Archive for the 'The Best View' Category

The Sound of Silents - Minima rescore 1920 classic The Cabinet of Dr Caligari

The Cabinet of Dr Caligari - 1920 German Expressionist silent  movie classic

We’ve been fans of silent-movie-soundtrack specialists Minima here at Movie Talk since witnessing their bold rescoring of Germaine Dulac’s 1928 surrealist oddity The Seashell and the Clergyman in the dank and gloomy railway arches beneath London Bridge Station a couple of years ago.

So it’s good news to learn that the enterprising four-piece band are going on the road this month performing live to 1920 silent classic The Cabinet of Dr Caligari on a tour of Picturehouse Cinemas across London and the South West.

If your only experience of live musical accompaniment for silent movies is of a solo pianist tinkling the ivories (great though that often is), then prepare to open your eyes and ears to the daring collision of image and sound when Minima work their magic on this bizarre and hypnotic German Expressionist classic of the silent era.

Minima - avant-garde music ensemble’s rescore of The Cabinet of Dr  Caligari

Here’s how the band describe their dramatic Dr Caligari rescore:
“Minima’s original soundtrack strikes up an unexpected relationship with the images on screen, teasing out the film’s melancholy and grim humour. The four-piece ensemble of drums, bass, guitar and cello stalk the film, while their unique sonic palette provides an intensity to complement the film’s unsettling experience of mistrust and madness.”

“Silent films like this were meant to be screened with a live musical accompaniment because it adds so much to the experience,” says Alex Hogg, Minima’s guitarist. “It is particularly evocative with Dr Caligari because the film is so haunting.”

Minima’s Dr Caligari tour kicks off their tour at Bath’s Little Theatre Cinema on Sunday 21 March. See below for the full tour list and go to the Picturehouse website for further details.

Minima - avant-garde music ensemble go on tour with The Cabinet of  Dr Caligari

March 2010
21 March, 4:45pm The Little Theatre Cinema, St Michael’s Place, Bath, BA1 1SF
28 March, 4:45pm Exeter Picturehouse, 51 Bartholomew Street West, EX4 3AJ
31 March, 9.15pm The Ritzy, Brixton, London, Brixton Oval, Coldharbour Lane, SW2 1JG
April 2010
7 April, 9:15pm The Gate, Notting Hill, London, 87 Notting Hill Gate, W11 3JZ
11 April, 4:15pm Phoenix Picturehouse, Oxford, 57 Walton Street, OX2 6AE
12 April, 8.30pm Regal Picturehouse, Henley, 2 Boroma Way, RG9 2BZ
14 April, 9.15pm Clapham Picturehouse, London, 76 Venn Street, SW4 0AT
21 April, 9:00pm Duke of York’s Picturehouse, Brighton, Preston Circus, BN1 4NA
25 April, 4.00pm Harbour Lights Picturehouse, Southampton, Ocean Village, SO14 3TL
28 April, 9.15pm Greenwich Picturehouse, 180 Greenwich High Road, SE10 8NN
May 2010
9 May, 8:45pm Stratford-upon-Avon Picturehouse, Windsor Street, CV37 6NL

At the Cinema | The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - Genius hacker & dogged hack get to the bottom of Stieg Larsson mystery

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - Noomi Rapace plays punk-Goth computer hacker Lisbeth Salander

Swedish writer Stieg Larsson’s posthumously published Millennium trilogy of crime thrillers has won millions of fans around the world – all of them waiting to pounce on any missteps made by the makers of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo: the screen adaptation of the first instalment.

Fortunately, director Niels Arden Oplev has got things right – starting with the casting of the series’ hero and heroine: idealistic campaigning journalist Mikael Blomkvist, played with battered integrity by Michael Nyqvist, and punk-Goth computer hacker Lisbeth Salander, the eponymous tattooed girl  - an astonishing incarnation by Noomi Rapace of a character who has become an instant 21st-century icon.

