Since my last film recap, I've watched many films. Some brilliant, some worthy of watching constantly without getting bored, and some I'd rather not go back to. Here are four of the most interesting. For different reasons, of course.
Tron: Legacy (dir. Joseph Kosinski, 2010) I watched the original Tron (1982) directly before watching this. I can't say I liked it that much. It's everything you want in terms of a smart sci-fi plot with young Jeff Bridges but in parts it's totally incoherent in ways that made me just not want to bother. But having had the Tron: Legacy soundtrack by Daft Punk sitting in my iTunes library, well listened to and loved for over six months beforehand, I thought I'd better at least see what the sequel had to offer.
Basic premise of Tron - A computer hacker (Jeff Bridges) finds himself trapped inside the computer. Basic premise of Tron:Legacy - said computer hacker (Jeff Bridges) has been missing for some years. His now adult son, accidentally finds himself trapped inside the computer. He finds his father. He and his father must find way to escape.
I adored it within the first 30 seconds, and I can pinpoint the absolutely superb soundtrack as what makes it what it is. I'm not sure what came first, the visuals or the aural treats but they work so perfectly in sync that just thinking about the intro with Jeff Bridges talking (in that epic-trailer-voiceover-gravel-in-his-throat voice) about The Grid, gives me goosebumps. So it's mostly computer generated imagery, sleek and smooth and minimal and nothing like the original Tron. But despite this, it doesn't seem too self-obsessed with its own style. It just works, it looks and sounds good, and the film at a little over two hours may feel a bit long but it keeps the action up, is much easier to understand and let's just say, the costume designer needs and deserves kudos.
Made in Dagenham (dir. Nigel Cole, 2010) This was recommended to me by a close friend who shares my young feminist point of views. Made in Dagenham is a British dramatisation of the 1968 Ford car plant strike, and even with this keyword 'dramatisation', it makes me so proud. Its simple, near kitchen sink direction places it back neatly in the sixties. The fight against sexual discrimination isn't portrayed in the seemingly popular man-hating, extremist way - instead, this is a story about hard-working women, some married, some young and single, fighting together and in some cases risking their marriages and relationships, to change the face of politics for an entire sex. Feminism doesn't happen overnight and it isn't finished. And perhaps one of the best themes Made in Dagenham picks up on, and makes endearing, exciting and hilarious, is the concept of the male feminist!
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (dir. Tomas Alfredson, 2011) Search for this on IMDB. Look at cast list. Weep with joy, and watch it. What else can I say. Gary Oldman, Benedict Cumberbatch, Colin Firth… directed by Tomas Alfredson of Let the Right One In. The Swedish director has made an inherently British offering, keeping a hold of the drab, slow elegance of the book by John le Carré. Some critics have argued that Tinker Tailor is too slow in fact, but I beg to ask if they've actually read the book or grasped the point of making it so. It's a very British thing I feel, to make such self-deprecation and aching slowness so beautiful, and put within the context and the era, a fast moving action film would not work.
The set design is exquisite, portraying a listless and dreary London of the 1970s, and coupled with gorgeous photography, seamless editing, and a melancholic colour palette, I ask you to find me better. Gary Oldman is perfect as George Smiley, establishing within the first five minutes with minimal dialogue and slow performance, his lost, morose and depressed existence.
What upsets me is how underrated Benedict Cumberbatch's performance has been by the mainstream media. I might be biased… but while the rest of the cast is totally deserving of praise, Benedict Cumberbatch's Peter Guillam is definitely one of the most important characters, and somehow just through subtle facial expressions and flawlessly delivered dialogue (one of my favourite scenes being angry Guillam when he meets Ricki Tarr (Tom Hardy) after a long unexplained absence) you feel his loyalty for Smiley, and totally feel his angst during his one fleeting subplot about his personal relationships.
I desperately hope that Oscars are awarded for this. British film at its absolute optimum.
Rubber (dir. Quentin Dupieux, 2010) Basically, Rubber is a film about a tyre called Robert (yes, really) that becomes self-aware, discovers 'he' has telekinetic powers and through sheer willpower (who says tyres can't have willpower?) can make any living things head explode. And so, we follow his journey, killing people who get in his way, and becoming obsessed with a girl. It sounds ridiculous, and it is. It sounds like a spoof, but it isn't. But it has so many redeeming factors and does appear to have reasoning for its farcical plot, that I can't help but think this it's nothing but inspired and original in ways so many films lack.
