641 posts
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Post by jek on Aug 19, 2024 11:12:57 GMT
Saw the Mexican film 'Radical' at the Barbican yesterday. It won the Festival Favorite Award at Sundance last year. If, like me, you are interested in novel educational initiatives (two of my children went to brand new schools that had opened under the government's free school programme) it's a particularly interesting watch. There is always a disconnect between trying to do things differently but still getting kids through public exams. More generally it is very much a feel good movie - think To Sir With Love. There are some very fine performances by both adult and child cast.
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3,575 posts
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Post by showgirl on Aug 20, 2024 3:24:26 GMT
Pleased to see that someone else has seen & liked Radical, which I also did & have recommended to others.
On the same day I then saw Babes, which was OK but imo over-rated - though maybe I'm just too old for the target market and was never a girly girl so can't relate to the endless over-sharing, especially of details I'd consider coarse and better kept private, but which seem actually intended to be part of the appeal.
Kneecap was interesting. Given that it contains lots of swearing, even more sex, frequent drug-taking, violence & music from a genre I dislike, it sounds completely the wrong film for me, but in a strange parallel to Radical, it shared the same satisfying story arc.
Hollywoodgate was much as you'd expect & pretty one-note & sobering but as with Kneecap, in line with the description.
A little longer ago I also saw Didi (nothing like as good as I expected or as similar films with which it has been compared) and Crossing (better).
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Post by danb on Aug 23, 2024 14:57:09 GMT
Finally caught ‘Mrs Harris Goes to Paris’ yesterday and its general lovely ‘Sunday Afternoon-ness’ completely won me over. All is whimsical and sweet and I may have fallen slightly in love with Alba Baptista. Chris Evans is a very lucky guy!
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Post by amyja89 on Aug 23, 2024 15:34:38 GMT
Kneecap - **** 1/2
So impressed with this. Brilliant performances by the real life band members as themselves, didn't feel amateurish for a second. The energy of the whole thing is so frenetic and addictive, it exhibits the kind of lightning in a bottle vibe that so many films try to capture and fail miserably.
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7,175 posts
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Post by Jon on Aug 24, 2024 23:44:38 GMT
Kneecap - **** 1/2 So impressed with this. Brilliant performances by the real life band members as themselves, didn't feel amateurish for a second. The energy of the whole thing is so frenetic and addictive, it exhibits the kind of lightning in a bottle vibe that so many films try to capture and fail miserably. I thought it was great, I did like the use of Irish and English and also how explicit it was, no holes were barred!
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156 posts
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Post by meister on Aug 25, 2024 6:23:49 GMT
Saw ‘Blink Twice’ yesterday. A really solid directing debut from Zoe Kravitz and a clever and enjoyable skewering of the Jeffrey Epstein/Ghislane Maxwell scandal. Recommended!
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641 posts
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Post by jek on Aug 27, 2024 10:24:32 GMT
I don't think Between The Temples merited the four star reviews it got in the Guardian and the FT. But it had some nice moments and performances (Carol Kane and Jason Schwartzman in the leads and some good support) and a memorable soundtrack. Pretty good for a Bank Holiday watch.
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Post by amyja89 on Aug 27, 2024 10:49:22 GMT
In A Violent Nature - ***
Solid if slightly unremarkable low fi horror movie that draws a lot of inspiration from Jason/Friday the 13th. Vaguely undead child/grown to man monster with revenge on its mind (slowly) rampaging through woods to slaughter unsuspecting young people. Doesn't outstay its welcome, and credit for one particularly inventive and gruesome kill that I can't remember seeing before!
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3,575 posts
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Post by showgirl on Aug 27, 2024 16:56:26 GMT
I don't think Between The Temples merited the four star reviews it got in the Guardian and the FT. But it had some nice moments and performances (Carol Kane and Jason Schwartzman in the leads and some good support) and a memorable soundtrack. Pretty good for a Bank Holiday watch. No indeed - over-rated imo and I did wonder whether to stick it out but I did, & was rewarded by the set-piece ghastly dinner party towards the end.
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Post by kallyloo on Aug 28, 2024 15:46:52 GMT
Saw the premiere of Firebrand last night, a look at the intense relationship between the despotic Henry Viii and his last wife Katherine Parr. I really enjoyed it as an insight into the suffocating abuse he perpetrated, which almost crushed her independent mind and threatened her life.
