25 April 2022

Much Ado about Nothing (Tennant and Tate)

 Much Ado about Nothing 2011

  • Director: Robert Delamere
  • Based on play by William Shakespeare
  • Cast: David Tennant, Catherine Tate, Tom Bateman, Jonathan Coy, Adam James, Elliot Levey, Sarah MacCrae, John Ramm
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • David Tennant – Deadwater Fell, Jessica Jones, Broadchurch, What We Did on Our Holiday, Doctor Who, The Politician’s Husband, Fright Night, The Decoy Bride, United, Hamlet, Kick Ass Girls 2 St Trinian’s, Glorious 39, The Learners, Secret Smile, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Blackpool, Bright Young Things, Jude, Takin’ over the Asylum
    • Catherine Tate – Doctor Who, The Catherine Tate Show, Starter for 10
    • Tom Bateman – Murder on the Orient Express
    • Jonathan Coy – Downton Abbey, Pillars of the Earth, To Kill a King, Longitude, TV series
    • Adam James – Doctor Who, Hustle, Last Chance Harvey, Bonekickers, Lazarus
    • Elliot Levey – Murder on the Orient Express, The Lady in the Van, Philomena, The Queen
    • John Ramm – Humans, The Love Punch, Shakespeare in Love
  • Why? Need you ask?
  • Seen: 24 April 2022      

       After a long and fruitless search for this version of the play, the DVD is now in the player! Dear Karin Ida, thank you so much! What a wonderful gift!

       Can any two in the world be better as Beatrice and Benedick? (Sorry, Emma and Ken.)

       Branagh brought the play forward to the 19th century. This one takes place today or thereabout. It works for me.

       It’s a fine mix of straight humour, slapstick and a few moments of earnest emotion.

       OK, no one can beat Ken and Emma, but no one can beat Tennant and Tate either. They’re both unbeatable.      

5* of 5   

PS just a little ‘but’ – but still, there was more true deep emotion when the Doctor was forced to erase Donna Noble’s memory.

 

 

 

 

 

Sphere

 Sphere 1998

  • Director: Barry Levinson
  • Seen by the director: Liberty Heights, Homicide Life on the Streets, Good Morning Vietnam
  • Based on book by Michael Crichton
  • Cast: Dustin Hoffman, Samuel L Jackson, Sharon Stone, Liev Schreiber, Peter Coyote, Queen Latifah
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Dustin Hoffman – Last Chance Harvey, Holiday, Stranger than Fiction, Finding Neverland, Moonlight Mile, Hero, Hook, Billy Bathgate, Dick Tracy, Rain Man, Tootsie, Kramer vs Kramer, Lenny Bruce, Papillion, Straw Dogs, Little Big Man, John and Mary, Midnight Cowboy, The Graduate
    • Samuel L Jackson – The Hateful Eight, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, Django Unchained, Glass, Split, Jumper, 1408, Star Wars, Kill Bill, Changing Lanes, The Red Violin, Jackie Brown, The Long Kiss Goodnight, Sphere, True Romance, Jurassic Park, Pulp Fiction, Jungle Fever, Mo’ Better Blues, Sea of Love, Do the Right Thing
    • Sharon Stone – Bobby, Broken Flowers
    • Liev Schreiber – The Fifth Wave, The Butler, Mental, Every Day, Repo Men, Taking Woodstock, X-Men Wolverine, Defiance, Kate & Leopold, Hamlet
    • Peter Coyote – Erin Brockovich, ET
    • Queen Latifah – Stranger than Fiction, Chicago
  • Why? Sci fi, Samuel L Jackson
  • Seen: 23 April 2022      

       An alien space craft is discovered a thousand feet below the surface of the middle of the Pacific Ocean. It is estimated to be three hundred years old. A team of scientists is sent down to investigate it.

       Not all Crichton’s novels have translated well into film. Let’s see if this one is better.

