Film Reviews Blog

This page only shows films that have a review. By default in date order of reading with newest at top

Sunday 20th June 2021

USA 2019

Running time: 120 mins

Harriet

Director : Kasi Lemmons

Film Summary :
Based on the true story of Minty, a runaway slave (1850's USA) who became Harriet Tubman aka Moses, and worked tirelessly helping slaves escape
Film Category

Reviewed by rogerco, DVD proj @ home on 20 Jun 2021

Review Summary :
A good solid conventional movie dealing with the end days of slavery in the USA.

A Good Story Well Told

I enjoyed this tale, with the added piquancy of being based on a true story. Cynthia Erivo (Minty/Harriet) holds the screen as she progresses from cowed slave to inspiring commander. The photography is excellent throughout and the music track not too distracting.

It is a very conventional film, not really pushing any boundaries. Some of the chase scenes slightly stretch credulity - can a person really outrun a horse through fairly open woodland, can tracking dogs not catch her and loose the scent that easily - but these only require minor suspension of disbelief.

The whole business of Harriet being guided by the voice of god is handled well - whilst sensing danger and finding a safe river crossing can be read as minor miracles thanks to divine intervention, they can equally well be read as tapping into embodied wisdom, or even pure luck - so all sides are satisfied.

All in all I was well satisfied with this movie - not a classic but a good story well told.




Saturday 6th March 2021

UK 2021

Running time: 112 mins

The Dig

Director : Simon Stone

Film Summary :
Story of the Sutton Hoo excavation in 1938/9
Film Category

Reviewed by rogerco, DVD proj @ home on 06 Mar 2021

Review Summary :
Classic Englishness. So little to like.

The Dig I Didn't Dig

Naturally there are minor quibbles about some of the adjustment of the true story for dramatic affect. Edith was much to young (she was actually well into her 40s), the spurious use of the coming war as a dramatic tension builder is unlikely to have been real - Basil started excavating in 1938 and the discovery was complete well before war was declared in '39. The character of the RAF pilot cousin was, I think, a complete invention - the photographer on site in 1939 was actually a woman and Peggy remained married to her husband until the 1960s. I suspect the crash of the aeroplane into the river is a complete dramatic invention. I'd never heard that Uncle Robert had any direct involvement with Basil and his wife, but it might have happened.

Setting those quibbles aside - after all it doesn't claim to be documentary - it is a classic bit of rose tinted English nostalgia where everyone is in their place and knows it. (see The Go Between etc etc). 

The first half cover the development of a non-relationship between Edith and Basil which is never going anywhere (this is not the Go Between, despite the use of a child to link the protagonists across the class divide), so it then has to switch to the triangle between Peggy, her closet gay husband, and the dashing dishy cousin. But it is all a bit obvious.

Good points - interesting use of sound - music and dialogue crossing between scenes to give an impression of a character's interior life. Well photographed, the flat Suffolk landscape comes across and the interiors, like the pub scenes, work well. Ralph Fiennes plays Basil Brown very well.

But overall it is just another feel-good everything is alright with the English world bit of nostalgic propoganda. 




Saturday 27th February 2021

USA 2019

Running time: 135 mins

Uncut Gems

Directors : Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie

Film Summary :
New York jewellery shopkeeper tries to get ahead of his gambling debts by auctioning a rare uncut opal gemstone.
Film Category

Reviewed by rogerco, Streamed proj @ home on 27 Feb 2021

Review Summary :
Pretty non-stop rollercoaster following Howard Ratner (Adam Sandlaer) as he acquires and attempts to sell the opal. Fast paced New York life.

Claustrophobic focus but races along

From the opening in Ethiopia I thought it was going to have a much broader scope taking in the trade in uncut gems from the miners to the bling - sadly that would be a very different and better film. This should really have been titled Uncut Gem since there is only one.

Once we focus in on Ratner and his life and dealings it is entertaining enough, racing along at a frenetic pace as he struggles to keep his life together - divvorce, lover, debts, extended (jewish) family, gambling, black culture, small time crooks and more serious ones.

The end was slightly surprising (didn't see that coming - not a Hollywood ending) and leaves a delicious question over what happened next to Julia (the girlfriend/colleague - Julia Fox)




Wednesday 24th February 2021

USA 1982

Running time: 109 mins

The King of Comedy

Director : Martin Scorsese

Film Summary :
A New York saddo stalks a top comedian.
Film Category

Reviewed by rogerco, Streamed proj @ home on 24 Feb 2021

Review Summary :
Horrible annoying people in screechy unfunny car crash

One of the worst films ever

This is simply awful. It's a very long time since I last saw a film so bad that I couldn't finish it. Not that it was horrible, or offensive - just a complete and utter waste of eyeball time. 

Also epitomises all of the worst aspects of american culture - which I suppose is why people who like american culture are fooled into thinking it is a good film. It is not.




Monday 22nd February 2021

Australia 2019

Running time: 89 mins

2040

Director : Damon Gameau

Film Summary :
An investigation into what solutions working today could transform the eco-clim emergency by 2040
Film Category

Reviewed by rogerco, DVD proj @ home on 22 Feb 2021

Review Summary :
Avoiding the scary and too much eco-technic porn it manages to be informative and interesting.

Is it possible in 19 years

Firstly this is a really well made film - the creative use of visual effects to inform and underline what is being said is the best I have seen on this subject. The lead character/director is engaging and seeks out some interesting possibilities using only what is already available today.

It avoids the pitfall of so many 'eco' films of being preachy and scary, he doesn't downplay the difficulties but makes an honest attempt to find solutions that could work for his daughter's future.

There is a slight whiff of eco-technic porn about some of the ideas - high-tech mass transport, the continuing prevalence of an internet and some shiny new fun gizmos without considering the resource cost implications, but on the whole he digs up some good ideas - micro-grids transforming the domestic energy landscape, communally owned personal transport, greening (plants) of cities by freeing the space taken by private cars, changes to diet, plus the education of women and their equality as a major driver for reducing resource use.

Overall much better than many attempts at this and  probably achievable if it was not for the structural obstacles. System change requires more than simply sharing your energy with your neighbours (try that in the UK and you'll get a ton of regulation and law down on your head unless you also change the system that governs us). 

Is it possible in 19 years? Not without system change first.