Film
Matt Wolf
Is friendship mightier and more durable than sex? That's the proposition put forward by the engaging if ultimately cautious Banana Split, the Los Angeles-set romcom in which two teenagers become friends unbeknownst to the long-haired himbo boyfriend whom they have shared. Co-written by Hannah Marks, who stars as the wounded (but maybe not) April, this feature film directing debut from cinematographer Benjamin Kasulke is sufficiently lively that one feels the timidity of its closing sequence that much more fully.Up until then, there's a lot that both surprises and satisfies about a movie that Read more ...
Graham Fuller
Was witchhood a vocation in the Middle Ages or, as seems more likely, a charge levelled at sick or troublesome women by superstitious neighbours anxious to be rid of them? One of the merits of the gravely beautiful folk horror film Hagazussa is the way it shows a young Alpine woman of the 15th century committing unspeakable acts not because occult practices run in her family, as the locals believe, but because she is psychotic.The Austrian writer-director Lukas Feigelfeld’s full-length debut begins with the pre-pubescent Albrun (Celina Peter) observing the agonising decline of her middle-aged Read more ...
Veronica Lee
Simon Bird's feature film debut as a director is a gentle, warm-hearted look at a mother and son's strained relationship as they are forced to spend the summer holidays together when the teenager's dad cruelly cancels a trip to see him and his pregnant, much younger wife in Florida.Days of the Bagnold Summer started life as Joff Winterhart's graphic novel, and Bird's wife, Lisa Owens, has adapted it for the screen. It has a slow-moving, elegiac quality as we see Sue Bagnold (the ever-wonderful Monica Dolan) and 15-year-old heavy-metal fan Daniel (Earl Cave, son of Nick, note-perfect as the Read more ...
Graham Fuller
A master at bringing neurotics to bilious life on screen, David Thewlis shines as a peevish, corrupt health inspector in Guest of Honour. There’s a perverse pleasure to be had in watching his character, health inspector Jim, a British expat in Hamilton, Ontario, suspiciously probing simmering griddles with his meat thermometer and scrabbling for rodent faeces on the kitchen floors of various ethnic restaurants. Alas, the father-daughter melodrama’s subdued emotional payoff barely warrants Thewlis’s nuanced performance and writer-director Atom Egoyan’s intricately nested narrative, which Read more ...
Nick Hasted
Woody Allen’s filmography, like Michael Caine’s, is remorseless, accepting mediocre work to mine more gems than most. Even after his career and this film’s planned 2018 release became collateral damage to #MeToo and a revived child abuse allegation, he has kept directing. A Rainy Day in New York is a thorough résumé of late Woody flaws, but still sparks with residual brilliance.The octogenarian Allen is increasingly divorced from modern life and remotely realistic plots. Undeterred, he sends young lovers Gatsby (Timothée Chalamet) and Ashleigh (Elle Fanning, pictured below centre with Rebecca Read more ...
Joseph Walsh
It’s impossible to deny the sincerity with which Todd Robinson has approached the true story of William H. Pitsenbarger, a US Air Force Pararescueman who was killed in action while rescuing over 60 injured soldiers during one of the bloodiest conflicts in the Vietnam war. The set-up is familiar for films of this ilk. Sebastian Stan is Scott Huffman, a cynical Capitol Hill careerist in the Department of Defence who gets landed with a job he doesn’t want. Whilst trying to climb the political ladder he’s cornered by a Vietnam vet (William Hurt), who asks him to get his fallen comrade Read more ...
Kathryn Reilly
So what exactly is all the fuss about? For those of us from a cinema-deprived area, it’s been a long wait for the homevideo release of this much vaunted "masterpiece". And the trailer gives away so much, there’s probably little to surprise us, right? Very wrong.Hauntingly dark, South Korean director Bong Joon-ho's lauded Parasite is neither simply comedy nor drama but something – dare I say? – genre-eschewing. A sinister atmosphere is pervasive throughout the two hours in which we watch plan after plan go wrong for the Kims, a desperate but resourceful Seoul family. It serves to add yet Read more ...
India Lewis
For the average female millennial, Greta Gerwig’s Little Women is the perfect film to watch in lockdown. Brought up on Winona Ryder’s Jo March, then Gerwig’s Frances Ha in our teen years, we never expected this blessing but are most ardently grateful for it. Even the clothes are echoes of Batsheva and Shrimps dresses, the aesthetic social currency of affluent girls in their late twenties. This relevancy is both Little Women’s strength and the source of its only bum notes.The feminist aspect of the book has been drawn out, with lines mostly delivered by Saoirse Ronan’s Jo and Florence Read more ...
Graham Fuller
The Vast of Night’s premise scarcely guarantees originality. Non-science-fiction buffs scoping Amazon’s film listings will probably move on quickly when they learn it’s about two late-'50s teenagers discovering that an alien space craft is hovering over their rural New Mexico burg. But Andrew Patterson’s sparkling directorial debut is an object lesson in how to revitalize an over-familiar narrative with fresh-seeming characters, visual daring, ladles of wit, and atmosphere to burn.Patterson uses the tropes of the extra-terrestrial visitation scenario to investigate Eisenhower-era Read more ...
Owen Richards
Have you ever visited a destination you saw on film, only to realise it’s not quite how you imagined? Filled with tourists, the scars of mass visitation, and caught between its own culture and staying commercially attractive. The Thai city of Krabi is one such location, made famous by such films as The Beach and The Man with a Golden Gun. New release Krabi, 2562, from festival favourite directors Anocha Suwichakornpong and Ben Rivers, tackles these issues. But just like a visitation, it may cause you to think “this is not what I expected”.Presented as a docufiction, the film features a Read more ...
Graham Fuller
The Uncertain Kingdom is a VOD anthology of 20 short films, 10 directed by women, comprising a tapestry of life in – and, in one case, outside – Brexit-era Britain. Though hope, humour, and whimsy were threaded into the project, its dominant fabric is grey. The majority of the filmmakers recognised that a nation afflicted with poverty, unemployment, racism, xenophobia, and other injustices, mostly perpetuated by the class war, couldn’t be portrayed in brilliant hues, either literally or metaphorically.The films are being shown online in two volumes of 10. Eight of them are works of fiction. Read more ...
Jasper Rees
Larry Kramer, who has died at the age of 84, was the Solzhenitsyn of AIDS who indomitably reported from the gay gulags of Manhattan’s quarantined wards and revolving-door hospices. “I felt very much like a journalist who realises that he has been given the story of his life,” he told me when I met him. “I don’t consider myself a writer. I don’t bring the question of art into it at all like most writers do. I’m a messenger. As with activism, you figure out your target and the best way of reaching that target.”His most celebrated work, The Normal Heart, was a polemic about the early years of Read more ...