       Farfetched? Well, sure. Too long? Oh yes. Does it make sense? Not a whole lot. But humour, sharp dialog, suspense, action, excitement, a tiny tad of existential philosophy all make it worth watching. The good cast helps.

       I quite like it.      

3 * of 5   

 


 

 

The Revenant

 The Revenant 2015

  • Director: Alejandro G Iñárritu
  • Seen by this director: Babel, 21 Grams
  • Based partly on the book by Michael Punke
  • Cast: Leonardo Di Caprio, Tom Hardy, Will Poulter, Domhnall Gleeson, Forrest Goodluck
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Leonardo DiCaprio – Once upon a Time in Hollywood, The Great Gatsby, Django Unchained, Inception, Shutter Island, Blood Diamond, The Aviator, Catch Me If You Can, Gangs of New York, Beach, Titanic, Marvin’s Room, Romeo & Juliet, What’s Eating Gilbert Grape, This Boy’s Life
    • Tom Hardy – Dunkirk, Legend, Mad Max Fury Road, The Dark Knight Rises, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Inception, Gideon’s Daughter
    • Will Poulter – Midsommar, Maze Runner the Death Cure, The Maze Runner, Son of Rambow
    • Domnhall Gleeson – Star Wars etc, Brooklyn, Ex Machina, About Time, Harry Potter etc, Never Let Me Go
  • Why? Curious
  • Seen: 23 April 2022      

       Isn’t it said that DiCaprio should have been given an Oscar but not for this? I have no idea what this is about other than DiCaprio running around in a snowy forest.

       It turns out that that about covers it. Generally, I enjoy survival films, especially if they’re based on true stories, which this one sort of is.

       It’s way too long, the characters are thin, and DiCaprio mostly just grunts in pain. Still, kudos for the hardships these professional actors went through to make the film. The scenery is stunning, but the film just left me cold (sorry for the pun, I do love snow in films). The fist fight at the end is at least as boring as all fist fights at the end of films and costs the rating ½*, lowering it to 

2* of 5

 


 

 

Band de filles

 Band de filles

  • Director: Céline Sciamma
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Karidja Touré, Assa Sylla, Lindsay Karamoh, Mariétou Touré, Idrissa Diabaté
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • None of them
  • Why? It sounded good
  • Seen: 21 April 2022      

       A girl gang in a Parisian suburb roam the streets, browse in Parisian shops, dance and drink and laugh, rumble with rival girl gangs, push back on the macho and oppressive boy gangs. It’s a poignant and disturbing look at the dynamics of urban girl gangs, the complexity of alienation and yearning. Girl power, maybe, sometimes, but boys and men run things.

       It’s well done and a little too long as well as depressing but it’s worth seeing.      

3 ½ * of 5   

 

 

 

 

Unbreakable

Unbreakable 2000

  • Director: M Night Shyamalan
  • Seen by the director: Split, The Happening, The Village, Sixth Sense, Glass
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Samuel L Jackson, Bruce Willis, Robin Wright, Spencer Treat Clark, Charlayne Woodard, Eamonn Walker
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Samuel L Jackson – The Hateful Eight, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, Django Unchained, Glass, Split, Jumper, 1408, Star Wars, Kill Bill, Changing Lanes, The Red Violin, Jackie Brown, The Long Kiss Goodnight, True Romance, Jurassic Park, Pulp Fiction, Jungle Fever, Mo’ Better Blues, Sea of Love, Do the Right Thing
    • Bruce Willis - Looper, Moonrise Kingdom, Friends, The Siege, Armageddon, The Fifth Element, The Twelve Monkeys, Billy Bathgate, Pulp Fiction, In Country, Die Hard, Glass, Split
    • Robin Wright – Blade Runner 2049, Wonder Woman, The Private Lives of Pippa Lee, How to Kill Your Neighbour’s Dog, Forrest Gump
    • Sarah Poulson - Serenity
    • Spencer Treat Clark – Cymbeline, Much Ado About Nothing, Mystic River, Gladiator, Glass, Split
    • Charlayne Woodard – Terminator the Sarah Connor Chronicles, Hair, Glass, Split
  • Why? Prequel to Split
  • Seen: 19 April 2022      

       David (Willis) is the only survivor of a train derailment. He’s not even injured. Elijah (Jackson) was born with a rare disease and has had countless broken bones. He seeks out David, believing him to be a Protector. At first David thinks Elijah is nuts but gradually realises that he may be right. That’s about it.

