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Raw (DVD Review)

13th August 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Garance Marillier, Ella Rumpf, Rabah Nait Oufella, Laurent Lucas, Joana Preiss
Directed By: Julia Ducournau
Running Time: 94 mins
BBFC Certificate: 18
UK Release Date: August 14th 2017 (UK)

Our Score

Just occasionally I watch a movie and genuinely can’t decide whether it’s a case of the Emperor having no clothes. Raw is one of those films.

On its festival debut the Belgian movie was met with a lot off buzz, as well as talk of people walking out and fainting because of its intensity and levels of gore. It now has a 90% Fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, which is pretty remarkable for a ‘horror’ movie, but I’m not completely sure whether it deserves it or not. [Read more…]

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American Gods – Season 1 (DVD Review)

30th July 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Ricky Whittle, Ian McShane, Emily Browning, Pablo Schreiber, Gillian Anderson
Directed By: Various
Running Time: 450 mins
BBFC Certificate: 18
UK Release Date: July 31st 2017

Our Score

Quite a lot of people have tried to get Neil Gaiman’s 2001 novel to the screen, but it’s never happened until now. Despite being beloved by a lot of people, you can see why the money men were nervous about ponying up the cash for a film or TV version, as the book is often strange, surreal and quite graphic, with various tangents and peculiar moments that could be unintentionally funny in the wrong hands.

However, executive producer Bryan Fuller was the right man to hire, as with the likes of Hannibal and Pushing Daisies he’s shown an affinity with unusual, multi-layered tale that often verge towards the surreal. He certainly brings that to American Gods, which is often perplexing and weird, and will annoy some due to the fact it obstinately refuses to fully explain what going on. [Read more…]

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ACTORS: Ricky Whittle, Ian McShane, Emily Browning, Pablo Schreiber, Gillian Anderson  

Ghost In The Shell (DVD/VoD Review)

30th July 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Scarlett Johansson, Pilou Asbæk, Takeshi Kitano, Juliette Binoche, Michael Pitt
Directed By: Rupert Sanders
Running Time: 107 mins
BBFC Certificate: 12
UK Release Date: July 31st 2017 (DVD), July 24th 2017 (VoD)

Our Score

Despite being in development for years, the live-action Hollywood movie version of Ghost In The Shell seemed to have the cards stacked against it. Some questioned whether Snow White & The Huntsman’s Rupert Sanders was the right director for the job, and many more felt that casting a white actress in a traditionally Japanese role smacked of whitewashing. Sadly, when the movie arrived, it didn’t get the sort of critical and commercial reaction that might have been able to overturn the issues surrounding it.

The movie opens in the near future with the brain of a young woman being transferred into a robot body (Johannsson) – the first of her kind. The android is named Major, and with memories of being nearly drowned by terrorists, she becomes part of a special team tasked with particularly difficult, often technological crimes.

Someone is hacking the brains of cyber-augmented humans that work for the government-funded Hanka Robotics. As Major gets deeper into the investigation, she begins to learn things about her own past, which calls into question everything she thinks she knows.

While not as bad as some cinema reviews might have led you to believe, Ghost In The Shell is a movie that feels like was on the way to being good, but never quite got there. Sanders obviously spent a lot of time trying to create the look and feel on the film’s universe, but while it results in some impressive and very pretty individual shots and sequences, the overall impression is of a low-rent Blade Runner, where looking nice is more important than logic.

It gets to the point where the script begins to feel like it’s contorting itself to get from one thing the makers thought would look cool to another, without too much thought about how it does it. There is an attempt to provide a bit of depth to what is going on as Major heads deeper into an existential crisis and meets Michael Pitt’s villain, but Ghost In The Shell seems to think is profound is essentially the first plot and most basic ideas someone would think of when provided with this set-up.

Even the way it tries to get around the whitewashing arguments (which it’s clear the makers expected due to the way it’s handled), are less well-thought out than the movie believes it is. Indeed, it might actually be even more insulting than just not bringing it into the mix at all.

