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Post by Marwood on Oct 24, 2024 20:23:25 GMT
Was at the screening of A Tale Of Two Dirtys at the BFI earlier : advertised as the UK premiere but I can’t see any cinemas rushing to book this. It’s a documentary about Ol’ Dirty Bastard who I’m sure is a big favourite of all of us on this forum, especially you show tune lovers 🤣 but it all seemed a bit cobbled together: I won’t mention which members of the Wu Tang Clan do or don’t contribute so that I don’t spoil it 😉but I will be generous and give it 3 stars although I won’t be rushing to see it again.
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Post by amyja89 on Oct 25, 2024 14:10:47 GMT
The Room Next Door - *** 1/2
Think I need to sit with this one for a minute, my rating might improve.
The thing about Almodovar is that his work is so often heightened in tone combined with a heightened narrative, but there is a slight disconnect here as the narrative is actually incredibly straight forward and just contemplative.
When weird stuff is happening in some of his other movies, the way that the characters speak like no human has ever spoken seems totally fine, but I'm not entirely sure it works here, most notably with Swinton. Having said that, I really enjoyed.
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Post by juicy_but_terribly_drab on Oct 25, 2024 20:28:45 GMT
The Room Next Door - *** 1/2 Think I need to sit with this one for a minute, my rating might improve. The thing about Almodovar is that his work is so often heightened in tone combined with a heightened narrative, but there is a slight disconnect here as the narrative is actually incredibly straight forward and just contemplative. When weird stuff is happening in some of his other movies, the way that the characters speak like no human has ever spoken seems totally fine, but I'm not entirely sure it works here, most notably with Swinton. Having said that, I really enjoyed. This was my last film of the festival last Sunday and I liked but didn't love it for similar reasons. Has all the usual melodramatic Almodóvar trappings but no one is really treating it like melodrama. The dialogue just comes across as stilted like it's lifted directly from a book that was never meant to be read aloud or a too-literal translation from another language (the flashbacks in particular have very on-the-nose, expository dialogue without a lick of subtext). Great score, look and performances but it never quite gels as well as you'd hope.
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Post by theatregoer22 on Oct 26, 2024 17:46:03 GMT
The Room Next Door - *** 1/2 Think I need to sit with this one for a minute, my rating might improve. The thing about Almodovar is that his work is so often heightened in tone combined with a heightened narrative, but there is a slight disconnect here as the narrative is actually incredibly straight forward and just contemplative. When weird stuff is happening in some of his other movies, the way that the characters speak like no human has ever spoken seems totally fine, but I'm not entirely sure it works here, most notably with Swinton. Having said that, I really enjoyed. I watched it last night and found that virtually nothing about it made me care for any of the characters, plus it really dragged. (And Parallel Mothers was one of my favourite films of 2021/2).
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Post by amyja89 on Oct 26, 2024 17:47:04 GMT
The Room Next Door - *** 1/2 Think I need to sit with this one for a minute, my rating might improve. The thing about Almodovar is that his work is so often heightened in tone combined with a heightened narrative, but there is a slight disconnect here as the narrative is actually incredibly straight forward and just contemplative. When weird stuff is happening in some of his other movies, the way that the characters speak like no human has ever spoken seems totally fine, but I'm not entirely sure it works here, most notably with Swinton. Having said that, I really enjoyed. Saw it last night and found that virtually nothing about it made me care for any of the characters. And yet Parallel Mothers was up there as one of my favourite films of 2021/2. Feel exactly the same!
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2,058 posts
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Post by Marwood on Oct 27, 2024 19:45:19 GMT
Saw The Shining earlier as part of The Prince Charles Cinemas Halloween season in league with Beavertown Brewery, which involves numerous undead types telling people they have died in there or collapsing in front of the screen before proceedings began, along with a load of horror film VHS tapes lining the bar outside. This was at least the fifth time I’ve seen it in a cinema and I don’t know if I would call it ‘scary’ as such although the thought of losing my marbles like Jack Torrance does is what bears heaviest on my mind but it’s an impressive piece of work that still bears repeat viewing (although I now get the impression he had cracked up before the family got to the Overlook 🤣): anyway, just remember that All Work And No Play Makes Jack A Dull Boy😉
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Post by amyja89 on Oct 29, 2024 17:26:52 GMT
Emilia Pérez - *** 1/2
Is this an absolute mess? Yes.
