• Home
  • Movie News
  • Movie Trailers
  • Reviews
    • Cinema Reviews
    • Home Entertainment Reviews
      • Blu-ray Review
      • DVD Review
  • Competitions
  • Features
    • Interview

Movie Muser

Have your say about cinema

Tash Force (DVD) – Dealing with Hooligans in the new Brit comedy

18th April 2012 By Tim Isaac


Tash McDermott (Mark Woodward) is the head of Lancashire Constabulary’s Football Intelligence Unit, who’s dedicated to preventing hooliganism. He agrees to allow a documentary crew to follow him around, showing off what he believes is his great skill, but what the world can see as his bungling incompetence.

He’s on the trail of the elusive football firm bad guy Nightmare, but it’s going to be tough to find him, especially as Tash has taken programmes like The Sweeney to heart and seems incapable of moving towards a more modern style of policing, much to the chagrin of his superiors.

Tash Force is the sort of low budget film that tries to make strengths out of its financial limitations, such as using the mockumentary form and largely featuring just two characters – Tash himself and the journalist following him. This latter trick would certainly have made things cheaper and easier, but it’s a potentially dangerous gambit. After all, it puts the entire movie on Tash’s shoulders, with little else to help with the burden. It means that if you don’t immediately take to Tash, the whole movie fails, as quite a lot of the film is a bit of a one-man comedy show.

He’s undoubtedly a bit of a Marmite character, whose comedy will be a bit too broad and obvious for many, while others will no doubt be amused by his antics. When I first saw the ridiculous wig he wears, I feared the worst and that this would be cheap, lazy, lowest common denominator rubbish. It isn’t that, but neither is it a comic tour de force. I eventually realised that the wig was actually quite a good barometer of whether you should watch the film or not. If you look at the pic of Tash above and smile, you’ll probably enjoy the movie, but if you just think he looks stupid, this probably isn’t your kind of film.

Although Tash Force attempts a bit of depth and character development, it doesn’t really succeed, and Tash’s rather episodic capers are undoubtedly a bit hit and miss. To be honest it wasn’t really my kind of film, but I can certainly see a lot of people enjoying it. I didn’t think it was bad, just that it didn’t particularly tickle my funny bone. It’s a film that comes out of a long heritage of Northern comedy – the likes of Cannon & Ball and Dave Spikey sprang to mind while I was watching it – so if you like that kind of thing, you’ll probably enjoy Tash Force.

Overall Verdict: It won’t be to everyone’s taste and it’s definitely a bit hit and miss, but if you look at Tash and his wig makes you smile, you’ll probably like it.

Special Features:
Viral – Baddest Bastards – Tash runs through his captured hooligans
Viral – Boardroom Extra – Tash and Terry have a boardroom spat
John Robb TV Interview
Tash’s Christmas Message 2011
Tash’s webcam
Tash Force Trailer
Tash McDermott Hardcore Drinker – a featurette

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

 

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:

Storage 24 Trailer – Noel Clarke is being hunted down by a predator!

18th April 2012 By Tim Isaac


The first trailer and poster have arrived for Storage 24, which is bidding to be this year’s breakout Brit sci-fi flick. The film stars BAFTA award winner Noel Clarke (Kidulthood, 4.3.2.1) – who also wrote the movie – Antonia Campbell Hughes (Bright Star) Laura Haddock (The Inbetweeners Movie) and Colin O’Donoghue (The Rite), and is directed by Johannes Roberts (F, When Evil Calls). Here’s the synopsis: ‘London is in chaos. A military cargo plane has crashed leaving its highly classified contents strewn across the city. Completely unaware London is in lockdown, Charlie (Noel Clarke) and Shelley (Antonia Campbell-Hughes), accompanied by best friends Mark (Colin O’Donoghue) and Nikki (Laura Haddock), are at Storage 24 dividing up their possessions after a recent break-up. Suddenly, the power goes off. Trapped in a dark maze of endless corridors, a mystery predator is hunting them one by one. In a place designed to keep things in, how do you get out?’ The film hits cinemas June 29th.

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:

The Divide – Everything goes Lord Of The Flies in Xavier Gens dark horror-thriller!

