Wednesday, 29 June 2011

The Guard ★★★★☆




Cut from very much the same cloth as In Bruges, The Guard simultaneously feels both welcomingly familiar and delightfully humorous. Despite its obvious shared focus on dark humour and sharp, witty dialogue this lazy, albeit complimentary comparison only acts as a disservice to a film which impressively manages to mould its own unique identity out of an increasingly formulaic genre.

The Kingdom ★★★★☆




This seminal TV show by renowned Danish Director Lars Von Trier has finally been released in its entirety this month, giving UK residence a chance to once again delight in its maddeningly Twin Peaks surrealist style, set against a backdrop of horrific nineties soap opera conventions.

Talihina Sky: The Story of Kings of Leon ★☆☆☆☆



Music documentaries are often seen as an incredibly subjective strand of filmmaking. However, there have been occasions when the genre has managed to produce films which overcome the potentially alienating trappings of their subject matter and attract a wider audience than just those who religiously buy the records of the bands being distastefully thrust in front of the camera in order to acquire more royalties 

Monday, 27 June 2011

Turin Horse ★★★★★



This Berlinale silver bear winner is rumoured to be Bela Tarr’s directorial swansong. Turin Horse is a deeply personal and philosophical film that masterfully uses the impoverished and desolate backdrop of the Hungarian countryside to take us on a harrowingly bleak journey through six days of spiralling despair and misery.

Tomboy ★★★★☆



Celine Sciamma won much notoriety with her debut feature Water Lilies, a female coming of age drama which stood as another example of French cinemas gloriously joyful ability to capture the raw emotional energy which surrounds adolescence.

Saturday, 25 June 2011

Jitters ★★★☆☆



Played out like an Icelandic ‘Skins’ this coming of age drama may be easy to pigeonhole as a piece of teenage cultural trash but give it a chance and you’ll discover a powerfully emotive and honest insight to the harrowing journey adolescences can be.

By Day And By Night ★★☆☆☆


This low budget Mexican Sci-Fi uses a wonderfully unique premise to builds the foundations of a grippingly bleak social satire about issues of over population and our ever depleting natural resources.

On the Shore ★★☆☆☆


Nice is renowned around the world for the elegance of its coast line and the glamorous hotels and restaurants which gloriously overflow with a clientele of irreproachable financial sway. A seemingly bizarre setting then for a harrowingly amplified literal voyage into the spiralling level of madness loneliness and unrequited love can lead to.

Albatross ★★★☆☆


This nuanced coming of age drama embodies everything that independent British Cinema has recently become famous for. A combination of homely humour, eccentric relationships and a gritty underbelly of the social implications of the class divide make the corner stone of this much loved yet increasingly predictable format. All three of the aforementioned ingredients are present within Albatross however, this quintessentially British movie somehow manages to transform itself into a film which despite its generic and creatively suffocating approach to filmmaking is hard not to become besotted with.

Wednesday, 22 June 2011

Rabies ★★★★☆



If you go down to the woods today you’re in for a big surprise...

The pretty girls and boys visiting this secluded woodland could never have imagined the madness they were in store for and neither will you as Rabies violently breaks all the conventions of the slasher genre whilst simultaneously executing all the most successful scare techniques from every critically revered horror film of the last century.

Troll Hunter ★★★★☆



Choosing to take the well trodden ‘found footage’ path that has over the last decade slowly become a recognized sub category of both the horror and thriller genres, The Troll Hunter is difficult not to describe as a more farcical Blair Witch Project or adrenaline fueled Catfish. Indeed there’s plenty of shaky camera shots as our protagonists run in fear combined with close ups of scared faces to at first make you feel like you’re observing a carbon copy of these cheaply made shock pieces. However, the instant we’re thrust into the depths of Troll Hunters gloriously exhilarating venture into the mythical Norwegian wilderness it becomes instantly clear that this lazy journalistic stereotyping would be a total disservice to what is a uniquely creative, tongue in check, piece of lovingly assured film making.

King of Devil's Island ★★★☆☆




King of Devil’s Island is a wonderful example of how even the ugliest of events can be the basis of something beautiful. Based on real life accounts from Bastoy, a Norwegian reform school for maladjusted young boys (which continued to operate well into the middle of the twentieth century), this tense thriller is stepped within layer upon layer of human tragedy.

Phase 7 ★★☆☆☆


As the apocalypse dawns a couple begin to have a few problems with their neighbours.
 During a national epidemic Coco and his pregnant wife must stay locked in their apartment, quarantined until it’s deemed safe to leave. There seems little need to panic though as the fridge is fully stocked and there’s plenty of entertainment at home. However, as the days unwind and the contagious virus appears to be unstoppable the patience of some of the buildings more paranoid and unstable residents begin to diminish amongst the escalating chaos occurring outside. It leads to a series of events that few of them could have previously anticipated and none of them will ever forget.