It's beautifully filmed as far as films about killer tyres go. It isn't too long. And it doesn't at any point take itself seriously. Rubber laughs at itself and it laughs at the viewer for watching it, and the longer you watch the more it laughs at you. It plays with diegesis' - the happenings of the film are being watched by an audience on screen, an audience that represent us. At some points, they're bored. One man jumps diegesis near the end and starts talking to the actors, offering advice on how he thinks the action should go. At the end, Robert is reincarnated into a tricycle, and rolls down the street, other tricycles and tyres appearing at his side as he goes.
Rubber is an acquired taste. If you can get the fact it's not serious and can go with it, you'll find the hilarity woven into its being. If you're one of those who insists a spade is a spade, probably one for you to miss.
Showing posts with label recently watched. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recently watched. Show all posts
Saturday, 15 October 2011
Tuesday, 19 July 2011
recently watched #19
Some Like It Hot (dir. Billy Wilder, 1959) Marilyn Monroe really was the perfect star; they don’t make them like this anymore. I get it now. Funnier than I was expecting.
United 93 (dir. Paul Greengrass, 2006) From the British director of two Bourne films is a dramatisation of the United 93 flight, the only hijacked 9/11 plane which didn’t reach it’s destination. It’s rare I get that moved by a film. Horrors, while being my favourite genre, largely unaffect me. It’s “real” dramas like this that turn my stomach. I believe it was the director’s desire to make the take-off-crash duration as close to real time as possible, and after a certain point of the film you don’t actually leave the flight. Just small things like this make it so much closer to a reality it’s almost painful to watch.
Mostly filmed handheld, I couldn’t imagine seeing this at the cinema – much like The Blair Witch Project, I’m sure it would be enough to make people very sick. But just the idea of this happening, and knowing that it did. Really intense.
Life is Beautiful (La vita è bella, dir. Roberto Benigni, 1997) After watching, I researched this film to find it had won many Academy Awards and been highly successful at Cannes in the 90s. I had never heard of it, only coming across it on Sky Modern Greats. Life is Beautiful is based on life for Jews in a Nazi occupied Italy and split into two clear parts – a slapstick, romantic comedy –esque first sequence which to me was a fairly typical Italian comedy affair, and a dramatic, sad but weirdly upbeat second half. The second half, set inside a concentration camp, I found most interesting, as you wouldn’t think it would be easy to make a comedy out of it. At times it is really heart wrenching, as you watch the main protagonist Guido, keep the horrible truth about their place in “camp” from his small son. He turns it into a game, one that most don’t win. It’s so delicately done.
And of course, as per usual, the Americans roll in right at the end to save the day.
The Green Mile (dir. Frank Darabont, 1999) Another classic I’ve felt compelled to watch for some time. At 188 minutes, it’s one of those films that becomes an intense effort to pull yourself through, especially considering the grim subject matter, but it never slows down enough for you to become bored. The photographic direction wasn’t of much interest to me, but the score was – it was so Thomas Newman. Anyone who’s seen American Beauty can tell the composer a heartbeat away. Honestly, I think Sam Rockwell quite frankly stole the show with this.
Cemetery Junction (dir. Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, 2010) Anything by Gervais and Merchant I am going to watch, and their unrelenting cynical humour is so, beautifully clear. Cemetery Junction is another 1970s coming-of-age drama that reminded me a bit of Nowhere Boy, the Sam Taylor-Wood film on John Lennon's early life. But there was something missing, I can’t quite place it, but I’d only really recommend this if you’ve 1. Not seen enough coming-of-age-dramas or 2. You are very loyal to Gervais/Merchant. Not bad, just not anywhere near la crème de la crème.
Less Than Zero (dir. Marek Kanievska, 1987) Based on a book by the author of American Psycho, and myself loving American Psycho in film format, I thought this would be up my street. Baby Robert Downey Jr. is great. But a largely unmoving and slow film.