If you have an interest in the era, it was a fascinating take on what has been generally considered as one of Henry’s more stable marriages.
We had a Q&A with Ms Vikander afterwards, which is always a treat. She seemed a little dismissive of the average fan’s questions though tbh.
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Post by danb on Aug 28, 2024 17:07:49 GMT
She was quite ‘detatched’ on The One Show last night. There were other guests as well and she just looked a bit peeved to not be the main attraction.
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Post by amyja89 on Aug 31, 2024 10:16:32 GMT
Sing Sing - ****
This is sure to be an Awards favourite by the time all that starts to come around. Interestingly, my second cinema viewing in as many weeks (Kneecap) where many of the core cast aren't actually professional actors. Again, you wouldn't know.
Colman Domingo is great in this, and is surely a Best Actor frontrunner as things stand.
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641 posts
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Post by jek on Aug 31, 2024 13:30:47 GMT
I'm just back from seeing Sing Sing and enjoyed it too. It was more profoundly sad than I expected and had less Hollywood manipulation than I feared. Very good performances as amyja89 said. Also a good score by Bryce Dessner which featured in the recent prom (no.34) which focussed on 'soundtracks at the cutting edge'. It was played at the proms by the London Contemporary Orchestra who played on the film's soundtrack. I wasn't at the concert (my daughter was) but it was one of the ones filmed for TV. www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m002202j/bbc-proms-2024-modern-movie-soundtracks-at-the-proms
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2,058 posts
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Post by Marwood on Sept 13, 2024 19:45:47 GMT
Just seen The 4:30 Movie: while I enjoyed it more than the last few Kevin Smith movies I’d seen, he can’t resist using his same acting circle and throwing in callbacks to his earlier movies. Some people in the screening were laughing like hyenas at every f***ing thing but I think I chuckled maybe twice during the whole thing (less than 90 minutes but it seemed to go on longer) 2 out of 5 from me : mostly for Ken Jeong which is troubling when you can say that about a film.
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3,575 posts
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Post by showgirl on Sept 14, 2024 17:41:49 GMT
Unlike amyja89 and jek, I wasn't that impressed by Sing Sing; in fact I was disappointed as I'd expected so much more, based on the ratings and reviews. It was good in parts, of course, but didn't seem to have a clear narrative arc and could have ended sooner and on a more resolute note. On the other hand, on the same day as part of my post-holiday catch-up (only 2 cinemas where we were staying and both showing nothing but tripe), I did really relish His 3 Daughters and then My Favourite Cake. Yet to see Lee, so I hope that doesn't turn out to be another Sing Sing.
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Post by theatregoer22 on Sept 14, 2024 22:07:16 GMT
Unlike amyja89 and jek , I wasn't that impressed by Sing Sing; in fact I was disappointed as I'd expected so much more, based on the ratings and reviews. It was good in parts, of course, but didn't seem to have a clear narrative arc and could have ended sooner and on a more resolute note. On the other hand, on the same day as part of my post-holiday catch-up (only 2 cinemas where we were staying and both showing nothing but tripe), I did really relish His 3 Daughters and then My Favourite Cake. Yet to see Lee, so I hope that doesn't turn out to be another Sing Sing. I too was unimpressed with Sing Sing (Colman Domingo's performance aside). The whole play in a film concept made it a bit predictable and I just couldn't get invested in it.
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2,058 posts
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Post by Marwood on Sept 16, 2024 22:30:36 GMT
A double bill at BFI Southbank yesterday: Dougal and the Blue Cat, followed by Will & Harper.
I hadn’t seen Dougal in at least 30 years but it was good fun and doesn’t outlast its welcome at only 80 minutes running time (although the film notes mention how you would keep a small child sitting still for that long but I think a lot of what Eric Thompson came up with in lieu of a plot line will go over a lot of children’s heads) Buxton the cat is a marvellous villain, far better than anything Marvel, DC and Star Wars have come up with recently.
Will & Harper was followed by a q&a with Will Ferrell, Harper Stele and the director Josh Greenbaum: I enjoyed it and I don’t know how many actors would sign on for a project like this (Ferrell isn’t exactly an A lister these days, despite what he says numerous times in this) but it could have done with a trim to its running time, and I don’t know how often I would watch it. Worth catching when it’s up on Netflix though.
