Saw 2

Volume Two Does Not Disappoint, 5 August 2006

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

Like many others I was riveted by the original Saw from start to finish.The hallmarks of gore, sadism, horror, innovation and tight storytelling are back with a vengeance, although the physical setting lacks some credibility, this is more than compensated for by another ripping yarn.

It is difficult to believe that the Director, Darren Bousman, is only 27 years old. My only concern is that he should have the courage to walk away after the forthcoming Saw 3 to develop his talents outside of this stunning formula, and not become bogged down by it.

There are not many films which have me closing my eyes and recoiling in revulsion whilst still being compelled to watch. This is such a film. Like Final Destination on heavy drugs Bousman finds ever more ingenious ways to kill and maim people, whilst just teetering on the right side of entertainment The denouement cleverly leaves the door ajar for Saw 3, I cannot wait!

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Flightplan

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

I am a huge Jodie Foster (and Sean Bean) fan. As such I was thoroughly looking forward to this film. Fosters’ range is her strength, whether it be in a straightforward thriller like Panic Room, a comedy like Maverick, or a classic like Anna and the King. Sadly, this effort is a huge misfire in an otherwise impressive career.

To be fair, the first hour shapes up well. The atmospheric introduction in Berlin is promising. When the action switches to the plane, the claustrophobic intensity of Panic Room is briefly reprised. Well edited, and tightly scripted, the mystery surrounding her childs’ disappearance is a faithful homage to Hitchcock.Then, out of nowhere, comes one of the most preposterous and risible plot twists that I have seen for a long time.

Sean Bean does his best in a non action role as a responsible jumbo jet pilot. But I bet that he, as much as the audience, wishes he had been given something heroic, or nasty to do, instead he has to character act a wet lettuce, to his obvious discomfort.

Greta Scacchi has a cameo role as a dowdy Therapist which she plays so hammily that Dads everywhere will scream “just get your clothes off” at the screen,sadly no such respite is offered.

The final reel plot twist stinks of formula film making and ruins an essentially promising story.The style demonstrated at the start of the film evaporates as the flight goes on and genuinely makes you just want to laugh at the unbelievability of it all.This flightplan should have been rerouted.

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Casino Royale

Strong new character- same plot shortcomings, 18 November 2006

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

I have seen every new Bond film since the late – 60’s and seen every one made.Like many, i was disappointed with the demise of Pierce Brosnan as Bond, and nervous about Daniel Craig’s appointment. I needn’thave been.

Craig brings an icy steeliness to the character not really seen since Connery. I loved Brosnan as Bond, but accept that he lacked menace.In Casino Royale, Bond is probably the most convincing menacing character, on screen. The opening post title chase sequence is not only one of the best Bond chases ever- it ranks with the best full stop.In itself it makes the film worth seeing. So, after these plaudits , whats wrong? The film is too long, and the last third lacks pace.The Card game sequence lacks power because we don’t know enough about the players, and goes on for too long. the traditional female glamour associated with bond films is largely absent.Apart from Bonds’ girl, and the baddies’girl, there is hardly a female in sight.What there is , is copiously clothed. By contrast, the interest in Bonds body is almost homo-erotic.Wehave the “Dr No” Ursula Andress cloned Bond emerging from the water,and close ups of his bare chest and nipples on several occasions apart from his nude torture scene. The girls by contrast are firmly robed.

The new Bond theme and incidental music is awful.I am all for contemporising themes.The “Mission Impossible” and British TV “Dr Who” themes are universally loved, but haveboth een given successful makeovers.This failed dismally.

The Venice finale is risible and anti climactic, and little effort is made to capitalise on the dramatic opening fifteen minutes – the film gradually losing momentum thereafter.

The overall verdict is that the Bond franchise is safe in the capable, and different hands of Craig. But how i long for a convincing, well paced, well written story line.

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The Strip

An above average 50’s yarn, 31 July 2006

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

These types off film were being hammered out weekly in the 1950’s. Superficially, there is little to distinguish this from the rest. However as it progresses, there is much to admire and enjoy. I love the format of an a hour and a quarter running time. Long enough to tell a simple tale, but without any time for padding, every frame counts.

Mickey Rooney is a fine character actor. One of the minor amusements here is watching a diminutive Rooney playing the lead, being dwarfed by everyone apart from his leading lady, Sally Forrest, who is probably the only actor on screen smaller than him! The premise of the loser/little guy who stands up for himself works well with several acutely observed scenes. The tragic denouement is a genuine surprise and is well told with clever editing keeping the tale skimming along at a brisk pace.

