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Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation Teaser – The full title is announced and Tom Cruise is back

22nd March 2015 By Tim Isaac


A new Mission: Impossible film is due out at the end of July and until now it’s slightly be flying under the radar, but now it’s ready to announce that it’s full title will be Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation and give us a teaser trailer.

A full trailer will be available tomorrow!

Here’s the synopsis: ‘Directed by Christopher McQuarrie, the film reunites its star Tom Cruise with Simon Pegg, Jeremy Renner and Ving Rhames, and adds to the cast Rebecca Ferguson and Alec Baldwin. Ethan and team take on their most impossible mission yet, eradicating the Syndicate, an International rogue organization, as highly skilled as they are, committed to destroying the IMF.’

It’s due out July 31st.

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Mommy – Xavier Dolan returns with a powerful tale

19th March 2015 By Tim Isaac


Just when you think you’ve had enough of well-meaning films featuring disabilities and heroic struggles along comes one that completely restores your faith. Xavier Dolan’s film is a tour de force, an emotional power-punch that slowly makes its way into your head and then into your heart. It may deal with a lot of clichés but finds a winning way to tell its story.

Anne Dorval is Die, a handsome but tired-looking woman who has lost her husband three years ago and is now stuck with looking after her son Steve (Antoine-Olivier Pilon). He has severe ADHD, a problem when he is such a strapping lad on the brink of discovering sex, and he loves a drink, a smoke and a fight. Die rescues him from an institution where he has apparently started a fire, and she determines to make a new life for them both. But boy, is he a handful, constantly swearing, eyeing up girls and unable to sit still to study.

Just to complicate matters, Die loses her job when her old boss, who she flirted with, is replaced by a battle-axe of a woman, so she moves the two of them into a cheap, grimy flat. There they squabble and Steve dabbles in petty stealing, until into their lives comes Kyla (Suzanne Clement), a seemingly kindly neighbour. She is a former teacher so traumatised by an unspecified event that she has a severe speech impediment, a stammer and stutter. She and Die become unlikely friends – Kyla is painfully shy, conservatively dressed and nervous, Die is brash, brassy, loud, fag permanently on her lips and tattoos proudly displayed. A glass of chardonnay is all it takes for them to bond, then Kyla appears to lose her stammer when talking to Steve. She begins to tutor him, and the boy responds to her gentle manners, but his past is always going to catch up with him.

This is melodrama writ large, with Dolan’s camera getting literally into people’s faces, especially Steve’s when he has one of his many fits, saliva spurting, eyes bulging, swear words firing out of him like someone with Tourette’s. Yet somehow the film slowly weaves its spell; his helplessness, Die’s overbearing motherly love, and Kyla’s quiet concern, all forming an intricate emotional web. Mommy, as the title suggests, tips towards hints of incest. Steve constantly tests his mother’s love and throws a hissy fit when she has a date with another man. Equally there is a key moment when he taunts Kyla and she responds devastatingly, hinting that his illness may have been set off by an emotional trauma involving his father.

If it all sounds a little overbearing and full-on, well, it is. There are probably a couple of meltdown scenes too many, and sequences of Steve on his skateboard listening to music are overblown – the soundtrack is a little cheesy to say the least. A good 20 minutes could have been trimmed (as issue that’s been true of some of Dolan’s other movies), but these are minor complaints.

What really makes it a success are the stunning performances of the two women. Dorval as Die is a force of nature – all cheap skirts, thigh-length boots, tattoos and lipstick, a street fighter who believes her sexuality is her only weapon but who even doubts that, constantly referring to her flat chest. She is clearly no-one’s fool. She actually gets some work as a translator of children’s books, but with a fragile set-up as she and her son have, it’s never going to last. Clement as Kyla is equally tremendous, a nervous wreck of a woman – the source of her trauma is never revealed, although her husband is a creepy presence throughout. Plucking at her hair, pulling at her clothes, her basic decency shines through even when she is groping for a word.

Visually the film is a treat, the warm glow of Canada in the autumn a constant backdrop to the shouting, and Dolan has uses a 1:1 ratio to give the film a ‘square’ look, which, after a few minutes of adjusting, actually adds to the claustrophobic nature.

Overall verdict: Thoroughly gripping, harrowing look at life as a single mum with a troublesome teen which is much warmer and funnier than the theme would suggest. A film that takes its time then throws a huge emotional knockout blow.

Reviewer: Mike Martin

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Joseph Gordon-Levitt Takes On Fraggle Rock Movie – He’ll star and produce

19th March 2015 By Tim Isaac

For over a decade now there’s been talk of a live-action Fraggle Rock movie, but despite a lot of talk it’s never actually seemed close to happening. However sometimes it needs the clout of a big name to get things happening, and hopefully that’ll happen now as Variety reports that Joseph Gordon-Levitt has signed up to produce and star.

Gordon-Levitt says, “The first screen personas I ever loved were Henson creations, first on ‘Sesame Street,’ and then on ‘Fraggle Rock. Jim Henson’s characters make you laugh and sing, but they’re also layered, surprising, and wise. From Oscar the Grouch, to Yoda, to the Fraggles. I’ve never stopped loving his work, even as a young frisky man, and on into adulthood. Collaborating with Lisa Henson makes me confident we can do something that Jim would have loved. I’m grateful and excited to be working with New Regency on this project.”

There’s not too much info other than that, such as who might direct and whether they’re bringing on new writers, or indeed when we might get to see the movie. There’s also no info about who Joseph might play, or indeed whether he’ll voice a Fraggle or be a live-action character.