       I liked Glass and Split very much but this one is muddled and, on this first viewing anyway, a bit boring. It’s not M Night Shyamalan’s greatest effort. But the ending is strong. Now I’m curious to watch the other two again. 

3 * of 5   

 


 

  

18 April 2022

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children update April 2022

Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children 2016

Update 17 April 2022

  • Director: Tim Burton
  • Based on book by Ransom Riggs
  • Cast: Eva Green, Asa Butterfield, Terence Stamp, Samuel L Jackson, Judi Dench, Rupert Evert, Allison Janney, Chris O’Dowd, Ella Purnell, Finlay MacMillan, Lauren McCrostle
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Eva Green – Dark Shadows, Perfect Sense, Casino Royale, Kingdom of Heaven
    • Asa Butterfield – The Space Between Us, Hugo, Merlin, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, Son of Rambow
    • Terence Stamp – Song for Marion, Valkyria, Wanted, Star Wars, The Limey, The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert, Superman, The Collector, Billy Budd
    • Samuel L Jackson – Jumper, 1408, Extras, Kill Bill 2, Changing Lanes, The Red Violin, The Negotiator, Jackie Brown, Long Kiss Goodnight, Die Hard, Pulp Fiction, True Romance, Jurassic Park, Lethal Weapon, Jungle Fever, Mo’ Better Blues, Do the Right Thing, Ragtime
    • Judi Dench – The Hollow Crown, Spectre, Hotel Marigold 1&2, Philomena, Vicious, Skyfall, My Week with Marilyn, Pirates of the Caribbean, Jane Eyre, Cranford, Nine, Quantum of Solace, Notes on a Scandal, Casino Royale, Mrs Henderson Presents, Ladies in Lavender, Die Another Day, The Shipping News, Chocolat, The World Is Not Enough, Tea with Mussolini, Shakespeare in Love, Tomorrow Never Dies, Mrs Brown, Hamlet, Golden Eye, Henry V, A Handful of Dust, 84 Charing Cross Road, A Room with a View, Macbeth
    • Rupert Evert – St Trinian’s 2, Stardust, To Kill a King, A Midsummer’s Night’s Dream, Shakespeare in Love, My Best Friend’s Wedding, The Madness of King George, Dance with a Stranger
    • Allison Janney – Girl on the Train, The Help, Life During Wartime, Juno, The Hours, Nurse Betty, American Beauty, 10 Things I Hate about You, The Ice Storm
    • Chris O’Dowd – The Boat that Rocked, Vera Drake
    • Ella Pernell – Never Let Me Go
  • Why? Tim Burton
  • Seen: 15 September 2018      

       Young Jake (Butterfield) is a nerd ridiculed by his classmates in Florida. His grandfather Abe (Stamp) has dementia. Or maybe all his crazy ramblings are real. Creepy things really are happening.

       Abe had lived a time in Miss Peregrine’s home for peculiar children on an island off Wales. His parents had sent him there in 1943 because it was dangerous in Poland. While Jake was growing up Abe told him stories about the home and the children. When Abe dies Jake goes looking for the island with his less than enthusiastic father. They find the island, but the children’s home is in ruins. It had been bombed in 1943 by the Germans and there were no survivors.

       Jake explores the ruins and discovers the ghosts of everyone Abe had told him about. Ghosts? No. He’s now in the year 1943. Before the bomb fell.

       Not only are the children peculiar, the film is rather peculiar itself. Is it a kids’ movie? A love story? A scary movie? An adventure movie? A comedy?

