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  • Summer Scars: Trouble In The Woods

    Summer Scars: Trouble In The Woods

    Summer Scars is the one-hour production by Julian Richards, setting itself amongst others of the ‘Broken Britain’ genre.

    The story is set in Wales and follows a group of young delinquents as they enjoy a day of hot-rodding in the local forest. They soon come across Peter (Kevin Howarth), a seemingly harmless man who enjoys joining in their fun. But as he gains their trust what becomes apparent is his true prerogative when they find themselves trapped in a hostage situation.

    Although the film has been lumped with others raising the same issue of British youth, the characters here are a little more believable and a little less threatening. Although the group do get involved with some underage drinking and mild violence, unlike the extreme criminals from films such as Eden Lake and Harry Brown, what is portrayed is the fact that they are just kids and this progresses as Peter’s games become increasingly risky. For the age they are, the actors and actress playing the group do a great job of rendering their helplessness onto the screen, being described as “impressive acting,” from The Independent. Howarth also does a stand up job of playing the psycho in the woods, giving just the right amount of unhinged initially to raise suspicion and slowly developing into a truly fearful and believable performance.

    The idea from the movie stemmed from an event in Richard’s child hood, which is perhaps why he was able to create such tension from scene to scene. Even the forest in which it was set becomes like a prison and creates an incredibly claustrophobic air to the viewer. Despite having little budget to play with, Richards has successfully made a film that could have easily been hyperbolised and for that the movie has received great reviews, being described as a mixture between Kidulthood and Stand By Me.

    It’s an entertaining and well-made film with a decent and thankfully not overly complicated plot. Not only this but it fulfills its goal in creating a tense watch that will leave you falling off the edge of your seat.

  • The Sky In Bloom: Review

    The Sky In Bloom: Review

    The British Gangster film is a fundamental field when it comes to modern UK cinema. The combination of gritty backdrops, dry humor and brimmed with violence plots make this genre a prevalent one, albeit some might say a little over done. However, whether it’s meant to or not, award winning The Sky In Bloom has managed to turn what could have been a typical cat and mouse chase into a rather amusing, rather engaging British crime thriller with an interesting back story of love, death and chocolate cake.

    The storyline follows carpet salesman slash human trafficker Branick (Bill Thomas) and his right hand man Sean (Sean Knopp) as they, along with their unusually non-threatening gang, seek out the killer of one of their men. What should be one of the most prominent aspects of the plot is that fact that Branick only has months to live. However, this is a detail that gets lost in the background of the narrative while also strangely creating a little bit of comical relief, in particular the skit where Branick is selecting his coffin with an overly hyperbolised bent priest. While the plot unfolds as they get closer to their culprit, it’s often hard to tell what is supposed to be the most conspicuous angle: Branick’s imminent death, the vengeance of Eddie, or the interwoven love story between Sean and Branick’s daughter, Amy (Kelly Eastwood). Just when it appears that director Toor Mian might not even be sure himself, the ending all comes together to create a meaningless and yet entertaining conclusion with just the right amount of “holy s**t!”

    At times the acting flits between being a bit hollow to being a bit amplified. The dialogue between certain characters such as Sean and friend Ducek (Ross Mullan) can come across as some generated by a high school drama class. However, what becomes apparent is the intention of the discourse, as Mian creates a hilarious banter that draws inspiration from Guy Richie and Quentin Tarantino, producing some genuinely witty moments including anecdotes that are reminiscent of the classics such as Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and Gangster No. 1. On the other side of production, the cinematography is slick and sharp. Mian uses some interesting points of view, embracing object perspectives and imaginative camera angles, strengthening the film and showing up Mian’s talents as a director.

    The Sky In Bloom established some very positive reactions from its critics and viewers alike, winning ‘Best Picture’ at Newport International Film Festival. What is refreshing to see here is a film that is not embarrassed by its blatant motivations but instead embraces them. One to look out for if you’re seeking an enjoyable British thriller with a comical edge.

