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American Made (Blu-ray Review)

28th December 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Tom Cruise, Domhnall Gleeson, Sarah Wright, Jesse Plemons, Caleb Landry Jones
Directed By: Doug Liman
Running Time: 115 mins
BBFC Certificate: 15
UK Release Date: December 26th 2017

Our Score

Barry Seal (Tom Cruise) is working as a pilot for TWA in the late 70s when she’s spotted by CIA agent Monty ‘Schafer’ (Domhnall Gleeson). Schafer wants Barry to fly reconnaissance missions in Central America, where the Soviet Union is backing Communist militias. His success at that leads to missions where he acts of the CIA courier to General Noriega in Panama, as well as helping to arm the anti-Communist Nicaraguan Contras in Honduras.

All this leads him to some dodgy places, including into the sphere of the Medellin Cartel, who get Barry to help them smuggle drugs into the US on his return trips. The CIA turn a blind eye to his side job as long as he still gets results. However, not every US law enforcement agency is as keen to ignore Barry’s smuggling. [Read more…]

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Tom Cruise, Domhnall Gleeson, Sarah Wright, Jesse Plemons, Caleb Landry Jones  DIRECTORS: Doug Liman  

Dunkirk (Blu-ray Review)

18th December 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Fionn Whitehead, Tom Hardy, Mark Rylance, Kenneth Branagh, Cillian Murphy
Directed By: Christopher Nolan
Running Time: 106 Minutes
BBFC Certificate: 12
UK Release Date: December 18th 2017

Our Score

Christopher Nolan is one of the few directors who can pretty much make any movie he wants. Thanks to the success of unconventional big budget movies such as Interstellar and Inception – and of course The Dark Knight trilogy – Warner Bros. trusts him to deliver. On the surface Dunkirk seems a more straightforward proposition as it’s a World War II movie, but as this is Nolan, he’s not going to make a war film quite like anyone else.

For a start there’s remarkably little dialogue and while there are main characters, we learn comparatively little about them. Likewise, while it’s about an incredibly famous event, it’s not interested in being an exposition-heavy historical overview, complete with officers pushing little boats around a war-room map to explain to us what’s going on. Instead it’s a film that wants to create a sense of realism about the events it’s talking about. It also has an almost puzzle-box nature – three intercut stories each taking place at a slightly different time – helping to create a sense of the chaos and uncertainty for those caught up in the events of late Spring 1940. [Read more…]

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Fionn Whitehead, Tom Hardy, Mark Rylance, Kenneth Branagh, Cillian Murphy  DIRECTORS: Christopher Nolan  FILMS: Dunkirk  

The Dark Tower (Blu-ray Review)

11th December 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Idris Elba, Matthew McConaughey, Tom Taylor, Jackie Earle Haley, Katheryn Winnick
Directed By: Nikolaj Arcel
Running Time: 95 mins
BBFC Certificate: 12
UK Release Date: December 11th 2017 (UK)

Our Score

It’s a movie 10-years in the making (at least this attempt took 10 year), but when it arrived in cinemas The Dark Tower was met with negative reviews and muted box office. It currently has a pretty abysmal 16% on RottenTomatoes and just 5.9/10 from viewers on IMDB. So is it really that bad? No, it’s not, but its easy to understand why it’s had such bad reactions.

The film focuses on teenager Jake (Tom Taylor), who’s been having strange visions of a giant tower at the centre of the universe and the ‘Man In Black’ (Matthew McConaughey), who’s determined to destroy it. While those around him are beginning to think Jake is becoming unhinged, the teen discovers what he’s been seeing is real. [Read more…]

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Idris Elba, Matthew McConaughey, Tom Taylor, Jackie Earle Haley, Katheryn Winnick  DIRECTORS: Nikolaj Arcel  FILMS: The Dark Tower  

Jabberwocky (Criterion Blu-ray Review)

20th November 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Michael Palin, Harry H. Corbett, John Le Mesurier, Max Wall, Bernard Bresslaw
Directed By: Terry Gilliam
Running Time: 105 mins
BBFC Certificate: PG
UK Release Date: November 20th 2017 (UK)

Our Score

In 1977 Monty Python had made their TV series and their first film, The Holy Grail, but hadn’t yet brought us Life Of Brian or The Meaning Of Life. In amongst this came Jabberwocky, which wasn’t a Python movie (although their production company was involved), but marked Terry Gilliam’s first movie as a solo director, and starred Michael Palin and Terry Jones.