The Last Circus ★★★★★




Directed by renowned surrealist Alex de la Iglesia, The Last Circus throws us straight into the action when a circus performance in Madrid is interrupted by the sound of gunfire and explosives. All the men in the audience are pulled out and forced to fight, this includes the performers, notably one of the shows bedraggled clowns who despite his opposition is thrust into this bloody conflict against general Franco’s advancing armies. The carnage which ensues would be enough to titillate even the most extreme cinema fan’s but throw in a clown dressed in drag, wielding a machete, and the excitement scale burst uncontrollably under the weight of its own absurdity.

Calvet ★★★★★




After a terrifying journey to hell and back Jean Marc Calvet must now faces his biggest demon. After rising from the ashes of a life shrouded in paranoia this now famous artist must embark on a harrowing voyage back through his troubled past in order to find the son he abandoned almost eighteen years ago in this brave and thoroughly touching documentary.

Bombay Beach ★★☆☆☆




Bombay Beach focuses on a small American community inhabiting the remains of a once prosperous holiday town which is now nothing more than a trace memory of better times. Acting as an insightful journey into the real core of natural human behaviour each of the townsfolk we’re presented with has their own entrancing back story and unique way to survive amongst what is now little more that an isolated dust bowl of a town.

Monday, 20 June 2011

Arriety ★★★★☆



Much loved by adults and children alike, Studio Ghibli’s contribution to the world of cinema has so far been a continually welcomed dose of adult friendly childhood fantasy, which, continues to accelerate beyond the now seemingly redundant benchmark Disney had previously set for hand-drawn animation. Last year’s Ponyo managed to mesmerise audiences with its charming retelling of Hans Christian Andersen’s ‘The Little Mermaid’, so with Arriety similarly adapted from a much loved children’s classic (The Borrowers) it would be fair to say that expectations are high...

Saturday, 11 June 2011

Jack Goes Boating ★★★☆☆



American Independent cinema has, over the last decade, built an image for itself based on a foundation of awkward, damaged, middle class nobodies who appear deeply disenfranchised with their seemingly mundane lives. Perhaps it’s a sign of the countries zeitgeist, both disassociating itself from the greedy upper classes who still cling to their Darwinian social stature beliefs (which died out at roughly the same time as the eighties), whilst simultaneously ignoring its worryingly high level of unemployment and the ever increasing wealth divide...

Thursday, 9 June 2011

Rabbit Hole ★★★☆☆



Cinema has always unashamedly drawn its inspiration from any form of narrative it can get its grubby mitts on. Unless nailed to the ground everything imaginable has by now had the cinematic treatment, from historical epics, which, remain little factual information of the events they portray, to adaptations of much loved literary classics that, more often than not, fail to capture the true essence of the source material in an attempt to condense everything into a sellable two hour narrative. Recently there has been a trend for a mirroring of this cultured musing between cinema and theatre. We’ve recently had stage versions of big screen favourites such as Umbrellas of Cherbourg, Ghost and the Lion King (to name but a few) whilst cinema, particularly American Independent cinema, has looked towards critically  popular west end shows for moving character dramas to recreate and sell to a larger audience. Yet whilst watching a painstakingly, multi levelled film stripped down to its core in an attempt to capture it’s inner magic, purely being held together vitally by strong acting and pragmatic direction, can no doubt be a fascinating procedure to witness firsthand, the same cannot always be said for reversing the treatment.

Tuesday, 7 June 2011

Cria Cuervos ★★★★★



The best years of life are universally regarded to be those of youth; a time filled with unadulterated fun and adventure with the constraints, monotony and rigmaroles of adulthood nothing but a distant enigma. Director Carlos Saura raises a rather compelling counter argument; he believes “it’s only our memory that tells us this period was a wonderful time, but that’s only because we don’t remember things.” Although a rather pessimistic view (Saura is no doubt referring to his own traumatic childhood growing up during the Spanish civil war), there are many that would agree with him. Cria Cuervos is a delightful exploration of one girl’s traumatic journey through childhood, giving us a warts and all portrayal of the true confusion that plagues this phase instead of glorifying it through self imposed misinformed nostalgia. Using a seemingly endless series of unhappy events, Saura throws us into a time of terrible indecision, cloaked in a suffocating atmosphere of fear. Highly regarded as one of the most insightful and politically charged pieces of Spanish filmmaking, this charming journey of child fantasy imbued in reality finally gets the re-release it deserves from the BFI.

It’s still very much Francisco Franco’s Spain when we intrude upon the Madrid household of the recently widowed Anselmo. He dies suddenly amidst the throes of passion with Amelia, the wife of his best friend and fellow army officer, Nicolas. However, it appears this was no natural death – he was poisoned! The apparent culprit of this calculated murder? None other than the second of his three daughters, Ana (Ana Torrent, Spirit Of The Beehive), a wise beyond her years girl who blames her father for the death of her beloved mother. Cria Cuervos literally translates as Raise Ravens, a Spanish proverb that reads “raise ravens and they’ll take your eyes” and is generally used for someone who has bad luck raising children!