The musical,and song and dance interludes provide pleasing pauses in the action resulting in a film that ultimately delivers because it works so conspicuously within it’s boundaries, rather than trying to push them.

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Roseanna’s Grave

A superb, classy, tragic comedy, 21 May 2006

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

This film is one of those wonderful hidden gems that restore your faith in both film making and storytelling.The opening premise is that a mans’wife is soon to die from an incurable disease and that her last wish is to be buried in the village church graveyard. Unfortunately there is just one plot left!

Naturally there are a number of other villagers even closer to deaths’ door.The husband, Marcello,is brilliantly played by Jean Reno. He delivers a virtuoso performance which carries the film dashing around saving the lives of other villagers in order that his wife can secure the last plot! Part romantic comedy, part farce, part love story, part tragedy, this superbly crafted tale had me laughing and holding back a tear in equal measure.

The farce scenes rival Feydeau at his best in the likes of ‘Hotel Paradiso’, slapstick with style. Yet Reno as Marcelo, ably assisted by his comic “sraight” partner, Mercedes Ruehl as his wife Roseanna, also produces a pathos for the tragic circumstances which underscore his credentials as a very fine actor.Unmissable. A real treat

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Fizz 6

Fizz 6

An invite from the Polesworth Poets  to the Lichfield Poets, of whom I am one, to perform at the Polesworth Abbey Refectory provided the ideal opportunity for me to visit a group, and a venue, which I had been meaning to check out for some time. I was not disappointed.

From the Lichfield Poets perspective it was an opportunity to perform what has become quite a well rehearsed and performed set, based on the anthology “Battle Lines”, and member’s “greatest hits”. As a visiting poet ,it also gave me the opportunity to check out the Polesworth Poets too.

The venue is a good one, it’s crowning glory a fireplace before which John Donne and Michael Drayton are reputed to have met and read, Shakespeare even? Whether a group assimilates the ambience of its surroundings or vice versa is a moot point. But the august, refined feel of the Abbey certainly is found in the work of the “home” poets, and the demeanour of its leader, Mal.

Reading your own work, that of other poets and listening to the work of others, is always an experience which excites the senses. Familiarity, surprise at what goes better than expected , and what goes worse, delight at the unexpected, and the test of how good your own work really is as it spills off the tongue, all combine in a heady cocktail.

Fizz 7- 17/5 The New Polesworth Poets

Fizz 8 – 19/7 Matt Merritt

Fizz 9 20/9 Tony Owen

Fizz 10 22/11 Polesworth International Poetry Film Festival

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Requiem For The Margarett Rose Abri Cafe, Digbeth

 

The name always was a mouthful wasn’t it? Finding it was a bugger too. I can’t recall how I found out about it. It may simply have been a random Google search. But it came up,  Poetry and Espresso Theatre evenings, in a back street dingy cafe. Nor was the venue much, a simple cafe room, 22 x 12 maybe. Jean and Lloyd, the proprietors, meant well and were invariably good hosts. And from these modest surroundings something pretty precious emerged. That it was coffee and cake in a space exclusive to the evening made all the difference. There were no boozy interruptions, or indifferent passers-by ,as you can get in some pubs.

A place where anyone could turn up and have their five minutes in front of the mic. Some performers were consistently good, others less so, but it didn’t matter. Everyone respected everyone else’s time at the mic. And no evening was short of a surprise, like the first time that Sean Colletti and Andy Cook bowled in, fresh, smart and brimful of ideas

Of course we had our characters. Where Martin Gibberd came from I’ll never know, and I have never seen him at any other events. Tall, lean, with a mane of long grey hair, a biker’s jacket and skinny jeans, Martin epitomised the ageing rock n roll troubadour. Hunched over the mic, he would take you into an hallucinogenic journey of 60’s America, Route 66, tumbleweed and road trips. After a while you completely forgot how the story had started, and at the end you were sure there was a meaning, but you were never quite sure what it was. What you  always had experienced was an unique performer, and performance. The cd of his material which he gave me is much valued.