Oplev and his writers also prove sure-footed with the plotting, which is a strikingly faithful, adroitly streamlined version of the book.  Over 500 pages long, Larsson’s story is a locked-room mystery thriller set on an island – as is Martin Scorsese’s Shutter Island, coincidentally released in the UK on the same day as The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - Michael Nyqvist’s journalist Mikael Blomkvist pieces together his investigation

Hedeby Island is home to the wealthy Vanger family, a warring clan of industrialists with Nazi skeletons in the closet. Smarting from a libel defeat and in disgrace, Blomkvist comes here at the behest of the head of the Vanger family, elderly recluse Henrik Vanger, who wants Blomkvist to investigate the mysterious disappearance 40 years earlier of his great-niece.

Blomkvist’s probing into the case leads to him into an unlikely partnership with the remarkable Lisbeth, a spiky, damaged, semi-autistic computer genius with multiple piercings and a photographic memory. Together, they sift through seemingly baffling clues and unearth a series of appalling crimes against women.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - Noomi Rapace’s Lisbeth Salander comes under threat from corrupt lawyer Nils Bjurman (Peter Andersson)

Be warned: the scenes of sexual violence are extremely distressing. The original Swedish title of book and film is Män som hatar kvinnor: Men Who Hate Women, and Oplev pulls few punches in showing what Larsson describes. It’s probably his only major faux pas: what is implicit on the page becomes disturbingly explicit on screen.

If you wanted to, you could find other points to cavil. Feminist avenging angel Lisbeth bears marks of a male author’s fantasy, as does, in a different but complementary way, the heroic Blomkvist. You’re unlikely to care too much, however, when their dogged investigation gets you in its grip.

On general release from 12th March.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

At the Cinema | Green Zone - Matt Damon is Bourne-again in war-torn Iraq

Green Zone - US soldiers Lt Briggs (Jason Isaacs) & Roy Miller (Matt Damon) find themselves on opposite sides in post-invasion Iraq in this gripping action thriller

Matt Damon teams up again with Paul Greengrass – his director in the last two Bourne movies - for Green Zone, a frenetic conspiracy thriller set in post-invasion Iraq.

The film is inspired by Rajiv Chandrasekaran’s highly acclaimed non-fiction book Imperial Life in the Emerald City, a clear-eyed, darkly comic account of the breathtaking arrogance, ignorance and incompetence of US-led rule in occupied Iraq.

Though grounded in fact, Green Zone is, however, very much a made-up story: a “Bourne goes to Baghdad” adventure, as Damon’s doughty US army officer Roy Miller goes on the hunt for Saddam’s weapons of mass destruction in the immediate aftermath of the invasion.

He can’t understand why he and his team are coming up empty-handed at every supposed WMD site they visit, but as he digs deeper he discovers that the intel has been fabricated. Can he stay ahead of Greg Kinnear’s slippery Pentagon agent and Jason Isaacs’ Special Forces officer and expose the truth before Iraq falls into anarchy and civil war?

Green Zone - Paul Greengrass’s action thriller set in post-invasion Iraq

With Greengrass at the helm, deploying his trademark, Bourne-style shaky camerawork and rapid-fire cutting, Green Zone is as fast-paced as you’d expect, but the uneasy mix of fact and fiction ultimately works against the film.

The viewer does get to share the outrage of Damon’s character as he realises that the invasion rested on lies – as if we didn’t know already - but the attempt to shape the chaos of Iraq into a Bourne-shaped plot is eventually self-defeating.

The last word, though, belongs to the character of the Iraqi who is pressed into service as Miller’s interpreter. After all the machinations and mayhem, Khalid Abdalla’s Freddy, an Iraqi army veteran who lost a leg in the Iran-Iraq war, delivers a curt reprimand to the Americans’ meddling in his country, telling Miller: “It isn’t for you to decide what happens here.”

