Showing posts with label Hugh Bonneville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hugh Bonneville. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Paddington 2

The choice of this film was a unanimous decision by the Committee bolstered by requests from several of our regulars.

We had screened the original Paddington film and that had gone down well.  i had enjoyed it very much but after the reviews for the new film I saw it at the cinema last year and really enjoyed seeing it again: on a second viewing you get a chance to pick up on the incidental detail that passes you by first time around.

It was a good evening - and also very well attended.

Here are my notes

Paddington 2

UK 2017          104 minutes

Director:          Paul King

Starring:            Ben Whishaw, Hugh Bonneville, Sally Hawkins and Hugh Grant

 
Awards and Nominations

  • Nominated for three BAFTAs – Best Supporting Actor (Hugh Grant), Best Film and Best Adapted Screenplay
  • A further three wins and five nominations
“This is the follow-up to the first Paddington movie of 2014 and it’s a tremendously sweet-natured, charming, unassuming and above all funny film with a story that just rattles along, powered by a nonstop succession of Grade-A gags conjured up by screenwriters Paul King (who also directs), Simon Farnaby and Jon Croker. Their screenplay perfectly catches the tone of the great master himself, Michael Bond, author of the original books, who sadly died in June this year at the age of 91, creative and productive to the end.”
 
Peter Bradshaw

Paddington is now happily settled in Windsor Gardens with the Brown family. While searching for a present for his Aunt Lucy’s 100th birthday he finds a unique pop-up book in Mr Gruber’s antique shop, and undertakes a series of jobs to earn money to buy it. However when the book is stolen Paddington and the Brown family have to unmask the thief.

The global success of Paddington (2014) made it inevitable that a sequel would follow and the film reunites the same director and principal cast members, with the addition of newcomer Hugh Grant in a scene-stealing role as Phoenix Buchanan, an ageing actor now reduced to appearing in commercials for dog food. The main characters have come from the books that Michael Bond wrote, and thus the film qualifies for nominations as a “best adapted screenplay”  but, just as in the first film, the screenwriters have produced an original screenplay that nonetheless manages to retain the spirit of the published stories: Michael Bond was partly inspired to create Paddington by his memory of seeing child evacuees with labels around their necks and carrying suitcases as they left London at the beginning of the Second World War, both Paddington and his best friend Mr Gruber (Jim Broadbent) are immigrants and the area of London where the Browns live is, with the exception of Mr Curry (Peter Capaldi), most definitely multi-cultural. It is impossible in the current environment to escape entirely from the long shadow of politics, even in what is ostensibly a children’s film, and thus Sight & Sound was able to lead its rave review of the film with the memorable headline “Brexit, pursued by a bear”.

From an audience approval perspective the film has an approval rating of 100% on the aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes and thus joins an elite and eclectic list which includes established classics such as Bride of Frankenstein (1931), Mary Poppins (1964) and Day for Night (1973). The film also appeared in 18th place in The Guardian’s list of the best films of 2017.  As a result of the global success of the film the CEO of StudioCanal has confirmed that the studio is committed to making a third Paddington film, although no details have yet been released.
 
The film is dedicated to the memory of Michael Bond, who died at the age of 91 while the film was in production.

Here's the trailer:

 

 

Friday, September 15, 2017

Viceroy's House

For the first film of our new season we chose this film: it fulfilled the basic selection criteria in that several of the committee had seen and enjoyed it. The added bonus was the presence in the cast of Hugh Bonneville: and we ended up with the best attended film since Mamma Mia - quite a few years ago.

The audience was thirsty so the bar had healthy takings and the film went down very well.

Here are my notes:

Viceroy’s House

USA 2016        103 minutes

Director:          Gurinder Chadha

Starring:            Hugh Bonneville, Gillian Anderson, Manish Dayal, Huma Qureshi and Michael Gambon

 “…I found myself increasingly gripped by Chadha’s handsome period drama – impressed by the accessibility of its history-primer narrative, entertained by its warm wit and occasionally boisterous charm, and moved by its melodramatic contrivances, which turn out to be more rooted in fact that one might imagine.”

Mark Kermode

In 1947 Lord Louis Mountbatten (Hugh Bonneville) has been given the task of bringing about the transition of India from its role as the jewel in Britain’s imperial crown to an independent state. As he and his wife Edwina (Gillian Anderson) oversee the complex process, clashes between the conflicting political and religious forces are resolved only by the partition of the country into two separate states; as a result of this there is a massive displacement of refugees who have to risk everything to seek sanctuary within their newly defined homelands.

