Sep 13 2008

Elegy

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

Dir: Isabel Coixet
Writ: Nicholas Meyer based on book by Philip Roth

  • Ben Kingsley … David Kepesh
  • Penélope Cruz … Consuela Castillo
  • Dennis Hopper … George O’Hearn
  • Peter Sarsgaard … Kenneth Kepesh

Ben Kingsley & Penelope Cruz
IMDb ; OtherReviews

David Kepesh, sometime narrator of this film, is an ageing lecturer. Or an ageing Tom Cat, going from woman to woman in order to maintain his independence. And then Consuela comes to his class.

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Tags: 6 Stars, based on book, Ben Kingsley, bleak, character study, Dennis Hopper, depressing, Elegy, feminism, Isabel Coixet, looks pretty, nice touches, Nicholas Meyer, Penelope Cruz, Peter Sarsgaard, Philip Roth, R16

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Nov 11 2006

Marie Antoinette

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

Dir and Writ: Sofia Coppola

  • Kirsten Dunst - Marie-Antoinette
  • Marianne Faithfull - Maria Teresa
  • Steve Coogan - Ambassador Mercy
  • Jason Schwartzman - Louis XVI
  • Rip Torn - Louis XV
  • Asia Argento - Madame du Barry
  • Shirley Henderson - Aunt Sophie

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Tags: Asia Argento, Bored Now!, costume design, France - revolution, French royalty - Louis XV, French royalty - Louis XVI, French royalty - Marie-Antoinette, historical fiction, Jason Schwartzman, Kirsten Dunst, looks pretty, Marianne Faithful, Marie Antoinette, Rip Torn, Shirley Henderson, silly, Sofia Coppola, Steve Coogan

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Mar 05 2006

Mirrormask

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

  • Stephanie Leonidas - Helena
  • Gina McKee - Joanne
  • Rob Brydon - Helena’s Father/Prime Minister
  • Jason Barry - Valentine

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I’ll admit to being a Neil Gaiman fan, so I’ve been waiting for this film for quite a while, and although I try not read reviews of films I haven’t seen, I had read a few negative remarks about this film.

However, I am pleased to report that the film lived up to all my expectations.

Helena is a circus girl. Her father and mother run the world’s greatest “small Big top” but all Helena wants is to be a normal girl, to live in the real world. Not to have to deal with punters and put on a show, but to simply live her life. And as with any teenage girl she has arguments with her mother. And during one such argument her mother, Joanne, uses that old cliché “you’ll be the death of me”. Helena instantly responds that she wishes she was.

And it looks like she might get her wish, as that evening in the middle of the circus performance Joanne falls ill and is taken to hospital.

Ten days later she is still there, undergoing tests and about to be operated on, Helena is living with her nan, and the circus is about to break apart due to financial pressure. At this moment Helena finds herself transported to a strange world.

A world where everyone wears a mask, and thinks there is something wrong with her face. A world that is out of balance and where the shadows threaten everything.

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At first she believes this is all a dream, but gradually Helena comes to believe that this weird world is as real as her own, and even worse, that there is an imposter in her place back at home, in her real world.

I really enjoyed this film. There is wonderful sense of humour to much of the dialogue, Valentine in particular got quite a few laughs from the audience. But it is the look of the film that really commands attention. That combined with many of the strange, but wonderful, creatures. The monkey birds, for example are captivating, with their “bobbing” and “welcoming”. And the sphinx, wonderfully brought to life on the big screen.

All the actors do a great job, Stephanie Leonidas plays Helena perfectly, from the rebellious teenager aspect of her personality, to the worried daughter, and everything in between. Rob Brydon’s role isn’t the largest, but he still manages to make quite an impact, as the slightly too romantic father. But for me Jason Barry was marvelous. For the most part his character wears a mask, hiding most of his facial feelings, yet the viewer could still empathise with him.

The weakest part of the film is probably the storyline; a fantasy world in need of saving, a sense of not belonging, and of finding one’s place. All of these aren’t exactly the most original, but the way they are put together makes them new and interesting.

IMDb | Neil Gaiman’s Journal | The Art Of Dave McKean | SF Signal | Stainless Steel Droppings |

Tags: 9 Stars, Dave McKean, Gina McKee, Jason Barry, looks pretty, Mirrormask, Neil Gaiman, Rob Brydon, sff, Stephanie Leonidas, stylish

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Feb 03 2006

Memoirs of a Geisha

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

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  • Ziyi Zhang …. Sayuri
  • Youki Kudoh …. Pumpkin
  • Li Gong …. Hatsumomo
  • Ken Watanabe …. Chairman
  • Kôji Yakusho …. Nobu
  • Michelle Yeoh …. Mameha

In short, this is a film that is pretty to look at, but boring to watch.

