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A Little Chaos (DVD) – Kate Winslet takes on Versailles

24th August 2015 By Tim Isaac


It’s 17th Century France and King Louis XIV (Alan Rickman) is on the throne. He wants a revamp of the Versailles gardens and hires architect Andre Le Notre (Matthias Schoenaerts) to build it. However, he needs help from a landscape artist and so brings in widower Sabine De Barra (Kate Winslet).

They have a few initial problems as he likes classical geometry and straight lines, while she is more forward-thinking and asymmetrical in her design (metaphor alert). Despite this, the two begin to fall for one another. This should be okay as Andre has an open marriage, however his wife (Helen McRory) isn’t keen on the feelings he develops for Sabine and plans to destroy what they are creating together.

Directed and co-written by Alan Rickman, A Little Chaos suffers from the strengths and weaknesses of quite a few other movies helmed by actors. It looks beautiful and the likes of Winslet and Schoenaerts are given great space and consideration to show off their skills (although Rickman himself seems a little distracted trying to act and direct at the same time). However, as a piece of storytelling it’s rather hit and miss, partly because it has so much respect for what the actors are doing that it defers to them rather than pulling the whole thing into something cohesive.

Its penchant for rather stodgy melodrama and slightly cheap storytelling devises undermine the good work going on elsewhere. A Little Chaos could have been far worse as it does have a fair amount of charm, a great cast and it’s never dreadful, but sadly it’s also duller than it should be considering the talent of all involved. It results in a movie that by the end will elicit polite applause but nobody is going to want to give it a standing ovation.

Overall Verdict: A Little Chaos looks beautiful and it’s obviously a labour of love for Alan Rickman, but unfortunately despite his best efforts and a great cast, the film is a little stodgy and never fully comes to life.

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

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Kill Your Friends Trailer – Nicholas Hoult enters the 1990s British music scene

24th August 2015 By Tim Isaac


Synopsis: When the road to success is littered with losers and even your closest colleagues are desperate for you to fail, what would you do to make it to the top?

London, 1997; the British music industry is on a winning streak. Britpop bands Blur, Oasis, Radiohead rule the airwaves and Cool Britannia is in full swing. 27-year-old hit chasing A&R man Steven Stelfox (Nicholas Hoult) is slashing and burning his way through the music business, a world where ‘no one knows anything’ and where careers are made and broken by chance and the fickle tastes of the general public – “Yeah, those animals”.

Fuelled by greed, ambition and inhuman quantities of drugs, Stelfox searches for his next hit record amid a relentless orgy of self-gratification. Created by an industry that demands success at any price, as the hits dry up and the industry begins to change, Stelfox takes the concept of ‘killer tunes’ to a murderous new level in a desperate attempt to salvage his career.

Kill Your Friends is a dark, satirical and hysterically funny evisceration of the Nineties music business. A time and place populated by frauds, charlatans and bluffers; where ambition is a higher currency than talent, and where it seems anything can be achieved – as long as you want it badly enough.

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Child 44 (Blu-ray) – Tom Hardy investigates child murder in Soviet Russia

23rd August 2015 By Tim Isaac


When it was first announced Child 44 seemed like a good bet – based on a hit book, directed by Daniel Espinosa (Safe House, Easy Money) and a really good cast. However, when it arrived in cinemas it was met with bad reviews and made hardly any money at the box office.

I’m not entirely sure where all the animosity came from though, as while it has quite a few problems it’s certainly tense, uneasy and very watchable.

Set in post-World War II Soviet Russia, Tom Hardy is Leo Demidov, an investigator for the feared MGB who roots out traitors for Stalin. The organisation is judge, jury and executioner – and it extracts ways to find guilt in everyone they arrest. It’s an era of massive paranoia and one where deviating from the official line on something can be a death sentence.

Leo discovers evidence that someone is killing children, although his superiors tell him this is impossible (officially at least) as Stalin has said that murder is a capitalist disease.

The purges of ‘traitors’ strikes close to home when Leo is asked to denounce his own wife, Raisa (Noomi Rapace), and when he refuses they are exiled from Moscow. He then discovers that the murders aren’t just happening in the capital. Leo decides to investigate, even though he is now persona non grata and the authorities have no interest in admitting there’s a problem, let alone finding the killer – as there are no murderers in paradise.

