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  • Broken – Review

    Broken – Review

    This is despair porn. And you know exactly what I’m talking about. It’s one of the biggest sub-genres in British independent cinema. Thug violence, thug redemption, the loss of innocence, one person sitting alone in a big empty room, tears from bruised eyes; Tyrannosaur, Fishtank, This Is England. Now add Broken to the list.

    Which isn’t to say Broken is bad. It’s good, the three examples I used before it are great, and I do recommend it. I just find it – both the film and the genre – a little exhausting after a while. I get it; they’re cheap to make, there’s no end of new (albeit horrible) stories of human misery out there, and the raw, unflinching material attracts consistently excellent actors, which more often than not makes them a gripping watch. I just wish that despair porn wasn’t synonymous with prestige, because while Broken has all its crying, punching and mental health problems in more or less the right places, the whole thing feels a little fuzzy.

    Let’s start with the positives first though.

    The performances are uniformly brilliant. Everyone involved grapples with the material to staggering effect, just cramming every scene with nuance, humanity, shades of warmth and colour. Tim Roth, Rory Kinnear, Cillian Murphy, Robert Emms all do great work, but the film belongs to its leading lady. Eloise Laurence is astonishingly good. On paper, it’s just another one of those roles, a coming-of-age tween, with a sparky attitude, type-1 diabetes and a quirky nickname – Skunk. Laurence is just so natural though, investing Skunk with such a rich life behind the eyes that we quickly look past the cliches. She becomes a living, breathing person and this is what makes Broken work. She’s our anchor, a mainstay of hope and innocence in an increasingly woeful tale.

    The direction from Rufus Norris is assured as well. You don’t get a huge sense of his signature style from the film, but this allows for a series of well-composed, well-paced scenes, allowing his actors to carry the audience’s attention rather than obtrusive direction or editing.

    Through his direction, and the script by Mark O’Rowe, we also find a nice vein of playfulness that runs through much of the film. Touches of witty editing, light moments from the script, or a quick burst of sunlight or colour from the camerawork, add teeny tiny sprinkles of levity throughout.

    The negatives now. The film is almost farcically depressing. It starts as it means to go on with Rory Kinnear’s thuggish father of three beating the red out of a teenager with mental health problems. This establishes the threat of violence nicely, creating a palpable dread that lingers throughout, but the film doesn’t really let up from there and the cumulative effect of all the suffering becomes almost ludicrous. I won’t spoil any of it, because I do think it’s a good film worth seeing, but by the film’s closing moments, as woe after woe after woe piles up, it would have actually been more cheerful to watch cameraphone footage of a rabbit being kicked to death by my own dad.

    The circumstances get so dire that what once was compelling and emotionally honest, became a touch contrived and callous. The cast sell the absolute hell out of it, and the characters’ redemption/damnation still struck home for that reason, but the film lost me a little in its unrestrained sadness, dampening the triumph/loss felt.

    There are also slight structural problems. The film’s not really about much of anything. All the themes are there – fatherhood, community, perseverance, but they don’t develop into something the audience can take home. The plotting’s just a bit slapdash. Things just happen, one after another, in the life of Skunk. This isn’t terrible. They’re all engaging, well-acted things, but they don’t feel like they’re a whole story when the credits roll.

    Some characters fulfil their arc by accident, rather than choice, some don’t get one. The film’s got a lot of life to it, but other than us caring deeply about Skunk and wanting her to generally do well, it’s quite tricky to know what the film wants us to feel. Sad, sure, but about anything in particular, or just sad because sometimes bad things happen?

    Like I said, Broken is not bad, not anywhere approaching bad, but its filmmaking doesn’t quite match its incredible cast or its engaging subject matter, which, in a thickening crowd of like-minded competition, renders it a slightly missed opportunity, if a very worthy one.

  • Looking For Hortense Trailer

    Looking For Hortense Trailer

    Pascal Bonitzer’s bittersweet comedy Looking For Hortense will be released in the UK on 9 August 2013.  Starring acclaimed actress Kristin Scott Thomas, Jean-Pierre Bacri and Isabelle Carré, Looking For Hortense is a tale of dysfunctional relationships in modern day Paris.  Here’s the trailer.

