Friday, 18 September 2009

On Their Bikes

Away-We-Go-001

New Releases: Friday, September 18, 2009

The month of September has become a cinematic doldrums, the lull after the summer blockbusters, the calm before the winter biggies. Often it can yield up some understated or offbeat gems, to wit 500 Days Of Summer or District 9. Though not this week, which resorts to seasonal type, numbering just three nationwide releases, the pick of which being possibly Away We Go (pictured above). Sam Mendes' road movie, starring Maya Rudolph and John Krasinski, is "sketchy but likeable," according to The Guardian.

While the family 3-D animation, Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs, gets decent write-ups, it's far from the case with Nick Love's 80s football hoolie-fest, The Firm. Says the
Daily Mail, "The one positive aspect is that Danny Dyer isn't in it."

Of the limited releases, the fly-on-the-wall documentary,
Three Miles North Of Molkom, about a New Age/nudie/tantric festival in Sweden is reckoned to be a real hoot.

All national reviews follow below...


Nationwide

Away We Go
Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs

The Firm


Limited

The Agent
Birdwatchers
Blind Dating

Chevolution

Je Veux Voir

31 North 62 East

Three Miles North Of Molkom

Wanted

The Daily Mail/Mail On Sunday
The Daily Telegraph/Sunday Telegraph
The Guardian/Observer
The Independent/Independent On Sunday
The Mirror/People
The Star
The Sun/News Of The World
The Times/Sunday Times

Audio reviews: Five Live

Friday, 11 September 2009

Everything But The Kitchen Sink














New Releases: Friday, September 11, 2009

All hail Fish Tank, the grim Essex-set drama from Oscar-winning documentary maker Andrea Arnold (once a presenter on '80s Tiswas-like Saturday morning romp No. 73), which the broadsheets have lapped up — none more than the compulsorily socially-aware Guardian, which anoints Arnold "Ken Loach's natural successor." Praise too, for Greg Mottola's Adventureland, a college coming-of-age comedy which, says The Times, as "an example of the genre takes your breath away."

Julia & Julia, starring Meryl Streep and Amy Adams, about pioneering US TV chef Julia Child, wins plaudits, but not universally, The Independent's Anthony Quinn damning it with the faint praise of being "not objectionable". National releases also include panned gross-out comedy Miss March and sci-fi actioner Gamer, starring the questionably ubiquitous Gerard Butler, which opens midweek.

Of the limited releases this week, nice to see the return of The Thing, John Carpenter's 1982 Alien-style shocker, dismissed in its day but rehabilitated as an overlooked sci-fi classic.

All the week's reviews follow below ...

Adventureland

Fish Tank

Gamer

Julie & Julia

Miss March

Audio reviews: Five Live

Tuesday, 8 September 2009

Life, Nelson, But Not As We Know It


New Releases: Friday, September 4, 2009

A double whammy of critical wows this week, first with the Kevin Jackson-produced, South African alien flick, District 9, and also in the shape of inventive romcom, 500 Days Of Summer. District 9 and its alien crustaceans gets raves across the board, a "prawn cracker" according to the Daily Mail. 500 Days, meanwhile, does receive a couple of cynical knock-backs from The Times and Sunday Times, Rupert Murdoch's cockles failing to be warmed on this occasion.

Elsewhere it's the usual smorgasbord of late summer stock, a harvest festival of the unusual, including two critically-panned WW1 Euro-epics,
Passchendaele and Red Baron (where's Snoopy when you need him?), a documentary about a London rent boy, Greek Pete, and Big River Man, about a bloke who swims up the Amazon — though presumably not after coating himself in lard, on account of all the piranhas. An acclaimed surfing chronicle, too: Bustin' Down The Door.

All the week's reviews follow below ...

Big river man
Big River Man

The Daily Mail/Mail On Sunday
The Daily Telegraph/Sunday Telegraph
The Guardian/Observer
The Independent/Independent On Sunday
The Mirror/People
The Star
The Sun/News Of The World
The Times/Sunday Times


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Bustin' Down The Door

The Daily Mail/Mail On Sunday
The Daily Telegraph/Sunday Telegraph
The Guardian/Observer
The Independent/Independent On Sunday
The Mirror/People
The Star
The Sun/News Of The World
The Times/Sunday Times



District9ii
District 9

The Daily Mail/Mail On Sunday
The Daily Telegraph/Sunday Telegraph
The Guardian/Observer
The Independent/Independent On Sunday
The Mirror/People
The Star
The Sun/News Of The World
The Times/Sunday Times



500 Days
500 Days Of Summer

The Daily Mail/Mail On Sunday
The Daily Telegraph/Sunday Telegraph
The Guardian/Observer
The Independent/Independent On Sunday
The Mirror/People
The Star
The Sun/News Of The World
The Times/Sunday Times



