Tuesday 8 November 2011

Brian Cowen wasn’t a failure: he was just drawn that way


Watching Crisis: Inside the Cowen Government on Monday night, I realised something: for nearly three years, our Taoiseach was TinTin’s companion, Captain Haddock.

The evidence can be traced through the blotted comic-strip of 2008 to early 2011. Haddock is brash and grumpy (Mary O’Rourke might call him ‘truculent’). He’s fond of the Loch Lomond Single Malt whiskey (one’s mind drifts to the alleged line of pints on the bar the night before that Morning Ireland interview). Indeed, at times, Haddock’s drinking posed a greater hazard to TinTin than the villains he encountered. Finally, the Captain’s short-tempered outbursts are legendary (remember when challenged on NAMA in the Dáil, Cowen fumed "billions of bilious blue blistering barnacles!"?)

Okay, we can put a line through the last tibit, but the outline of the two characters is beginning to converge. Where they diverge, however, is more telling: Haddock’s brashness and drinking were often used for comic effect.

One might say, then, that Haddock works as comic foil. Foil to whom? The courageous TinTin: a righteous and noble character. Brian Lenihan heroically battled pancreatic cancer, but, unlike TinTin (who continuously emerged from tight scrapes), this was one perilous situation he sadly could not disengage from. If ever Ireland needed TinTin, it was in the early hours of September 30th 2008. But all we got was Haddock.

Hergé, TinTin’s creator, in later editions, created a diverging destiny for Haddock. Resembling a weak character initially, the Captain would later earn our respect-his most noble act being in the pivotal Tintin in Tibet, in which he stoically volunteers to sacrifice his life to save Tintin. Cowen needed Hergé to continue drawing for him, but instead he blotted his own page. And, later, it was left for the troika to draw Ireland’s destiny.

Saturday 8 October 2011

Review: Midnight in Paris ****

Ahh, belle.....

Director: Woody Allen

Writer: Woody Allen

Stars: Owen Wilson, Rachel McAdams and Kathy Bates

Amy Leigh Richards

Midnight in Paris has enough name-dropping to make a Beverly Hills' cocktail party jealous. If A-movie actors such as Owen Wilson, Marion Cotillard, and Rachel McAdams aren’t enough, let’s also throw in some TV actors, a model/singer/First Lady of France, and oh yeah, that little-known movie legend Woody Allen as writer and director. But here we have a rare large-cast film in which the characters not only each make important contributions, but are, in general, more famous and important to the arts than the actor portraying them.

The story itself does not scream originality, I admit. Owen Wilson’s character Gil travels with his fiancée Inez and future in-laws to Paris. After running into Inez’s friends and getting verbally abused by Inez and her friends alike, Gil opts to wander the streets at night, alone with his thoughts and aspirations to become a true writer. In a wine-induced stupor (ah, France.) he stumbles upon a way to travel back to his dreamland: 1920s Paris. After a night of partying with Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald, Cole Porter, and eventually Ernest Hemingway, Gil is in heaven amidst his inspirations and idols and is determined to continue hopping between time periods. As Gil becomes more caught up in his “nightlife” he drifts further from his modern life and finds increasingly more reasons to stay in the 1920s, including the beautiful and effervescent Cotillard, and a future as a true novelist. Naturally, he must make a decision about where he belongs, and with whom, and in what era.

Anyone who has studied the French will enjoy the tongue-in-cheek commentary on French culture. Even more amusing than the French references, however, is the playful and creative portrayal of art’s celebrities. Corey Stoll does a fantastic Hemingway, who speaks with the brazen poignancy of the author and the rambling, disconnected, confusing sentence structure of his prose. Writing this movie must have been terribly fun, poking fun at artists, art, and the crazy ideas of the art world. Really, how often does Adrien Brody pop up as Salvador Dalí, spouting bizarre nonsense and reminding us why that surrealism unit in school was impossible to understand?

It’s always a refreshing feeling to leave the cinema remembering that movies can be an art form. Few films can accomplish this feeling, and even fewer include humour that art-lovers will enjoy.