  • Review: Mud

    Review: Mud

    Matthew McConaughey is an easy punchline. Coming off like a walking, talking stoner caricature, doing ludicrous things like getting caught playing the Bongos naked or being shirtless 99.9999% of the time, he may as well be a lazily written movie star parody in Californication. After establishing credibility in Indie movies like Dazed and Confused, and even mainstream fare like A Time To Kill, he had  the world at his feet, he had the natural charisma and effortlessly magnatizing screen presence that comes about once every ten years. Oscars and superstardom were probably his if he wanted them. Instead, McConaughey did what most movies stars wish they had the balls to do, which is spend a decade taking the highest pay-cheque offered him at any point, no matter how terrible the movie, or how clearly disinterested he was in the project. McConaughey is such a natural movie star that he could give about 30% and still be the best thing about The Wedding Planner, How to Lose a Guy In 10 days, Failure To Launch, Fool’s Gold or Ghosts Of Girlfriends past.

    B movie romantic comedies were where he lived, so surely this guy should have gone by now. But he didn’t go. And in the last couple of years, he has shown that for him, it was essentially a matter of deciding he could be arsed to become one of the most interesting actors on the planet. Last year he could have been nominated for two Oscars, either his scene-stealing, movie saving turn in Killer Joe, or his barnstorming supporting performance in the otherwise quite leaden Magic Mike. He is rumored to be the male lead in the new Christopher Nolan movie, and may well again be in Oscar contention this year for his Role in Scorcese’s The Wolf on Wall Street. Mud, a small, intimate, southern Gothic indie, is probably the lowest profile release of what was a remarkable 2012 for McConuaghey, but it itself a reminder of his range and capabilities.

    Mud is the story of two kids, Ellis (Tye Sheridan) and Neckbone (Jacob Lofland), who live in the deep south, in an isolated river community. One fateful day ,the two boys go exploring on a small uninhabited island and discover a boat lodged in a tree canopy. Before they can celebrate their find however they discover that ‘Mud’ (McConaughey) is living in it. The boys, particularly Ellis, form a friendship with the rough looking stranger, but he is not all he seems and soon they find themselves roped into his desperate situation, which without giving too much away all revolves around Mud’s one and only Juniper (Reese Witherspoon).

    Mud is an intriguing movie, but it’s also a deeply uneven one. There’s a meandering tone and the slight feeling like another draft of the script to get to the root of what the film is really about wouldn’t have gone a miss. Its got a lot of characters it wants to serve, stories it wants to tell within what is, on the face of it, quite a simple set-up. Not all of them get due service enough to make them compelling, and in turn it means a couple of elements of the story become dead ends and time sucks. For example, the story about Ellis’s relationship with his parents as they are set divorce and lose their home works very well. Ray McKinnon gives a very good performance as his Dad and that carries a decent emotional impact. The noir storyline with Juniper however, is scripted in very broad terms with both the plot and the relationship between Mud and Juniper given very little detail or specificity. And that means it becomes a fairly bland space-filler in a film clearly more interested in other things. It leaves Witherspoon on an island in a role that she really can’t do anything with, and to be honest the whole thing seems to just exist as an excuse for a climactic shootout.  The villains of the story are equally two dimensional and don’t really feel like a threat or even a presence.

    The film is better when McConaughey is on screen and he forms a good rapport with Sheridan and Lofland, and invests his character with enough colour and humanity that it covers over the broad strokes and overly gimmicky things occasionally done with Mud. It’s a very quiet performance, but it gives the movie a beating heart and that serves it well. Sheridan and Lofland give solid performances, Sheridan in the bigger role is a little creaky in the more emotional moments, but for the most part hold their own. The film certainly creates its world very well, and rather than overplaying it’s southern Gothic hand, creates a fairly realistic picture of what a fishing community like this would look like. Of course this relative realism hurts the the more heightened elements of the film, as they feel out of place, but while it is a throw shit at the wall and see what sticks kind of movie, I’d say enough of it lands for the film to be an enjoyable experience.

    Mud is a flawed film, I don’t think there can be much question of that. It feels like a patchwork quilt of ideas that don’t quite fit together neatly enough to make you see past the stitching but I’d say those who enjoy meditative looks at a community and its place in the modern world will get more out of this than those after a creepy, slow-building Sotuhern Gothic thriller. The movie aspires to be both, which is both commendable and the reason for its failures, but there’s a candour, an honesty about the movie that together with a good performance or two that make it worth putting up with the occasional lack of focus. And it’s certainly another noteworthy chapter in the redemption of Matthew McConaughey,  an actor that finally is leaving up to his potential. Thank god for mid life crises, am I right?