Greek Pete
Greek Pete

The Daily Mail/Mail On Sunday
The Daily Telegraph/Sunday Telegraph
The Guardian/Observer
The Independent/Independent On Sunday
The Mirror/People
The Star
The Sun/News Of The World
The Times/Sunday Times


Passchendale ii
Passchendaele

The Daily Mail/Mail On Sunday
The Daily Telegraph/Sunday Telegraph
The Guardian/Observer
The Independent/Independent On Sunday
The Mirror/People
The Star
The Sun/News Of The World
The Times/Sunday Times

Red-baron-arcade-20080905040820424_thumb_ign
Red Baron

The Daily Mail/Mail On Sunday
The Daily Telegraph/Sunday Telegraph
The Guardian/Observer
The Independent/Independent On Sunday
The Mirror/People
The Star
The Sun/News Of The World
The Times/Sunday Times

Friday, 12 June 2009

Scrubbers!

Forty Years On
Have been up to my eyeballs crafting a piece for The Sunday Times on Withnail & I to tie in with a DVD giveaway. Embraced as one of Britain's best loved "cult" films it was handy to discover that it was forty years ago this winter that Bruce Robinson first sent Marwood's battered Jag up the M1, the project beginning life as a novel. For those in the know, amongst Robinson and the prinicipals, there's a code of silence... an omertà... so that didn't help when it came to getting quotes. Due to alleged financial irregularities on the part of Handmade Films and others, it is claimed that a lot of money is still owed.

As devotees know, the experience of the film disillusioned Robinson and he hasn't directed a flick since 1992 (Jennifer Eight). This month, however, marks his return. Big fan Johnny Depp has managed to haul him out of retirement and they just last week finished shooting Hunter S. Thompson's The Rum Diary in Puerto Rico. Released in 2010, it'll be Robinson's first directed film in eighteen years.

The big question remains as to just how good Withnail actually is. I was not a massive fan first time round and, having watched it again recently, remain unconvinced that it is anything more than a reasonably entertaining, quirky British comedy. There are some fantastic scenes, to be sure, but also some rather weak ones. Take away the segments with Uncle Monty (the fabulous, scene-stealing Richard Griffiths) and what are you actually left with?

Monday, 25 May 2009

Juliet Bravo


Here's my Juliet Stevenson interview from this week's Sunday Times Culture.

Thursday, 21 May 2009

Hey Hey, JJ

Here's my JJ Abrams interview in Sunday Times Culture.

Friday, 8 May 2009

The Day The Earth Stood Still


All Smiles Chez JJ
Just got off the phone with JJ Abrams, director of Star Trek, creator of Lost, Alias, Cloverfield, Fringe, etc. Historic date today as Star Trek opens globally. At the time of speaking it had done a full day's business in Australia/New Zealand and the matinees had already concluded across the UK and Europe. East Coast USA was just rolling up the shutters. An effervescent chap but incredibly modest. Breakfast time in LA, he was just going to hang out with his son, who's off school, wait for the studio returns tomorrow morning and "Hope that people like it." If the reviews are anything to go by, he'll be sleeping soundly.

Tuesday, 5 May 2009

Space Academy: First Assignment


Star Trek
As mentioned previously, I was in LA doing interviews for the new Star Trek film back in March. It has yielded something of journalistic bonanza, with not just my Sunday Times Culture feature but spin-offs for the Daily Mail, Yorkshire Post, Scotland's Sunday Herald. and a syndicated piece on Simon Pegg which has cropped up all over the place, including such far-flung outposts as Malaysia's The New Straits Times. More will follow. With frothing advance reviews out there already (and from people who are normally quite restrained), it's a rare and definite case of "do believe the hype" for this film. And not a single trite Trek reference in this post (damn it Jim, I'm a journalist, not a cliché-monger).

And, purely gratuitously, did you ever see this Tenacious D tribute?

Desperately Seeking Screenplays


Matchmaking Heaven
You could be sitting on the hottest script ever written, but if you can't get connected with the right people, the chances of it ever getting made remain, sadly, zero. As part of the development of this website, we're trying to encourage writers, directors, producers, filmmakers in any capacity, to get in touch with others, get their stuff out there, share advice, just talk to people. If you have a screenplay you want read, post it here (remember to register if first, of course!). If you have a short film or feature you want viewed, link it here. Agents get inundated with stuff sent blind, so let's get creative.