       Well, it’s Tim Burton. 

3 ½ * of 5    

Update 18 April 2022

There’s not really much to add. I just read the book and since I knew the basic story there were no surprises. It’s an OK book but once again the film, though no masterpiece, is better than the book.

 


 

Reservation Road

 Reservation Road 2007

  • Director: Terry George
  • Seen by this director: Hotel Rwanda, Some Mother’s Son
  • Based on the story by Harry Bates
  • Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, Jennifer Connelly, Mark Ruffalo, Elle Fanning, Antoni Corone, Mira Sorvino, Gary Kohn, John Slattery
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor/actress in:
    • Joaquin Phoenix - Joker, Two Lovers, Walk the Line, Hotel Rwanda, Gladiator
    • Jennifer Connelly - American Pastoral, Alita Battle Angel, Winter’s Tale, A Beautiful Mind, Creation, He’s Just Not That Into You, The Day the Earth Stood Still, House of Sand and Fog, Blood Diamond, Pollack, Requiem for a Dream, Labyrinth
    • Mark Ruffalo - Avengers, Shutter Island, The Kids Are All Right, Zodiac, Rumour Has It, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, My Life without Me
    • Elle Fanning – Maleficent, Ginger & Rosa, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Babel, I Am Sam
    • Mira Sorvino – Lulu on the Bridge, Romy and Michelle’s High School Reunion, Beautiful Girls
    • John Slattery – Mad Men, Mona Lisa’s Smile, Station Agent
  • Why bought: The cast
  • Seen: 16 April 2022 

A little boy is killed in a hit and run by a service station on the dark and rainy Reservation Road with the boy’s parents and little sister as witnesses.

The driver is a divorced dad bringing his son home late from a Red Sox game to a furious ex-wife.

The film follows the grieving family (Phoenix, Connelly and Fanning) as well as the guilt-ridden driver Dwight (Ruffalo). Then comes the twist. The parents hire a lawyer to pressure the cops to find the killer and bring him to justice. That lawyer is…Dwight.

It’s an unusual cat-and-mouse thriller. With tragedy in the background the suspense is especially poignant.

The acting is compelling and Ruffalo is outstanding. 

4* of 5.

 

 

 

Cloud Atlas Update April 2022

 

 

Cloud Atlas 2012

Update 16 April 2022

  • Director: Tom Tykwer
  • Based on book by David Mitchell
  • Cast: Tom Hanks, Halle Berry, Jim Broadbent, Hugo Weaving, Jim Sturgess, Doona Bae, Ben Whishaw, Keith David, James D’Arcy, David Gyasi, Susan Sarandon, Hugh Grant
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in: (as of January 2016)
    • Tom Hanks – Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, Catch Me If You Can, Road to Perdition, Cast Away, The Green Mile, You’ve Got Mail, Saving Private Ryan, Forest Gump, Philadelphia, Sleepless in Seattle, A League of Their Own, Joe and the Volcano, Punchline
    • Halle Berry – Things We Lost in the Fire, Monster’s Ball, X-Men, Bullworth, Jungle Fever
    • Jim Broadbent – Filth, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Another Year, The Young Victoria, Hot Fuzz, Vera Drake, Gangs of New York, Moulin Rouge, Topsy-Turvy, Little Voice, Smilla’s Sense of Snow, Richard III, The Crying Game, Enchanted April, Life is Sweet, Brazil, Black Adder
    • Hugo Weaving – The Hobbit the Battle of the Five Armies, The Hobbit an Unexpected Journey, V for Vendetta, Little Fish, Lord of the Rings 1-3, Matrix 1-3, The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert
    • Jim Sturgess – The Other Boleyn Girl, Across the Universe
    • Ben Whishaw – Spectre, Skyfall, The Hollow Crown – Richard II, The Tempest, Bright Star, Brideshead Revisited, I’m Not There
    • Keith David – Crash, Requiem for a Dream, Armageddon, Dead Presidents, Clockers, Reality Bites, Stars and Bars, Platoon
    • James D’Arcy – Bonekickers, Wilde
    • Davis Gyasi – The Dark Knight Rises
    • Susan Sarandon – Emotional Arithmetic, Romance and Cigarettes, The Exonerated, Alfie, Moonlight Mile, The Banger Sisters, Igby Goes Down, Anywhere but Here, Cradle Will Rock, Dead Man Walking, Little Women, The Client, Lorenzo’s Oil, Thelma and Louise, White Palace, A Dry White Season, The January Man, Bull Durham, The Witches in Eastwick, Atlantic City. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
    • Hugh Grant – Music and Lyrics, American Dreamz, Love Actually, About a Boy, Bridget Jones’s Diary, Notting Hill, Sense and Sensibility, Four Weddings and a Funeral, The Remains of the Day, Impromptu
  • Why? Sci-fi. The cast.
  • Seen:  3 January 2016  

