Thursday, May 14, 2015

Boyhood

I still have to see this: I missed our screening, but have bought the DVD as the reviews made it look too good to miss.

Here are my notes:


Boyhood

USA 2014                    165 minutes

Director:                      Richard Linklater

Starring:                        Ellar Coltrane, Patricia Arquette, Lorelei Linklater, Ethan Hawke

 

Awards and Nominations

  • Nominated for six Oscars, including Best Film, Director, Original Screenplay, Supporting Actor (Ethan Hawke) and Supporting Actress (Patricia Arquette)
  • Won two BAFTAs (Best Film, Director and Supporting Actress) and nominated for Best Supporting Actor and Original Screenplay
  • A further 138 wins and 119 nominations

“Like the fabled Jesuit, Richard Linklater has taken the boy and given us the man. In so doing, he's created a film that I love more than I can say. And there is hardly a better, or nobler thing a film can do than inspire love.”

Peter Bradshaw

Over a period of 12 years, from 2002 to 20014 Boyhood depicts the adolescence of Mason Evans, a young boy growing up in Texas.  His parents are divorced: Mason and his sister live with their mother (Patricia Arquette) who subsequently remarries while, initially at least, their father (Ethan Hawke) is just an occasional presence in their lives.

Richard Linklater had long wanted to make a film that told the story of family relationships from the perspective of a boy over an extended period of time and without a completed script: for Boyhood he knew the basic plot points for each character as well as the ending, but otherwise wrote the script for each year’s filming to reflect the changes he saw in each character. He only filmed for three or four days each year, but the production team spent two months in pre-production and one month in post-production each year.  Once he had finished filming in 2013 Linklater named the film 12 Years, but then changed it to Boyhood to avoid any confusion with 12 Years a Slave.

In the 12 year shooting schedule for Boyhood Richard Linklater also directed eight other feature films that ranged from the directly commercial (Bad News Bears (2005)) to literary adaptation (Me and Orson Welles (2008)).  More significantly, he directed Before Sunset (2004) and Before Midnight (2013) completing a trilogy starring Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy that had begun with Before Sunrise in 1995 and which revisited the same two central characters at different points in their lives, a common theme in many of his films.

Boyhood received its premier at the Sundance Film Festival and it was also entered in the Berlin Film Festival where Richard Linklater won the Silver Bear for Best Director.  On its commercial release the film received almost unanimous acclaim from critics from around the world and Sight & Sound, after polling more than 100 international film critics named it as the best film of 2014. The film also appeared on more “best of” lists for 2014 than any other film: it appeared on 536 lists and was in first place on 189 of them.

Here's the trailer:

 

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

The Grand Budapest Hotel


This is one of the few films we've shown this year that I actually saw in advance of our screening.  I'd missed it at the cinema and caught up with it on DVD - but it definitely repaid a second look, especially on our big(gish) screen.

Here are my notes:

The Grand Budapest Hotel

USA 2014                    100 minutes

Director:                      Wes Anderson

Starring:                        Ralph Fiennes, Edward Norton, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe and Tony Revolori

Awards and Nominations

  • Nominated for nine Oscars, including Best Film, Director and Original Screenplay, and won four Oscars
  • Won BAFTAs for Best Original Screenplay, Best Soundtrack, Costumes and Production Design and nominated for six more including Best Film, Director, Leading Actor (Ralph Fiennes), Best Supporting Actor and Original Screenplay
  • A further 95 wins and 110 nominations

“In some hands, this convoluted, labyrinthine narrative would end up a sprawling mess, but such is Anderson's storytelling discipline – informed and sustained by the precision of the cinematography and set design – that it never gets away from him. As Gustave skips from hotel lobby to prison camp, from railway carriage to drawing room, the architecture of this picaresque remains entirely lucid."

