26 June 2023

Interstellar Update June 2023

 

Interstellar 2014

UPDATE 25 June 2023

  • Director: Christopher Nolan
  • Seen by this director: Tenet, Dunkirk, The Dark knight etc, Inception, The Prestige, Insomnia
  • Based on the book: no
  • Cast: Matthew McConaughey, Mackenzie Foy, John Lithgow, Timothée Chalamet, David Oyelowo, Anne Hathaway, Michael Caine, David Gyasi, Casey Affleck, Jessica Chastain, Matt Damon
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Matthew McConaughey – True Detective, The Lincoln Lawyer, EDtv, Amistad, Contact
    • John Lithgow – Shakespeare 400 Live BBC, Third Rock from the Sun, The Pelican Brief, Footloose, Terms of Endearment, The World According to Garp
    • David Oyelowe– The Butler, The Help, Small Island, The Number 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency, As You Like It, Derailed
    • Anne Hathaway– Les Misérables, The Dark Knight Rises, Alice in Wonderland, Rachel Getting Married, Becoming Jane, Brokeback Mountain, Ella Enchanted
    • Michael Caine – Widows, Breath
    • David Gyasi – Cloud Atlas, The Dark Knight Rises
    • Casey Affleck – Gone Baby Gone, Lonesome Jim, Hamlet, Good Will Hunting,
    • Jessica Chastain – The Help, The Tree of Life, Coriolanus, Veronica Mars
    • Matt Damon - Elysium, Contagion, True Grit, Invictus, The Brothers Grimm, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, The Bourne Identity, Dogma, Saving Private Ryan, Good Will Hunting
  • Why? sci-fi
  • Seen: 1 July 2016

      

       It doesn’t start out very interstellar. It starts with an agricultural blight and a family fighting it on their own farm. Widower Cooper lives with his father-in-law Donald and his children Tom and Murphy. They are trying to adapt. The world needs farmers, not engineers and pilots like Cooper.

       The Apollo space missions are said not to have happened, they were just invented propaganda. It was the consumerism of that period that caused the current environmental disaster, but Cooper – who knows the missions took place because he was on some of them – longs for the days of space travel and high tech. He hates being a farmer. And he denies his daughter Murphy’s claim that their house has a poltergeist.

       And then he and Murphy discover that NASA still exists – in hiding.  Old Dr Brand (Michael Caine) says, ‘We are not meant to save the world, we are meant to leave it.’ The plan is to send someone out after the three missions that earlier tried to colonise other planets. Cooper is the chosen pilot to accompany Brand’s daughter Emilia, also a physicist, and two other scientists, on a mission to rescue and awaken those earlier missions. So Cooper blasts off, leaving his weeping children behind.

       In a blippy time warp Cooper and Brand are separated from the other two for a few minutes only to discover that 23 years have passed when they are reunited. Cooper has received messages from his children for 23 years. It’s not possible to answer them.

       Earth continues to die as the space travellers have existential discussions about love vs science. With quotes from ‘Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night’ there is drama and philosophy in this odd mixed bag.

       It’s quite long but it has its moments.

 

Update 25 June 2023

On this second viewing I liked it better. In my first review (see above) I told the story. Now I enjoyed the whole sci fi set-up more and the existential premise of human struggle, human survival. It got a bit lovey-dovey for my tastes but this time it’s definitely 4*. PS I’ve seen the actors in other films since the first review.

 

3 ½ * of 5

 

 

 

http://rubyjandsmovieblog.blogspot.se/2016/07/interstellar.html

 


Splice

 

Splice 2009

  • Director: Vincenzo Natali
  • Seen by this director: Orphan Black, Paris je t’aime
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Adrien Brody, Sarah Polley, Delphine Chanéac, Brandon McGibbon
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Adrien Brody – Detachment, Cadillac Records, Darjeeling Limited, King Kong, The Pianist, The Village, Bread and Roses, Liberty Heights
    • Sarah Polley – Slings and Arrows, The Secret Life of Words, Dawn of the Dead, Go, eXistenZ
  • Why?  Polley and Brody
  • Seen:  24 June 2023 

Scientists Elsa (Polley) and Clive (Brody) have found a way to splice DNA from other creatures into humans with the potential power to cure many genetic diseases. Their bosses refuse to let them continue because their research is required to produce profits, so Elsa and Clive go maverick and create a sort of a monster. Or is it a sort of a human?

She (Cháneac) grows quickly and Elsa and Clive secretly become her parents.

It’s hard to know what to make of this film. In a way it’s a comedy. Or a parody of the woes of parents of a rebellious teen-ager. Or sci fi horror about messing with DNA. Or a poke at profit-hungry pharmaceutical companies.