People travelled quite a way. Stuart Favell was a regular from the Black Country, and once, unannounced, a guy arrived from Barnsley, did his spot, and then went home! The Brum literati glitterati also showed, Charlie Jordan, Lorna Meehan, Louise Stokes, Roy MacFarlane, Fatima Al Matar, Adrian Johnson, Dave Reeves, Richard Bruce Clay, Claire Corfield, Janet Smith, David Calcutt all appeared. Yet Jasher and his ilk, stumbling in, out of the cold, to read for the first time in public made an equal contribution. Ian Ward even introduced the concept of the audience selecting his set by asking them  to shout out numbers which matched those he had ascribed to his pieces.

Writing and reading poetry is rewarding, but there is no replacement for hearing it, and delivering it in front of an audience. Seeing the faces in the audience as you speak, detecting how words and phrases do, and don’t work. It is a real test. The cafe provided that opportunity in a friendly supportive environment, and it will be missed. Whether it was full with thirty people, or more modestly attended with ten, the atmosphere never changed. The variety mattered, it was never a shouty, ranty performance poetry gig, but nor was it a heavy serious page poetry vibe. No-one ever had any idea what the content was going to be like until the last word of the last poem had been performed.

When the Cafe diversified into acoustic nights, Charity nights, “Espresso Theatre” and comedy it was equally successful. The mini-plays in “Espresso Theatre” were of a consistently high standard, and the “Lafacino” comedy nights provided a platform for the likes of Aaron Twichen and Claire Corfield (aka Lady Jospehine Whittle) young talents who have the capacity to “make it” on as big a stage as they choose.

Stuart Zola, MC, organiser, and spiritual head of the event was the heart of it. It was free, because he believed that art should be accessible to all. He wasn’t a regular poet at all, primarily a musician, lyricist and talented playwright. That a non-poet, who rarely read, should have devoted such time and energy to the project tells you all that you need to know about the spirit of the place.

Now a landlord dispute has resulted in its closure. Yes it might re-open, but the regular cycle of events as they were has ended. And although that saddens me, I reflect on Roger Daltrey’s cry ,“I hope I die before I get old”. Because the Cafe did not stop through decrepitude or indifference, but through external intervention, whilst it’s heart was still, beating, and for that I am grateful.

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Spoken Worlds 18/3

Spoken Worlds, Rangemore House,Burton-on-Trent 

THIS was a valedictory occasion for the last “Spoken Worlds” to be held at this venue. The unavailability of Rangemore House going forwards has prompted a move to the Old Cottage Tavern, just a few hundred metres away down Byrkley St, for future meetings.

Rangemore house itself has proved to be a good host, a drama studio with modern toilet and refreshment facilities, wholly self contained and private, a sympathetic place for Spoken Word. But poetry and pubs have been easy bedfellows since the time of Chaucer. A private room, a bar, and free entry, close to their old home, strikes me as being a winning move which will only serve to build on the success of the existing event. 

Poetry/Spoken Word evenings are quite difficult to get right. Straight page poetry  can be hard work, performance poetry only can seem lightweight and ranty, multiple monologues boring, and music and sketches “off message”. The trick is in getting the alchemy right, and that is what organiser ,and MC , Gary Carr gets right at “Spoken Worlds”. On Friday we were treated to a mix of all of the aforementioned- and it worked well. 

Mal Dewhirst is a distinguished presence on the Midlands poetry scene. His economic ,evocative poetry, particularly a memorable description of a waterfall scene in Yorkshire was a treat. Performance poet Fergus McGonigal had endured a two hour journey up the M5 on a Friday night to make  his  debut performance at “Spoken Worlds”.

ARDUOUS JOURNEY

But his arduous journey was not apparent in a sparkling , humorous, rehearsed set ,including pieces about the tell-tale signs of middle age and the delight that we take in seeing other people’s children misbehaving. 

Janet Jenkins , leader of Lichfield poets also made her SW debut including a delightful nature poem and a cautionary tale about the perils frogs face when copulating from falling mobile phones ( you had to be there).

Rob Robson from Buxton, combining the physique of a Manchester cocaine dealer with the finesse of a Saville Row tailor, delivered wry humour that was consistently a delight, Dea Costelloe enthralled with her monologue, and Andy Biddulph used his flamenco guitar skills  to atmospheric effect during “Condor”. Jeannie Jordan performed the second part of her drama with Jo imagining the fate of Shirley Valentine’s husband, and Margaret Torr read a poignant piece on deafness. All that provides a by no means comprehensive flavour of what was on offer on another  very enjoyable evening. 

Next meeting Friday April 22, at The Old Cottage Tavern, 3b Byrkley St, Burton-on-Trent, DE14 2BG, free entry, 7.30pm, open mic and thereafter May 20, June 17, July 22 and August 19.