Andrew Pulver

 In its 1930s glory days the Grand Budapest Hotel, located in the Central European Republic of Zubrowka, is presided over by Gustave H. (Ralph Fiennes), the hotel’s devoted concierge.  Among his many other duties Gustave H. courts a series of elderly women, including Madame D (an almost unrecognisable Tilda Swinton), who flock to the hotel to enjoy his “exceptional service”.  Following the death of Madame D. Gustave H. attends her funeral: he suspects that she has been murdered and learns that she has bequeathed him a valuable painting in her will, but her family want it and her son Dmitri (Adrien Brody) will stop at nothing to get it back.

Wes Anderson wrote the screenplay from an original story he had co-written, but it was inspired by the writings of Stefan Zweig, an Austrian novelist, playwright and journalist.  In the 1920s and 1930s Zweig was one of the most popular writers in the world but now he is best known for his novel Letter from an Unknown Woman, filmed in Hollywood by Max Ophuls in 1948.  Anderson’s inspiration for his story was Zweig’s 1927 novella Twenty Four Hours in the Life of a Woman (filmed in 1952 and remade twice since) as well as his 1939 novel Beware of Pity, filmed in Britain in 1946.

 
The film had its premier at the 2014 Berlin Film Festival where Wes Anderson received the Grand Jury Prize.  On it general release the film received excellent reviews with many critics commenting particularly on the performance of Ralph Fiennes (in a role written originally written for Johnny Depp) as Gustave H.  In a recent profile of Fiennes Anne Billson reviewed his film career to date and with regard to The Grand Budapest Hotel commented:

 

“His Gustave H., in Wes Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel, is probably the most likeable character he has ever played.  Amid the film's colourful assembly of caricatures, his fey but ferociously efficient concierge is full of regretful nuance, provides the film with its moral backbone, and heartbreakingly embodies the values of a lost epoch. It's a lovely performance.”

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Marvellous

This was an unexpected treasure: I'd missed the film on TV, but we selected it following a rave review from one of our Members.  I enjoyed it very much: the stylised presentation (and occasional incursions by real people) well suited the slightly incredible story that was - mostly - true.

Here are my notes:

Marvellous

UK 2014                      90 minutes

Director:                      Julian Farino

Starring:                        Toby Jones, Gemma Jones, Tony Curran and Nicholas Grieves

Neil Baldwin (Toby Jones) has a life that is both ordinary and extraordinary.  He lives with his widowed mother (Gemma Jones) and despite his learning difficulties he begins his working life as a clown in a circus, becomes the mascot for Stoke City Football Club and also becomes a student liaison officer for Stoke University.

Neil Baldwin’s life story first appeared as an article in The Guardian which detailed his unexpected friendships with football managers, football players, referees, vicars, bishops, archbishops, politicians and celebrities.  The film reflects this diverse life by being put together as a scrapbook of Neil’s life and includes appearances by real characters (Neil himself, plus Lou Macari and Gary Lineker).

Toby Jones won rave reviews for his performance as Neil Baldwin.  He made his breakthrough playing Truman Capote in Infamous (2006) and has since appeared in films as diverse as Captain America: The First Avenger (2011), Tinker Taylor Soldier Spy (2011) as well as the Harry Potter series where he provided the voice for Dobby the House Elf.  On TV he secured a Golden Globe nomination for his role as Alfred Hitchcock in The Girl (2012).

Julian Farino started his TV career by making documentaries before directing the BAFTA winning Our Mutual Friend.  In the US he directed episodes of the TV series Entourage, Big Love and Rome before directing his first feature film The Oranges (2012) which starred Hugh Laurie in his first leading role.

Here is the trailer:

 

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Before I Go To Sleep

I'd not read the book that this film was based on, and it would have been interesting to see how the novelist managed to conceal some of the more incongruous elements of the story.  As it was, the film was very entertaining g, with a real shock coming from the two male leads who were very definitely cast against type.