All of the above, but why the tiresome gender stereotypes?

In truth, it’s an odd and absurd jumble. But entertaining and imaginative at times. 

3* of 5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tokyo Story

 

Tokyo Story 1953

  • Director: Yazujiro Ozu
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Wonderful actors but I’ve not seen them in anything else.
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • See above
  • Why?  A classic
  • Seen:  24 June 2023 

An aging couple visit a son, a daughter, a widowed daughter-in-law and some grandchildren in Toko in the early 50s.They are welcomed but the grandchildren are indifferent, and the son and daughter have little time for them. Only the daughter-in-law shows them real affection.

In beautiful black and white, with almost no drama, the complexity and depth of family feelings are explored, feelings that we can all identify with.

The film deserves its status as a classic. 

5 * of 5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Wolfman

 

The Wolfman 2010

  • Director: Joe Johnston
  • Seen by this director: Hidalgo
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Benicio Del Toro, Emily Blunt, Anthony Hopkins
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Benicio Del Tor – Star Wars the Last Jedi, 21 Grams, The Pledge, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, The Usual Suspects, The Indian Runner
    • Emily Blunt – A Quiet Place 1&2, Girl on the Train, Into the Woods, Edge of Tomorrow, Looper, Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, Young Victoria, Sunshine Cleaning, Dan in Real Life, The Jane Austen Book Club, Gideon’s Daughter, My Summer of Love
    • Anthony Hopkins – Thor, Bobby, Proof, The Human Stain, Titus, Meet Joe Black, Amistad, Surviving Picasso, The Remains of the Day, Howards End, Silence of the Lambs, 84 Charing Cross Road, Othello, The Elephant Man
  • Why?  The cast
  • Seen:  22 June 2023

 

I have not seen the Lon Chaney classic so I cannot compare but it must have been better than this. I have nothing against werewolves. We all love Remus Lupin, I love Buffy’s friend Oz and I’m quite fond of George in Being Human. Anthony Hopkins and Benicio Del Toro make dreadful werewolves and Emily Blunt is lifeless as the love interest. What a waste of good actors.

 

1 ½ * of 5

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

Shooting Dogs

 

Shooting Dogs 2005

  • Director: Michael Caton-Jones
  • Seen by this director: Rob Roy
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: John Hurt, Hugh Dancy, Nicola Walker, Dominique Horwitz, Louis Mahoney, Steve Toussaint, David Gyasi, Victor Power, Clare-Hope Ashity
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • John Hurt – Doctor Who, Snowpiercer, Only Lovers Left Alive, Merlin, The Hollow Crown, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Harry Potter, Melancholia, Brighton Rock, V for Vendetta, Contact, Dead Man, Rob Roy, The Elephant Man, Alien, Midnight Express, I Claudius
    • Hugh Dancy – Hysteria, The Jane Austen Book Club, Ella Enchanted, Daniel Deronda
    • Nicola Walker – Annika, Unforgotten, Last Tango in Halifax, Doctor Who, River, Being Human, Luther, The Turn of the Screw
    • Louis Mahoney – River, Being Human, Doctor Who, Shooting Fish, Cry Freedom, Fawlty Towers
    • Steve Toussaint – Doctor Who, Fortitude
    • David Gyasi – Annihilation, Interstellar, Cloud Atlas, Doctor Who, The Dark Knight Rises
    • Clare-Hoppe Ashity – Doctor Who, Children of Men
  • Why?  The subject. John Hurt.
  • Seen: 21 June 2023 

Rwanda 1994. You know. If you don’t, Google it.

John Hurt is a Catholic priest, Hugh Dancy is an idealistic teacher, Nicola Walker is a journalist.

The massacre begins.

Like films about the Holocaust, there can never be too many. The story needs to be told, and told, and told. 

4 * of 5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Life Itself

 

Life Itself 2018

  • Director: Dan Fogelman
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Oscar Isaac, Olivia Wilde, Annette Bening, Mandy Patinkin, Jean Smart, Olivia Cooke, Sergio Peris-Mencheta, Antonio Banderas, Laia Costa, Àlex Monner, Isabel Durant, Lorenza Izzo, with the voice and a brief appearance of Samuel L Jackson (I don’t need to list him, do I? You all know who he is.)
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Oscar Isaac – Dune, Annihilation, Star Wars the Last Jedi, X-Men Apocalypse, Ex Machina, Inside Llewyn Davis, Robin Hood
    • Annette Bening – Death on the Nile, Ginger & Rosa, The Kids Are All Right, American Beauty, Mars Attacks!, Richard III, The Grifters
    • Mandy Patinkin – Dead Like Me, Lulu on the Bridge, Impromptu, Daniel, Ragtime
    • Antonio Banders – The 33, Once Upon a Time in Mexico, Frida, Evita, Interview with the Vampire, Philadelphia
  • Why?  The cast
  • Seen:  20 June 2023 

The DVD box has an alarmingly feel-good rom com vibe but I like several of the actors so there is hope.