On general release from 12th March.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

Out on DVD | Zombieland - Woody & Jesse’s horror comedy is killingly funny

Zombieland - Woody Harrelson stars in this road-movie horror comedy

Horror comedy Zombieland shows that you can still get fresh laughs from the festering carcasses of the living dead. In a US overrun with flesh-eating zombies, Jesse Eisenberg’s timid survivor joins forces with Woody Harrelson’s ornery badass, and with a pair of sassy sisters played by Emma Stone and Abigail Breslin for a cross-country journey to the supposed sanctuary of a Los Angeles amusement park. En route, there are smart gags, sharp pop culture references and gory mayhem galore - and a terrific deadpan cameo from a great comic icon whose identity best comes as a surprise.

Released on 15th March.

Splatterfest spoof gets laughs from the living dead. Read more.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

Out on DVD | Cold Souls

Cold Souls - David Strathairn & Paul Giamatti star in Sophie Barthes’s playful existential comedy

With a surreal storyline and a famous actor playing himself, this playful existential comedy unavoidably draws comparisons with Being John Malkovich, yet first-time writer-director Sophie Barthes’s assured feature film debut has a deadpan wit and gentle pathos all its own. In New York, Paul Giamatti is agonising over the rehearsals for his forthcoming production of Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya, so he enlists the services of a company that offers to lighten his burden by temporarily storing his soul. Unfortunately, despite the soothing assurances of David Strathairn’s smooth-talking doctor, the transaction doesn’t quite go to plan and Giamatti finds himself mixed up in the murky world of soul trafficking in the company of Dina Kurzon’s world-weary Russian mule. Bizarre? Certainly, but funny, touching and thought-provoking too.

Released on 15th March.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

At the Cinema | Shutter Island - Leo risks a crack-up on Marty’s craggy island

Shutter Island - Leonardo DiCaprio’s US marshal Teddy Daniels looks for a missing patient on an island asylum

Shutter IslandMartin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio’s fourth screen collaboration, is a psychological mystery thriller that takes place in 1954 and harks back to that era’s edgy film noir classics and exquisitely suggestive horror films. In look and mood, it recalls such B movie gems as Mark Robson’s The Seventh Victim and Isle of the Dead, and Jacques Tourneur’s I Walked With a Zombie and The Leopard Man, films which Scorsese screened during production for his cast and crew.

Scorsese’s movie, however, is based on a 2003 book by Dennis Lehane (author of Mystic River and Gone, Baby, Gone) and opens with Di Caprio’s US marshal Teddy Daniels and new partner Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo) crossing Boston Harbour by ferry to reach the Ashecliffe hospital for the criminally insane on craggy, storm-buffeted Shutter Island. They’re going there to search for missing patient Rachel Solando, a woman who murdered her children.

Her disappearance is a locked-room mystery. Solando has vanished from her fastened cell, a hurricane is raging outside and there’s no way off the island.

Shutter Island - Leonardo DiCaprio’s US marshal Teddy Daniels investigates a puzzling disappearance from a hospital for the criminally insane

The puzzle is enough to give anyone a headache, but DiCaprio’s Daniels has them already: debilitating migraines that leave him feeling wrecked. As if this weren’t disorienting enough, he’s also haunted by the past - by the death of his wife in an arsonist’s fire and by his experiences as a WWII GI present at the liberation of Dachau concentration camp. The medication he’s taking confuses his perceptions still further.

What is going on? Whom can he trust? Is head psychiatrist Dr Cawley (Ben Kingsley) really the humane clinician he claims to be? What should he make of Cawley’s sinister German (ex-Nazi?) colleague Dr Naehring (Max von Sydow)? And what are they up to in the island’s lighthouse?

Throw in twitchy patients and menacing staff, not to mention the looming shadows of McCarthyism, the Cold War, H-bombs, lobotomies and psychotropic drugs, and it’s no wonder that Daniels finds it hard to keep his balance. And no wonder, as he plunges down dark corridors and dangles off cliff faces in a desperate bid to solve the mystery, that a chasm of madness and paranoia should open up vertiginously beneath his feet.