Here are my notes:

Before I Go to Sleep

USA 2014                    92 minutes

Director:                      Rowan Joffe

Starring:                        Nicole Kidman, Colin Firth, Mark Strong and Anne-Marie Duff

“...an enjoyable shaggy dog story with a twist that will leave you with the strange feeling that you've seen all this before, even if you can't quite remember where.”
 

Mark Kermode

Christine (Nicole Kidman) is a middle-aged woman who wakes each day with no memory of her life from her mid-20s onward, so every morning Ben (Colin Firth) has to tell her that he is her husband, she was in an accident, and as a result of this she is suffering from amnesia.  But one day while Ben is at work a call from Dr Nasch (Mark Strong) informs Christine about a camera on which she has been keeping a secret video diary.

The film is based on the recent bestselling novel by S J Watson, but the subject of amnesia has long been popular with film makers:  Hitchcock’s Spellbound (1945) is a classic Hollywood film while more recently in Memento (2000) Christopher Nolan tells the story of his amnesiac hero by interspersing black-and-white sequences that tell a chronological story with colour sequences in reverse chronological order (the DVD allows viewers to restructure the film so that they can see it with a conventional chronology). 

In his perceptive review of Before I Go to Sleep Mark Kermode also notes key similarities with the plot of Wolfgang Petersen’s Shattered, another film about an amnesiac:

“I don't know whether Joffe is familiar with Petersen's 1991 oddity but his film certainly seems to remember it well.”

Rowan Joffe is the son of director , best known for The Killing Fields (1984) and The Mission (1986), and the actress Jane Lapotaire.  After winning awards for his screen writing he directed his first film The Shooting of Thomas Hurndall for TV which won a BAFTA in 2009.  He followed this with his own adaptation of Brighton Rock (2011).  His other screenplay credits include 28 Weeks Later (2007) and the George Clooney vehicle The American (2010).

 Here's the trailer:
 
 

 

Sunday, February 1, 2015

20 Feet from Stardom

I'm not sure what happened to January: I went back to work, we screened two films and now it's February.

20 Feet from Stardom was a great revelation and a brilliant film.  The subject of backing singers is rich for exploration, and it would have been possible to have constructed any number of dramas from the characters who appeared in it.

It was a worthy winner of the Oscar for Best Documentary.

Here are my notes:


20 Feet from Stardom

USA 2013                    90 minutes

Director:                      Morgan Neville

Awards and Nominations:

  • Won 2014 Oscar for Best Documentary
  • A further 17 wins and 18 nominations

“Such a great idea for a documentary, and such a surprise to realise that it has never been done before.  Morgan Neville's Oscar-winning film is about the backing singers who have lent their musical talents to many a star name's pop record.  Sometimes they have been acknowledged and appreciated, and sometimes not.  Sometimes they have been content with a supporting role, and sometimes not.  But once you accept the backing-singer role, it is very difficult to break out.”

Peter Bradshaw

Morgan Neville’s film received its premiere at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival where it was acquired for nationwide release by Radius – The Weinstein Company and was also screened at many film festivals.  The film received nearly universal positive reviews with Rotten Tomatoes giving it an approval rating of 99%.

Morgan Neville began his career as a journalist before turning to film production in 1993.  He made a series of documentaries about various musicians and was nominated for three Grammys and followed these by the award-winning The Cool School about the birth of modern art in Los Angeles. 

Here is the trailer:

 

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Best Films of 2014

This is the flipside of my previous post: the top five films of 2014:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culture-review-of-the-year/11287706/The-five-best-films-of-2014.html

Of these I've only seen 12 Years a Slave, but the rest are now on my "must see" list - more DVDs will be on their way soon.

Monday, December 15, 2014

The Five Worst Films of 2014

With the papers being full of "best of" lists, this makes a welcome change: the five worst films of the year:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culture-review-of-the-year/11287705/The-five-worst-films-of-2014.html

I'm pleased to record that I haven't seen any of them. 

It's at moments like this that I'm glad that I'm not a full time critic...