It doesn’t start out as either feel-good or rom com. One character is hit and killed by a bus, another goes crazy and is institutionalised, there’s a dog called Fuckface, one character was orphaned early and take in by an abusive uncle. The point seems to be that life is the ultimate unreliable narrator of life. And that’s only the first chapter.

So far so good.

Sadly, it goes down from there. The next three chapters are not without interest but both feel-good and mushy romance creep in and finally take over. Such a pity. But the first chapter is so good that it gets 

3* of 5

 

 

 

 

 



La glace et le ciel

 

La glace et le ciel 2015

  • Director: Luc Jacquet
  • Seen by this director: La marche de l’empereur
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Documentary
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Documentary
  • Why?  The subject
  • Seen:  20 June 2023 

In Sweden it’s hot today. Hotter and earlier than it should be. I need some snow.

82-year-old Professor Claude Lorius discovered thirty years ago that climate change is happening, and it’s caused by us. He is now devastated that he was right. It’s happening.

As a student in the 50s he was sent on a year-long expedition to the Antarctic. The film is mostly about his work there in the coming fifty years or so.

A personal and scientific biography of the climate change that is today causing the suffering of millions and the extinction of species, the climate change that we humans have caused.

Lorius despairs, and hopes. 

4* of 5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

19 June 2023

The Village

 

The Village 2004

  • Director: M Night Shyamalan
  • Seen by this director: Glass, Split, After Earth, The Happening, Unbreakable, The Sixth Sense, Wide Awake   
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Sigourney Weaver, William Hurt, Joaquin Phoenix, Bryce Dallas Howard, Adrien Brody, Brendon Gleeson, Celia Weston, Judy Greer
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Sigourney Weaver – Chappie, Paul, Be Kind Rewind, Snow Cake, Imaginary Heroes, Holes, Galaxy Quest, A Map of the World, Alien etc, The Ice Storm, Death and the Maiden, Dave, The Working Girl, Gorillas in the Mist, Ghostbusters
    • William Hurt – Humans, Winter’s Tale, Robin Hood, Into the Wild, A History of Violence, AI, Sunshine, Lost in Space, Smoke, The Accidental Tourist
    • Joaquin Phoenix – Joker, Don’t Worry He Won’t Get Far on Foot, Two Lovers, Reservation Road, Walk the Line, Hotel Rwanda, Gladiator, To Die For
    • Bryce Dallas Howard – Rocketman, The Help, As You Like It, Manderlay
    • Adrien Brody – Detachment, Cadillac Records, Darjeeling Limited, King Kong, The Pianist, Bread and Roses, Liberty Heights
    • Brendon Gleeson – Paddington 2, Alone in Berlin, Suffragette, Edge of Tomorrow, Harry Potter etc, Perrier’s Bounty, In Bruges, Breakfast on Pluto, Kingdom of Heaven, Cold Mountain, 28 Days Later, AI, The Butcher Boy, Michael Collins, Braveheart
    • Celia Weston – Far from Heaven, Igby Goes Down, Snow Falling on Cedars, Dead Man Walking, Stars and Bars
    • Judy Greer – Ant-Man, Tomorrowland, American Dreamz
  • Why?  The cast and the director.
  • Seen: Possibly once before. Now: 18 June 2023. 

A kind of a cult in 19th century clothing and speaking 19th century English (sort of) lives in a village in the woods far from the towns. They have a truce with Those We don’t Speak Of but when small animals turn up slain and skinned, some believe it is TWDSO who are to blame.

Young brave Lucius (Phoenix) requests permission of the elders to go through the woods to the towns for supplies. He says that TWDSO won’t harm him because he is not threatening.

But things happen. More and bigger slain and skinned animals are left and villagers are frightened.

If you don’t look too deeply into the story and don’t mind the stilted English you might enjoy this, as I do, for its eeriness, uneasy atmosphere, not to mention Joaquin Phoenix, who is always worth seeing. 