18th April 2012 By Tim Isaac


I think it’s safe to say that if you want a nice, jolly couple of hours, The Divide probably isn’t the best movie to watch. It’s dark, relentlessly pessimistic, often unpleasant and more than a little depressing. It’s certainly not completely without merit, but it ain’t fun.

In the great, no fuss opening, a nuclear explosion is tearing through New York City and a group of random people race for the safety of a basement/slash bomb shelter. The owner of the basement, Mickey (Michael Biehn), doesn’t want them down there, but with radiation swirling above, he doesn’t have much choice.

The survivors don’t know what to do or how they’re going to get through this, and soon start bickering. Things get even more desperate after men in hazmat suits invade and take away the only child amongst the group, leaving the rest behind and welding them in. As the days pass and with radiation slowly leaking in, everything begins to go rather Lord Of The Flies, with people losing their minds, factions developing and even the best of people starting to do things they never thought they would. In the quest for power and survival, the situation becomes ever more dangerous and degraded, with the threat of rape and violence growing ever greater as all the trapping of civilised behaviour disappear.

The Divide is definitely not a movie that takes a positive view of human nature. While it’s very dark and some of the scenes are likely to induce a wince or two, the film’s problem isn’t where it ends up, but where it comes from. Things could undoubtedly go very Lord Of The Flies in such a predicament, but the movie spends very little time setting the people up before everyone starts turning on one another. It means that when everything quickly falls apart it doesn’t feel psychologically satisfying as it hasn’t taken us on the journey to get there.

By not giving us a genuine sense of how and/or why these people can turn utterly depraved, it results in a movie that will be fine for those whose view of human nature is already pretty pessimistic– and who just assume everyone’s an asshole underneath a civilised exterior – but will feel unpleasant for the sake of unpleasantness to many others. It would have helped if we got a proper sense of how much time is passing, but we don’t really get that either.

The film’s red herrings are likely to drive some people nuts too. The opening scene of the city exploding is purely to get the people in the basement – which is the only thing the movie is interested in. However when hazmat suited strangers turn up, it seems like the film is opening up and starting to question what’s going on outside the claustrophobic bunker, especially when Josh (Milo Ventimiglia) discovers a bizarre lab just outside the basement. However this turns out to be nothing more than a rouse, seemingly only included to play with those expecting a more typical horror-thriller set-up and further unsettle the inhabitants.

It’s a shame the early part of the movie doesn’t really work and largely just serves to confuse what the film is trying to do and muddy where the characters are starting out from, because while The Divide gets incredibly dark, the film does a lot of good stuff in the second half. However due to the lack of satisfying set-up, it still doesn’t quite work. That said, it certainly provokes a reaction, which is a lot more than most films manage, and there are some decent performances (along with a couple of slightly dodgy ones). Heroes star Milo Ventimiglia in particular certainly sheds his good guy image with an intensely unhinged performance.

Overall Verdict: If you’re going to present such a nihilistic view of humanity, you need to provide the set-up for that, rather than just assuming we’ll all agree. And that’s where the provocative The Divide will, well, divide audiences.

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:

Mark Ruffalo Set To Be A Foxcatcher – He signs up for the Steve Carell & Channing Tatum flick

17th April 2012 By Tim Isaac

Foxcatcher has been in the works for years, and while it moved a bit closer to the screen last year when Steve Carell and Channing Tatum signed on to star, it still haven’t gone in front of the camera. Now it’s taken one step closer, as The Avengers star Mark Ruffalo has joined the cast, according to Variety.

In the based on a true story tale, Ruffalo will play Olympic wrestler Dave Schultz, with the film charting his relationship with John du Pont (Carell), who shot and killed him in 1996. John du Pont was the heir to the Du Pont chemical empire, but was also a paranoid schizophrenic. Schultz was a longtime friend to du Pont, who repeatedly tried to get him help before du Pont killed him. Channing Tatum will play Schultz’s younger brother, Mark, who was also an Olympic wrestler.

Production is scheduled to begin this October in Pittsburgh, with Bennett Miller (Moneyball) directing.