Friday, 1 May 2009

Revenge Of The Nerds


Raiders Of The Lost Ark: The Adaptation
Saw this truly charming film this week, which enjoyed its low-key UK premiere. In a nutshell, back in 1982, three kids from Mississippi set out to film their own tribute to Raiders Of The Lost Ark — not just a mess-around, play-acting version, but a serious shot-for-shot remake including all the stunts. It took them seven years, cost $5,000 and was all captured on a Betamax camcorder. 

Until it was unearthed in December 2002 and sneak-previewed at a film festival in Austin, it had long been forgotten about. But, lo and behold, Spielberg himself now hails it as the biggest professional accolade he has ever been accorded. The chaps themselves have since been hauled out of obscurity and have become filmmakers in their own right, with a Paramount production about their lives in the works to boot.

The end result is not just a staggering technical accomplishment, remarkable given that the boys were just 12 when they started making it, but is an enchanting journey through that endless summer of youth. 

Here's the weblink which leads to footage, interviews and articles. 

My own piece appears in The Sunday Times (Culture), Sunday (May 3).

Wildmutt


This Week's Reviews
Poor old Hugh Jackman. After that razzle-dazzle at the Oscars it's back to the day job.


Released — Friday, May 1

X-Men Origins: Wolverine

Ghosts Of Girlfriends Past

Is Anybody There?

Helen

Brace Yourself For Melvin


Wheels Turn On Film Production
The interesting personal news this week is that my screenplay "Melvin Smarty" appears a good way down the road to being realised as a movie. For fear of tempting fate, I would hesitate to say it's a dead cert, and I've probably gone and done that just by talking about it here. But after numerous knock-backs over too many years, the long-suffering producers have the finances and director in place, scouted the California locations and met with a casting director. This is only the beginning of what will be a long old haul. Keep you posted.

Friday, 10 April 2009

Easter Surprising


Those Fifty Dead Men Walking Reviews
The Guardian claims the backdrop is a cliché, otherwise the broadsheets laud both the film's thriller qualities and Jim Sturgess' winning performance.




The Times

No Telegraph or Daily Mail. Funny that.

Friday, 27 March 2009

Good Lad!


The Damned United: Reviews
What with the big ITV documentary and everything else, it's full-on Clough mania at the moment, which I'm sure its subject would have enjoyed immensely. Michael Sheen and director Tom Hooper had been on a media blitz ahead of today's opening of The Damned United. Here are the main broadsheet reviews. For full piece on the film, scroll down below. So far it's three, but usually four, stars. I expect (and know) that the weekends will follow suit. Generally full marks for Sheen's performance, the rest open to interpretation. An interesting criticism comes in the shape of Martin O'Neill's lengthy Five Live dissection. But anyway, more importantly, what do you think?

Wednesday, 25 March 2009

Troubles Ahead


Fifty Dead Men Walking
A film sure to stir up controversy is the impending Fifty Dead Men Walking, which comes out April 10. Based on the autobiography of Martin McGartland, it's the harrowing tale of an undercover agent infiltrating the IRA. McGartland, a Catholic youth from the Republican stronghold of Ballymurphy, West Belfast, should have been a natural recruit for the Provos. As a petty crook, however, running one step ahead of a punishment kneecapping, he came to see the IRA as being as injurious to their own kind as they were to the hated "Brits" — in short, a bunch of thugs. 

Easily tapped up by the RUC as a casual informer, the opportunistic McGartland began with the odd nod to nefarious activity in return for a bit of spare cash. Later, he had an epiphany. After the horror of the senseless 1987 Enniskillin bombing, he rejected any notion of the Armed Struggle and began working for Special Branch as all-out informer, enlisting in the IRA and passing intelligence from the inside. If ever revealed as a "tout", a traitor in such circles, he faced a fate worse than death. To the security services, though, as "Agent Carol", he was a godsend. His tip-offs, from 1987-91, are thought to have saved as many lives as his book's title implies.

Inevitably McGartland was rumbled. Tortured and set for a miserable end, he evaded his captors by leaping, bound, from a third floor window. Good samaritans and an ambulance spirited him to safety, from whence he went to the mainland, living a life undercover that endures to this day. In 1999, after his identity was inadvertently revealed, a hit squad — allegedly IRA — tracked him to Whitley Bay, Tyneside. They shot him six times at point blank range but, miraculously, he survived, unlike some of the other informers who had been unmasked. McGartland went to ground again, hopeful that one day he might be able to return to Belfast and see the wife and kids he had to leave behind.

The film, a great ticking clock thriller, made by the Canadian director Kari Skogland, features a remarkable turn by Jim Sturgess, the otherwise soft-spoken Surrey actor. Here, it's life on a knife edge, his only link to the outside world through his Special Branch handler (Sir Ben Kingsley... who always, incidentally, insists on use of his title). 