Did I kind of love it once Karla Sofía Gascón emerged in her full glory? Also yes.
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4,984 posts
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Post by Someone in a tree on Oct 30, 2024 20:44:43 GMT
That obsure object of desire
(Bunuel)
The usual bunch of awful middle class people are paraded infront of us. We watch a couple play a cat and mouse, the toxicity is both fascinating and tiresome. We even get to see a mouse caught in a trap plus terrorist explosions galore, the symbolism is obvious.
Two actors play the same character who interchange by scene - do we ever really know our partner?
This was the masters final film, at times it was familiar but also managed to suprise. Captivatingly brilliant.
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2,058 posts
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Post by Marwood on Oct 31, 2024 21:08:36 GMT
Just had the displeasure of watching Heretic: the trailer seemed amusing, Hugh Grant in moustache twirling bad guy mode haranguing a couple of Mormon girls but the reality was a horrible, turgid mess that was a cross between the worst bits of Seven and Saw that really had no redeeming features, a two hour joyless cruise around various basements and cellars that only seemed to exist for the writers to have an extended rant about organised religion, but if you have ever felt a yearning to hear Hugh Grant singing Creep, your prayers have been answered (thank God I only paid £4 to see it)
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2,058 posts
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Post by Marwood on Oct 31, 2024 22:18:40 GMT
Just had the displeasure of watching Heretic: the trailer seemed amusing, Hugh Grant in moustache twirling bad guy mode haranguing a couple of Mormon girls but the reality was a horrible, turgid mess that was a cross between the worst bits of Seven and Saw that really had no redeeming features, a two hour joyless cruise around various basements and cellars that only seemed to exist for the writers to have an extended rant about organised religion, but if you have ever felt a yearning to hear Hugh Grant singing Creep, your prayers have been answered (thank God I only paid £4 to see it) I just remembered Grants Jar Jar Binks impression 🤦🏻♂️
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4,984 posts
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Post by Someone in a tree on Nov 2, 2024 15:55:07 GMT
Bluebeard
(Breillat)
All very watchable, the tension was present but never really strong enough. The tale is told by a meta device of two young girls reading the story aloud which worked well and was apt.
The film has some comedy Freudian beds. Plus the plots wraps up too quickly, perhaps a deliberate choice.
In the summer i watched the Emma Rice version which worked brilliantly and weaved in the horrors from the Sarah Everard case. It was reflective and said enough is enough. From Brellat's tale i did not get the modern perspective and that it is to the films detrement.
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3,577 posts
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Post by showgirl on Nov 3, 2024 3:36:46 GMT
Small Things Like These: not my 1st or even 2nd choice (those would have been Juror No 2 for sure and possibly then Anora) but the only film with timings to fit in pre-matinee. Not helped by the fact that I don't like Cillian Murphy, whom I find creepy, and that I knew the subject was grim. Well, I regretted my choice as it was indeed really miserable and depressing, and all done in a very dark way visually, too: so many scenes at night or during the dark mornings/evenings and eventually I was just about to yield to the temptation to look at my watch, when mercifully the film ended suddenly. Phew! Definitely a mistake for me and not a film I could recommend but OK if you know what to expect and are made of sterner stuff.