There are some good things though, such as Pilou Asbæk as Batou, who’s a lot of fun as the second in command of Major’s Unit, while Takeshi Kitano brings a slice still gravitas as Chief Daisuke Aramaki. Some of the action set pieces are well put together, and Johansson herself once more shows off her impressive action chops, while putting in a creditable performance as a robot with vague memories of a previous life.

There will also be more than a few straight men who’ll appreciate the fact her outfits are designed to make her look as naked as possible while she’s actually wearing a full body suit. They may like to pretend she has to look like that due to the invisibility tech in her clothes, but the designer definitely had sexualisation more than practicality on their mind (although, to be fair, it is accurate to the anime/manga it’s based on).

Despite its problems, Ghost In The Shell is actually not too bad a watch, but like quite a lot of Hollywood films, you can’t escape the sensation that despite a gargantuan budget and thousands of people involved in its creation, the movie is constantly struggling to reach its potential. And as so often, it comes up short in ways that should have been easy to sort out. As the long-lived manga has shown, there’s a huge amount of potential in Ghost In The Shell, but this film spends so much time getting excited about individual visual moments that it never succeeds in making what goes in-between work properly.

Overall Verdict: A ghost of what it might have been in the shell of something better. It’s a watchable if problematic movie, which from beginning to end could have been a lot better.

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Scarlett Johansson, Pilou Asbæk, Takeshi Kitano, Juliette Binoche, Michael Pitt  DIRECTORS: Rupert Sanders  FILMS: Ghost In The Shell  

Logan (DVD Review)

7th July 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, Dafne Keen, Boyd Holbrook, Stephen Merchant
Directed By: James Mangold
Running Time: 137 mins
BBFC Certificate: 15
UK Release Date: July 10th 2017 (UK)

Our Score

There have been increasing grumblings in some circles that too many superhero movies feel like they’ve come off a production line and are all pretty much the same as one another. Included in that grumbling has been Fox’s X-Men movies, but in the last couple of years they’ve also produced two standalone movies set in that universe – Deadpool and now Logan – that have really felt different and have shown that there are all sorts of possibilities in the world of comic books.

Although Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine has had two previous non X-Men movies, this is a very different beast to the earlier film, having more in common with a western or a road movie than a traditional superhero film.

Set decades after previous films set in the X-Men universe, there are now very few mutants left and those that exist aren’t doing too well. Wolverine/Logan is working as a driver, and his health is failing him. He’s become increasingly grizzled, and his ability to heal from injury is weakening. He’s also looking after Professor Xavier, who’s now in his 90s, has a faltering memory and a condition that means he keeps losing control of his powers – with potentially deadly consequences – unless he’s kept medicated.

Logan is bitter, angry and utterly disillusioned with everything mutant and particularly Professor X’s highfalutin ideas. However, his desire just to be left alone is forced to change when he has to look after a young, apparently mute, mutant girl called Laura (Dafne Keen), who has powers that are very similar to his own. He must take her to North Dakota, so she can then escape to Canada, but an evil corporation and their ‘reavers’, led by Pierce (a genuinely menacing Boyd Holbrook), are determined to hunt them down, no matter what.

Logan is so different to most superhero movies that when it does do something ‘typical’ of that sort of film, it feels oddly inappropriate. That said, despite its unusual style, it still provides plenty of action, excitement and some great fight scenes. And as this isn’t saddled with having to have a PG-13 rating, there’s a lot more swearing, bloody violence and decapitations than we’ve seen from Wolverine and co. before.

But more than just action and violence, the movie is interested in the characters, exploring what has happened to them after they’ve been broken by age, and a world that has turned out the opposite of what they’d hoped. Throughout Hugh Jackman’s time as Wolverine, his character has hinted towards a world-weary nihilism and desire not to connect with the world, but it’s always been in ways where it’s made clear to the audience he doesn’t really mean it. Here though he’s genuinely given up, as has his body.