Shutter Island - US marshals Teddy Daniels (Leonardo DiCaprio) & Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo) find themselves caught in a hurrican during their investigation into a mysterious disappearance from a hospital for the criminally insane

Scorsese intensifies the delirium at every opportunity. With bleeding chunks from such 20th-century modernists as Ligeti and Penderecki throbbing and shrieking on the soundtrack, he keeps the tension at a pitch of near-constant hysteria.

Yet when the solution to the mystery is finally revealed, you’re left with a sense of disappointment - even if you haven’t already guessed the payoff. Is that all? Those old B movies to which Scorsese is paying homage usually had running times of around 70 minutes. At 138 minutes, Shutter Island is almost exactly twice as long. Unsurprising then that it feels as though a pulp story has been bulked out and blown up until it collapses from the strain. Think of all the money, energy and skill Scorsese has expended on the effort. That really is mad.

On general release from 12th March.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

Out on DVD | An Education - Carey Mulligan’s Jenny learns lessons in life & love

An Education - Carey Mulligan & Peter Sarsgaard star in the period movie based on Lynn Barber’s memoir

Rising star Carey Mulligan won a well-deserved Bafta and an Oscar nomination for her pitch-perfect performance as the teenage protagonist of sharp, smart, witty coming-of-age drama An Education.

Scripted by Nick Hornby from the memoir by journalist Lynn Barber, the film is set in drab suburban London in 1961, just before the Sixties really got swinging.

And just as Britain is on the cusp of the exciting, rebellious Sixties, so too is Mullligan’s Jenny on the cusp of exciting, rebellious womanhood. A bright 16-year-old Twickenham schoolgirl swotting for Oxbridge, her mix of worldliness and naivety allows her to be charmed by Peter Sarsgaard’s louche thirtysomething David and swept up into his glamorous but rackety world.

An Education - Rosamund Pike & Dominic Cooper co-star in the period movie based on Lynn Barber’s memoir

With the encouragement of her socially insecure father (an excellent Alfred Molina), Jenny is soon enjoying a fast life of trips to nightclubs, concerts, auctions and the dogs in the company of David’s cosmopolitan friends Helen (Rosamund Pike) and Danny (Dominic Cooper). Of course, Jenny’s flashy new education comes with a price tag, as she eventually learns

An Education deserves high marks. You could argue that the central relationship ought to seem sleazier, but Danish director Lone Scherfig perfectly captures the era’s look and mood, Hornby’s Oscar-nominated script is deft and the performances are spot on - with impressive support from Olivia Williams and Emma Thompson (Jenny’s bluestocking teacher and headmistress respectively). As sophisticated scattterbrain Helen, Pike very nearly steals the film with such radiantly dim aperçus as: “In about 50 years, nobody will speak Latin, probably. Not even Latin people.”

Released on 8th March.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

Out on DVD | Bright Star - Jane Campion’s Keats’ biopic: not just another frock flick

Bright Star - Ben Whishaw & Abbie Cornish star as John Keats and Fanny Brawne in Jane Campion’s ravishing romantic drama

Jane Campion’s splendid costume drama Bright Star was largely overlooked at this year’s Oscars (it picked up one nomination for Costume Design). Overshadowed by Kathryn Bigelow’s testosterone-fuelled The Hurt Locker, it’s the kind of movie that would have probably caught the attention of the Oscar electorate in previous years, as did Campion’s The Piano, which was nominated for eight awards in 1994 (including Best Director for Campion) and won three (for Holly Hunter, Anna Paquin and Campion’s screenplay).

This neglect is a shame as Bright Star is far more than just another frock flick. Telling the story of the tragically short love affair between romantic poet John Keats and his young neighbour Fanny Brawne, the inspiration for some of Keats’s most beautiful poetry and letters, the film is quietly restrained yet surprisingly moving and always visually ravishing. Without being in any way anachronistic, Ben Whishaw and Abbie Cornish bring a freshness and conviction to their roles as Keats and Brawne, while Campion shakes off costume drama frippery to deliver real lyricism and emotional depth.