    Damien (Jean-Pierre Bacri), a Chinese civilization professor, lives with his partner, Iva (Kristin Scott Thomas), a stage director, and their son Noé.  The couple’s relationship has drifted into routine that has drained it of love.  Damien finds himself trapped one day by Iva, who orders him to ask his father, a senior member of the French Council of State, for help in preventing Zorica (Isabelle Carré), a woman Iva knows, from being deported.  But Damien and his father don’t get on and are barely ever in touch with each other.  This dangerous mission throws Damien into a spiral that will turn his life upside down.

  • Best Sorkinisms In HBO’s The Newsroom

    Best Sorkinisms In HBO’s The Newsroom

    Aaron Sorkin’s The Newsroom shows the life and careers of a news team working to develop the best possible show and content on television for their audience.  Writing the script for each episode, Sorkin manages to create effective and memorable dialogue between his characters, even using some of his past work from other shows.

    To celebrate the upcoming release of The Newsroom: The First Complete Season on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital Download, we take a look at some of Aaron Sorkin’s best and most memorable quotes from The Newsroom.

    “America is not the greatest country in the world.”

    “We sure used to be. We stood up for what was right. We fought for moral reasons. We passed laws, struck down laws for moral reasons. We waged wars on poverty, not poor people. We sacrificed, we cared about our neighbours. We put our money where our mouths were. And we never beat our chest. We built great big things, made ungodly technological advances, explored the universe, cured diseases, and we cultivated the world’s greatest artists and the world’s greatest economy. We reached for the stars, acted like men.”

     “What does winning look like to you?”

    “Reclaiming the fourth estate. Reclaiming journalism as an honourable profession. A nightly newscast that informs a debate worthy of a great nation. Civility, respect, and a return to what’s important; the death of bitchiness; the death of gossip and voyeurism; speaking truth to stupid. No demographic sweet spot; a place where we all come together.”

    On the Debt Ceiling

    Sloan: “To give time for the people to call their Congressman and say: ‘If you fuck with the full faith and credit of the US Treasury, you’re fired!’ To give time for the people to jam the phone lines of the District Offices, to give the people TIME to say: ‘I’m a fiscal conservative, and you’ve gotta put the pin back in the grenade right now.’ That’s why.”

    Gabrielle Giffords…Dead?

    Reese: “Every second you’re not current a thousand people are changing the channel to the guy who is. That’s the business you’re in. MSNBC, FOX and CNN all say she’s dead. Don, tell him. Don!”

    Don: “It’s a person. A doctor pronounces her dead, not the news.”

    LOL means Lots of Love

    “They’re Journalists”

    Will: I’ve got a guy on my staff who got hit in the head with a glass door Thursday. His forehead wouldn’t stop bleeding, but he wouldn’t go to a doctor ’cause I got another guy who got beat up covering Cairo. And the first guy wouldn’t see a doctor until the second guy saw a doctor. I’ve got a producer who ran into a locked door ’cause he felt responsible for the second guy. I’ve got an 18-year-old kid risking his life halfway around the world and the AP who sent him there hasn’t slept in three days. I’ve got 20-somethings who care about teachers in Wisconsin. I’ve got a grown woman who has to subtract with her fingers staying up all night trying to learn economics from a PhD who could be making 20 times the money three miles downtown. They’re journalists.

    “You never asked me out”

    Sloan: I don’t know who told you you’re a bad guy, but somebody did, somebody along the way. Somebody or something convinced you of it because you think you’re a bad guy, and you’re just not. I’m socially inept, but even I know that. So because you’re a bad guy you try to do things you think a good guy would do, like committing to someone you like but maybe don’t love. A sweet, smart, wholesome Midwestern girl. I could be wrong. I almost always am.

    Don: Why are you single?

    Sloan: A lot of men are intimidated by my intelligence.

    Don: No, seriously.

    Sloan: Because you never asked me out. Caught you off-guard, didn’t I?

    Don: Yeah, you really did.

    While many of these quotes are significant and original to The Newsroom, many of Sorkin’s one liners appear all throughout the first season from multiple characters. Many Sorkinisms used in The Newsroom and their counterparts from other shows can be found in a complete video.

    The Newsroom: The Complete First Season is released on Blu-ray and DVD on 22nd July, and available now to own on Digital Download.

  • Hot Hot Hot Fuzz!

    Hot Hot Hot Fuzz!

    It is quite typical for the genre of comedy to convey a story of the two companions with polar characters, working to protect the law and order. However, this mundane topic gets a brand new flame in The Heat, since we have to tough and hot ladies instead of conventional Bad Boys, who are mixed up in an explosive cocktail.