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Post by amyja89 on Sept 16, 2024 22:42:05 GMT
Lee - ***
The sort of earnestly put together biopic that is good enough to make you want to do the real life research for yourself, but not good enough to force you to wait until after it has finished.
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641 posts
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Post by jek on Sept 17, 2024 7:39:12 GMT
amyja89 I've not seen the film yet - though I intend to. It worries me a bit that Kate Winslet (who I have liked in many things - particularly Mare of Easttown) is quite a bit older than the real Miller was during the war. If the film has left you interested in Miller I would recommend a visit - if at all possible - to Farley's House in Sussex where Miller lived. It's a nicely homely sort of place - even the Picasso tile in the kitchen is damaged by scrubbing as the cleaner tried to get the grease off of it. You get a real feel for someone having made a life there - it's not museum-y at all. Only a few rooms are open to the public and no photos are allowed but if it's not too off the beaten track for you I'd say it's worth the trip. It's open April to October.
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Post by amyja89 on Sept 17, 2024 9:58:04 GMT
amyja89 I've not seen the film yet - though I intend to. It worries me a bit that Kate Winslet (who I have liked in many things - particularly Mare of Easttown) is quite a bit older than the real Miller was during the war. If the film has left you interested in Miller I would recommend a visit - if at all possible - to Farley's House in Sussex where Miller lived. It's a nicely homely sort of place - even the Picasso tile in the kitchen is damaged by scrubbing as the cleaner tried to get the grease off of it. You get a real feel for someone having made a life there - it's not museum-y at all. Only a few rooms are open to the public and no photos are allowed but if it's not too off the beaten track for you I'd say it's worth the trip. It's open April to October. Thanks for the tip! I can't say that Winslet's age bothered me at all. I didn't do much thinking about character age during the film to be honest, my brain must have just settled on a sort of mid 30s vibe and that was that.
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Post by amyja89 on Sept 19, 2024 18:22:44 GMT
Femme - **** 1/2
OOOOOOFFFF.
A deliberately uncomfortable and uneasy watch at times. It is definitely too generalising to say that every queer person can relate to some of the self destructive, boundary pushing behaviours on display here, but I certainly did and that's what made it such an affecting experience.
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Post by alessia on Sept 20, 2024 12:39:48 GMT
I went to a preview of The Substance last night. Not 'enjoyable' as an experience but really good film. Expect a lot of gore and disgusting visuals, I couldn't watch sometimes. Great to see Demi Moore back in top form, she's really beautiful so the premise was hard to believe but anyway. If you've seen the trailer you have some idea, but they kept all the gross stuff out of it so don't be fooled and I'd say avoid if you are squeamish. Saying all that, it is a film with a powerful message (purposely on your face) and I loved it.
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1,482 posts
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Post by mkb on Sept 20, 2024 13:21:13 GMT
I went to a preview of The Substance last night. Not 'enjoyable' as an experience but really good film. Expect a lot of gore and disgusting visuals, I couldn't watch sometimes. Great to see Demi Moore back in top form, she's really beautiful so the premise was hard to believe but anyway. If you've seen the trailer you have some idea, but they kept all the gross stuff out of it so don't be fooled and I'd say avoid if you are squeamish. Saying all that, it is a film with a powerful message (purposely on your face) and I loved it. I second that. It was Odeon's mystery Scream Unseen movie a couple of weeks ago (although there's never any mystery as the titles are always leaked). With no knowledge of what to expect, I was blown away. Absolutely loved everything about it. One of my films of the year.
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7,175 posts
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Post by Jon on Sept 20, 2024 13:40:49 GMT
I want to see The Substance but I might need to go on an empty stomach...
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Post by theatregoer22 on Sept 20, 2024 17:52:13 GMT
I went to a preview of The Substance last night. Not 'enjoyable' as an experience but really good film. Expect a lot of gore and disgusting visuals, I couldn't watch sometimes. Great to see Demi Moore back in top form, she's really beautiful so the premise was hard to believe but anyway. If you've seen the trailer you have some idea, but they kept all the gross stuff out of it so don't be fooled and I'd say avoid if you are squeamish. Saying all that, it is a film with a powerful message (purposely on your face) and I loved it. I'm due to see it on Wednesday and am very squeamish, so sounds like I'll be putting my hands over my eyes at multiple points!
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