Released on 8th March.

Bright Star: A Thing of Beauty. Read more.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

Out on DVD | Julie & Julia - Meryl and Amy’s foodie comedy is very tasty, in parts

Julie & Julia - Meryl Streep stars as famed American cook Julia Child in Nora Ephron’s foodie comedy

Oscar-nominated Meryl Streep is a hoot in Nora Ephron’s delicious foodie comedy Julie & Julia, which interweaves the parallel stories of celebrated American cook Julia Child’s life in post-war France and 21st-century blogger Julie Powell’s attempt to cook her way through Child’s classic book Mastering the Art of French Cooking in a single year. As Child, Streep is at her most mannered and camp, gleefully impersonating Child’s eccentric demeanour and hooting voice (see the DVD/Blu-ray extras for confirmation of the accuracy of her impersonation). Yet her performance brims over with such joy and mirth and love that it’s hard not to be won over. A shame then that the movie’s second course - featuring the insipid romcom woes of Amy Adams‘ Powell - is less appetising.

Released on 8th March.

Savouring the joy of Streep and the tastes of France. Read more.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

At the Cinema | Alice in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll’s beloved heroine goes for a Burton

Alice in Wonderland - Mia Wasikowska plays Lewis Carroll’s now grown-up heroine Alice in Tim Burton’s 3D movie

You’d think Tim and Alice would be the perfect match. Tim Burton, master of the weird and off-kilter, and Alice in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll’s dream-like and surreal Victorian masterpiece: an ideal combination, surely?

Yet Burton’s Alice in Wonderland, though dazzling to look at, isn’t quite as wonderful as admirers of both director and book might have hoped.

As it happens, Burton’s 3D movie isn’t exactly an adaptation of Carroll’s book but a sequel which finds the now 19-year-old Alice (played by Australian actress Mia Wasikowska) returning to the fantastical Wonderland – or rather, Underland – after fleeing from a dim toff’s marriage proposal and tumbling down a rabbit hole.

She thinks her memories of previous Wonderland adventures are simply dreams but is soon meeting a number of familiar faces, including the Cheshire Cat (purringly voiced by Stephen Fry), the White Rabbit (Michael Sheen), the Caterpillar (Alan Rickman) and Johnny Depp’s decidedly loopy, white-faced, green-eyed, ginger-haired Mad Hatter.

Alice in Wonderland - Matt Lucas plays twins Tweedledum and Tweedledee

These characters all look and sound amazing, as do gormless tubby twins Tweedledum and Tweedledee, inspired and rather endearing CGI versions of Matt Lucas. Helena Bonham Carter’s stroppy Red Queen with her huge oversized head is a scream too (though she owes a big debt to Miranda Richardson’s brilliant comic creation Queenie in Blackadder).

Alice in Wonderland - Helena Bonham Carter plays the Red Queen in Tim Burton’s re-imagining of Lewis Carroll’s classic tale

All this is fabulous. The problem is the plot.

Storytelling has never been Burton’s strong suit and his weakness is here compounded by a desire to somehow squeeze Carroll’s topsy-turvy, logical-illogical tales into a teen-friendly, Disney-approved, big-screen adventure.

So feisty, proto-feminist Alice is thrust into a bog-standard quest narrative in which she becomes the Joan-of-Arc-like champion of Anne Hathaway’s White Queen and undertakes the task of slaying that fearsome beastie the Jabberwock – the monster from Carroll’s ‘Jabberwocky’ poem, found in the Alice sequel Through the Looking Glass.

Sadly, this doesn’t really come off. Burton’s Alice could nibble and nibble on the cake labelled ‘Eat Me’, and sip and sip on the potion labeled ‘Drink Me’, and she still won’t go through this door.

On general release from 5th March.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.