The result is a movie that’s semi-Python, with echoes of the zany, off-the-wall humour, but which is still its own beast.

Palin plays Dennis, an apprentice cooper in a fantasy medieval kingdom. He’s desperately in love with Griselda (Annette Badland), and so to prove himself – and after a falling out with his father – he sets off to the city to make his fortune.

The kingdom has a big problem though as a monster, the Jabberwock, is stalking the woods. The King (Max Wall) decides a champion is needed. While Dennis has no experience of combat, Dennis gets caught up in all this. But will it help him win the heart of Griselda?

Like much of Python, there’s a madcap quality to Jabberwocky. Although there is a plot, it’s a rather circuitous one that isn’t afraid of going off on zany, often downright silly, tangents. Unlike Python though, there are few moments of comic genius. That’s not to say it’s not fun though, as it’s zaniness and dark humour ensure it’s entertaining to watch, even 40 years on.

Despite being made when the Pythons were still in their first active phase, Gilliam still had enormous difficulty raising the funds for Jabberwocky. It was a very low budget film, but as has almost become Terry’s trademark, he makes a little go a long way. Although there are some obvious rough edges, it still manages to create a convincing, dirty, medieval world, helped by a cast of British comedy veterans. And while it’s mainly interested in being silly, it does have a few serious points to make, such as the ‘businessmen’ who think the Jabberwocky is good for business and don’t want it killed, despite the misery its causing.

There’s also a nice addition for gay audiences in that despite this being a 1977 fantasy film, the King and his Chamberlain (Max Wall and John Le Mesurier) are a couple. They don’t make a big deal of it – indeed, it’s something you could easily miss – but when you notice it adds an unexpected sweetness to the movie. There’s no laughing at them and no one comments on it – it’s just something that is – and has a naturalness to how it’s included that even many modern movies can’t manage.

As this is a Criterion Edition, the Blu-ray comes with some good special features, including a really interesting, brand new documentary. Gilliam, Palin and actress Annette Badland all talk about the making of the movie, giving some fascinating insights into its creation. With a commentary and a few other worthwhile inclusions, it’s a good selection of features. The film has also recently been restored, ensuring that while not a crystal clear as modern released, it looks better in HD than you might expect.

Overall Verdict: Crazy, silly and rough around the edges, Terry Gilliam’s zany solo directorial debut is still a lot of fun – and looks good in this new release.

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

Special Features:
New 4K digital transfer from a restoration by the BFI National Archive and The Film Foundation, approved by director Terry Gilliam
5.1 surround mix, supervised by Gilliam and presented in DTS-HD Master Audio on the Blu-ray
Audio commentary from 2001 featuring Gilliam and actor Michael Palin
New documentary on the making of the film, featuring Gilliam, producer Sandy Lieberson, Palin, and actor Annette Badland
New interview with Valerie Charlton, designer of the Jabberwock, featuring her collection of rare behind-the-scenes photographs
Selection of Gilliam’s storyboards and sketches
Essay by critic Scott Tobias

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Michael Palin, Harry H. Corbett, John Le Mesurier, Max Wall, Bernard Bresslaw  DIRECTORS: Terry Gilliam  

The Big Sick (Blu-ray Review)

20th November 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Kumail Nanjiani, Zoe Kazan, Holly Hunter, Ray Romano, Anupam Kher
Directed By: Michael Showalter
Running Time: 120 mins
BBFC Certificate: 15
UK Release Date: November 20th 2017 (UK)

Our Score

Despite the presence of executive producer Judd Apatow (40 Year Old Virgin, Knocked Up) and plenty of ecstatic reviews, The Big Sick wasn’t the breakout international hit many had crossed their fingers it would be. That said, the fact a movie about a Pakistani-born man raised as a Muslim got a mainstream release seems like progress.

Kumail (Kumail Nanjiani) was born in Pakistan but was brought to the US by his parents when he was still a kid. Now he’s living between two worlds, with his family still keen for him to be a good Muslim and have an arranged marriage with a nice Pakistani girl, while he’s not sure what he thinks about God and wants to be a stand-up comic.

He meets Emily (Zoe Kazan) at a gig and the two begin to date. However, he knows that there’s a good chance that if he told his family he was with a white girl, they would reject him. After the two have an enormous blow-up, Emily falls ill, which results in her having to be put into a medically induced coma. This brings Kumail into contact with Emily’s parents (Holly Hunter and Ray Romano), who aren’t sure about the young man, or whether he ought to be around after he broke their daughter’s heart.

