I can’t be the only person to think there are shades of Roald Dahl’s Matilda in The Girl with All the Gifts. Precocious child with unique abilities aids her idolised teacher in a world otherwise populated by hostile adults. The ...
Read More »Captain Fantastic: Happy Noam Chomsky Day!
Fair warning: as a non-committal leftie who is never going to be able to live up to the utopian ideals I espouse and is deeply guilt-ridden over my compromised stance within the capitalist web of corruption that we currently call ...
Read More »Kubo and the Two Strings: If you must blink, do it now
Considering most children’s films are saccharine explosions of gaudiness rendered in bargain basement 3D animation with glib, feel-good pop music for soundtracks, it’s nice to see a children’s film with a sense of craft about it. Kubo and the Two ...
Read More »Hell or High Water: I’ve been poor my whole life
Is the modern Texan western a genre now? I can’t help feeling that since No Country for Old Men, we’ve seen a number of imitators or people following that tradition. In this case, the ‘state of Texas’ seems to be ...
Read More »Café Society: Life is a comedy written by a sadistic comedy writer
Woody Allen is renowned, prolific and inconsistent. He’s been making a minimum of two films a year since the 1970s. Everyone remembers his greats. His flops produce grimaces but tend to be forgotten in the unrelenting stream of his productions. ...
Read More »The Childhood of a Leader: He’s been acting out a bit
Europe is to be carved up anew in the wake of World War I. Relocated to France with his American diplomat father and his European mother for the duration of the negotiations, Prescott is a troubled boy. Growing up amid ...
Read More »The Red Shoes: Finding the fantastical in the mundane
Myths and fairytales were created as a means to explain the world around us, to warn children not to stray off the path, and to find meaning in tragic events. For instance, before science could provide answers to how the ...
Read More »War Dogs: Welcome to Dick Cheney’s America!
The lives of international arms dealers must be formulaic. By the end of the nominally ‘based on true events’ War Dogs, I was struck by just how neatly the protagonists’ lives had dovetailed into a screenplay template. The fact that ...
Read More »Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping
Parody films of this nature are like a blanket and a cup of tea on a cold day. Pure comfort. Popstar was never going to break the mold, say anything particularly new or incisive, or be the next big thing ...
Read More »Finding Dory: I suffer from short term memory loss
One has to feel sorry for Pixar. With so many treasured classics in their relatively recent back catalogue, the pressure to continue to perform must be terrible. No matter how otherwise laudable an effort, so often all one can do ...
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