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Post by solotheatregoer on Nov 3, 2024 12:20:02 GMT
Small Things Like These: not my 1st or even 2nd choice (those would have been Juror No 2 for sure and possibly then Anora) but the only film with timings to fit in pre-matinee. Not helped by the fact that I don't like Cillian Murphy, whom I find creepy, and that I knew the subject was grim. Well, I regretted my choice as it was indeed really miserable and depressing, and all done in a very dark way visually, too: so many scenes at night or during the dark mornings/evenings and eventually I was just about to yield to the temptation to look at my watch, when mercifully the film ended suddenly. Phew! Definitely a mistake for me and not a film I could recommend but OK if you know what to expect and are made of sterner stuff. You held out longer than I did. I checked my phone about an hour in. I read the book last year so I knew the subject matter well but I didn't really feel this needed a movie adaptation. They should have explored the inner workings of the Magdalene laundry in more depth. As in the book, they skimmed over this so both the book and the film lost their impact. I've read a few Claire Keegan books and I feel the same way about all of them. They always feel unfinished.
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Post by justfran on Nov 3, 2024 17:43:13 GMT
Midas Man - now streaming on Amazon Prime. It tells the story of Brian Epstein first seeing The Beatles, how he believed in them and went on to make music history. It’s a shame that the film couldn’t get the rights to any original Beatles hits and it did seem to have been done on a slightly limited budget (may have worked better as a short tv series) but I enjoyed it overall - Jacob Fortune-Lloyd gives a brilliant performance as Brian.
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643 posts
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Post by jek on Nov 3, 2024 18:22:03 GMT
I really disliked The Room Next Door. It looked beautiful and had a very good cast, but that dialogue! It was so clunky and all that stuff about the Bloomsbury Group and later mention of Hemingway and Martha Gellhorn felt shoe-horned in. As did some of the issues. Poor John Turturro having to spout all that stuff about neo-liberalism. Honestly I spent some time wishing Martha would just take the pill! Such a shame as I have enjoyed a lot of Almodovar films over the years. But listening in to conversations in the Barbican toilets afterwards it was clear that some people loved it. So maybe it's just me.
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Post by Marwood on Nov 3, 2024 18:40:27 GMT
Saw Bullitt: worth it for THAT car chase, the Lalo Schifrin score and as a snapshot of San Francisco in the late 60s but the actual story felt very clunky and I don’t think it would hold up to too much scrutiny and that ending just felt like they had enough and just stopped filming.
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7,183 posts
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Post by Jon on Nov 3, 2024 21:38:31 GMT
It's November which means Channel 5 cracks out the Christmas TV movies. The one I watched today was Christmas in Notting Hill which had Killian Donnelly in a small role, it was filmed in Ireland because I assume for cost reasons.
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Post by theatregoer22 on Nov 3, 2024 23:41:59 GMT
I really disliked The Room Next Door. It looked beautiful and had a very good cast, but that dialogue! It was so clunky and all that stuff about the Bloomsbury Group and later mention of Hemingway and Martha Gellhorn felt shoe-horned in. As did some of the issues. Poor John Turturro having to spout all that stuff about neo-liberalism. Honestly I spent some time wishing Martha would just take the pill! Such a shame as I have enjoyed a lot of Almodovar films over the years. But listening in to conversations in the Barbican toilets afterwards it was clear that some people loved it. So maybe it's just me. You aren't the only one to not like it - I wasn't sure if the dialogue was to blame, but I found much of it tediously dull.
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Post by amyja89 on Nov 4, 2024 0:19:38 GMT
I actually did like Small Things Like These.
Haven't felt that much atmospheric claustrophobia and simmering rage as a viewer in a long time. The film isn't as dynamic as you might want it to be given the searing subject matter, but as the title suggests, it focuses on the 'small things' that people would have been experiencing on the periphery of this formidable cultural tragedy.
A great companion piece for Peter Mullan's 'The Magdalene Sisters' in my opinion.