3 * of 5

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Byzantium

 

Byzantium 2012

  • Director: Neil Jordan
  • Seen by this director: Breakfast on Pluto, The Butcher Boy, Michael Collins, Interview with the Vampire
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Saoirse Ronan, Gemma Arterton, Sam Riley, Caleb Landry Jones, Daniel Mays, Uri Gavriel
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Saoirse Ronan – Little Women, Mary Queen of Scots, Lady Bird, Brooklyn, Hanna, Atonement
    • Gemma Arterton – Their Finest, The Girl with All the Gifts, 100 Streets, A Song for Marion, Tamara Drewe, Kick Ass Girls 2, The Boat that Rocked, Quantum of Solace, Lost in Austen
    • Sam Riley – Maleficent, Brighten Rock, Control
    • Caleb Landry Jones – Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri, Get Out, God’s Pocket, X-Men First Class, Social Network, Breaking Bad, No Country for Old Men
    • Daniel Mays –1917, Fisherman’s Friends, Rogue One, Victor Frankenstein, Doctor Who, Made in Dagenham, Hustle, Red Riding, Atonement, A Good Year, The Secret Life of Words, Vera Drake, All or Nothing
    • Uri Gavriel – The Dark Knight Rises, The Band’s Visit
  • Why? The cast
  • Seen:  17 June 2023 

Eleanor (Ronan) writes her story and throws the pages out the window from her high-rise flat. Clara is a lap dancer. They both kill somebody and must flee the city.

That’s just the start.

They end up in a seaside town. Eleanor and Clara are not what they seem to be. Eleanor is haunted by their past, and it’s a very long past.

It’s one of the best vampire films I’ve seen. It has similarities to Interview with the Vampire by the same director but it’s much better – more credible, superior acting, and more sympathetic characters. 

4 * of 5

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edie

 

Edie 2017

  • Director: Simon Hunter
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Sheila Hancock, Kevin Guthrie, Paul Brannigan, Amy Manson, Wendy Morgan
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Sheila Hancock – Hustle, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, The Catherine Tate Show, How I Won the War
    • Kevin Guthrie – Dunkirk, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Misfits, Sunshine on Leith, Case Studies
    • Paul Brannigan – Sunshine on Leith, Angel’s Share
    • Amy Manson – Misfits, Being Human
    • Wendy Morgan – 84 Charing Cross Road
  • Why?  Possibly interesting
  • Seen: 14 June 2023 

After years of caring for her invalided, unappreciative, and unkind husband in a loveless marriage, Edie (Hancock) is finally widowed. After three years of isolation, she impulsively packs her old camping gear and boards the night train to Inverness. A chance meeting with young Jonny (Guthrie), who is stunned to learn that she intends to climb the treacherous Suilven, and is even more stunned to find himself being her guide. She does not want a guide, he does not want to guide her, but off they go.

It's not a match made in heaven. She’s crotchety and stubborn, he’s impatient.

Fortunately, this is not a sentimental sweet old lady Hallmark film but a moving portrait of two people trying to break out of a life they haven’t chosen.

The scenery is spectacular (it’s Scotland!), the acting is wonderful, and the drama and emotions are genuine. 

4½ * of 5

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Nocturama

 

Nocturama 2016

Director: Bertrand Bonello

  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Finnegan Oldfield, Vincent Rottiers, Hamza Meziani, Manal Issa, Jamil McCraven, Rabah Nait Oufella, Laure Valentinelli, Ilias Le Doré, Robin Goldbronn
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Vincent Rottiers – Les femmes de l’ombre
  • Why?  Possibly interesting, won awards.
  • Seen:  13 June 2023 

Paris. One by one a variety of young men and women converge. Slowly we realise that it’s all choreographed. They are planning a huge attack. Assassinations and explosions. Minutely planned, coolly rehearsed, calmly executed.

We aren’t told how they first met, what their motive is, what their goal is, how they learnt to make explosives, where they got their guns. We don’t even know all their names, but each individual is strongly portrayed by to me unknown actors.

What a very odd film. And oddly suspenseful. Often quiet but always visually dramatic. Ultra realistic and at the same time surrealistic. Minimalist and extravagant. Terrorists for whom we hope things go well.

This is a work of art. 

5 * of 5

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

Go

 

Go 1999

  • Director: Doug Liman
  • Seen by this director: Edge of Tomorrow, The Bourne Identity, Jumper
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: Sarah Polley, Jay Mohr, Scott Wolf, Taye Diggs, Katie Holmes, Suzanne Krull, Desmond Askew, Nathan Bexton, Timothy Olyphant, William Fichtner
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Sarah Polley – Slings and Arrows, The Secret Lives of Words, Dawn of the Dead, My Life Without Me, eXistenZ
    • Jay Mohr – Pay It Forward
    • Taye Diggs – Rent, Chicago
    • Katie Holmes – Woman in Gold, Batman Begins, The Gift, The Ice Storm
    • Suzanne Krull – Lost
    • Timothy Olyphant – Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Snowden, I Am Number Four, Ellen Foster
    • William Fichtner – Elysium, The Lone Ranger, The Dark Knight, Crash, Equilibrium, The Perfect Storm, Armageddon, Heat, Strange Days
  • Why? Sarah Polley
  • Seen:  12 June 2023 

Ronna (Polley) works in a supermarket, is being evicted for lack of funds, works 14-hour shifts, gets asked for help in getting Ecstasy for a big party. She goes to a dealer, and trouble starts.