There are moments during The Big Sick where you may be tempted to think it’s stretching credulity or taking a bit of a strange turn. However, with all of these oddities, it turns out they’re in the movie because they happened in real-life.

The plot is a fictionalised take of Kumail Nanjiani courtship with his now wife Emily V. Gordon, who then worked together on the script. It means that when Emily suddenly falls into a coma, which initially comes across as a tiny bit strange and convenient (especially at the point it comes in the movie), it’s because the real Emily had a serious, life-threatening illness.

The couple took three years to write the script, with the likes of Judd Apatow giving them notes to help them hone the story and dialogue. That extended writing period and the sense that neither of them put their own ego above the story, allows it to be a sharp, clever and sometimes very funny movie. Even when it turns darker in the second half, it still retains its sense of humour.

The screenplay also realises that there are moments when looking for a filmic ‘truth’ is more important than just echoing the actual events and character. That results in some smart fictionalisation, such as making Emily’s movie parents different to her real ones. It allows the movie to more effectively compare and contrast Emily’s American parents with Kumail’s Pakistani ones in an interesting, intelligent way. The movie never really criticises either parents, instead deftly showing why their very different experiences of the world make them see things in different ways. That in turn helps illuminate why the culture clash for their children initially seems so intractable.

The movie challenges stereotypes about Pakistanis and Muslims in often humorous ways. It doesn’t hide the challenges or suggest everything is perfect, but constantly reminds the viewer that there may be different ways to look at things, and that underneath the cultural differences, the human emotions are the same.

For example with arranged marriages, the western stereotype would suggest they were always about forcing someone to marry against their will, as the family’s ‘honour’ and social standing are more important than the happiness of the couple. Here though, it’s clear that for right or wrong, Kumail’s parents genuinely believe it’s what’s best for their child and will make him happy in the long run. Equally, his mother’s obsession with introducing him to single Pakistani girls is far removed from the stereotype of the people getting married having no say in the matter and barely meeting the person beforehand.

The film is smart enough to say that while with arranged marriages and other things, they may be different and/or more complex than we might initially think, that doesn’t mean there aren’t problems and pressures on a human level. That includes Kumail being somewhat trapped between his own desires and those of his parents, as well as a very smart scene involving one of the women Kumail’s mother has introduced him to. She talks about the pressure to marry and weight of expectation she feels. It’s written in a way that acknowledges the difficulties may be similar but more pronounced for women. It’s a vital moment as it stops these women just being props for a man’s story.

It’s one of the things that helps set the movie apart, that it is acutely aware of the issues of race, gender, religion, and even level of funniness that it’s dealing with, and has empathy for all of them. Not just that but it also knows that to promote understanding it can’t get too bogged down in all this. Instead it finds the humour in the situations, helped by a very charming, self-deprecating turn from Silicon Valley star Kumail Nanjiani.

Overall Verdict: Many films are said to be ‘bittersweet’, and that’s very true here. The Big Sick doesn’t hide from the darkness of some of the issues it raises, but it also looks hard for the humour and empathy, showing a different side to Muslims and interracial relationships than the mainstream is used to.

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

Special Features:
A Personal Journey: The Making Of The Big Sick
The Real Story
The Bigger Sick: Stick Around for More Laughs
The Big Sick: The Other Stuff
2017 SXSW Film Festival Panel
Cast&Filmmaker Commentary
Deleted Scenes

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Kumail Nanjiani, Zoe Kazan, Holly Hunter, Ray Romano, Anupam Kher  DIRECTORS: Michael Showalter  

The Wall (Blu-ray Review) – Aaron Taylor-Johnson is trapped by a sniper

19th November 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, John Cena, Laith Nakli
Directed By: Doug Liman
Running Time: 89 mins
BBFC Certificate: 15
UK Release Date: November 20th 2017 (UK)

Our Score

It’s 2007 and two American soldiers – Isaac (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Matthews (John Cena) – have been sent in after a group of people working on a pipeline in Iraq are gunned down. Convinced the gunmen have left, they head down to the bodies, only to come under fire from a sniper. Mathews is hit in the gut and collapses in the open. Isaac meanwhile is shot in the knee but manages to take shelter behind a ramshackle stone wall.

Losing blood and with no long-range radio, Isaac is trapped – unable to move away from the small wall without getting shot. Things get even more complicated when the sniper comes onto the short-range radio, demanding Isaac talk to him and threatening to shoot Mathews in the face if he doesn’t. [Read more…]

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, John Cena, Laith Nakli  DIRECTORS: Doug Liman  
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