Hopefully though the addition of Gordon-Levitt means the film will actually go somewhere this time.

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Horns (DVD) – Daniel Radcliffe has a horny problem

18th March 2015 By Tim Isaac


Horns is a certainly a bit of an odd film, not least because it can’t quite decide what it is – comedy, horror, fable, fantasy, thriller, murder mystery, drama – flitting between them all with little sense of consistency. It’s probably this difficulty in pigeonholing the movie that has limited its audience so far, but in many ways that’s a shame, as while very uneven it is oddly entertaining and just a little beguiling.

Daniel Radcliffe is Ig Perrish, whose girlfriend (Juno Temple) has been murdered and everyone in his small town has decided he’s the killer, despite there not being enough evidence to charge him with anything. Things get a little bizarre when he wakes up one morning to discover he’s grown horns out of his forehead, and that he now has the power to get people to admit to all the things they’d normally keep hidden away (he discovers a lot of these things involve what they’d really like to do to him, as they believe he’s gotten away with murder).

Ig quickly realises that this bizarre turn of events may give him the opportunity to find who the real murderer is, as if he gets to the right person, they won’t be able to help themselves but to confess.

It’s an odd idea but a potentially fascinating one. Horns knows that it has massive amounts of potential and it certainly tries to explore Ig’s horny problem, even if it does it in a rather uneven way. One moments it’s playing it as broad comedy where it feels almost as if it’s fallen into a Kafka-esque absurdist comedy fantasy, and the next it’s turned much darker and more disturbing, before throwing in some slightly confused religious ideas about vengeance.

Horns never quite figures out what it’s doing with all these things, but I nevertheless enjoyed it, helped by Radcliffe, who handles the movie’s oddities extremely well and keeps you on side no matter what weirdness is surrounding him. It’s also true that while the murder mystery isn’t exactly the most complex of whodunits, it’s well done and acts as a good spine to help keep the movie on track. It also has quite a few extremely well done scenes, particularly those involving Ig having no choice but to hear the unvarnished truth from all those he meets.

Things go completely over the top at the end when it tries to bring its themes and ideas to fruition. Because it’s not 100% sure what those ideas are, it comes across as overblown and more than a little silly. Thankfully what’s gone before is good enough that this isn’t a complete disaster.

It’s also a little odd that despite being set in America, it has a largely British cast (Daniel Radcliffe, Juno Temple, Joe Anderson & Max Minghella), a French director (Alexandre Aja) and was filmed in Canada. It’s certainly very international but it is a little peculiar.

Ultimately despite being enjoyable it’s difficult not to feel that Horns is a little bit of a missed opportunity as the premise offers so much potential for a movie that is both entertaining, complex and intellectually fascinating. It manages the first of those but rather botches the other two despite putting in plenty of effort.

Overall Verdict: Horns has quite a few problems and could have done with a stronger sense of what it was doing and why its oddities are necessary, but even so it pulls you in and keeps you wondering what’s go to happen even while you wonder whether you ought to care.

Special Features:
Behind The Scenes
Interviews

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

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Win Silicon Valley – Season 1 On DVD! – The comedy series is up for grabs

18th March 2015 By Tim Isaac

The socially challenged underdogs of the lucrative world of tech start-ups are finally uncovered in the painfully funny SILICON VALLEY: THE COMPLETE FIRST SERIES released on Blu-ray and DVD from the 23rd March 2015, courtesy of HBO. And we’ve got three DVD copies to give away in this competition.

From the offbeat mind of Mike Judge (Office Space, Idiocracy), this critically-acclaimed HBO comedy takes viewers inside the high-tech gold rush of modern Silicon Valley. Inspired by Judge’s own experiences as a Silicon Valley engineer in the 80’s, the show follows the trials and tribulations of awkward computer programmer Richard (Thomas Middleditch – The Wolf of Wall Street), who lives in a “Hacker Hostel” along with his friends Big Head (Josh Brener – The Big Bang Theory), Gilfoyle (Martin Starr – This Is The End), and Dinesh (Kumail Nanjiani – Sex Tape).

Under the watchful eye of Erlich (T.J. Miller), a dotcom millionaire who lets them stay in his house for free (as long as he gets a 10% stake in their projects), the friends struggle to break into the elusive and lucrative market. Richard is stuck in a part-time job at tech company Hooli, and his obscure website, Pied Piper, is going nowhere fast. But when a colleague realises just how valuable the site’s compression algorithm is, Richard finds himself caught in the middle of an extreme bidding war between Hooli founder Gavin Belson (Matt Ross – American Horror Story) and independent billionaire venture capitalist Peter Gregory (Christopher Evan Welch – The Master).

To be in with a chance of winning one of the three copies of SILICON VALLEY: THE COMPLETE FIRST SERIES on DVD 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 April 1st, 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 April 1st, 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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First Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2 Poster Revealed – Plus the logo revealed in a teaser

18th March 2015 By Tim Isaac


The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1 may have only just arrived on DVD, but Lionsgate is already thinking to the future and the release of the final film in the series later this year.

They’ve now released the first poster and teaser/logo for the film (via EW), and it probably won’t be a shock to find that it’s reminiscent of a lot of the earlier films, with an image of a Mockingjay, but taken from a slightly different angle.

It’s a good reminder though – as if we needed it – that later this year we’ll be able to see what happens to Katniss and her allies as they go up against the evil Capitol in a final showdown.

Mockingjay Part 2 will be in cinema November 20th.

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