Until recently it would have been regarded as yet another film about The Troubles, reflecting on that era, pre-Peace Process, as a historical curiosity. Of course, the recent Continuity IRA killings have given it a whole new context, not helped by the fact that a quote: "The IRA were some of the nicest people that I ever met," was extracted from an Empire magazine interview Sturgess gave and run as a headline in The Belfast Telegraph (the film closes the Belfast Film Festival on April 4). Sturgess had lived amongst former Provisionals while researching his role. Previously, the American actress Rose McGowan, who appears in the film as a senior Provo, expressed some ill-advised and typically "Hollywood" pro-IRA sentiments, which had the film's producers backpedalling furiously.

The big problem for the film may yet be McGartland himself. I can't go into details until my Sunday Times piece is in print, but he's not happy with his portrayal and the film in general, particularly as it used former IRA terrorists as advisers on-set also. He still feels sold short by the security services, it would seem. This story will run and run. The Daily Mail are going to jump all over it.

Let's just say that when dealing with this subject, even though it's just an Arts piece, one has had to tread extremely carefully. God knows what it's like being a proper political reporter! To my mind it's a rare, even-handed film with regard to McGartland's community — sympathetic to the Republican cause, highlighting the oppression of the Catholics, but ultimately revealing the IRA for what they are/were. 

But check out those one-dimensional Loyalist forces. With the police based in an empty derelict warehouse, complete with dripping water and banks of surveillance screens, it's only just removed from Blade Runner. And why, in any drama about the Troubles, are the cops always English?

Tuesday, 17 March 2009

Backlot Millionaire News


In The Works
(The trial continues...) Couple of things in the works. One, I recently interviewed an up and coming actor by the name of Jim Sturgess. He's the star of the college-kids-take-Vegas film, 21, and also the love-it-or-hate-it Beatles musical, Across The Universe. He'll next be seen in the controversial Fifty Dead Men Walking, a true story about an IRA operative turned British informer during the final phase of The Troubles. I'm sure the makers assumed their film amounted to a safe-ish reflection on recent Ulster history, but the pic has been given added poignancy by the latest and tragic paramilitary activity in Northern Ireland. Sturgess is brilliant in it. More on this film soon.

Two, I was just in LA to do press for the new JJ Abrams Star Trek film. In addition to the various cast and crew interviews notched up (including an exclusive with JJ himself), I saw about 30 minutes of footage, screened on the lot of the famous Paramount Pictures (actually the same footage screened in a sneak-peak in London last November, but hey...). I'm not an action movie fan, nor sci-fi buff, but... and without going into details... it is FANTASTIC. Just the right amount of irreverence added to a killer story and some imaginative action sequences. Great to break from the current vogue for re-visiting an old franchise and (tediously) exploring its dark side. A few days ago I topped it off by interviewing Simon Pegg in London. He plays the immortal, up-beaming Scotty. Will keep you posted.

Monday, 16 March 2009

Shawshank's Redemption



The Backlot Millionaire 
Alternative UK Film Chart

Week: March 6-13
(This is a test...) What the nation watched. Viewing figures calculated using cinema admissions, DVD sales and rentals, TV ratings.

1 The Shawshank Redemption (C4) 1.84m
2 Freedomland (C5) 1.19m
3 Wallace & Gromit: The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit (BBC3) 880,000
4 Watchmen (cinema) 648,600
5 Mamma Mia (DVD sale) 300,000 approx
6 Slumdog Millionaire (cinema) 257,818
7 Gran Torino (cinema) 243,221
8 The Young Victoria (cinema) 203,210
9 Hancock (DVD rental) 200,000 approx
10 Bolt (cinema) 195,790

Forget the overrated Raging Bull (yes, I said it) and the perennial critical chart-topper Citizen Kane, it's The Shawshank Redemption that continues to burnish its credentials as an everyman favourite — what's more, it would appear, a film open to multiple repeat viewings. "Shawshank" won not a single Academy Award, having had the misfortune to be released the same year as both Forrest Gump and Pulp Fiction. But, 15 winters on, it still has the capacity to pull in over seven times more viewers than the current critics' (and Oscar) darling, Slumdog Millionaire, which scrapes in just below Meryl Streep's Abba DVD.

To those in marketing circles, the film's underperformance at the box office, back in 1994, was all down to the poster, which confirms the advertising maxim that you should never make a feature of the rear of someone's head... or, in this case, whole body (see above). The movie has since enjoyed a spectacular second coming on video, DVD and TV, of course — a real grower. Who needs arty cinematography and pork-pie method acting when you've got that timeless winning ingredient, humanity...?


Champs Of The Week
Actors: Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman
Director: Frank Darabont
Writers: Frank Darabont from the story by Stephen King