Verdict: How appropriate that this work of the Septième Art is set in the magical city that calls to all of us with creativity in our souls.

Amy Leigh Richards is the enigmatic Lady that shared a falafel with me one eve in Brussels.

Saturday 24 September 2011

Review: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy ****


Director: Tomas Alfredson

Writers: John le Carré (novel), Peter Straughan (screenplay), and Bridgit O’Connor

Stars: Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, Tom Hardy, John Hurt, Toby Jones, Mark Strong

Beige, drab, muggy, uneasy, prickly....brilliant. Essentially a masterpiece, but with such dense plotting, there's little time to fully sketch anyone, and the 'whodunnit' revelation fails to inject enough excitement. Oldman's portrayal of the cooly calculating Smiley, one would suspect, will garner an Oscar nomination, but the collective cast are all solemnly on-song.

It's the 1970s, the war is Cold and rain-drenched London is decaying. George Smiley (Gary Oldman) is re-hired by British intelligence to flush out a suspected duplicitous character from the circus (the top echelon of MI6).

A broody atmosphere envelops the film's mood and never relents (a replication in form then, of Alfredson's masterful Let the Right One In). For all its slow-burning moments, there's a nice stock of palm-sweaters (Mark Strong's agent suspecting something is not right in Budapest; Benedict Cumberbatch's Peter Guillam in a classic espionage scene-staple in the records' room). The cream of Britain (males only!) too is on show, from the old masters (Hurt, Oldman and Firth) to cinema's fastest rising star (Hardy).

Verdict: Imperious filmmaking. Oscars 2012: are the British coming again?

Tuesday 20 September 2011

Putting the Rector in Director (Pedantic but Clarifying Note: Latin version of 'rector' meaning 'ruler') Part Une


New-ish kids worth crossing the street for

If you like gender balance, then look away, it's PromisingMenDirectors* time.

Who is in the saddle? (There is no explanation for some of these worrying- would you call it homoerotic?- undertones)

First up is Duncan Jones, director of Moon and Source Code (and kudos goes to his FCUK advertisement that had a brief kiss between, get this, two female ladies!). The son of David Bowie, he lived in various locations (from Scotland to Switzerland) and dropped out of a PhD course to attend the London Film School. *Role-Model Alert*

Future Projects: Lost out on the re-booted Superman and the follow-up to Wolverine. The success of Moon (picking up rave reviews and independent film statuettes), however, has inspired Jones to convert the tale into a trilogy. The next installment will be an epilogue to the events of the first film, with Sam Rockwell signed on for a cameo appearance. Aside from the Moon trilogy, there is a planned film which is set in a future Berlin dystopia (Jones describes the film, Mute, as a 'love letter to Blade Runner').

Overall: Expected to be a strong voice in Science Fiction-dom. The genre needs a new Prince.

* Criteria for picking promising directors doesn't stand up to objective scrutiny. Rather, it's all a whim; a fancy!

Sunday 18 September 2011

Review Jane Eyre ****


Mr Rochester and Jane cosyin' up

Director: Cary Fukunaga

Stars: Mia Wasikowska, Michael Fassbender, Judi Dench, Jamie Bell, Sally Hawkins

Fukunaga's Jane Eyre is delivered with impressive economy. Dovetailing from flashback to flashforward, certain elements of the tale (for instance, Jane Eyre's childhood and education) are given short shrift. Its most famous element- and here, the film's climax- is delivered with little fuss or reflexion. For 'Eyreians' (a collective name for Eyre fans that I know will not catch on), this may be a problem; this reviewer however, having not read the book or dipped a toe into any of the previous film canon, approached Fukanaga's installment unencumbered (and sparsely equipped with a childlike sense of wonder)....

We first meet Jane in full flight from Mr Rochester. She's midst the beautiful heather of some alien landscape, curled up in the fetal position and howling (Boy is she unhappy!). She eventually pulls herself up and finds shelter in the cottage of St John Rivers (Jamie Bell); a clergyman who lives with his two sisters. From there, we revisit Jane's unhappy childhood and meet her unedifying aunt (Sally Hawkins). Boo Hiss, says I! At a Victorian comprehensive, Jane undergoes character-building via the cane and later we catch up with her as governess of a thumping big mansion (maison á la Michael Fassbender's Mr Rochester).