I wonder whether part of the problem with the film in the cinema was understanding the thick Russian accents all the actors use, as it does take a while to get used to even on Blu-ray (to be honest some people may want to put the subtitles on). And it is undoubtedly true that despite a penchant for extended exposition there are quite a few sections where it’s difficult to work out exactly what’s going on and why. Even here though you can always pick up the general gist.

I’ll also be the first to admit that it never quite gets to grips with the motivations for why people act the way they do or how the Soviet Union functions in the way it does, beyond a few easy pointers to the effects of World War II on the Russian psyche, and that it’s a paradise for brutes. This would have been helped if Joel Kinnaman’s Vasili wasn’t such a ridiculous pantomime villain, as it tends to undermine the reality of the situation, as well as that of a character who could have been the most fascinating in the entire movie.

However, beyond this there’s a lot that’s far more successful. The performances are good and Espinosa certainly succeeds in creating a relentlessly dark atmosphere – indeed at times it’s a little too dark, as it gives you little hint as to why anyone would believe Soviet ideals were worth fighting for, despite the fact many people did. There’s a real tension at the film’s heart of people scrabbling about in the mud (literally at the end), desperately trying to do more than merely survive by living an endless series of what they know are lies.

Some have criticised the film for being a thriller without thrills, which is rather unfair. It’s more that where action in other films might be described as exciting, here it is tense and dark. I have to say that despite all the negative things I’d heard I was pulled in by Child 44 and while the 137-minute running time could have done with a little cutting (especially as so many of the things that are difficult to understand could have been removed without seriously affecting the plot), it kept me on the edge of my seat.

Sure, some of the plotting is convenient and a bit over the top, but certainly not more so than most mainstream thrillers. Those who’ve read the novel seem particularly aggrieved by the movie, but as I’ve not read it, I could enjoy the film on its own. Ultimately you can’t watch this as a look at the truth of Soviet Russia, as it’s not accurate (and isn’t really trying all that hard to be realistic on this score), and you shouldn’t be expecting a movie like Taken either. However, if you want something dark and tense – even if it’s rather confused about what the film is for – it certainly works. It also raises interesting ideas about whether a serial killer who murders because he is compelled to is actually better than somebody who chooses to end lives based on something they don’t really believe in.

Overall Verdict: Dark, tense and with some great performances, Child 44 may be a bit confused and rough around the edges, but it’s also intriguing and watchable, with more than a few troubling ideas.

Special Features:
‘Reflections Of History: Recreating The World Of Child 44′ Featurette

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

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Win A Little Chaos Poster Signed By Alan Rickman & Kate Winslet! – Plus Blu-rays

23rd August 2015 By Tim Isaac

Reunited for the first time since Sense and Sensibility, British acting royalty Alan Rickman directs Academy Award winner Kate Winslet in the wonderfully romantic period drama, A LITTLE CHAOS, available on digital platforms from 10th August, 2015, and on Blu-ray and DVD from 24th August, 2015, courtesy of Lionsgate Home Entertainment.

We’ve teamed up with them to give one lucky winner A Little Chaos poster signed by Kate Winslet and Alan Rickman and a Blu-ray of the film, with two runners up receiving a Blu-ray.

When brilliantly talented landscape gardener Madame Sabine De Barra (Kate Winslet – Labor Day, Revolutionary Road) finds herself an unlikely candidate for landscape architect of the still-to-be-completed Palace of Versailles, she is thrown into the bewildering world of the court of King Louis XIV (Alan Rickman – Lee Daniels’ The Butler, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows). She has little time for the classical, ordered designs of her employer, the famous architect Le Nôtre (Matthias Schoenaerts – Far From The Madding Crowd, Suite Francaise), but as she works on her creation, she finds herself irresistibly drawn to him, while attempting to negotiate the perilous rivalries and intricate etiquette of the court.

To be in with a chance of winning the A Little Chaos prizes that we’ve got to give away, sign in to the site below (or click here to register) and answer the multiple choice question (see below for more details on how to enter). The competition closes on September 6th, 2015, so get answering and good luck!

