This controversial Netflix film about the life of Marilyn Monroe is bold and ambitious, and it is certainly no standard film-star biography, more of a feminist-filtered critique of the Hollywood star system and a deconstruction of the relationship between personality identity and the construction of a star. Starting on a particularly traumatic birthday in 1933, with Norma Jean as a young girl living with her disturbed and unstable mother, an unflinchingly dark and violent tone is set from the outset as we follow her through her difficult childhood through to her early casting-couch exploitation, her breakout stardom and beyond. With its shifting aspect ratios, changing use of colour/black-and-white and its unsettling score and placement of sound, Blonde is very effectively designed to reflect the unease and lack of control in the actress's personal and professional life, also seen in its blurring of actuality and fiction both in the constructed narrative and in Marilyn's mind in an hypnotic, almost hallucinatory manner. This is a long film (pushing towards three hours) that is relentless and often difficult to watch, portraying an unflinching depth of unhappiness and sadness, where Marilyn in assaulted, exploited and demeaned at every turn. With its key themes of identity, objectification and parent-child relationships constantly thrust to the fore, the film does feel as if at times it over-intellectualises the narrative at some points through stilted dialogue and odd emotional distancing, and whilst Ana de Armas undoubtedly gives a bravura performance, the actress is mostly (and somewhat repetitively) required to portray Marilyn in one of three ways: child-like, as the iconically-recognisable screen-star persona, or on the edge of tears. There is brave film-making on display here, making Blonde an interesting if flawed film that exploits Marilyn Monroe in its singular perspective perhaps as much as it suggests Hollywood did.
Friday, 30 September 2022
VOD: Blonde (dir: Andrew Dominik, 2022)
VOD: Top Gun Maverick (dir: Joseph Kosinski, 2022)
The opening of Top Gun Maverick sets the tone for the whole movie: respectful to the past with plenty of fan-pleasing, absurdly familiar but with some good self-awareness, with a shiny and impressive 2020s upgrade and enough new ideas to keep it interesting. Indeed, the integration of old and new/next generation is pretty seamless and it is handled sensitively and very effectively, with the juxtaposition of the two eras working extremely well at key (emotional) points. The aerial work is breathtaking, beautiful and often thrilling, and Kosinski certainly knows how to handle action and scale. Cruise absolutely delivers here - this is totally his movie - but there is very able support by the likes of Jon Hamm, Jennifer Connelly and Miles Teller, with a touching cameo from Val Kilmer. Cruise should be commended not only for his assured acting but also for taking an overview of the Top Gun property, holding out for the right story at the right time. Even if the main mission is basically destroying the Death Star in A New Hope (here, an underground uranium-processing facility), Top Gun Maverick is spectacularly superb blockbuster entertainment on every level.
VOD: Lou (dir: Anna Foerster, 2022)
Foerster's directorial film debut is a grim 1980s set thriller has the USP of seeing the magnificent Alison Janney (as Lou) do the full Taken/older Laurie Strode routine as - against the backdrop of a massive storm - deep in the backwoods, her nearest neighbour's young daughter is kidnapped by her presumed-dead military-trained father. As Lou's tracker skills come into play, she and the child's mother hunt down the kidnapper as they learn hidden secrets and reveal Lou's secret dark past. Alison Janney is as ever effortlessly watchable, even if the tension is sometimes dissipated by slow dialogue scenes and the soft-rock stylings of Toto, but storytelling and relationships are carefully deployed. Ultimately, Lou is a very-messed-up family drama with a very bleak ending, lifted by its strong cast.
VOD: Downton Abbey - A New Era (dir: Simon Curtis, 2022)
This sequel to the successful movie spin-off from the TV phenomenon is unashamedly fan-pleasing and plays to its target audience most effectively. The 'send-the-cast-on-holiday' trope for TV-to-film adaptations is certainly not a guarantee of success, so smartly this film dispatches half the family and entourage to the South of France to secure a villa bequeathed to the elderly Lady Grantham, leaving the rest at home to contend with an invading new-fangled cinema film crew shooting a movie, as the world hurtles towards the end of the 1920s. A New Era has similar strengths to the first film: the core cast returns, it is sumptuously and cinematically lensed and it is written in a pacy TV-style format. There is suitable closure for some characters, plenty of story to follow, and it is very comfortable box-of-chocolates viewing that is very well-made and enjoyably indulgent.
VOD: The Nan Movie (original director: Josie Rourke, 2022)
TV series to big screen adaptations are tricky beasts to pull off - for every Alan Partridge Alpha Papa and The Inbetweeners Movie there is The Harry Hill Movie and - oh, the horror - Mrs Brown's Boys D'Movie. It was a surprise to see this spin-off from The Catherine Tate Show; given the success of the revival Nan TV specials it looked a viable proposition, but whilst the limited scope of the Nan character works very well in short-form TV-sketch format, it does not carry particularly effectively across a full-length feature film. The expansion mechanism here is sending Nan and hapless grandson Jamie off on a road trip to visit her long-estranged sister, but the film is saddled with a thin script that offers little real comedy. Thankfully, the film does stay true to the character, and the World War II flashbacks flesh out the backstory with some nice character moments. Both Catherine Tate and Katherine Parkinson are strong dramatic and comedic actors and they try their best, but reports of reshoots to boost the number of modern day scenes and the insertion of unnecessary additional animated sequences with the original director credit removed, make the movie seem inconsistent and lacking the sharp humour that the sketch format delivered.
