wed 16/05/2012

Film reviews, news & interviews

Cannes 2012: Heavyweights on La Croisette

Demetrios Matheou

The 65th edition of the Festival de Cannes opens today, with Wes Anderson’s latest slice of leftfield whimsy, Moonrise Kingdom, and continues for almost two weeks of frantic film-going, star-spotting, wheeler-dealing and beach partying. For these days in May a usually somnolent seaside town becomes the cinema city that never sleeps.Cannes is still the world’s leading film festival, for good reason: the best directors in the world want their films to premiere here; everyone else has to wait in...

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The Dictator

Bruce Dessau

Is this a sophisticated satire or a dumb, laugh-out-loud, nothing-is-sacred comedy? That is the question which pings around your head Sacha Baron Cohen's latest. The title is presumably a nod to Chaplin's The Great Dictator, but while that is still rated as a classic 72 years years after it was made, somehow you cannot see this piece of lightweight froth, in which Baron Cohen plays strutting but stupid North African potentate Admiral General Aladeen, being held in the same esteem for 72 weeks....

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The Raid

Emma Simmonds

If action speaks louder than words, then The Raid is positively deafening. The third feature from Welshman Gareth Evans is ingeniously, almost...

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Q&A Special: Matthew Bourne and the making of...

Ismene Brown

A boy alone in his vast white bedroom has a recurrent haunting dream, frightening yet somehow comforting - a swan invades his mind, simultaneously...

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DVD: Haywire

Adam Sweeting

In one of the DVD featurettes included here, Ewan McGregor puts his finger on what gives this movie its curious air of detachment. Director Steven...

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Jean Vigo: Celebrating the father of French New Wave

Kieron Tyler

The release on DVD of all the French director's films commemorates his unique genius and humanity

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All in Good Time

Matt Wolf

National Theatre play diluted in celluloid transfer

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Dark Shadows

Emma Simmonds

Tim Burton somewhat recovers from the disappointing Alice in Wonderland with this gothic rib-tickler

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DVD: The Complete Humphrey Jennings, Volume Two: Fires Were Started

Graham Fuller

Britain's greatest wartime documentarist's vision of a nation united against a common enemy

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Jeff, Who Lives at Home

Jasper Rees

The Duplass brothers revisit male dysfunction

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Two Years At Sea

ASH Smyth

Less is less in backwoods art-house life-'story'

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DVD: The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby/ The Old Curiosity Shop

Nick Hasted

Two enjoyable, neglected Dickens films, back for the bicentennial

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Le Quai des brumes

Graham Fuller

Jean Gabin and Michèle Morgan give love a chance in the benighted Le Havre of a French poetic realist classic

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Angel & Tony

Demetrios Matheou

A Normandy fishing community is the setting for an atypical and touching love story

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Interview: 10 Questions for Clotilde Hesme

Demetrios Matheou

One of France's unsung actresses is finally getting the attention she deserves, for new film Angel & Tony

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The Lucky One

Matt Wolf

Sun galore - oh, and Zac Efron, too - in predictably glossy love story

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Silent House

Adam Sweeting

Low-budget spookathon chills the spine but then drops the ball

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Footnote: a brief history of British film

England was movie-mad long before the US. Contrary to appearances in a Hollywood-dominated world, the celluloid film process was patented in London in 1890 and by 1905 minute-long films of news and horse-racing were being made and shown widely in purpose-built cinemas, with added sound. The race to set up a film industry, though, was swiftly won by the entrepreneurial Americans, attracting eager new UK talents like Charlie Chaplin. However, it was a British film that in 1925 was the world's first in-flight movie, and soon the arrival of young suspense genius Alfred Hitchcock and a new legal requirement for a "quota" of British film in cinemas assisted a golden age for UK film. Under the leadership of Alexander Korda's London Films, Hitchcock's Blackmail (1929) is considered the first true sound movie, documentary techniques developed and the first Technicolor movies were made.

Brief_EncounterWhen war intervened, British filmmakers turned effectively to lean, effective propaganda documentaries and heroic, studio-based war-films. After Hitchcock too left for Hollywood, David Lean launched into an epic career with Brief Encounter (pictured), Powell and Pressburger took up the fantasy mantle with The Red Shoes, while Carol Reed created Anglo films noirs such as The Third Man. Fifties tastes were more domestic, with Ealing comedies succeeded by Hammer horror and Carry-Ons; and more challenging in the Sixties, with New Wave films about sex and class by Lindsay Anderson, Joseph Losey and Tony Richardson. But it was Sixties British escapism which finally went global: the Bond films, Lean's Dr Zhivago, Mary Poppins and The Sound of Music made Sean Connery, Julie Christie and Julie Andrews Hollywood's top stars.

In the 1970s, recession and the TV boom undermined cinema-going and censorship changes brought controversy: a British porn boom and scandals over The Devils, Straw Dogs and A Clockwork Orange. While Hollywood fielded Spielberg, Coppola and Scorsese epics, Britain riposted with The Killing Fields, Chariots of Fire and Gandhi, but 1980s recession dealt a sharp blow to British cinema, and the Rank Organisation closed, after more than half a century. However more recently social comedies such as Four Weddings and a Funeral and The Full Monty, and royal dramas such as The Queen and The King's Speech have enhanced British reputation for wit, social observation and character acting.

As more films are globally co-produced, the success of British individual talents has come to outweigh the modest showing of the industry itself. Every week The Arts Desk reviews latest releases as well as leading international film festivals, and features in-depth career interviews with leading stars. Its writers include Jasper Rees, Graham Fuller, Anne Billson, Nick Hasted, Alexandra Coghlan, Veronica Lee, Emma Simmonds, Adam Sweeting and Matt Wolf

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