The Experiment (dir. Paul Scheuring, 2010) I’m just going to start out by say, America, you really need to stop taking brilliantly made European film and slaughtering it, all for the sake of removing subtitles. If you have any interest in the Stanford Prison Experiment alluded to in this film, watch Das Experiment (2001), which was so intense I nearly cried, and I’ve already explained how largely unmoved I am by most film, so this should tell you everything you need to know. I mean, even Adrien Brody and Forest bloody Whitaker couldn’t make this remake any more tolerable. It lacks the intensity, art direction and passionate performances and decent screenplay of its original.
Harold and Maude (dir. Hal Ashby, 1971) Another one it’s taken me too long to see. Unconventional relationship between a young boy and an older lady, two detached outsiders who constantly attend stranger’s funerals. The first scene shows Harold faking his own hanging, and his mother nonchalantly ignoring him, just another day. With a smooth, tinkering Cat Stevens soundtrack layered over the top, it’s a perfect 91 minutes.
Sophie Scholl – The Final Days (dir. Marc Rothemund, 2005) The Germans are frequently showing themselves at masters of dramas based heavily in reality – Das Baader-Meinhof Complex, Goodbye Lenin…. And this certainly deserves to be seen alongside those modern classics. It’s also compelling to see a German interpretation and confrontation with their own past.
Changeling (dir. Clint Eastwood, 2008) Interesting but I felt it far too long and drawn out. Maybe that was intentional. The feminist undertones were the one thing that kept me watching, so much so I found myself shouting at the screen. Women have come a long way from the 1920’s chauvinism, but we’ve still a lengthy road ahead. John Malkovich stole this for me, sorry Angelina.
Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror (dir. John Rawlins, 1942) & Sherlock Holmes and the Spider Woman (dir. Roy William Neill, 1944) Two Conan-Doyle installments with Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, what isn’t to like.
Scott Pilgrim vs. The World (dir. Edgar Wright, 2010) As much as I feel disloyal to lodge my dislike against a British director making it stateside, Scott Pilgrim perfectly encapsulates everything I’ve grown to repel in the MTV generation. This film IS the MTV generation.
So called ‘awkward’ main protagonist? Check.
Action plot? Check. ‘Alternative’ romance subplot? Check.
Annoying ‘alternative’ love interest, who is ‘alternative’ because she was in a band and changes her hair colour? Check.
Constant need for me to use quotation marks to emphasis how cool this film wants to be by being awkward and alternative? Check.
The flashy, self-conscious onscreen graphics every time a phone rang became tiresome after the first go. You have seven plus lengthy fight sequences, all the same, all with the same onscreen graphics, to sit through. If you’ve seen one Michael Cera film then you know what to expect from him – just ‘that’ face. The entire film was so conscious of being COOL, of being GRAPHIC, of being LOOK-IT’S-MEANT-TO-LOOK-LIKE-A-VIDEO-GAME!!!!!!!! Utterly annoying. I may be biased but if you want a decent, unpretentious film based on a comic book that doesn't constantly scream I'M A COMIC BOOK AND I'M VINTAGE ALTERNATIVE, look at Ghost World for ideas. But I like Keiran Culkin. The Culkins always win.
In The Loop (dir. Armando Iannucci, 2007) British comedy at it's best, directed by co-creator of Alan Partridge, based on The Thick of It, savagely satirical with an angry, rude, arrogant, downright disgusting Scottish man played by Peter Capaldi who comes out with lines such as “Well, it is out there, it’s out there now, lurking like a big hairy rapist at a coach station”. My poor descriptors don’t do any justice, just, see it. Laugh. Enjoy. Love being British for so shamelessly having this caustic sense of humour.
London Boulevard (dir. William Monahan, 2010) Better than I thought. Better than the critics had insisted. A sexy Keira Knightley, with every other line usually revolving around the phrase “fuck off you cunt”.
Devil (dir. John Erick Dowdle, 2010) Right from the beginning I was shouting at the screen “THAT OLD WOMAN IS AN ANNOYING BITCH.” And I was right. There, I’ve ruined it for you; you don’t even need to watch it. It was almost okay, until the very last line – “it’s ok. If the devil is real, then God must be real, too.” OH, fuck off. Did this really need to take THAT turn?
Forgetting Sarah Marshall (dir. Nicolas Stoller, 2008) One of those rom-coms you only really need to watch once. Some good lines, usually about Russell Brand being British. Mediocre at best.
Get Him To The Greek (dir. Nicolas Stoller, 2010) See Forgetting Sarah Marshall.
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