Film Reviews
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword review - Guy Ritchie's deadly weaponThursday, 18 May 2017![]()
Guy Ritchie is back birthing turkeys. Who can remember/forget that triptych of stiffs Swept Away, Revolver and RocknRolla? Now, having redemptively bashed his CV back into shape with the assistance of Sherlock Holmes, the mockney rebel turns to another of England’s heritage icons in King Arthur: Legend of the Sword. Do, however, dump that fantasy of yours of a triumphant return to the multiplex for medieval chivalry and courtly romance. Messrs Malory... Read more...
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The Secret Scripture review - Jim Sheridan's turgid homecomingTuesday, 16 May 2017![]()
It's the church wot done it! That's the unexceptional takeaway proffered by Jim Sheridan's first Irish film in 20 years, which is to say ever since the director of My Left Foot and The Boxer hit the big time. But despite a starry and often glamorous cast featuring Vanessa Redgrave (in... Read more... |
Frantz review - François Ozon in sombre mood: it worksSaturday, 13 May 2017![]()
François Ozon’s Frantz is an exquisitely sad film, its crisp black and white cinematography shot through with mourning. The French director, in a work where the main language is German, engages with the aftermath of World War One, and the moment when the returning rhythms of life only... Read more... |
Miss Sloane review - Jessica Chastain lobbies hard for your voteFriday, 12 May 2017![]()
For a demoralising period towards the start of Miss Sloane, it looks as if we’re in for a high-octane thriller about palm oil. That’s right, palm oil. Everything you never wanted to know about the ethics and economics of the palm oil market is splurged in frenetic, rat-a-tat, overlapping, school-of-Sorkin dialogue. After 10 minutes your ears need a rest on a park bench. Read more... |
Alien: Covenant review - we've seen most of this beforeThursday, 11 May 2017![]()
When Ridley Scott returned to his hideous intergalactic monster with Prometheus five years ago, he brought with him a new panoramic vision encompassing infinite space, several millennia of time and the entire history of human existence. With Alien: Covenant, he makes a more modest proposal. Read more... |
Mindhorn review - Eighties detective spoof is a hootFriday, 05 May 2017![]()
To appreciate the full engaging silliness of Mindhorn, it helps to have been born no later than 1980. Those of the requisite vintage will have encountered the lame primetime pap it both salutes and satirises. Everyone else coming to this spoof will just have to take it on trust that things, admittedly not all of them British, were indeed this bad back in the day. The eponymous detective of the... Read more... |
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 2 review - complacent, tedious, cynicalFriday, 28 April 2017![]()
The original Guardians of the Galaxy from 2014 had a freshness to its humour and introduced audiences to a set of novel characters; unfortunately, the sequel is overstuffed with ageing movie stars trying to get a slice of the action. There’s always a camp knowingness about Marvel scripts, it's one of the studio's charms, but here the overt cynicism begins to drag with lines like "We’re really going to be able to jack up our price if we’re two-times galaxy saviours". Foul-... Read more... |
The Promise review - genocide reduced to melodramaFriday, 28 April 2017![]()
The Armenian genocide by the Ottomans during and after World War One killed 1.5 million people and is a wound that won’t heal for Armenians, though modern-day Turkey continues to insist that no genocide occurred. Read more... |
Lady Macbeth review - memorably nastyThursday, 27 April 2017![]()
The Scottish play’s traces are faint in this bloody, steamy tale of feminist psychosis. Read more... |
Heal the Living review - 'lots of emotion, not enough life'Thursday, 27 April 2017![]()
Three teenage boys meet at dawn. One of them, blonde and beautiful Simon (Gabin Verdet), jumps out of his girlfriend’s window and rides his bike through the dark Lyon streets to meet the others in their van. They drive almost silently to the beach, put on wetsuits and catch waves. A grey sea, a grey sky: we can hardly see where foam ends and cloud begins. It’s mesmerising, wordless, and the camerawork is superb, as is Alexandre Desplat’s score. Read more... |
Unforgettable review - forgettable filmFriday, 21 April 2017![]()
Within seconds – literally seconds – of Unforgettable it becomes apparent that this is the kind of film that in the late Eighties and Nineties used to be referred to as “straight to video”, a label that covered a plethora of trashy, sexist, by-the-numbers psycho and erotic thrillers that beat a hasty route to Blockbuster. Read more... |
Clash review - 'a nation in crisis'Wednesday, 19 April 2017![]()
An Egyptian/French co-production directed by Egyptian film-maker Mohamed Diab, Clash is a fevered, chaotic attempt to portray some of the tangled undercurrents that fuelled Egypt’s “Arab Spring” and its subsequent unravelling. Read more... |
Their Finest review - undone by feeble female characterisationTuesday, 18 April 2017![]()
Yet another excuse to snuggle down with some cosy wartime nostalgia, Their Finest is purportedly a tribute to women’s undervalued role in the British film industry. Unfortunately it comes over more blah than Blitz. Read more... |
The Handmaiden review - opulently luridFriday, 14 April 2017![]()
Park Chan-wook is a Korean decadent and moralist who’d have plenty to say to Aubrey Beardsley. Read more... |
The Sense of an Ending review – an enigmatic journey through the pastThursday, 13 April 2017![]()
Julian Barnes’s 2011 novel The Sense of an Ending teased the brains of many a reader with its split time frame and ambiguous conclusion. It was the sort of thing that the interiorised world of fiction can do surpassingly well, and Barnes had handled it skilfully enough to carry off the Man Booker Prize. Read more... |
The Hatton Garden Job review - extraordinarily dullTuesday, 11 April 2017![]()
There have been plenty of films glamourising diamond geezers who live on the wrong side of the law. Some of them don’t even star Danny Dyer. In the history of British film, rhyming slang plus dodgy morals equals box office. Perhaps there is even a special source of European funding ring-fenced for low-budget films about cockney gangsters. The true story of the old lags who pulled off the biggest... Read more... |
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