The connection between Eyre and Rochester crackles and froths; their two-hander scenes are the film's finest. Both actors, too, are not strictly bound to their characters' accents (Fassbender in particular lets his Celtic intones loose) which is a virtue (think of the effect a bad accent can have!). Wasikowska's performance has pain (but resolve); a character desperate to assert herself. She quietly commands the whole film.

Verdict: Hasty climax aside, overall a comfortable and beautifully mounted/acted edition.

Friday 9 September 2011

Review: Troll Hunter ****


The crew avec Mr Troll Hunter

Director: Andre Ovredal

Stars: Glenn Erland Tosterud, Johanna Morck, Knut Naerum, Otto Jespersen, Robert Stoltenberg, Tomas Alf Larsen

Troll Hunter makes a fantastic addition to the ciné-vérité (jittery camera hokery pokery) sub-genre of Blair Witch Project, Cloverfield and Paranormal Activity. The film's strength is its rich, localised mythology which hoodwinks you into (nearly) believing that trolls move silently through the rain-soaked fjords and mountainsides of Norway (actually, not really).

Three young filmmakers trail a local bear poacher (Jesperson) for a college documentary. The poacher, an elusive character, promises to be an interesting interview if pinned down. The tale of his profession, as it transpires, is more remarkable still.

*Spoiler Alert* He hunts trolls! Trolls that can distinguish the blood of Christians. But don't worry: the Government fences them in with electric pylons. Oh? Yes, it's rigid when applying the wonderfully absurd Nordic fictions of Asbjørnsen and Moe. How can the film pass it off with a straight face? The sober and stoic-like conviction of the character of the Hunter (a fantastic Jesperson) helps. It's the knowing wink throughout though; the semi-satirical wink ('we realise our own absurdity') that reinforces the film's likeability.

Verdict: Troll Hunter deserves to be seen for its creative personality, enchanting scenery and beguiling final act.

Wednesday 7 September 2011

A Thinly-Veiled Lazy Post


A less productive day than Max Fischer's

Things I Learnt Whilst Idly Whittling Away The Day

1) Duncan Jones, director of the brilliant Moon (2009) and the worthy Source Code (2011), is the son of David Bowie.

2) Eddie Izzard posts mundane tweets of the weather.

3) Following Chloe Moretz on twitter is Legal.

4) Natalie Portman's real surname is Hershlag.

5) Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy's director (Thomas Alfredson) directed the brilliant Let the Right One In

Saturday 3 September 2011

Review: The Skin I live in


Antonio Banderas and Elena Anaya

Director: Pedro Almodóvar

Writers: Pedro Almodóvar (screenplay), Thierry Jonquet (novel)

Stars: Antonio Banderas, Elena Anaya and Jan Cornet

'The Skin I live in' is perverse medical B-movie horror noir; provocative and shockingly sincere. The film's non-linear structure and pacing constantly elude the viewer, slowly drawing back the tapestry on a queasy and horrifying denouement.

Dr Robert Lesgard (Antonio Banderas) is a renowned surgeon whose research attempts at a breakthrough in the field of synthetic skin creation. His human guinea pig is a beautiful woman named Vera (Elena Anaya); a subject contained within his home, and cared for by his head servant Marilia (Marisa Paredes). The narrative (shifting from present to past and back again) extrapolates the nature of the relationship between Vera and Lesgard and the motivating factors behind the Doctor's actions.

Towering over much of the film, Banderas' Lesgard is a frightening figure; one exercising tight manipulation over his subjects (his sinister-ness is fully revealed when you stop linking 'Puss in Boots' to his voice). Anaya's Vera is imperceptible but engaging (thanks to a beguiling performance) from the outset. The 'sadness behind her eyes' slowly becomes the main point of exploration for the film's narrative.

Delightfully, Almodóvar masterfully controls our perception of plot direction. This is achieved through the film's pacing. Early on, we experience what feels like the main plot's climax- something which later reveals itself to be subplotting. There does come the point where the direction of the film's 'twist' becomes apparent to the viewer. The scale of its horror, however, might still very well leave you in denial.