       It jumps back and forth in time and space in a phantasmagorical tapestry of stories, one odder than the next. Past, present, future, history, fantasy, magic, murder, suicide, memories, prophesies, humour – is there anything this movie doesn’t have?

       It’s confusing for a long time but it doesn’t matter. Each scene, each story, each woven thread is fascinating and a kind of coherence emerges slowly.

       The actors all play multiple roles and part of the fun is trying to recognise them behind all of the outlandish costumes and make-up. 

4 ½ * of 5

 

Update 16 April 2022:

       After seeing the film, I bought the book and now I’ve finally read it. What a disappointment. Thin story, long, boring.

       Do I remember the film wrong? Let’s see.

       Film advantage 1: It jumps much more quickly between the six stories, avoiding the book’s plodding pace.

       Film advantage 2: The actors, playing vastly different multiple roles, bringing life to the book’s stiffly dull characters. It’s especially enjoyable to see Hugh Grant as a savage elaborately tattooed warrior. Not to mention Hugo Weaving as a Nurse Ratched type.

       Film advantage 3: The film’s strong visuals are ever so much better than the book’s endless droning descriptions.

       Film advantage 4: The film makes much more sense, even in its wildness.

       Sum total? This is one of the many films that are much better than the book. Thank goodness for film makers. The rating is still 

4 ½ * of 5

      

 

 


The Wicker Man

 The Wicker Man 1973 

  • Director: Robin Hardy
  • Based on the novel by David Pinner
  • Cast: Edward Woodward, Christopher Lee, Diane Cilento, Britt Ekland
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Edward Woodward – Hot Fuzz
    • Christopher Lee – The Hobbit etc, Dark Shadows, Hugo, Glorious 39, The Golden Compass, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Star Wars etc, Sleepy Hollow
    • Britt Ekland – something, no doubt
  • Why?  Cult classic
  • Seen: 15 April 2022 

The 70’s. The devoutly Christian police officer Howie (Woodward) investigates a missing girl on the island Summerisle, owned by the charming Lord Summerisle (Lee). The islanders are friendly enough, but they all deny knowing what happened to the girl.

To Howie’s dismay and disgust, they are obsessed with sex. To their way of seeing it, they are pious pagans who celebrate life and the cycles of nature.

Radical stuff for the 70s – likeable reasonable pagans vs uptight mean-spirited Christian copper. It’s still amusing and makes a few acerbic points but it’s all quite inane and the story disintegrates into a puerile farce. With twenty minutes left of this bizarre film I’m bored to tears. 

2* of 5

 

 

 

Pan's Labyrinth

 Pan’s Labyrinth 2006 

  • Director: Guillermo del Toro
  • Seen by this director: The Shape of Water, Pacific Rim, Hellboy
  • Based on the novel: no
  • Cast: Ivana Banquero, Ariadna Gil, Sergi López, Maribel Verdú
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Sergi López – Dirty Pretty Things
  • Why?  Highly recommended
  • Seen: 14 April 2022 

1944. The Spanish Civil War is over, but the guerrillas continue to fight against Franco’s army.

Young Ofelia (Banquero) loves fairy tales. Her pregnant mother Carmen (Gil) is now married to Vidal (López), a Franco soldier who hunts and kills guerrillas or anyone he wants to.

