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LEGEND

December 1, 2015 By Leave a Comment

LEGEND

LEGEND is not the first biopic of the notorious Kray Brothers to hit the big screen.  The identical twin brothers, who were both vicious gangsters and pop-culture celebrities in the 1950s and 60s, were portrayed by the Kemp brothers, Gary and Martin as Ronnie and Reggie respectively in 1990’s THE KRAYS, a film that spent… Read More »

Tagged With: biography, book to screen, gambling, gangster, identical twins, Mafia, psychosis

THE TRANSPORTER: (not) REFUELED

September 6, 2015 By Leave a Comment

THE TRANSPORTER: (not) REFUELED

A few years ago I interview Patton Oswalt for YOUNG ADULT, and during the chat I asked him to expand on something that he had said with which I totally agreed: Jason Statham makes any movie better. (Click  here for the interview and my mini-rant about how unfair it was that Oswalt didn’t get an… Read More »

Tagged With: car chase, Ed Skrein, father-son, French Riviera, hot tub, Loan Chabanol, Ray Stevenson, remake, Russian mob, sex trafficking, THE TRANSPORTER: REFUELED

Dreary DARK PLACES

August 7, 2015 By Leave a Comment

Dreary DARK PLACES

DARK PLACES is awash with dark moodiness as it tells a raggedy story that suffers from a failure of to find a narrative structure as strong or as compelling as the performance of his star, Charlize Theron. Based on the novel by Gillian Flynn, on whose novel of the same name GONE GIRL was based,… Read More »

Tagged With: book to screen, Charlize Theron, Gillian Flynn, murder, mystery, narrative, suspense

SHAUN THE SHEEP MOVIE

August 5, 2015 By 2 Comments

SHAUN THE SHEEP MOVIE

Four decades ago there was a Monty Python sketch in which Graham Chapman and Terry Jones discussed why a flock of off-screen sheep were hopping about on their back legs, attempting (badly) to fly, and doing something in trees that appeared to be nesting. It appeared that they had been led to believe that they… Read More »

Tagged With: aardman, animation, Mark Burton, narrative, Richard Starzak, SHAUN THE SHEEP MOVIE, stop-motion animation

Welcome to JIMMY’S HALL

July 9, 2015 By Leave a Comment

Welcome to JIMMY’S HALL

Ken Loach has never been a filmmaker to shy away from politics. In fact, a case could be made that the reason he makes films is to explore politics, the which he has done with such strident films as BREAD AND ROSES (union organizing in contemporary Los Angeles) and LAND AND FREEDOM (the Spanish Civil… Read More »

Tagged With: Aileen Henry, Andrew Scott, Barry Ward, based on a true story, Donal O'Kelly, exile, Ireland, Iris Civil War, Irish Civil War, Jim Norton, Ken Loach, Marxism, narrative, Paul Laverty, Simone Kirby, stage to screen

SONG OF THE SEA is Beautiful Harmony

February 4, 2015 By 2 Comments

SONG OF THE SEA is Beautiful Harmony

SONG OF THE SEA reminds us of the power of simplicity in storytelling and in animation.  Hand-drawn and steeped in Irish folklore, it is a profoundly moving experience rife with charm, wisdom, and beauty.  Told from a child’s perspective, the magical and the mundane coalesce in perfect harmony, revealing the one in the other in… Read More »

Tagged With: Celtic, cinema, drama, film, folklore, Ireland, Irish, Macha, mythology, narrative, ocean, Owl Witch, seal, selkie

TAKEN 3

January 11, 2015 By Leave a Comment

TAKEN 3

  And so once again we are in the company of Bryan Mills and his very specific skill set as brought to life by the incomparable Liam Neeson.   The one-man demolition squad, trained by the darkest of black ops, is once again called into action when his family is threatened.  Fortunately, this is no irksome… Read More »

Tagged With: action, cinema, film, Forrest Whitaker, Liam Neeson, movie

Just Try to Resist PADDINGTON

January 10, 2015 By Leave a Comment

Just Try to Resist PADDINGTON

There is a certain trepidation that accompanies any screening of a film released in January.  This is the graveyard of films that failed to meet studio expectations, but that for some reason or another, are due a theatrical release.  There is even more trepidation when the film is one aimed at children. How bad, one… Read More »

Tagged With: Ben Wishaw, cgi, children's book, cinema, Darkest Peru, film, Hugh Bonneville, Michael Bond, movie, Nicole Kidman, Paddington, Sally Hawkins, taxidermy

TELL NO ONE (Ne le dis a personne)

October 21, 2014 By Leave a Comment

TELL NO ONE is a tight and tautly plotted thriller in the classic mold. An innocent man is plunged from the mundane into mysterious with nothing less than his life on the line for reasons he can’t begin to imagine. The man is Alexendre Beck (Francois Cluzet), a newly minted pediatrician celebrating with a family… Read More »

GIRL CUT IN TWO, A (La Fille Coupee en Deux)

October 21, 2014 By Leave a Comment

It’s a very long way to go for a punch line, but Claude Chabrol fearlessly meanders along for the two hours it takes him to get there with A WOMAN CUT IN TWO, based loosely and badly on the infamous early 20th century Thaw-White murder scandal at whose center was Evelyn Nesbitt, the so-called Girl… Read More »

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