Rating: 3/5

Monday 29 August 2011

In a world of TimesNewRoman fontsize 12, Bill Murray is Calibri fontsize 14

Bill Murray, rejuvenated star

Bill Murray is a bona-fide Cat and, recently, does a fantastic line in characters who are embedded with middle aged depletion. In ascending order, my favourite Bill Murray films.

5) Zombieland
'Any Regrets?' Immortal.

4) Broken Flowers
Characteristically understated. Slight film with excellent ending.

3) Rushmore

Herman Blume emerges as an excellent showcase for his comic discipline.

2) Groundhog Day
Brilliant nonchalance from Bill; comedy classic.

1) Lost in Translation
Murray shows immeasurable shades in his greatest performance.

Sunday 31 July 2011

What are the tell-tale signs of the indie film? Aside from Zooey Deschanel and the ‘Official Selection at Sundance’ Logo.


3) Earnest (and Often Unplugged) Songs

There’s a lot of love for the Smiths (Nick and Nora’s Infinite Playlist; 500 Days of Summer) and also anything twee (Juno). The Moldy Peaches or Sufjan Stevens appearing on the soundtrack is not unexpected.

Thursday 28 July 2011

What are the tell-tale signs of the indie film? Aside from Zooey Deschanel and the ‘Official Selection at Sundance’ Logo.

Paul Dano

2) Gawkish, Ponderous Male Leads

Conservative haircuts, good, a body as powerful as Christian Bale’s Trevor Reznik (also preferred). John Heder (Napoleon Dynamite) Jesse Eisenberg (Adventureland), Paul Dano (Gigantic), Michael Cera (Everything), John Krasinski (Away We Go), Jim Carrey (Eternal Sunshine)

Wednesday 27 July 2011

What are the tell-tale signs of the indie film? Aside from Zooey Deschanel and the ‘Official Selection at Sundance’ Logo.

Lloyd Tate, Submarine

1) Beards

There’s probably a bewhiskered male somewhere (Joel in Eternal Sunshine; Burt in Away We Go; Paul in The Kids are Alright). Some of these will ‘bristle’ with intelligence (Frank in Little Miss Sunshine; Lloyd in Submarine; Bernard in The Squid and the Whale).

Thursday 21 July 2011

Christopher Nolan and the 'Man of Steel'

Christopher Nolan is involved in writing the story for the latest Superman

adaptation. Attached is a picture of Henry Cavill, the new Superman (I really liked

Superman Returns, I'm not sure why there was a drive to re-boot the

franchise). Anyway, Nolan is a great writer (look at the screenplay credits for all

his excellent films) so this should be worth waiting for.



I leave with the wise words of Bill, words created by another great writer:

'As you know, l'm quite keen on comic books. Especially the ones about superheroes.

I find the whole mythology surrounding superheroes fascinating. Take my favorite

superhero, Superman. Not a great comic book. Not particularly well-drawn. But the

mythology... The mythology is not only great, it's unique.


A staple of the superhero mythology is, there's the superhero and there's the alter

ego. Batman is actually Bruce Wayne, Spider-Man is actually Peter Parker. When that

character wakes up in the morning, he's Peter Parker. He has to put on a costume to

become Spider-Man. And it is in that characteristic Superman stands alone. Superman

didn't become Superman. Superman was born Superman.


When Superman wakes up in the morning, he's Superman. His alter ego is Clark Kent.

His outfit with the big red "S", that's the blanket he was wrapped in as a baby when

the Kents found him. Those are his clothes. What Kent wears - the glasses, the

business suit - that's the costume. That's the costume Superman wears to blend in

with us. Clark Kent is how Superman views us. And what are the characteristics of

Clark Kent. He's weak... he's unsure of himself... he's a coward. Clark Kent is

Superman's critique on the whole human race.'

Wednesday 13 July 2011

A Note on the Endurability of Lost in Translation


Richard Corliss (TIME magazine) says this of Lost in Translation: it ‘revels

in contradictions. It's a comedy about melancholy, a romance without consummation, a

travelogue that rarely hits the road.’