Okay, I’ll say a bit more about it:
Based on the novel by Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha has been somewhat controversial. Some people complained about casting Chinese actors in the roles of Japanese women. And recently China banned it because, well I suppose because of their historical issues with Japan.
The film opens with two young sisters being sold by their father, one of whom is our heroine. I’m going to call her Sayuri, although she only gets this name later in the film. Sayuri ends up in a geisha house, and is mistreated by the head geisha, Hatsumomo, because of the possibility that she will grow up to be a rival to Hatsumomo.

Too much of the film is spent in her childhood. There is no tension in this entire period. We can’t hope that she escapes from the house because we know that she doesn’t. the film is called Memoirs of a Geisha afterall, not Memoirs of a someone who once spent some time in training to be a geisha.

But eventually Sayuri grows up, and is taken under Mameha’s wing. Mameha is Hatsumomo’s rival, and there is much bitching and snide comments between the two, and also between Hatsumomo and Sayuri, as Sayuri attempts to learn how to be geisha. But the comments are never quite bitchy enough, they don’t make an impact, although we do get the impression that Hatsumomo wishes looks really could kill.

One of the big problems I had with the film is that you just don’t care. You aren’t really invited into the world of the geisha’s, you are simply a distant onlooker. We never really know what a geisha is, apart from a skillful entertainer, and an artist.

There is quite a big deal made about the fact that being a geisha is not to be a prostitute. Yet they sell off their virginity. Getting money for sex means prostitution, doesn’t matter how classy you pretend to be.

And the whole romance thing with The Chairman was utterly boring to me. I mean, were we really supposed to believe that she fell in love with him when she was nine, and her feelings never altered? Then again I suppose it was meant to show her determination. Sayuri was so taken with his little act of kindness that she built him up and made him the goal of her future.

But all in all the film is too long, too distant, and this may be petty, but the accents annoyed me. I’d much prefered to have watched it subtitled in Japanese, although they probably would have had a problem with the cast not speaking the language then.

IMDb | Official Site | Confessions of a Movie Critic | Shanghai Birch | Entertain your Brain | Casadecasa

Tags: 5 Stars, Arthur Golden, based on book, Bored Now!, historical fiction, Japan, Kôji Yakusho, Ken Watanabe, Li Gong, looks pretty, Memoirs of a Geisha, Michelle Yeoh, Youki Kudoh, Ziyi Zhang

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Jan 08 2006

Brokeback Mountain

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

Brokeback Mountain

  • Heath Ledger - Ennis Del Mar
  • Jake Gyllenhaal - Jack Twist

In a way it is a pity that this film has received so much press coverage, it’d be interesting to watch it not knowing what was going to happen between Ennis and Jack. But it is pretty much known as the gay cowboy film by now, so that part of the plot isn’t going to take anyone by surprise.

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Tags: 8 Stars, Ang Lee, Brokeback Mountin, gay rights, happiness, Heath Ledger, Jake Gyllenhaal, live in the moment, looks pretty, romance, western

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Jul 05 2005

War of the Worlds

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

Dir: Stephen Spielberg
Writ: ]H.G. Wells, Josh Friedman, David Koepp

  • Tom Cruise …. Ray Ferrier
  • Dakota Fanning …. Rachel Ferrier
  • Justin Chatwin …. Robbie Ferrier
  • Tim Robbins …. Ogilvy


You know the way you go to see a film that you’ve heard is crap, you have these really low expectations so the film turns out to be quite good. Well, not in this case. I thought it was going to be crap, and was I ever right?
The start isn’t too bad. We see Tom “Brain Lesion” Cruise as a fairly crap parent. He’s not a bad Dad, he just isn’t good. He’s also an asshole, so you are sitting there waiting for him to “grow and learn” through the destruction of life as we know it.

The effects are great, the lightning, the tripods, the whole film looks really good. And Dakota Fanning is utterly believable as a slightly precocious child. And she reacts pretty much like you’d expect a child to react, crying out for her “Mommy”.

Plus the initial fears that it is the “terrorists” who have attacked. All great touches.

Still didn’t like the film though.
The audience never has to worry about any of the characters dying. Yes there is destruction, death and violence left right and centre, but those are all mere background figures. People we never knew and don’t care about. By focusing so much on Cruise and his kids I think the audience knows that nothing really bad is going to happen to any of them.

And so despite all the aliens, the blood, the violence, there isn’t really any tension.

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I could go on listing things that made me go “hmmmm” (in a bad way). Like the now useless cars all stopped on the streets, yet handily pulled in a little so that Cruise could drive by. Like being able to use a mirror to hide from the aliens. And you know that scene in the basket? Why didn’t all the other folks help the fella who got sucked up before Cruise? Why the sudden desire to help?

Lame.

Tags: 3 Stars, aliens, based on book, crap, Dakota Fanning, David Koepp, H.G. Wells, Josh Friedman, Justin Chatwin, looks pretty, sff, special effects, Stephen Spielberg, Tim Robbins, Tom Cruise, War, War of the Worlds

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