    In the centre of the story we have special agent Sarah Ashburn (Sandra Bullock), who is quite successful in her investigative work, but rather unlucky in personal relationships and completely incapable of being a team-player. To uncover the mysterious and complex case, Ashburn is assigned in Boston, where she makes a hideous acquaintance with the police employee Shannon Mullins (Melissa McCarthy), who has her own views on the maintenance of the order with in her neighborhood. These plans do not include cooperation with the feds, compliance to the human rights and the basic rules of courtesy whatsoever. And here the Heat begins…

    If Bullock’s character modestly sneers over the police clichés – then in process of occurrence of the McCarthy’s heroine creators are not ashamed break bad, as one would expect from a comedy with an adult rating. McCarthy is performing as she would have been expected to in the role of a wild and foul-mouthed lady. However, her comedy talent and an intuitive ability to improvise shoe its privileges – a striking contrast of the cautious and meticulous fed and turretless sassy cop surely do the trick in making The Heat so hot. Their collision is, basically, the foundation of the scenario, which makes it quite predictable but nevertheless exceedingly funny.  Here comes the real chemistry, both in mutual hostility at the beginning and at their expected convergence as the story develops. If Shannon was accustomed to go ahead without worrying too much about how her methods affect the others and the image of her profession, Sarah, who is used to formality and civility, has to re-establish her behavior to somehow resist the pressure of the brusque colleague. All these moves are obvious, but The Heat charms are not about creativity of the screen-writer. The characters are completely natural, and each of the sassy ladies has her own intelligible story behind them.

    Maybe, the detective component of The Heat is very formal, superficial and rarely logical. But as for the characters – the images work perfectly and completely, allowing The Heat to impress the significant emotional depth even against the background of rudeness and outright cruelty, which often takes place on the screen. Yes, The Heat is a brutal comedy, full of hot and outrageous violent scenes, which justify the adult rating, not only in swear language, but also in the terms of blood and guts, but all these moments are as appropriate as they are exceedingly funny and charming.

  • 2013’s 5 Best Movies So Far

    2013’s 5 Best Movies So Far

    With the tail end of summer approaching, movie fans are starting to look forward to what is generally considered the better half of the year for film. Between the end of summer and the Christmas holidays, we tend to start seeing the true awards contenders of the year, so it’s always an enjoyable time to be at the movies.

    However, the midway point of the year is also a good time to look back at the best films so far. So here are a few words on the 5 best films of 2013 so far, some of which you may be able to purchase on Blue Ray or stream through Picture Box Films on Virgin before long.

    5. Iron Man 3

    It’s getting tough to rank the Marvel movies against each other, but it’s safe to say that this third Iron Man movie held its own. The movie is about Tony Stark (Robert Downey, Jr.) facing a new nemesis – an international terrorist called The Mandarin – while dealing with an anxiety issue that resulted from the events of “The Avengers.” It’s messy at times, but at its core this is one of Marvel’s smartest movies – and let’s face it, 2 hours of Tony Stark is okay by us!

    4. Mud

    This is a very simple movie about a fugitive named Mud (Matthew McConaughey) hiding out on a Mississippi River island. Mud is trying to evade hit men and law officers at the same time, but refuses to skip town without attempting to reunite with his lost love. Meanwhile, two young boys from the area stumble on Mud’s hideout and decide to help him as best they can. It’s simple, but very well done.

    3. Star Trek Into Darkness

    2009’s “Star Trek” reboot was a resounding success, largely because it was simply a lot of fun. It didn’t take itself too seriously, and it didn’t delve so far into Star Trek lore as to only be appealing to lifelong fans. This second installment of the 21st century franchise achieves the same success in much the same way. The movie is about the rise of the villain Kahn (Benedict Cumberbatch) and his battle with Captain Kirk (Chris Pine) and Star Fleet.

    2. This Is The End

    It’s definitely not for everybody, but if you’re a fan of Hollywood’s young comedians – Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill, James Franco, Craig Robinson, etc. – you’ll love it. In this movie, these actors all play themselves (or lightly fictionalized versions of themselves), with the premise being that a bunch of celebrities partying at Franco’s house have to survive the sudden apocalypse. It’s exactly as goofy as its premise, in a brilliant way.

    1. The Great Gatsby

    The latest and best Gatsby adaption is bold, but beautiful. From a hip-hop soundtrack, to vivid visuals, to a star in Leonardo DiCaprio whose personal reputation risked overshadowing Gatsby’s, this movie took a lot of risks – and they all paid off perfectly.