oram were multiple nominees for British Actress and British Actor, and won Breakthrough Filmmaker for their Sightseers script.
Andrea Riseborough won the British Actress award, which I presented, but she'd had to cancel her attendance at the last minute due to illness. So last year's winner Olivia Colman accepted the award and read a message from her. Toby Jones (below) won the British Actor award, and then came back to the stage with sound designer Stevie Haywood (a Technical Achievement nominee) to claim British Film of the Year for Berberian Sound Studio.
There was a warm acceptance video from Bill Westenhofer, who won Technical Achievement for the visual effects in Life of Pi. And Michael Haneke sent two thank-you videos - accepting his awards for Screenplay and Film of the Year for Amour. He's in Madrid at the moment staging a version of Cosi Fan Tutte

The highlight of the evening was Mike Newell presenting the Dilys to Helena Bonham Carter: "She's like a kaleidoscope, she is able to deliver these wonderful, vivid characters again and again. They're all full of variety, full of wit and energy and I think people long to see what she's going to try next. She's become an institution. Working with her is always surprising, always harmonious. Not one tiny little bit of foot-stamping or tantrum-throwing."

Her speech was hilariously witty, warm and honest, and she later told the press: "It feels like a rash. It suddenly seems like I've got a contagion of diseases - I mean awards! But it's nice, it's a nice feeling. It's so weird, because I'm only 46. A lifetime achievement award - it feels like 'I'm not over yet'. I hope they're not trying to say it's time to stop. I'm only just getting the gist of it." She clearly had a great evening, and she and Tim Burton were among the last to leave, happily chatting to everyone throughout the after party. I left shortly after them, sharing a cab through the snowy streets to North London with fellow critic and awards committee member Pauline McLeod (that's us below).
I didn't open my goody bag until this morning - quite a haul! I need to thank our charity partner Missing People and our amazing sponsors for making this happen. And now I feel like I need a holiday before I start thinking about 2014....


Critics' Circle Film Section - top 10 films of 2012:

  1. Amour
  2. The Master
  3. Life of Pi
  4. Argo
  5. Beasts of the Southern Wild
  6. Zero Dark Thirty
  7. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia
  8. Django Unchained
  9. Tabu
  10. Rust and Bone