HOW TO ENTER: This competition is open to all registered Movie Muser members who live in the UK. It’s free to register and obligation free, and once you’ve signed up to the site, you’ll be able to enter any other competitions we run, plus post comments, join in on the forum or even have your own film blog. CLICK HERE TO REGISTER. If you’re already a member, sign in below and answer the multiple choice question in the grey box, click enter, and you’re done!

This competition closes at 11.59pm on September 6th, 2015. Competition open to UK residents aged 15 or over. (For general competition terms and conditions, privacy policy and site T&Cs, CLICK HERE)

The Prize Finder – UK Competitions

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Mistress America – Noah Baumbach returns with Greta Gerwig

21st August 2015 By Tim Isaac


Welcome back Noah Baumbach. After the slight misfire of While We’re Young, which fizzed for an hour before losing pace and petering out, his new film is a complete bullseye. All of his usual tics are present and correct, but infused with a new energy and perfect pacing which works perfectly. It’s a complete treat from start to finish, maybe because it sees him working again with his real-life partner Gerwig, who puts in a performance of fantastic range and depth.

It’s Lola Kirke who takes the lead though, playing Tracy, a student newly arrived in New York City and finding it very lonely. Her room-mate is sullen, her fellow English students are poseurs, her lecturers no help, and as she has no money she is cannot run with the moneyed students. She also clearly has talent as a short story writer.

Luckily her mum announces she is getting remarried and her husband to be has a daughter, Brooke (Gerwig) who lives in Times Square. They hook up, and Tracy finds the women she thinks she wants to be. Brooke is effervescent, kooky, full of ideas, and fun to be with. She has a cool flat, plays vinyl records, dances with a band, has flings even though she has a boyfriend. To Tracy she seems like a breath of fresh air, but before long the cracks begin to show. Brooke has had her one big idea stolen by her best friend, who has also stolen her former boyfriend. So together they go to the country to sort it out, along with Tracy’s student pal who she has a crush on and his jealous girlfriend.

What is so impressive here is the film takes on the form of a screwball comedy, especially in the country house scene in which new characters are introduced, all interacting with each other at lightning speed with witty one liners, but it never loses touch with the seriousness of it all. Gerwig’s Brooke is a complete triumph, a mass of energy but with a dark heart, dreadfully insecure, worried about her future and realising her life is trickling away into nothing. When she gets the chance to pitch her idea for a business venture she chokes, and only Tracy bothers to help her out. Her relationship with Tracy is brilliantly realised, two “sisters” who slowly realise they have very little in common and one, inevitably, which will end in betrayal.

Kirke is the equal of Gerwig, a desperately lonely girl, almost incapable of empathising with anyone, talented but begrudging of praise, and dressed in a dowdy student uniform of baggy jumper and puffa jacket. One throwaway line encapsulates the film perfectly, when a minor character refers to Tracy as “the young one”, which Gerwig responds to with outrage. It’s funny and heartbreaking at the same time, much like the film as a whole.

Overall verdict: Cracking indie treat with a heart, terrific performances and beautifully written. Ultimately it’s about the fear of ageing and not leaving a legacy. Fantastic.

Reviewer: Mike Martin

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Victor Frankenstein Trailer – James McAvoy turns mad scientists with Daniel Radcliffe as his Igor

21st August 2015 By Tim Isaac


The world of film has dealt with Mary Shelley’s classic tale Frankenstein on numerous occasions, and now a fresh take which says it’s going to be a little different is on the way.

The first trailer for Victor Frankenstein has now arrived, which you can watch below.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘James McAvoy and Daniel Radcliffe star in a dynamic and thrilling twist on a legendary tale. Radical scientist Victor Frankenstein (James McAvoy) and his equally brilliant protégé Igor Strausman (Daniel Radcliffe) share a noble vision of aiding humanity through their groundbreaking research into immortality. But Victor’s experiments go too far, and his obsession has horrifying consequences. Only Igor can bring his friend back from the brink of madness and save him from his monstrous creation.’

The film is due out in the UK on December 4th.

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