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Post by showgirl on Nov 4, 2024 4:04:45 GMT
I really disliked The Room Next Door. It looked beautiful and had a very good cast, but that dialogue! It was so clunky and all that stuff about the Bloomsbury Group and later mention of Hemingway and Martha Gellhorn felt shoe-horned in. As did some of the issues. Poor John Turturro having to spout all that stuff about neo-liberalism. Honestly I spent some time wishing Martha would just take the pill! Such a shame as I have enjoyed a lot of Almodovar films over the years. But listening in to conversations in the Barbican toilets afterwards it was clear that some people loved it. So maybe it's just me. You aren't the only one to not like it - I wasn't sure if the dialogue was to blame, but I found much of it tediously dull. I neither loved nor hated it but did think how unrepresentatively glossy and glamorous the settings and characters' lifestyles were: clothes, homes, ability to travel everywhere, at the drop of a hat by taxi or vehicle apparently available on demand without any explanation of whose it was; lavish food choice, etc. And probably so untypical of the experience of anyone in the final stage of a terminal illness or of their relatives and friends. The lack of any background for Ingrid also made the story unbalanced: even if hers wasn't the focus, did she have any family or a former partner - other than the shared boyfriend? Plus I didn't find it credible that having been out of contact for years, Ingrid and Martha would suddenly become so close again.
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643 posts
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Post by jek on Nov 4, 2024 21:56:01 GMT
I went to see Blitz tonight at the Barbican - it seemed appropriate to see it at a place which was once a huge bomb site. I enjoyed it more than I expected. Having grown up in Stepney (I was born 18 years after the end of the war and our adventure playground was a on a piece of land that had once been blitzed housing) I was a bit worried that there might be too much Cockney bonhommie. But there wasn't and it was nice to see the very real Mickey Davies (known as Mickey midget) given some recognition. It is hard to see what it adds to the Second World War movie cannon - although it does, of course, incorporate the sorts of revisionist history which has now become commonplace (people behaved selfishly in the shelters for example, looting happened too). But it's properly involving, you are rooting for young George and it looks very beautiful.
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Post by showgirl on Nov 5, 2024 4:04:19 GMT
Based on your comments about Blitz, jek, I'm reviewing my decision not to see it, which was based on previous experience of SM's films and on the awful trailer, which suggested both that the film was historically inaccurate and too determined to make particular points at the expense of credibility. I'd concluded on this basis that I'd be too annoyed to feel engaged but as you found it better than expected and involving, maybe I should give SM another go. That film is certainly far more available than Juror No 2, which I'd still love to see.
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643 posts
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Post by jek on Nov 5, 2024 8:27:39 GMT
showgirl I can't compare this to other Steve McQueen films as I can't recall any that I've seen. I loved his art project which took photos of school classes of London kids. The excitement in Tate Britain as groups of school kids looked for their photo - on a proper gallery wall - was contagious. I think with Blitz you just have to accept that it's not gritty. Reviews which have mentioned the Children's Film Foundation and the Railway Children are on to something. We were discussing the lack of grit on the way home. My husband, who at the time I met him (32 years ago) was writing a PhD on changes in social attitudes due to WWII, is easily angered by portrayals of 'everyone came together in the Blitz'. He thought McQueen's film was an admirable attempt to bring a more rounded picture to the big screen in a totally non art house way. On a side note we are very much looking forward to Conclave because at the same time that my husband was researching his - currently film relevant - PhD, I was writing mine about the politics of the Catholic Church!
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Post by amyja89 on Nov 5, 2024 13:12:17 GMT
Anora - **** 1/2
An absolutely wild ride! Feels like some sort of modern day screwball comedy but with much sharper edges. A real panic attack of a film, similar in vibes to Uncut Gems but in a more 'for the girlies' vein.
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Post by Marwood on Nov 5, 2024 21:25:31 GMT
The Criterion Collection celebrated their 40th birthday tonight with a screening of Risky Business at Picturehouse Central preceded by a short quiz with Ali Plumb (I already have all the Criterion Blu-rays he was giving out as prizes so wasn’t bothered about not winning one): the actual film was ok but I found it very slow moving, Ferris Buellers Day Off took the same premise and did it with a lot more class, crankingthings right up (including the location, I’m not sure if John Hughes was accused of plagiarism when FBDO was released), not sure if I’d call it a classic but interesting to see Tom Cruise at the start of his film career: 40 years later and not a grey hair on his head, how does he do it? 😝
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