Even his connection to Professor X. seems more of an obligation than anything else. However, he ends up on a cross-country trip with what is essentially a surrogate family he doesn’t want – grandfather (Professor X), father (Logan), and daughter (Laura).

Most films would just treat him as if he’s being stupid for not wanting this family, but here you can see his point. You can perfectly understand why he feels being close to him, either physically or emotionally, is a bad idea. His is a world that’s destructive and violent, even if he doesn’t want it to be, and those who show him kindness tend to end up far worse for their troubles. Even by the end it leaves open the question as to whether the need for human connection and family can be as much a dangerous compulsion as something good for your life (at least in certain circumstances).

Much of the film is dark and quite gritty. It’s a melancholic look at characters that over the course of 17 years we’ve come to know in various guises, and a rather brave move on the part of the franchise to say that despite everything they’ve done, they have failed and their only hope is a small amount of personal redemption. Cleverly, despite the difference from their earlier appearances, the film is consistent with both Logan and Xavier as characters and who they’d be in a situation where they’re old and it’s all gone wrong. It’s thoughtful, sometimes surprisingly moving and a strong send-off for what both Jackman and Stewart have suggested will be their final X-Men movie.

It may not have a constant cavalcade of OTT special-effects, massive disasters and cities crumbling to dust as many of these movies do, but what it has instead is heart, thought and strong action when it needs it. It’s a film that understands that underneath the sci-fi/magical trappings of comic books, it’s a way to look at the issues of the world from a sideways perspective. It allows Logan to take on ideas of family, society, power, and even immigration in unusual and unexpectedly powerful ways.

Overall Verdict: After 17 years and two previous standalone movie, Wolverine finally gets the movie he deserves, which also acts to show just what a superhero film can be with a little thought.

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

Special Features:
Deleted Scenes (with optional commentary)
Audio Commentary With Director James Mangold

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, Dafne Keen, Boyd Holbrook, Stephen Merchant  DIRECTORS: James Mangold  FILMS: Logan  

The Hippopotamus (DVD Review)

7th July 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Roger Allam, Matthew Modine, Tommy Knight, Fiona Shaw, Tim McInnery
Directed By: Jon Jencks
Running Time: 89 mins
BBFC Certificate: 15
UK Release Date: July 3rd 2017 (UK)

Our Score

Stephen Fry’s debut novel, The Hippopotamus, has gained a lot of fans since its debut in 1994. It would seem like a good candidate for a film version. Sadly though, what we’ve got is rather limp.

Ted Wallace (Roger Allam) is a famous poet who hasn’t written anything for years, and whose very vocal cynicism causes him to lose his main means of support – as a theatre critic. In order to make money he agrees to go to the grand house of his former friend, Michael Logan (Matthew Modine), under the guise of visiting his godson, David (Tommy Knight). [Read more…]

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ACTORS: Roger Allam, Matthew Modine, Tommy Knight, Fiona Shaw, Tim McInnery  DIRECTORS: Jon Jencks  

Live By Night (DVD Review)

23rd May 2017 By Tim Isaac

Starring: Ben Affleck, Elle Fanning, Chris Messina, Zoe Saldana, Chris Cooper
Directed By: Ben Affleck
Running Time: 123 mins
BBFC Certificate: 15
UK Release Date: May 22nd 2017 (UK)

Our Score

Live By Night has been Ben Affleck’s passion project for several years. He started working on the adaptation of Dennis Lehane’s novel since shortly after it was published in 2012. However, it kept getting pushed back as be strove to prove he was a director worth the film’s hefty budget, and also while he honed the script (yes, he wrote the screenplay too, as well as directing and starring).

After Argo won the Best Picture Oscar, Warner let him loose on Live By Night, but to be honest, it might have been worth delaying it a little longer and bringing someone in who could have tightened the script and made more of the themes that should have tied it together. [Read more…]

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Ben Affleck, Elle Fanning, Chris Messina, Zoe Saldana, Chris Cooper  DIRECTORS: Ben Affleck  FILMS: Live By Night  
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