Chadha’s objective for her screenplay was to tell the story of the shared history of India and Pakistan in the style of the British historical epic: thus she placed the Viceroy’s House at the centre of the story. Her plan was for an Upstairs, Downstairs approach that looked at life both in the state rooms and the servant’s quarters; for her it was important that the Indian characters were not marginalised, and thus she ensured that they would have equal screen time with the white members of the cast. Initially she was annoyed that Downton Abbey reached the screens while she was still planning her film, although its subsequent global success popularised her chosen genre and also gave her Hugh Bonneville to play the key role of the Viceroy. Chadha’s own family was affected by the partition of India and she reveals the details of their history in an epilogue to the film.

In addition to its dramatization of the complex politics of partition and its impact on the population the film also uses recent research that revealed Churchill’s responsibility for the chaos that resulted from his promotion of the establishment of a separate Pakistan as a strategic counter-balance to a left-leaning India. From a British perspective this division allowed Britain to retain influence in Karachi, an important port on the coast of the Arabian Sea and the capital of a country strategically located on the borders of Afghanistan, thus making it a vital counter to any threat of Soviet expansion southwards.

Gurinder Chadha was born in Kenya before moving to the UK with her family while still a young child. Her early work explored the lives of Indians living in Britain and drew on her own experience: her first film was the BAFTA nominated Bhaji on the Beach (1993) and she made her name internationally with her second feature, Bend It Like Beckham (2002), which also made a star of Keira Knightley. She followed this with Bride and Prejudice (2004), a Bollywood version of Jane Austen’s novel, which opened at Number One in both the UK and India. Viceroy’s House received its first screening at the Berlin Film Festival and has recently been dubbed into Hindi for release in India.

 Here is the trailer:
 
 

Friday, December 11, 2015

Paddington

This was our last film before Christmas, and so we wanted something that would be a bit of fun.  I knew that the film had been well reviewed, but had not expected to have enjoyed it so much and laughed out loud so many times.

After the film I started thinking about Theorem and Boudu Saved from Drowning. Was Paddington an ursine remake?

Here are my notes:

UK 2014                      95 minutes

Director:                      Paul King

Starring:                        Hugh Bonneville, Sally Hawkins, Julie Walters, Jim Broadbent, Peter Capaldi and Ben Whishaw

Awards and Nominations

  • BAFTA nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay
  • Nomination for Alexander Korda award for Best British Film
  • BTVA nomination for Best Voice Acting Award (Ben Whishaw)
  • Winner of Best Comedy at the Empire Awards
  • Two for nominations for Best Film
“The jokes are good…, ranging from laugh-out-loud observations about the transformative effects of parenthood (and knowing mentions of “exotic wrestlers”) to slapstick bathroom episodes. Ben Whishaw turns out to be the perfect voice of Paddington …, his lilting diction at once childlike and wise, his delivery naive yet oddly noble. ‘Please look after this bear’, says the tag around Paddington’s neck. Rest assured, they have.”
Mark Kermode

 
After travelling from Peru to London in search of a new home, a polite young bear meets the Brown family at Paddington station. The bear is lost and alone so the Brown family offer him a place to stay – and name him Paddington.

 

Paddington Bear first appeared in print in 1958, and since then he has featured in more than twenty books of stories by Michael Bond. In the 1970s the BBC broadcast a series of short films adapted from Michael Bond’s stories with Michael Hordern memorable as the narrator.  For this film Paul King worked with screenwriter Hamish McColl (who had worked with Rowan Atkinson on Mr Bean’s Holiday (2007) and Johnny English Reborn (2011)) to develop a new story that included characters and elements from Bond’s works.

Paddington was Paul King’s first cinema film as director.  He began his career on TV where he directed 20 episodes of The Mighty Boosh and six episodes of Come Fly with Me, although he has also worked in theatre where he has specialised in comedy. David Heyman, best known as producer of the Harry Potter films, bought the film rights to Paddington Bear in 2007 and worked on the story in consultation with Bond and King since then.  Heyman’s aim with the character of Paddington was to achieve the level of verisimilitude for CGI characters achieved in the Harry Potter and recent Planet of the Apes films, although the film also used an animatronic version as well.

Paddington was the most expensive film ever produced by production company StudioCanal but it was a global success with total earnings of USD 259.6 million. It has now been confirmed that there will be a sequel, with King in discussions to direct it.

 Here is the trailer: