Wednesday 8 February 2012

CRAZY STUPID LOVE




IMOGEN SAYS: 

crazy stupid suggestion that changing your new balance for tan loafers would improve your sex life. crazy stupid amount of fit women in one bar. crazy stupid portrayal of women ie. why were said fit women so desperate. crazy stupid incident involving a 17 year old babysitter giving a 13 year old boy a nude photograph of herself. crazy stupid lack of ryan.

crazy stupid vinny for paying £7.50.

STARZ: 2


VINNY SAYS:


This was a crazy stupid film. I cannot believe I ended up paying £7.50 to rent this film off both itunes and film4. I could have gone to the cinema and seen something much better. Even Ryan Gosling couldn't really save this film as he wasnt on screen for long enough and when he was he looked like a mafia member featuring slicked back hair and a gold ring. The other massive problem I had with the film was it's ridiculous portrayal of women as disposable, with Ryan Gosling's slick character suggests all women can be talked into bed by enough compliments and ordering around with some dirty dancing references thrown in. Another plot curveball was the weird and slightly disturbing love triangle between a 13 year old,17 year old and the son's dad, culminating in some inappropriate photographs of the 17 year old being passed around. Is that not illegal.

Finally it was pretty boring, I laughed in a few places, but not really worth watching. I usually quite like Emma Stone (Easy A, Superbad) but even she couldn't save it. At least now we know Steve Carrell can do slightly better than 'I love lamp' (Anchorman), but only slightly. I would recommend 10 Things I Hate About You instead if you want a good rom com.

STARZ: 1/5

TYRANNOSAUR




VINNY SAYS:


This 2011 Film4 drama was written and directed by actor Paddy Considine, who is renowned for his portrayal of dark, complicated characters, and collaborated with Shane Meadow's for his hit This is England, which was pretty bleak. Therefore I wasn't expecting the cheeriest of films, especially with the ominous title 'Tyrannosaur', but his track record suggested he was a pretty experienced director. Oh a little known fact, he wrote the video for the Arctic Monkeys 'Leave Before the Lights Come On'. Anyways back to the review.

Regarding bleak characters and plot, the film did not disappoint. I warn you now if you cannot handle scenes of domestic violence, animal abuse and general misery, then give this one a miss.

However if you can bear some of the more hard-hitting scenes, I would highly recommend this film. As a directorial debut for a feature film, Paddy Considine did VERY well. The script is so realistic it almost made me think he was drawing on some of the themes from real life situations, in that I completely believed in the characters and their world. Indeed the council estate setting matched where Considine is said to have grown up, perhaps why the script felt so true.

Showcasing Olivia Coleman (who plays Sophie in Peep Show) in an incredible performance as Hannah, a Christian woman who works in a charity shop, alongside Joseph, a man with anger problems and a drinking problem. Joseph is played by Peter Mullan, who I was also really impressed by in Trainspotting (he plays Mother Superior) and a little known Film4 flick called My Friend Joe. The two characters work so well together on screen, both unhappy but finding solace in each others company. Both Coleman and Mullan received a load of praise from critics and won awards at Sundance, just in case you don't trust my judgement.

What I thought made the film stand out was the idea that the characters are not as black and white, good and bad, as they originally seem, with the 'good' Hannah having a violent and abusive husband in their 'cosy home', and  'bad' Joseph caring greatly for his neighbours son. The film explores how what appear to be ordinary people can instead act aggressively and violent if they encounter enough adversity, without leaving the characters as stereotypical 'bad people'.  It will change your conceptions of wrong and right, and made me think twice about the type of people I encounter who I would immediately (and probably incorrectly) classify as either yobs with anger problems or a bit mad. As a general rule of thumb I believe that any film that makes you rethink or examine the world around you is a worthwhile film.

STARZ: 4/5

IMOGEN SAYS:


what, its not like jurassic park? land before time?

THE DESCENDANTS

VINNY SAYS:



Having grown up watching George Clooney play charming characters to be swooned at by older ladies (Ocean's Eleven, those coffee adverts, ER), I always thought he was a bit of a frothy actor (perhaps like his coffee ads LOL). However I now take that back as his performance in The Descendants proved that he can do more impressive and deeper characters than I had originally thought. I also was a bit dubious as the director Alexander Payne made Sideways and About Schmidt, neither of which I particularly liked. BUT I would now fully recommend going to see this film.

       The idea behind the film, which they pretty much outline in the trailer in the 'Everyone thinks everything is so great in Hawaii but it's not etc', I thought was pretty original and something I can relate to. I spend most of the time thinking that every other country is somehow better than ours and nothing bad would ever happen there (countries I believe this about include France, Barbados, St Lucia, New Zealand and Australia). So it was interesting and probably timely to consider that maybe life isn't a perfect utopia in another country that isn't the U.K.

       The sad subject matter, the protagonist's wife is in a coma, juxtaposed against the beautiful backdrop of Hawaii, people wearing Hawaiian shirts and idyllic ukulele songs proved to make the events more moving as they unfolded throughout the film, yet somehow the film didn't end up being too cheesy. I also thought although Clooney has been nominated for an Oscar, the actress, Shailene Woodley, who played his daughter was much more interesting to watch and gave a pretty good portrayal of the classic rebellious teen. Although she does look a lot like Tulisa from X Factor which is kind of unnerving.

I thought the film dealt with the complex relationships within a family dealing with death realistically, and was a good mix of sad and funny, with some laugh out loud moments.  Although it's not life changing, I enjoyed watching it and came out feeling somewhere between sad and happy, in a good way.