Friday, 16 September 2022
VOD: The Northman (dir: Robin Eggers, 2022)
In his third major film, and biggest-budgeted so far, Eggers has established a clear style that gives us a film that is rich in (old) language and immersed in period detail, opening with a suitably wintry palette punctuated by bursts of warm firelight and bringing the director's distinctive energy and commitment to this bleak Norse tale. Like The Witch and The Lighthouse, this film is also challenging, ambitious and pleasingly off-kilter, with the director completely in control of both his vision and of the viewers' experience. At heart this is a simple if lengthy revenge story, told with indulgent theatrical flourishes (visions and mystics play a strong part here) that punctuate the generally gritty naturalism created. Alexander Skarsgard powers through the story as the man-mountain adult Asleth out to avenge the killing of his father by his uncle and seeking to rescue his mother, with notable supporting performances from Anya Taylor-Joy, Nicole Kidman and especially Claes Bang as Asleth's uncle. In spite of its budget, The Northman remains more art-house than mainstream that will not be to everyone's taste but again shows Eggers to be a creative and intriguing film-maker.
VOD: Thor - Love And Thunder (dir: Taika Waititi, 2022)
A strong pre-title sequence sets up an almost unrecognisable Christian Bale as a credible antagonist of this fourth Thor solo film. Taking in returning characters from across the Thor/Avengers movies (The Guardians of the Galaxy team, Jane Foster, Darcy, Valkyrie and even Heimdall), the addition of Russell Crowe as a self-important Zeus is a good addition to the greatest-hits-feel of the movie. The trailers gave away surprisingly little, and in many ways this is typical Waititi - quirky, silly and a bit all over the place (including a soundtrack that cannily ranges from ABBA to Guns N' Roses) - and indeed he nails both the comedy and drama elements, no matter how haphazardly they might appear. This film does not feel as fresh as the similarly-styled Ragnarok, with its reliance on past characters and hits (the ripe 'theatre' version of events reappears, for example, to lesser effect this time round), and it is apparent that the director's zany approach is at odds with the fact that there is (for a change in the MCU) a very strong well-performed villain that might have been served better by a more serious overall approach. Nevertheless, Love And Thunder succeeds in its mission to entertain, and Hemsworth remains a comedic delight to watch, but if there is to be another solo Thor movie, a change in tone/direction might be welcome.
VOD: The Lost City (dirs: Adam and Aaron Nee, 2022)
Essentially an update of Romancing The Stone and playing like a more playful self-aware version of Jungle Cruise with tongue very firmly in cheek, The Lost City finds Sandra Bullock as a bereaved romance novelist, under pressure to deliver her next novel in a genre that she dislikes, who gets whisked away on a quest by a media mogul (Daniel Radcliffe) to find the real-life priceless artefact (The Crown Of Fire) featured in her latest novel, with her deluded cover model (Channing Tatum) and sassy agent (Da'Vine Joy Randolph) on the chase to rescue her. Bullock strides through the film with easy comedic abandon and delivers this kind of material with absolute confidence and excellent timing, Tatum completely sends up his (and models') persona to great effect, Radcliffe feels a little miscast here as the villain of the piece, but Randolph gives a strong feisty comedic performance and Brad Pitt is good fun as a zen trainer/merecenary. Tatum and Bullock make for a good pairing in this silly, lightweight but quite entertaining romp.
VOD: I Came By (dir: Babak Anvari, 2022)
This interesting, low-key but suitably tense British thriller finds an anti-establishment graffiti writer Toby (George MacKay) and his mate breaking into homes of the rich to tag, but an unfortunate discovery in the basement of a former judge puts them all in a dire situation. The film benefits by being well shot and tightly edited from the outset, accompanied by an effective synth-driven score by Isobel Waller-Bridge. The character arcs and structural deployment of the main characters are interesting and not always predictable, although the occasional simplification grates (Toby listens to loud heavy metal and follows activists on the internet but lives with his mother), and worthwhile issues of inequality, young male rage, ethnicity and policing feel lightly touched upon at the expense of delivering story. The cast is very strong and enjoyable to watch: it is good to see MacKay playing a modern-day character which he delivers with his usual intensity and depth; Hugh Bonneville delivers a very well-controlled antagonist role here; Kelly Macdonald gives sensitivity to the role of Toby's mother as the film develops; and there is a sincere turn from Percelle Ascott as Toby's friend. For a small British film, I Came By is well made, delivered effectively and keeps interest right to the end.
VOD: Love In The Villa (dir: Mark Steven Johnson, 2022)
A Romeo And Juliet-obsessed American third-grade teacher gets dumped by her boyfriend right before their planned romantic trip to Verona, but she decides to go alone, only to find a handsome muscular wine-rep Brit already installed in her holiday apartment via a double booking. This is clearly conventional rom-com territory, as their initial animosity and prank-sparring starts to give way to romantic feelings, national stereotypes are unleashed at every opportunity and the rom-com genre machinations are so formulaic that you could fast forward to the final quarter of an hour without missing any surprising. Nevertheless, it is all very pleasant and undemanding, tourist Italy looks lovely, and - thankfully, as most of the film is a two-hander set in the apartment - the two leads (also a couple in real life) both perform well, with Tom Hopper delivering the stoic Brit comedy effectively and a delightful performance from Kat Graham that elevates the material.
VOD: Me Time (dir: John Hamburg, 2022)
"There's no way I'm f***ing a tortoise!"
This film is the very definition of a dated mismatched-buddy comedy starring Kevin Hart and Mark Wahlberg, and for the most part it is as crass and desperate as expected, as a family man (Hart) gets a few days away at his estranged friend-from-former-days' birthday trip. Watching middle-aged men trying to recapture their youth to comedic effect rarely works in this sort of film, and nothing much of interest happens here. The film drowns in a sea of seemingly-improvised excessive dialogue that simply floats by. Hart overacts and over-talks, the dependable Wahlberg is oddly subdued, and overall Me Time does little to truly entertain.