Ofelia finds her way to a labyrinth where Pan gives her missions, and magic to fulfil them. She confides in Mercedes (Verdú), who is one of the guerrillas.

It’s gruesome and violent and scary for kids and adults alike. We know how badly it goes for the guerrillas in reality. But for Ofelia?

The story of the guerrillas’ fight interwoven with the fantasy is an unusual concept. Fantasy and grim true history make an excellent combination (see https://themerlinchronicles.wordpress.com/ )

It’s almost unbearably suspenseful. The only tiny flaw is the king and queen and princess aspect. I don’t like the concept of royalty. But don’t let that stop you. 

4 ½ * of 5

 

 

11 April 2022

After Hours

 After Hours 1985

 

  • Director: Martin Scorsese
  • Seen by this director: The Wolf of Wall Street, Hugo, Shutter Island, The Aviator, Gangs of New York, Bringing Out the Dead, The Last Temptation of Christ, New York New York, Taxi Driver, Alice Doesn’t Live Here Any More
  • Based on the novel: no
  • Cast: Griffin Dunne, Roseanna Arquette, Verna Bloom, Linda Fiorentino, Teri Garr, John Heard, Catherine O’Hara
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Griffin Dunne – Le grand bleu, Who’s That Girl
    • Roseanna Arquette – Pulp Fiction, Le grand bleu, Silverado, Desperately Seeking Susan
    • Verna Bloom – The Last Temptation of Christ, TV series
    • Linda Fiorentino – Dogma, Men in Black
    • Terri Garr – Friends, Tootsie, Close Encounter of the Third Degree, The Conversation
    • John Heard – The Great Debaters, The Sopranos, O, Pollock, The Pelican Brief, Waterland, Awakenings, The Trip to Bountiful
    • Catherine O’Hara – Six Feet Under, A Might Wind, Waiting for Guffman, Beetlejuice
  • Why?  Is it good enough to keep?
  • Seen: Twice before. Now 10 April 2022 

Paul (Dunne) has a boring dead-end office job. He meets Marcy (Arquette) in a coffee shop. A wild New York by Night ensues.

Bizarre characters and unlikely events aren’t enough to make this a film that stands the tests of time. It was good the first time. On second viewing a few years ago, it became clear that Scorsese was trying too hard for the quirky. It was more stressful than entertaining and this third time I found it both stressful and irritating.

Definitely a film that should not have been seen more than once. 

2 ½ * of 5

 


Welcome

 Welcome 2009 

  • Director: Philippe Lioret
  • Based on the novel: no
  • Cast: Vincent Lindon, Firat Ayverdi, Audrey Dana, Derya Ayverdi
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Vincent Lindon – La Haine
  • Why?  Possibly interesting
  • Seen: 9 April 2022 

Bilal (Firat Ayverdi) a 17-year-old Iraqi Kurd, is trying to get to London to see his girlfriend Mina (Derya Ayverdi, Firat’s sister IRL) and pays a smuggler to get him across the channel. He’s caught. He’s released from jail but has nowhere to go so hangs with the hundreds of young men at the Calais harbour who are desperate to get across somehow.

Simon (Lindon) is a swimming instructor whose wife Marion (Dana) is divorcing him.

Bilal has the mad idea to learn to swim so that he can swim to Dover. Simon sets him straight but finds himself helping the boy, though it’s a crime in France to help illegal immigrants. The police hound him.

It’s a melancholy film about unlikely friendship, solidarity, lost love, oppression, and despair. 