Meanwhile her colleague Simon (Mohr), whose dealer Ronna is now messing with, is in Las Vegas getting into trouble of his own.

Meanwhile, more drug deals, a rave party, unlikely convergences of various characters and…

It’s wild, the cast is great, the twists are definitely unexpected.

What a night. 

4 * of 5

 

 


 

 

 

 

12 June 2023

Gitarrmongot

 

Gitarrmongot (Guitar Mongoloid) 2004

  • Director: Ruben Östlund
    • Seen by this director: Turist
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: many unknown
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • All unknown
  • Why?  Ruben Östlund
  • Seen:  6 June 2023 

Today is Sweden’ National Day. We pretend it’s a big deal with festivals all over the country but it’s only about twenty years old. Some clever person/persons were envious of other countries who had patriotic reasons to celebrate the nation and decided that we needed one too even though we have no dramatic liberation to commemorate. We had to dig back 500 years to when Gustav Vasa was elected king on 23 June 1523, which is generally regarded as the beginning of the Swedish state. To avoid granting the workers too many days off, Whitsuntide was removed as a holiday to make way for National Day, which I admit is better than an obscure Christian holiday. I’m just patriotic enough to choose a Swedish film and what’s more Swedish in the film world these days than Ruben Östlund? This is his first film.

Called by some a pseudo-documentary, it offers a series of vignettes of various unconnected character. Hoodlums tossing stolen bikes in the lake or breaking streetlights. Drunks playing Russian roulette. Boys who pause playing bandy to do synchronised Hitler salutes. A young couple joking about if they would love one another if their appearances changed. A twelve-year-old boy busking, very badly, on the streets of Gothenburg.

For some reason, these simple sad, meaningless little stories are quite captivating.

Happy Sweden Day. 

3* of 5

 

 

 

Wonderful Days

 

Wonderful Days 2003

  • Director: Moon-Saeng Kim
    • Seen by this director: The Beautiful Country
  • Based on book: no
  • Cast: animated
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • animated
  • Why?  Possibly interesting
  • Seen:  5 June 2023 

The year is 2142. ECOBAN, refugee ships built after an ecological catastrophe, runs on pollution. The slave race, the Morrians, are in rebellion because they know that blue skies can again be achieved if the rulers would stop their intentional production of pollution.

It’s a decent premise and the animation is beautiful, but the story is confusing and boring, the characters lame.

The film is highly praised for its animation but that’s not enough.

 2 * of 5

 

 

5 June 2023

Lady Macbeth

 

Lady Macbeth 2016

  • Director: William Oldroyd
  • Based on book by Nikolai Leskov
  • Cast: Florence Pugh, Cosmo Jarvis, Naomi Ackie, Paul Hilton, Christopher Fairbank, Anton Palmer, Golda Rosheuvel
  • Personal “oh yeah him/her” reaction, i.e. have seen this actor in:
    • Florence Pugh – Little Women, Midsommar, Fighting with My Family
    • Cosmo Jarvis – Humans
    • Paul Hilton – Case Studies, Wuthering Heights
    • Naomi Ackie – Doctor Who
    • Christopher Fairbank – Wallander, Wolf Hall, Doctor Who, Jack the Giant Slayer, Pirates of the Caribbean, The Fifth Element, Crocodile Shoes, Alien 3, Spender, Hamlet, Auf Wiedersen Pet
    • Golda Rosheuvel – Dune, Luther
  • Why?  The title
  • Seen:  4 June May 2023

Rural England, mid-19th century. Young Katherine (Pugh) has been sold into marriage by her father to the cold and neurotic Mr Lester (Hilton). When her husband and religious sadist father-in-law (Fairbank) are away, she ventures out of the house in which she has been confined. She encounters estate employee Sebastian (Jarvis) and a passionate affair ensues.

This is not Shakespeare’s Lady Macbeth (I confess that I had expected a spin-off) nor is it Lady Chatterly’s Lover. It is a psychological thriller about oppression, mad violent resistance, and the high price of liberation, which in part is to become an oppressor oneself.It is chillingly good. 

4 * of 5