Monday, February 26, 2007

Bridget Jones's Diary



Easily the best Richard Curtis romantic comedy. Jane Austen's plot does the heavy lifting and watching the film reminded me that Curtis did Black Adder which is really easy to forget during the thoroughly mirthless Notting Hill.

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Sunday, February 25, 2007

The Machinist



It's one of those films where you see something happen at the beginning and you're not sure what you're watching. Is it a flash back? A flash forward or what? Then for the next couple of hours you're led around the captivatingly bleak life of Trevor (played by a shockingly emaciated Christian Bale) and you try to put the pieces together to figure what's going on: Why isn't he eating or sleeping? Who's this guy in the red car? Why does the director keep showing us clocks with the time 1:30 on them? I guess Lost fans must spend much of their life in this state of mild bemusement and I think it's designed to make the viewer feel a bit clever without actually requiring much of them. Anyway, every solution you come up with is wrong and the truth, when you learn it, is probably significantly less shocking than some of the scenarios you've managed to cook up in the mean time.

A good point of comparison is Memento but The Machinist isn't that good.

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Transamerica



A pre-op transsexual finds out she has a son and in order to get the letter from her psychiatrist required for her to undergo surgery and , to cut a long story short, she has to go on a road trip across America with him. Everybody learns something and comes out of the experience better.

I spent much of this film wondering about the logic of getting Felicity Huffman to play the role of a man dressed as a woman when they probably could have got a man to do it, but I guess that it helps the viewer to think of her as female as most of the characters do through the film and Huffman's performance is very good.

Anyway, Transamerica suffers from the same thing that a lot of US vaguely indie films do in that it's a bit too mannered. But hey, whilst studiously avoiding being either laugh out loud funny or particularly emotionally engaging it's generally entertaining for the duration and it's hard to dislike the film.

Worth checking out when it inevitably crops up in Film 4's next 'American Misfits' season or whatever.


IMDB

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Hot Fuzz



Hot shot London cop Simon Pegg is stationed to a sleepy west country village where no crime ever happens and partnered with a moon faced simpleton (Nick Frost). But wait! Perhaps all is not as it seems, and maybe, just maybe the aforementioned moon faced simpleton can teach the city hot shot a thing or two after all...

Of course it's not and of course he can and of course this all leads to a gunfight of heroic proportions that had me humming the Bad Boys II theme tune all the way home.

Sean of the Dead, the team behind Hot Fuzz's previous film, was great, genuinely a horror film and at the same time genuinely a comedy, a difficult balance to get right. While Hot Fuzz doesn't quite get it's own peculiar balancing act spot on, mixing US macho cop drama (Point Break, Bad Boys 2, Die Hard etc) and British small town gothic (Wicker Man and Straw Dogs) is a stroke of genius. The direction and the acting are spot on and there's a genuine affection for and understanding of the films which are parodied, a million miles away from the crass and cynical junk like the Scary Movie series. If I had a problem with the film it's that just about every character will be recognizable to anyone who's watched any British TV over the last 5 years or so, but that's a small thing. If you like guns and/or laughing you should see this film.

IMDB

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Metallica: Somekind of Monster



I was lead to believe that this was going to be some kind of hilarious and damning documentary exposing Metallica's general buffonery. No such luck. Given that it's paid for and presumably given the green light by the band it was never going to be that (for that kind of thing you should really see Dig).

The film follows Metallica for two years as they spend vast sums of money making quite an ordinary album (albeit a massively successful very ordinary album). The first half hour is positively boring (essentially a Metallica hagiography) but it picks up when the band hire an analyst to help them work through their issues, he hangs around in the background in a slightly sinister manner for the remainder of the film occasionally making himself appear necessary but generally just milking the band for $40,000 a month. So basically interesting but not great and certainly not what the press and publicity led me to believe it was going to be.


IMDB

Monday, February 12, 2007

The Adventures Of Prince Achmed



Hailed as the first full length animated feature this film clearly has an important place in cinema history. The technique used is that of traditional shadow theatre mixed with some crude stop frame stuff. The detail of the cut outs and the composition of the scenes are both impressive for the time but were effortlessly superseded by Disney's Snow White a mere 11 years later.

Based on episodes from the Arabian Nights the story is pretty straightforward stuff; sorcerer invents flying horse, contrives to steal princess, prince with aid of Chinese witch and Aladdin rescues princess. The story itself didn't hold my interest (whenever things get tough for our hero the witch comes a long and magically solves any problems) over an hour and a half it's stretched pretty thin and I probably would have switched off had I not been in the middle of a three hour train journey. The problem is, that in spite of the obvious technical accomplishments, this is essentially a special effects film and like any special effects film once that aspect is worn out things quickly get boring. Snow White still gets watched in cinemas today not because of its animation which, whilst it stands the test of time, isn't up to today's standards but because of the story and the design work both of which are brilliantly realised.

Having said that Achmed's soundtrack is good and there's probably some interesting stuff for people interested in the idea of orientalism. But in the end this is an interesting foot note in the history animation.


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Friday, February 02, 2007

Black Book



The stories simple, a Jewish girl falls in love with an SS officer in occupied Holland. Performances are strong and the whole thing looks gorgeous, more film noir or 50s melodrama than the standard post Private Ryan blanched pallet and shaky camera. The film's thoughtful and thought provoking without ever being anything less than superb entertainment(for a whole two and a half hours!). But then this is a Paul Verhoeven film and other people aren't going to see it that way, despite the more traditional setting this is typically divisive stuff.

Even with my predilection for horror/cartoons/sci-fi and other lowbrow/genre films I often place Verhoeven's work firmly in the guilty pleasures category. The lurid mix of sex and violence portrayed in glossy Hollywood style is just so un-reconstructed it's hard not to feel slightly bad about enjoying it. But to me it always seems Verhoeven best stuff is all about this dissonance, making you laugh at something inappropriate or unexpected, taking a scene slightly further than he should in polite company; Black Book pulls of this kind of stuff time after time. As Picasso said; Good taste is the enemy of creativity (or something like that anyway, that's how lazy I've become, I can't even be bothered to Google these things any more) and I think this films is further evidence for truth in that statement.


IMDB