    6/10

  • Halo 4: Forward Unto Dawn – DVD Review

    Halo 4: Forward Unto Dawn – DVD Review

    Halo 4: Forward Unto Dawn is an American sci-fi action movie that was directed by Stewart Hendler and originally broadcast via the internet in five weekly episodes from October 2012 but is released on DVD here combined into a single feature.  It stars Tom Green, Anna Popplewell, Enisha Brewster and Daniel Cudmore.  It follows the fortunes of a group of young cadets at the Corbulo Academy of Military Science, a training facility designed to produce elite soldiers for an on-going war.

    The first forty minutes or so are pretty standard ‘grunts in training’ type stuff that you’ve probably seen many times before, albeit not with such an alarmingly adolescent cast.  For the benefit of those who have been living in a monastery for the last twenty years, and / or haven’t seen Starship Troopers, what this means is that you get stock characters in stock situations.  For instance, there’s the loose cannon cadet who gets his squad into trouble by not following the rules; there’s the shouty black Corporal; there’s the gruff General, and so on.  We see them mucking up their training exercises, fighting in the mess hall, and taking baby steps into the deep water of Meaningful Personal Relationships.

    So far, so crud.  But then a strange thing happens.  At the precise moment that a siren goes off and someone barks “This is not a drill!” the film becomes fantastically tense, gripping and thrilling thereby providing possibly the most exciting forty minutes of movie action I’ve seen this year.  The reason for this?  Well, frankly it’s because at this point that the director unleashes Master Chief – the central hero of the Halo video game series.  I must be one of the few people on the planet yet to play any of the games so this character was completely new to me but he’s pure cinema, being a cross between Robocop, Clint Eastwood and Michael Biehn.

    The film now takes you through the kinds of things you might reasonably expect to do if, as it wants you to, you decide to buy the game: shooting, shooting while running, shooting while driving, chucking grenades while spinning through the air attached to the back of a giant armoured lizard.  As with most descriptions of video games, it’s much more fun than it sounds in print.

    The cynic in me wanted to hate this movie, being as how it’s essentially just a gigantic advert for a product that is designed to make insanely wealthy people even wealthier while promoting war into the bargain.  But I wasn’t prepared for the skill with which it’s put together.  Its origins as a web-based series are cunningly disguised to the point that you’d be hard pressed to tell that it wasn’t a genuine cinema release.  Okay there is the odd moment, particularly in the first half, when it looks as if the budget only stretched so far but on the whole it’s a very impressive-looking piece of work.  The special effects and sound are terrific; I was obliged to turn the sound down at one point, lest the other residents in my block think judgement day had arrived.

    Generally speaking, films based on games are rubbish and I’m sure we can all reel off a list of the worst offenders: Streetfighter, Tomb Raider, Doom, Super Mario Brothers.  This movie is better than all of those and the reason it works so well is that once the initial set up is over and done with it takes what made the games so successful and single-mindedly concentrates on getting exactly that up on the screen.

  • The Horror Show

    The Horror Show

    THE HORROR SHOW, launching on 14th June, is the only UK video on demand destination created for, and curated by horror fans. It’s the primary destination for horror fans to stream and/or download horror films, from the latest releases to classic and cult titles.

    Current titles include the critically-acclaimed cult film EXCISION, THE TALL MAN starring Jessica Biel and the HUMAN CENTIPEDE films, as well as restored classics like WHO CAN KILL A CHILD? and NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD and cult favourites such as DEAD HOOKER IN A TRUNK, and a world exclusive- the award-winning supernatural horror THE CASEBOOK OF EDDIE BREWER available exclusively through THE HORROR SHOW.

    In addition, THE HORROR SHOW has the exclusive ‘SHORT STACK’ – a package 10 short horror films – including the award-winning HIM INDOORS, starring The League of Gentleman’s Reece Shearsmith – available for 99p, less than 10p per film!

    More films are being added weekly and all films are compatible with the most popular browsers and smartphones.