Out of a sense of family duty, Anselmo’s sister-in-law, Paulina, soon moves into the large, yet moderately dilapidated house to care for the girls and their mute grandmother, instantly instituting her own domestic regime. The girls remain unfazed and continue with their lives in much the same manner as before, but as their summer holiday unfolds, we become privy not only to the family dynamic of this all woman household, but also the vivid fantasy world of Ana. Through a myriad of daydreams and other forms of escapism, this inquisitive, imaginative and possible deadly young girl comes to terms with the death of her mother, whilst maintaining her staunch hatred for her father and the oppressive regime he represented…

The most captivating element of Cria Cuervos has to be its seamless story, which impressively blurs together fantasy and memory, whilst maintaining a strong foothold in reality. These hauntingly vivid depictions of Anna’s numerous flights of the imagination are beautifully conveyed as a stark contrast to the repressed household she dwells within and the world around her. These flashbacks, dream sequences and daytime mirages could have easily resulted in a confusing and cluttered film, yet, through deceptively simple shooting methods (Ana’s mother wanders into the frame nonchalantly and is completely ignored by all except Ana), the camera work of Teodoro Escamilla manages to capture the intimacy of these fictitious moments between Ana and her deceased mother. This ability to let fantasy and actuality intertwine on screen, combined with the tension created by the tentative yet relentless movement of the camera, perfectly aligns us with Ana’s point of view. It all culminates in not just an enjoyably honest portrayal of childhood confusion, but a unique and exquisitely presented perspective on the gritty reality of bereavement.

Fans of Pan’s Labyrinth’s darkly unsettling, poetic depiction of child fantasy and fairytales, successfully mirrored against the violent backdrop of the Spanish Civil War, will instantly fall in love with Cria Cuervos. Both films undoubtedly share a similar thematic and stylish template, but stand out for the astonishingly professional performances from their young and engaging female leads. This in no way should detract from the enjoyment of both these films, but instead underlines how effective depicting sensitive adult themes through immature eyes can be. However, unlike Pan’s Labyrinth’s heroine, Ofilia, a young girl who radiated with childlike innocence, Ana Torrent’s performance is so frighteningly serious that you can’t help but believe that she’s more than capable of the most malevolent of acts. This, however, is a role which demands a broader range of emotion responses than your usual pedophobia thriller, yet Torrent’s expressive and incredibly watchful face never falters in portraying any of these.

The film was made whilst General Franco was on his deathbed, and was naturally seen as a metaphor for the last dying gasps of fascism and the dictator’s totalitarian regime. The film clearly stresses the disparity between Ana’s fantasy world and the political reality of fascism though numerous symbolic techniques. The house, whilst clearly quite grand, feels incredibly claustrophobic, and it can be no coincidence that the blinds on the windows seem like prison bars containing the girls from the outside world. The empty swimming pool in the garden, which the girls play around, could also represent the lost pleasures of the era or, indeed, their unfulfilled lives. Ana’s father, in his military attire, is evidently here to represent fascism within the family dynamic. His controlling nature over Ana’s mother (a once famed concert pianist) could easily be interpreted as the repression of artists such as Saura, making Ana’s murderous act seem almost revolutionary within this domestic microcosm. Unfortunately, the introduction of Paulina to rule the home, with her strict code of cleanliness and etiquette, seems to act as a warning that Spain’s transition toward democracy may not be as smooth as hoped for.

Paulina’s presence turns the home into an all female household that spans three generations; each is represented with its own distinctive soundtrack. The disparity between the girls’ incredibly catchy pop music and the classical music, which seemingly once filled the house, shows a shift away from tradition, which is equally apparent in their casual clothing – a stark contrast to the elegant dresses of their elders. It has led to many perceiving that Saura uses the female sex and their legacy of repression as a parallel to Spain’s troubled history. It’s a tenuous link, but the fact remains that many feminists still laud Cria Cuervos as a wonderfully subtle account of female socialization, specifically the way in which the girls reject the roles they are expected to fulfill. Ana’s interactions with Rosa, the maid, lead to some humorous and well crafted examples of this, but perhaps the dress up scene, involving the three girls recreating a domestic dispute, is the most obviously symbolic of them all. It’s a scene that we later realise, through one of Ana’s recollections, is an almost exact copy of an argument between her broken down mother and nauseatingly abhorrent father. Yet, in this delightfully charming recreation by the children, Ana’s portrayal of her mother is a far more assured and confrontational one, perhaps signalling a time of hope regarding women’s rights through this new rebellious generation, brought up within a new liberated Spain. It’s a subject matter dealt with cautiously by the director, who despite these countless depictions of youthful empowerment presents the future Ana (though some gently interspersed, straight to camera pieces) under an impartial light. Interestingly, Saura casts the same actress here as plays Ana’s mother, leading us to question whether young Ana is doomed to make the same mistakes.

The term ‘classic’ often gets thrown around too easily, without much regard to the importance and role of the adjective within cinematic history. Cria Cuervos, with its cultivated meditation on history, memory and childhood, combined with an intriguing political undertone, is a film which can be enjoyed on many, many levels. Whether you choose to view it as a reflective parable documenting the fall of fascism, a subtle allegory about the repressed roles of women, or just as a joyous journey into the fantasy world of an imaginative young girl, it rightfully deserves to be heralded as a true classic.