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:

Jennifer Connelly Rumoured For Noah – Saoirse Ronan may also be in Darren Aronofsky’s film

17th April 2012 By Tim Isaac

The last time Jennifer Connelly teamed up with director Darren Aronofsky, for Requiem For A Dream, it didn’t exactly go well for her character. Hopefully things will go a little better for her if rumours are true the Connelly is in talks to star in Aronofsky’s Noah – even if the film is dealing with the death of virtually every human on the planet.

The Tracking Board has the news, and says that Paramount is also showing interest in Saoirse Ronan for a supporting role. Jennifer Connelly will play Naameh, the wife of Russell Crowe’s title character, with the film giving an action-packed take on the biblical story of The Flood. As for Ronan’s charcter, it isn’t known which character she would play, or indeed whether an offer has been made to the actress yet.

Darren Aronofsky will direct from a screenplay he co-wrote with Ari Handel, with production scheduled to begin in June.

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:

David O’Russell Up For Buddy Cianci Biopic – He’ll direct a film about the colourful Rhode Island mayor

17th April 2012 By Tim Isaac

In the UK, if you’ve heard of Buddy Cianci at all, it’s because the school Family Guy’s Chris Griffin used to attend is named after him, but in the US, he’s famed for being one of the most colourful politicians around. Now the LA Times reports that David O’Russell has signed on to direct a biopic of the former Providence, Rhode Island mayor.

Just from the title of his memoir, you can get an idea of why Cianci might be worth making a film about, as it’s called, ‘Politics And Pasta: How I Prosecuted Mobsters, Rebuilt A Dying City, Advised A President, Dined With Sinatra, Spent Five Years In A Federally Funded Gated Community And Lived To Tell The Tale’. Cianci was mayor twice, but was forced to resign both times due to charges that led to felony convictions, once for assault and the second time for racketeering conspiracy (running a corrupt criminal enterprise due to the dodgy practices that were tolerated during his mayorship), for which he spent four years in prison.

It’s a slightly Boardwalk Empire type story, with Cianci always thought to be a bit of a wiseguy, corrupt character, but still much loved by the electorate.

Robert De Niro and his producing partner Jane Rosenthal are developing the film via their Tribeca company, with Russell attached to direct and help work on the script. It’ll now go onto O’Russell’s pile, which also includes a Russ Meyer biopic, the comedy drama Old St Louis, and the congressional sting drama American Bullshit.

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
« Previous Page
Next Page »

Search this site…

Get Social

RSSTwitterFacebook

Get new posts by e-mail

Get the latest in our daily e-mail

Latest Cinema & Home Ent. Reviews

Mortal Engines (Cinema Review)

Anna and the Apocalypse (Cinema Review)

Suspiria (Cinema Review)

Overlord (Cinema Review)

King of Thieves (Cinema Review)

Isle of Dogs (DVD Review)

Mission: Impossible – Fallout (Cinema Review)

Tomb Raider (Blu-ray Review)

The Bridge 4 (DVD Review)

My Friend Dahmer (Cinema Review)

Latest News & Trailers

Detective Pikachu Trailer – Pokemon is going live action with Ryan Reynolds

Toy Story 4 Teaser Trailer – Woody & the gang are coming back once more

Aladdin Teaser Trailer – Guy Ritchie directs Disney’s latest live-action adaptation

New Glass Trailer – The worlds of Unbreakable and Split meet

Aquaman Extended Trailer – Jason Momoa goes to war under the seas against Patrick Wilson

New Overlord Trailer – Soldiers take on Nazi-created zombies in the JJ Abrams produced movie

The Mule Trailer – Clint Eastwood is an octogenarian drug runner opposite Bradley Cooper

Vice Trailer – Christian Bale transforms into former Vice President Dick Cheney

Mary Queen of Scots Trailer – Saoirse Ronan & Margot Robbie get Elizabethan

New Mortal Engines Trailer – London is literally on the move in the steampunk fantasy

Handpicked MediaHandpicked MediaCopyright © 2025 Muser Media · Powered by WordPress & Genesis Framework · Log in
Movie Muser is a member of The Handpicked Media network

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.Accept Read More
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT
 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.