Film Reviews Blog

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

Thursday 19th February 2015

1995

Dead Man

Director : Jim Jarmusch

Synopsis extract :
Having travelled across the continent to the end of the line a young man finds his job has gone ...
Film Category

Reviewed by Roger, DVD proj @ home on 19 Feb 2015

Review of "Dead Man"

This is everything A Field In England was not



Saturday 14th February 2015

Synopsis extract :
Stephen Hawking
Film Category

Reviewed by Roger, Watershed Bristol on 14 Feb 2015

Review of "The Theory of Everything"

ok



Saturday 7th February 2015

2015

Kingsman

Director : Matthew Vaughn

Synopsis extract :
Post bond and superhero secret agent hokuum
Film Category

Reviewed by Roger, Rebel Cinema Bude on 07 Feb 2015

Review of "Kingsman"

A good example of apocalypse porn



Sunday 1st February 2015

Synopsis extract :
Human-type visitor with giant robot from another galaxy lands in Washington with a message of ...
Film Category

Reviewed by Roger, Southbank Centre Bristol on 01 Feb 2015

Review of "The Day The Earth Stood Still"

A very 1950s view of the world and technology with an underlying anti militarist message



Friday 30th January 2015

Synopsis extract :
1970 Southern California (LA) stoner private eye gets rolled up in a confusing mystery. ...

Reviewed by Roger, Watershed Bristol on 30 Jan 2015

Review of "Inherent Vice"

Paul Anderson shows that it is possible to film a Pynchon book - yes the characterisation is weak, the dialogue incoherent, the plot all over the place and inherently misogynistic - but that is a true reflection of any novel by Thomas Pynchon. He is one of my favourite authors and I have always thought his books were un-filmable (although I once in my youth tried to write a screenplay for The Crying of Lot 49) - but Anderson has shown that it can be done - and made a good film to boot. Shades of The Big Sleep and (obviously) The Big Lebowski. Well worth going to see (unless you are female and find male fantasies about Californian "chicks" distasteful in which case there are parts you'll hate - were there ever any girls who described themselves as "chicks"? Why did I never meet them!). PS Inherent Vice is the only Pynchon book I haven't read (yet) so I have no idea whether the film is true to the book - it is certainly true to Pynchon.