STARZ: 3/5

Wednesday 1 February 2012

SHAME






VINNY SAYS:

Having seen Steve McQueen’s previous work with Michael Fassbender, Hunger; I was expecting good, if slightly uncomfortable, things from Shame. Shame did not disappoint and was thought provoking, sad, uncomfortable, yet one of the best films I have seen for a long time

Michael Fassbender gave a riveting performance as Brandon, a lonely sex addict in New York City. Being a personal prude I was slightly apprehensive about seeing a film all about sex, however I managed to sit through the explicit scenes whilst only hiding behind my hands a few times. Said scenes I found the most uncomfortable parts of the film, showing how the protagonist managed to completely annihilate himself through pornographic self degradation.

Shame offers an interesting (and possible truthful) view of sex, in opposition to a large selection of Hollywood blockbusters, where the male ‘hero’ is often portrayed a lothario who is able to sleep with many women, raising him in status and viewing sex on a more casual basis. This film however seeks to explore how sex can although be seen not only as a physical pleasure, but also as an escape for more internal and complex issues through an assault on the flesh. The climatic montage of degrading sex acts nearing the end of the film removes any ideas surrounding the lightness of casual sex, instead leading the viewer to question why Brandon is putting himself through such brutality.

I really enjoyed the way the film looked and the small details that McQueen used to convey the emptiness of Brandon’s life. Details like the sterile atmosphere of his apartment and lack of furnishings added to the confinement of Brandon’s addiction and demonstrated how lonely he felt. The continual drinking of red bull and eating of leftovers by the character added to this empty and oppressive character, with no pleasure or comfort experienced apart from the impersonal sex acts that Brandon takes part in.

McQueen also used his well known, close up long shots of faces and landscapes to great affect, the most moving being the shot of Brandon’s sister (played by Carey Mulligan) singing New York New York. This stylistic approach to film making was what enamoured me to Hunger (and won McQueen the Camera d’Or for a first time director at Cannes) and worked again with Shame. McQueen’s artistic background (he won the Turner Prize in 1999) was definitely used to his advantage, with his unflinching camera shots enhancing the voyeuristic tone used throughout the film.
The film appears to leave its opinion of sex addiction ambivalent, only making a slight reference to a chequered childhood, which could have contributed to Brandon’s condition. I thought this lack of judgment was a bold move, leaving the audience to ponder the causes of sex addiction, and more interesting than other films which try to excuse or sugar coat their protagonist’s actions in order to endear them to the audience.

I was very impressed by Shame, and although felt slightly empty afterwards and in need of a stiff drink. Although the content and message of the film is harsh, unforgiving and shocking, it was well worth seeing and will stay with you for days. However I would advise that you do not see this film with a family member, member of the opposite sex or someone who are not that well acquainted with, as all will undoubtedly lead to awkwardness during a large proportion of the film. 

IMOGEN SAYS:

We staggered out of the cinema totally zoned out. It wasn’t just the sun-spots-rub-your-eyes disorientation from leaving the blanketed darkness of the auditorium and emerging when its still light out. Shame offers no resolution to the viewer, no tangible insights to hold on to for comfort as the camera takes you deeper, darker into the messy reality that the gloss of porn does well to cloak. This irresolution is of course necessary: addictions aren’t particularly presupposed to neat wrap-ups. Sex addiction is often commented upon with apostrophes either side as if it is one of those exclusive celebrity neuroses or an affliction only to be found in the ‘real life’ columns of Glamour and Company, managed by a brief spell in the Arizona desert. 

I spoke to my Mum on the phone before I left for the cinema. When I told her what I was going to see her response was ‘I hear it’s a little pornographic…’ - cue awkward silence. Yet, surprisingly the porn content was less than one might expect. Sure, the audience would likely leave shell-shocked if they sat through two hours of hardcore porn flashing up on the screen but it would be too obvious and also unhelpful to producing any kind of nuanced understanding or empathy of the problem. This empathy is, however, tested as the viewer is made to feel increasingly disconcerted: the opening scenes with the prostitute belong to Pretty Women territory by the time the film nears its climax with the graphic scenes in the brothel and the threesome.  Brendan’s addiction is all-consuming, he desperately clears his apartment crammed full of magazines and videos, the effluvia of his obsession almost suffocating. Sex is not pretty and far from loving in this light; its brutal, animal, shoved up to the lens like the figures having anal against the apartment window glass. If there’s a difference in the terminology of sex from making love to fucking, this is definitely the latter. Clearly the soft-focus lens was missing on this set. 

However, this is not to say McQueen has imposed a judgmental gaze. The film is morally ambiguous, it is not declaring Brendan’s activities as reprehensible yet neither do they seem desirable. Cissy tells him, “We’re not bad people, we’ve just come from a bad place”. This made me think of Freud and his theories on repression, how the repressed will out but in a distorted way. I wonder if McQueen is showing the damage done by the condemnation of sex, how its pushed to the margins way underground, and that ultimately these attempts to neatly contain it are futile, it just seeps out anyway, only worse and damaging. 

To label it a film about sex addiction is too narrow, instead it seems to me to be a film about human relationships or rather relationships with varying degrees of humanity about them. A small token of hope is offered in the last minutes, as Brendan strokes his fingers over the scars of Cissy’s mutilated wrists, one wonders if here is evidence of real contact: from flesh to human.