Kathryn Bigelow has done it again. After the major success of Hurt Locker in 2008, she now tells the story of America’s hunt for Osama Bin Laden in the aftermath of 9/11. ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ documents the personal pursuit of CIA officer Maya, played by Jessica Chastain, over the decade it took to track down and kill the world’s most dangerous terrorist. Interesting from beginning to end, and brilliantly captured on screen, this very smart and gruelling picture holds nothing back.
DVD review: Wreck-It Ralph
A Disney animation where when the kids backs are turned, characters interact in their own secret society. It all sounds very Toy Story and with John Lasseter taking an executive producer role, it’s unsurprising. Though the initial concept is arguably borrowed from a past success, Wreck-It Ralph has originality, it’s cleverly written and a lot of fun. The titular Ralph, a bad guy gone good, played by John C Reilly is villain of arcade game Wreck-It Ralph where his sole responsibility is to leave a path of carnage wherever he lays his big clumsy fists, for hero ‘Fix-It Felix Jr’ to clean up his mess and be adored. Ralph is tired and lonely in his job, yearning to be a hero, to be part of something and goes on a mission to win a medal to prove he can do good and be welcomed into a penthouse suite in ‘Niceland’ with all the other good guys.
DVD review: I Give It A Year
Marketed strongly with ‘from the producers of Love Actually and Notting Hill’, Working Title bring us yet another Brit rom-com; ‘I Give It A Year’ starring Rose Byrne and Rafe Spall as the anti rom-com couple Nat & Josh, as they slog their way through the first year of a marriage that seems doomed even before it’s begun. While the leads bundle through unhappily looking for a way out of a loveless love-life, the supporting cast are allowed to rise to the top, in particular Stephen Merchant and Olivia Colman as Best Man and marriage councillor respectively.
For a film that is so obviously trying to go against the grain of the tried and tested formula of the genre, it winds up pretty much as you would expect, featuring a sleazy co-worker, awkward in-law moments and the mad dash to the train station in the pouring rain. The poster even has the white background/red typeface combo that seems oh so familiar. By bringing in controversial Sacha Baron Cohen collaborator, Dan Mazer, into the director’s chair, it escapes these clichés at times and finds moments of quirky brilliance where the balance between the two contrasting styles is almost perfect. There is one scene which sees Anna Faris’ in an embarrassing threesome which plays like a bad game of Twister that is very reminiscent of the Borat naked fight scene, although it is admittedly a lot easier on the eye.
In a breakthrough period of his career which has seen him pinch supporting roles in Prometheus and Life of Pi, Rafe Spall tries his best in the ‘Hugh Grant’ role, as stereotypical struggling writer type, trying to be ‘nice’ and ‘cool’ simultaneously and getting it wrong every time If you’ve ever seen him starring in Channel 4’s sitcom ‘Pete Versus Life’, here he is Pete again but with shorter hair. He does as well as can be expected in a plot lacking any imagination and to me, came across as quite likeable whereas co-star Rose Byrne was so anonymous that I can barely remember what she looks like. Instead, it’ll be the ensemble supporting stars which will be remembered such as Tim Key, Nigel Planer and Olivia Colman who all have fantastic segments, as well as Stephen Merchant, as the cringy idiot mate, who would’ve easily walked away with the film if all his best gags hadn’t been gobbled up by the trailers.
As the anti rom-com, IGIAY loses sight of what it making fun of halfway through and becomes a parody of itself in the closing third, though that is not too say it didn’t make me laugh. This film won’t win any awards or break records, but as a Friday night film, accompanied by a Nandos and a few drinks, it’ll do nicely.
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DVD review: Flight
Denzel Washington earned yet another Academy Award Best Actor nomination, playing alcoholic pilot Captain ‘Whip’ Whitaker in Robert Zemeckis’ psychological drama ‘Flight’. After a miracle plane landing, Whitaker is hailed as a hero but when results show he had alcohol in his bloodstream at the time of the crash, his life unravels, his flawed character reveals itself, and he could face life imprisonment for his actions. After the beautifully put together ‘flight’ scene in the opening third, the plot sometimes falls a little flat but Washington’s performance holds the structure together and the climax is almost as gripping as the start as we hear the verdict on Whitaker’s future.
The linear nature of the films narrative could be questioned as the stand out scene is ultimately the crash which comes and goes in the first half hour. I can’t help but think the film might have peaked too soon and could have benefited from beginning with the aftermath, looking back, stretching the gripping drama of the planes plummet throughout more of the lengthy running time. Maybe this would be too easy, and the edge-of-the-seat excitement would be lost. The scene is undoubtedly remarkable and pulled me straight into the action, though the full frontal nudity in the opening minutes had won my attention from the get go.
With Robert Zemeckis using up his entire special effects budget early on, he relies on DW’s performance to carry the remaining two hours. He delivers superbly. The casting is a stroke of genius because Washington whilst in playboy mood: laying in bed smoking a cigarette, sipping an alcoholic beverage while a naked woman slinks around the hotel room, epitomises ‘cool’. On the outside, he seems in complete control of himself; confident smooth talker, and a well respected pilot, he keeps his dark lifestyle very well hidden. However, juxtaposing this as a stuttering drunk, lying through his teeth, he is equally brilliant. His performance is multi-layered and the study of addiction is fascinating and I was rooting for Whip all the way. The ‘romantic’ sub plot is lacklustre and I didn’t care much for the heroin addict love interest, Nicole, played by Kelly Reilly. Though I felt the ‘two screw-ups fall in love and are there for one another’ cliche was forced and didn’t work for the majority, I still wanted a resolution to their turbulent relationship which didn’t really arrive, leaving their story feeling unfinished. The strongest from the decent supporting cast is John Goodman as Whip’s charismatic drug dealer Harling Mays. After stealing the show in Argo, Goodman shows his class once again, striding into this role with real ease, providing a proper laugh out loud one-liner with impeccable comic timing.
‘Flight’ has a great concept, a wonderfully complex central character, with a top actor to take the role. It has all the makings of a 10/10 and should have been in contention for the top prize alongside the other big hitters at the awards season in 2013. The unique screenplay deservedly received a nod of recognition as on paper, this film has everything. On screen, it nearly proves it.
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DVD review: Django Unchained
The latest addition to Quentin Tarantino’s filmography, ‘Django Unchained’, set in 1850s America, ticks all the boxes and features everything you would expect: strong bloody violence, punchy dialogue and Samuel L Jackson. Here, QT pays tribute to the ‘spaghetti western’ genre and tells the epic story of Django (Jamie Foxx), a freed slave and Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz), a German bounty hunter, who come together on a journey to rescue Django’s wife from a brutal plantation owner.
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