4* of 5

 

The Day the Earth Stood Still 2008 Update

 The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008)

Update 9 April 2022

  • Director: Scott Derrickson
    • Seen by this director: Doctor Strange
  • Based on the story by Harry Bates
  • Cast: Keanu Reeves, Jennifer Connelly, Jaden Smith, Kathy Bates, John Cleese, Jon Hamm
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor/actress in:
    • Keanu Reeves – many. Here are a few favorites: Much Ado About Nothing, Speed, Feeling Minnesota, Matrix (and the other two, though less so), A Scanner Darkly, The Private Lives of Pippa Lee, My Own Private Idaho, Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventures
    • Jennifer Connelly: A Beautiful Mind, Creation, He’s Just Not That Into You, House of Sand and Fog, Pollack, Requiem for a Dream
    • Kathy Bates: Six Feet Under, About Schmidt, Titanic, Dolores Claiborne, Fried Green Tomatoes, Misery
    • John Cleese – Monty Python, Harry Potter, A Fish Called Wanda, Clockwise, The Life of Brian, The Meaning of Life, Fawlty Towers, The Taming of a Shrew
    • Jon Hamm: Madmen
  • Why bought: included in Doomsday box with The Day after Tomorrow. I probably would have bought it anyway eventually.
  • Seen: Twice. First time in 2008. Now December 7, 2012
    • Third time 9 April 2022 

The original from 1951 with Michael Rennie is generally considered a much better film and I might agree if I watched both one after the other.  It’s been several years since I saw the ’51 version and I remember liking it very much, but I think the 2008 version is better than its reputation.  It is a serious attempt to update the story.  Of course, the Earth is in no way free from the threat of nuclear destruction either through war or power plant/waste storage disasters but the threat to the environment through overconsumption is dire enough to warrant a visit from an extraterrestrial rescue mission.  I hope they come soon!

The film is bogged down by platitudes and simplifications – when Klaatu sees Dr. Benson grieving with her beloved stepson by the father’s grave he realizes humans aren’t all bad and he decided to help them – a little too pathetic and don’t aliens love each other too?! – but good acting carries the film. Keanu Reeves is always Keanu Reeves and fits the role of the super intelligent detached ambassador very well. Jennifer Connelly is always good and it’s always a pleasure to see John Cleese and Kathy Bates. Since seeing it the first time I’ve made Jon Hamm’s acquaintance through Mad Men and had a hard time separating him from Don Draper, but it was fun to see him in a different role.

Generally, it’s a well-done film with believable special effects.  It’s exciting from start to finish.  And I like the kid.

 3* of 5.  

Update 9 April 2022 – I feel the same. It’s a decent remake and though it doesn’t have the impact as the original (seen for the second time yesterday) it should satisfy today’s viewers. I still like it.

 

The Day the Earth Stood Still 1951

 The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)

 

  • Director: Robert Wise
  • Seen by this director: Sound of Music, The Haunting, West Side Story, I Want to Live
  • Based on the story by Harry Bates
  • Cast: Michal Rennie, Patricia Neal, Billy Gray, Sam Jaffe
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Michael Rennie – Third Man on the Mountain, TV series
    • Patricia Neal – Hud, Breakfast at Tiffany’s
    • Billy Gray – TV series
    • Sam Jaffe – Ben-Hur, The Asfalt Jungle, Lost Horizon, TV series
  • Why?  A classic.
  • Seen: Once before. Now 8 April 2022 

An alien spaceship lands on a baseball diamond in Washington DC. A figure emerges and speaks of peace and good will. One of the soldiers surrounding the craft shoots him.  Another figure, a huge robot, emerges and destroys all the weapons.

The wounded alien Klaatu (Rennie) tells the presidential secretary Harley (Bates) that he has a message he will impart only to gathered representatives of all nations at the same time. Harley explains that with the hostilities and tensions between nations, this will be impossible.

It’s a bold, intelligent and politically astute film. Not to mention entertaining. It does have a few flaws and major holes in its logic, but it was made in 1951, after all. It’s still a classic.

