The Martian

Science is cool.  That is the idea that sits at the beating heart of The Martian.  Without it nothing in this film works and yet it could have so easily been its downfall.  Based on a book which tried it’s hardest to be scientifically accurate, The Martian may not have been the easiest conversion to the big screen.  Science may be cool, but on a cinema screen it is rarely sexy.  Yet somehow Drew Goddard’s script makes it not only work, but makes it sparkle.  Throw in Ridley Scott doing his best work in years and The Martian may well be unmissable.

Continue reading “The Martian”

Miss You Already

Walking into Miss You Already it’s hard not to want it to be great.  So few films are released that can claim to star two women and even fewer that are also written and directed by women.  For that alone I wanted Miss You Already to be classic.

Continue reading “Miss You Already”

A Walk in the Woods

A Walk in the Woods was a must see for me.  Not because I’ve read the book, which shamefully I haven’t, but because I once set out to spend three weeks on the Appalachian Trail.  Unbearably heavy rucksack strapped to my back, me and three friends started in the exact same place Robert Redford and Nick Nolte do in this film.  Except we were sweating a hell of a lot more thanks to Georgia’s unbearable humidity.  The fact that I only made it twenty-four hours before hitchhiking off the trail and that it was one of the worst twenty-four hours of my life is neither here nor there.

Continue reading “A Walk in the Woods”

Halloween Binge: A Nightmare on Elm Street

Wes Craven’s influence on the horror genre can not be underestimated.  As the great Kim Newman put it, ‘Wes Craven reinvented horror at least four times, most directors don’t even manage it once.’  Arguably, his most telling influence on the genre was the creation of Freddy Krueger and A Nightmare on Elm Street.  A film I was inspired to return to following Craven’s recent passing.  However, that didn’t seem enough and I decided to keep going.  In the last few weeks, I’ve watched every single Nightmare on Elm Street film, including crossovers and remakes.  Why?  Krueger only knows.

Continue reading “Halloween Binge: A Nightmare on Elm Street”

The Visit

Horror and comedy are often dismissed as easy genres.  Every year a plethora of films populated by jump scares and jokes about dicks are packaged up and inflicted on the public.  They’re also inevitably crap.  The truth is to make a horror film or a comic film is just as hard as making a sweeping war epic.  To combine the two, is arguably even harder.

Continue reading “The Visit”

Bill

The story of Bill needs no introduction.  I mean everyone has heard the tale of Shakespeare, who is still going by Bill at this point, being kicked out of his lute band (Mortal Coil) and moving to London where he and his first play get embroiled in a Catholic plot to kill Queen Elizabeth.  It’s basically history 101.

Continue reading “Bill”

Legend

Creating worlds around bad people is a tricky business.  When done well, you get shows like The Sopranos or Breaking Bad.  Filled with unpleasant people, who do bad things and also their families and the crap that they have to deal with in that world.  Importantly though, we are never offered excuses for what they do, but instead just given a glimpse into what motivates them.  When it’s done badly, you get self-aggrandising crap that tries to hide the fact these characters are bastards.  Legend sits somewhere in between.

Continue reading “Legend”

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl

Teens with cancer is in danger of becoming it’s own genre.  Following the success of the emotionally draining Fault in Our Stars, we now get the quirky indie version.  Sundance awards and all.  It’s a description that is sure to raise the heckles of some, as they expect to hate Me and Earl and the Dying Girl and yet this story about a self loathing teenager called Greg and his friendship with a girl suffering from leukemia manages to never collapse into mawkish sentimentality.

Continue reading “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl”

45 Years

Cinema is often unfair to the elderly.  There are few films that give an accurate representation of what it actually means to be old, at least not a growing old doesn’t involve them either going senile or just being a bit racist.  However, with the discovery in recent years that as a group they will attend the cinema on mass, this has begun to change.  The success of films like The King’s Speech seemed to activate the Grey Pound and we are now getting films that are more understanding of elderly life.

Continue reading “45 Years”

The Wolfpack

The Angulo families seven children have been raised without really seeing the real world.  An active year was leaving the house nine times, while there were years where they would never leave at all.  When Crystal Moselle met them walking down the street dressed like they had walked straight from the set of Reservoir Dogs, she found out about this story and determined to discover more.  Henceforth, The Wolfpack was born.

Continue reading “The Wolfpack”

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