18-03-11

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Munich

 

An Almost Great film, 29 January 2006

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

I was fourteen at the time of the Munich Massacre,followed the events closely, and have been interested ever since.The raw materials for a great film maker, and film, are all here:hate, fear, revenge, plotting, treachery and intrigue – Shakespeare would have loved to have had a go! Munich works best in providing snapshots of the assassins and their victims.The piano playing daughter of the Paris “hit”, the lover in bed with one of the Beirut “hits”, and the joy, then despair, of the families of the Munich hostages are all wonderful vignettes.

The criticism from both Palestinian and Jewish supporters reflects a tremendous story telling discipline from Spielberg.However for a long film, some essential original detail was omitted which would have added to the drama.Before each “hit”, in reality,the widow of one of the Munich victims was “tipped off” to watch the news by an anonymous caller.This complicity of Mossad and the Israeli Government in each assassination was ducked in the film apart from the implicit cooperation demonstrated in the Beirut raid.Was Spielberg too deferential to the Jewish lobby in this respect?

Equally,the spineless capitulation of the West German Government in releasing the three captured Munich Terrorists following a high jacking was referred to as an incidental. In reality, this was the real driver for revenge with those three top of the wanted list.The neutral portrayal of the Arab victims consequently evokes a sympathy which does not do justice to the motivation for the assassins actions.

I squirmed when the opening shots for Paris and London were the Eifel Tower and a red double decker bus.Audiences don’t need that insult.As a Brit, the “Twin Towers” shot at the end on the New York horizon totally passed me by until I read the reviews.

The last quarter of the film is a mess.A failed “hit” appears, then ends without explanation or reason.The real life assassination of the wrong man in Norway is omitted altogether, even though this was the catalyst for the end of the killing programme. So anxious is Spielberg to sit on the moral fence that he concentrates on the personal moral confusion of the chief assassin rather than the bigger moral picture.

Ultimately, that is what limits the film. Great drama examines Great Moral issues by using personal drama to highlight them. Spielberg has done the personal moral drama well, but just holds back from the big picture.A fine, but flawed, effort

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The Lovely Bones

An Unlovely Mess, 19 March 2011

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

There are occasions when you watch a film, understand its merit, but simply reflect that it doesn’t work for you. This is one such film. The book by Alice Sebold is much acclaimed, Director Peter Jackson is hugely experienced and vastly accomplished, as is executive producer Steven Spielberg, so what is it that doesn’t work?

The premise, of a murdered girl, Susie Salmon, played by Saorise Ronan, leading her parents, Jack and Abigail, to her killer from a spiritual nether world is an intriguing one. The cgi and staging of the girls scenes in spiritual limbo are fine, it’s the ones on terra firma that disappoint.

The planning and execution of the murder are understated which weaken the drama, there is no sense of horror about what has happened. Parents Mark Wahlberg and Rachel Weisz convincingly portray grief stricken parents, but this in turn is undermined by an almost comic turn by Susan Sarandon as a grandmother Lyn.

Attention soon focuses on the real killer as Susie Salmon leads her family towards the clues, but for little obvious terrestrial reason. This is no Revenger’s Tragedy ,and by the end, I found myself simply willing the end, which when it did come, was pretty unsatisfactory. Prior to this, Susie’s father is beaten up by a teenage lad who has his romantic assignation with his girlfriend disturbed as Jack charges through the high crops in a field in a grief stricken frenzy reprising the actual voyeurism of the real killer. But so annoying has his role become that instead of sympathising with him for his injuries , the viewer is tempted to think he deserved it for being so irritating.

There is a gripping opening to the final act when Susie’s sister breaks into the killers house and steals a notebook containing vital evidence causing the perpetrator to flee. But the climax wholly ignores the police, and presumable family ,chase to catch up with him, to cut to a very strange, anti-climactic final scene.

Shorn of visceral action, and with much of the film set in Susies’ dream world, the reality sequences are simply not enough to carry the story over the line of credibility. Brian Eno’s score is excellent, but its surreal ambiance only further distances the viewer from emotionally connecting with the story. Ronan’s performance of Susie is anaemic, and bad guy George Harvey, played by Stanley Tucci, simply isn’t sinister enough to really generate much viewer ill will. Investigating officer Fenerman played by Michael Imperioli has a cruelly underwritten scene and the end result is a film that goes nowhere in particular. Massively over-hyped watch on no-pay TV or borrow someone’s DVD only.

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