4* of 5

 

Bend of the River

 Bend of the River 1952

  • Director: Anthony Mann
  • Seen by this director: El Cid
  • Based on the book by William Gulick
  • Cast: James Stewart, Rock Hudson, Arthur Kennedy, Julie Adams, Stepin Fetchit, Harry Morgan
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • James Stewart – The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, The Greatest Show on Earth, Bell Book and Candle, Vertigo, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Rear Window, Rope, maybe others
    • Rock Hudson – probably some old ones
    • Arthur Kennedy – Crawlspace, Fantastic Voyage, Lawrence of Arabia, Elmer Gantry
    • Julie Adams – TV series
    • Harry Morgan – Third Rock from the Sun, M*A*S*H
  • Why? In the James Stewart box.
  • Seen: 6 April 2022      

       Wagon trains, settlers, gold rush, bad guy cattle raiders, one of whom is James Stewart. I can’t be bothered to tell the story. Westerns are really not my cup of tea and with this film’s traces of 50’s racism even James Stewart and his boring character can’t give it more than      

2* of 5

 

4 April 2022

Last Life in the Universe

 Last Life in the Universe 2003 

  • Director: Pen-Ek Ratanaruang
  • Based on the novel: no
  • Cast: Tadanobu Asano, Sinitta Boonyasak
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Tadanobu Asano Thor
  • Why?  It sounded good
  • Seen: 3 April 2022 

Kenji (Asano) is a young man who fantasises about suicide. He’s obsessively compulsive and an obsessive book collector, Japanese but living in Bangkok. Two tragic events bring free-spirit Noi (Boonyasak) into his life.

There is a very fine line between artistic intellectual, symbolic, existential films that grip your heart and provoke your thoughts, and those who leave you unmoved. Sadly, this is of the latter category. It got great reviews but it’s not for me. A pity. I so wanted to like it. 

2 * of 5

 

 

Georgia

 Georgia 1995 

  • Director: Ulu Grosbard
  • Seen by this director: Falling in Love
  • Based on the novel: no
  • Cast: Jennifer Jason Leigh, Mare Winningham, Ted Levin, Max Perlich, John Doe, John C Reilly, Jimmy Witherspoon, Jason Carter
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Jennifer Jason Leigh – Annihilation, The Hateful Eight, Margot at the Wedding, Road to Perdition, eXistenZ, A Thousand Acres, Dolores Claibourne, Fast Times in Ridgmont High
    • Mare Winningham – Philomena, Swing Vote, Six Feet Under, One-Trick Pony
    • Ted Levine – Shutter Island, Wild Wild West, Heat, Silence of the Lambs, Ironweed
    • Max Perlich – The Sarah Connor Chronicles, The Darwin Awards, Hill Street Blues, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Homicide Life on the Streets, Feeling Minnesota, Beautiful Girls
    • John Dow – Roswell, The Good Girl, Great Balls of Fire
    • John C Reilly – Kong Skull Island, A Prairie Home Companion, The Aviator, The Hours, Chicago, The Good Girl, What’s Eating Gilbert Grape,
  • Why?  I liked it the first time.
  • Seen: Once before. Now 2 April 2022 

Sadie (Jason Leigh) is a singer, an alcoholic, and a heavily made-up blues-rocking loser. Georgia (Winningham) is a clean-cut, housewifely superstar country and western singer with a husband, two and a half kids and a bucolic house in the country.

They’re sisters.

George never sought fame and fortune, but she got it. Sadie burned for it her entire life but screws up every time she gets a chance. She idolises Georgia, envies her success and family, and suffers from a severe inferiority complex. Georgia is sick and tired of Sadie’s neediness and constant demand for attention to her suffering.

Sisters. Love. Hate.

It’s more about Sadie than Georgia but the title is appropriate because Sadie lives her whole life as a distorted negative reaction to Georgia’s perfection. Jason Leigh is spectacular in the role. 

4 * of 5