These remarks are wonderfully observed- but I never really believed it was a film

about romance. To me it was friendship. It’s about finding someone when lonely in a

hotel (because hotels are plain lonely when you are on your own!). It’s about

fleeting moments with someone who resets your life batteries.

Tuesday 12 July 2011

The Guard: A Review


Cast: Brendan Gleeson, Don Cheadle, Liam Cunningham, Fionnula Flanagan, Mark Strong.


A hilarious Connemara western (surely a first) propelled by an inspired Gleeson.


Sergeant Boyle (Gleeson) is less concerned with the rigours of P.C than he is about

having a laugh. However, the arrival of Cheadle’s humourless Wendell (an F.B.I agent

concerned about professional ethic and capturing international drug mules located in

the West) threatens to shake Boyle from his comfortable day job. What follows is

straight out of the annals of the mismatched cop comedies (not to make that sound

like a bad thing).


Let’s run roughshod through my quibbles before we unearth all that is good. At times

(although the backdrop of Connemara makes for an effective supporting character)

production quality is revealed as thin. Additionally, I questioned the wisdom of

portraying a Croatian character as a visa-grabber (is this not an overwrought

stereotype ruling the waking prejudices of so many in Ireland?). Finally, repeated

reference to Russian philosophers bears some conceit I suspect.


The film draws influences from Tarantino (the-out-of-the-trunk shot in the scene

with Pat Shortt’s character is Quentin through and through) and, apparently, from

the younger Mc Donagh sibling. Crucially, to anchor the wayward Sergeant Boyle, the

director takes time to craft two worthwile relationships- Boyle and his mother (an

effective Flanagan) and Boyle and Wendell. Wendell, then, isn’t strictly

straight-laced foil. His greatest draw to Boyle (aside from trying to decipher the

Sergeant’s intelligence) concerns an inkling that there’s a shared (although weakly

perceptible) get-to-the-bottom-of-it ethos lurking somewhere.


The film’s best moments are etched in the bewildered faces of those who encounter

Boyle. Mc Donagh, hopefully, will inspire the birth of countless disarming

characters across the island.


Rating: 4/5

Saturday 9 July 2011

Super: A Review

Rainn Wilson as a leading man? For me, his character Dwight Schrute in ‘The (U.S)

Office’ is a world-away from Gareth Keenan (of ‘The Office’). While Gareth's

portrayal is smart and suggestive, Dwight’s is obvious and overstated. Thankfully,

in Super, Wilson dials it down- only he dials it down too far (to the point of

producing a dull character). Miraculously, a turn of pace three-quarters of the way

into the film sees Wilson develop (really quite interesting) shades to his

character. The ending becomes something you could not have anticipated given the

film’s gait up to then: surprising, meditative and penetrating (not to mention

disturbing).


Frank (Rainn Wilson) is generally morose; draws hands that are too big; and looks

stupid when he cries (but cooks good eggs). His life changes dramatically when Jock

(Kevin Bacon) -a drug dealer- ensnares his willing wife Sarah (Liv Tyler). With a

decisive intervention from heaven, Frank becomes the Crimson Bolt, and is later

joined by a kid sidekick Boltie (Ellen Page) on a crime-stopping face-smashing

charge.


Super doesn’t feel like new territory (despite its unashamed attempts) until

somewhere towards the end of the film. The emergence of the subversive Boltie (a

brilliantly barbaric Page) raises proceedings. Frank (up to that point infused with

a nihilistic energy by Wilson) becomes good comic foil for his erratic sidekick.

Their highlight on screen together is a startlingly perversive sex scene.


And then, the dramatic show-down in the drug dealer’s manor. Undoubtedly, here,

opinions will divide (does laughter turn to that of the nervous variety?). My mind

is settled: the conclusion is brilliantly self-reflexive on the superhero canon.

Saturday 2 July 2011

Cinema's best Tracking Shot

This week, the Irish Times asked what was cinema's best tracking shot?

Personally, the scene on Dunkirk Beach in Atonement gets my vote.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k5dqmUgu0SI