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  • A Glimpse Inside The Trailer Of Charles Swan III

    A Glimpse Inside The Trailer Of Charles Swan III

    Charles Swan III (Charlie Sheen) has it all. He’s an eccentric and highly successful graphic designer whose fame, money, and devilish charm have provided him with a seemingly perfect life. But when his true love, a perplexing beauty named Ivana, suddenly ends their relationship, Charles is left heartbroken.

    With the support of his loyal intimates– Kirby (Jason Schwartzman), Saul (Bill Murray), and his sister, Izzy (Patricia Arquette) – he begins a delirious journey of self-reflection to try and come to terms with a life without Ivana. “A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III” is a unique relationship film told in a playful and unconventional style.

  • SCENES OF THE CRIME BLOG-A-THON: Harry Brown Review

    SCENES OF THE CRIME BLOG-A-THON: Harry Brown Review

    By Robert Mann.

    The movie industry of the 21st century is very different to the one that existed just twenty or thirty years ago. There was a time when the big blockbusters were serious dramas and thrillers aimed at mature movie-going audiences but now the core demographic that the movie studios is younger people, consequently resulting in many releases being of the variety that only young people are really likely to enjoy and a lack of releases for a older, more discerning viewers. Every now and then, however, a film comes along with the potential to bridge the gap between these two distinctly different audiences, each with tastes completely different to the other, and Harry Brown is one such film. Dealing with issues related to today’s so-called “Broken Britain” in the form of the youth orientated gang violence that occurs on the estates of many British cities and featuring what is purported to be a sensational performance by one of Britain’s biggest and best veteran actors Michael Caine, Harry Brown really does appear to be a film that might appeal to both older and younger viewers, something that is quite rare nowadays, and one that also has the dual potential of being both an enjoyable and engaging piece of entertainment and a thought provoking and meaningful examination of what exactly has gone wrong with this country.

    Harry Brown (Michael Caine) is a widower who lives an uneventful life, enjoying a pint and playing chess with his mate Leonard (David Bradley) in their local boozer in Elephant & Castle. The neighbourhood, however, has become a hotbed of drug dealing and violent crime for savage rival gangs. The local law enforcement, in the form of detectives Frampton (Emily Mortimer) and Hickock (Charlie Creed-Miles), seem to do little more than deliver bad news when a shooting or knife attack claims another young life, and Super Intendant Childs’ zero tolerance policies only seem to attract violent retaliation. When Leonard is murdered by one of the gangs, the police are powerless to prosecute. Remembering his military experience with the Marines, Harry decides to take the law into his own hands. Quietly preparing for payback, he begins a merciless hunt for the killers.

    Right from the opening sequence which, shot in hand held camera style, depicts the shooting of a single mother in front of a child by a youth, it is clear that Harry Brown is going to be an unrelenting and, quite alarmingly, accurate film. With a gritty urban style director Daniel Barber portrays “Broken Britain” at its very worst and it is quite a harrowing journey of a film. Suffice to say anyone who takes offence to excessive foul language and brutal violence should steer well clear of this film, as should anyone who wants to see a film for a good time. This is most definitely not light viewing. Thanks to believable dialogue from scriptwriter Gary Young and believable performances from all the actors playing the youth roles everything we see on screen seems completely true to life and for this reason many will likely find this to be too hard going a film. Contrary to all the hype, the film is not perfect on any level. The storyline is fairly generic, bringing nothing particularly new or original to the fold and were it not for Michael Caine the film would likely have slipped under the radar largely ignored. Also, several of the police officer characters, particularly the Super Intendant, don’t seem quite right, the character I have mentioned seeming like he would be more at home in Midsomer Murders. Despite such flaws, though, the film is bolstered by a fantastic performance from Caine who is completely believable in the role and whose character will have the full sympathy of the audience, particularly anyone who has ever really suffered at the hands of youths like those depicted in the film. Michael Caine makes this film worth seeing but it is his performance that is the heart of the film and without it Harry Brown wouldn’t have much to offer.

    We at BRWC are proud to be part of the SCENES OF THE CRIME BLOG-A-THON!

  • The Best Movies Set At Christmas But Not About Christmas

    The Best Movies Set At Christmas But Not About Christmas

    There are a plethora of jolly tales told through the magic of film and it seems a new one comes out every year. From the wintery classic, A Miracle on 34th Street (1947) to the nineties not-to-be missed Santa Clause (1994), you could fill many a DVD store bargain bin with endless festive fun. But there are those movies set in the festive season that don’t really site the holiday too much, those films that maybe you might be prone to watch over the Christmas period but whose plot does not surround the general process of the holiday. Well if this year you get to the point where you’re getting a little sick of the taste of mince pies and feel like you have candy canes coming out of your ears, stick on one of these films and escape the festivities, at least for a short while!

    Home Alone (1990)

    Although Macullay Culkin’s most memorable character, Kevin Mcallister is left to fend for himself as his family enjoy a Christmas vacation and there are numerous references to the festive season, the plot of Home Alone still doesn’t truly match that of the classic Christmas tale. When two mischievous burglars plaid by Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern try to invade the family mansion, Christmas goes out the window for little Kevin and it turns to all out carnage as the criminals attempt, numerous times to penetrate the child like armoury the house has been transformed into.

     

    Die Hard (1998)

    John McClane, trigger happy, NYPD cowboy finds himself in a hostage situation at the Los Angeles Nakatomi Plaza during an office Christmas party as the German terrorist Hans Gruber attempts to seal his fortune.  The first of this unforgettable trilogy see protagonist played by non-other than Hollywood great, Bruce Willis, take down a whole team of bad guys using only intuition and good old fashioned gumption. There are a few references to the time of year, the power going out being a problem on Christmas Eve for example but this is surely a far cry from White Christmas.

     

    Batman Returns (1992)

    Gotham city is under attack again, this time by the grotesque Penguin, played by Danny Di Vito. Cat Woman makes an appearance in this movie too being played by the alluring Michelle Pfeiffer and overseeing proceeding as always is the caped crusader himself, in this carnation played by the unforgettable Michael Keaton. Again, you’ll find no jingle bells or boughs of holly in this dark and sinister tale, the most prominent hat tip to the season being the subtle dusting of snow that covers the idiosyncratic over-Gothicised Gotham city whose architecture and setting crawled out of the macabre mind of director Tim Burton.

    This article was brought to you by UK film buffs Vue Cinemas.

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  • First Trailer For Award Winning Wizard’s Way

    First Trailer For Award Winning Wizard’s Way

    Winner of the “Best Comedy Feature” at the 2012 London Independent Film Festival and recently-announced winner of the “Discovery Award” at the LOCO London Comedy Film Festival, Wizard’s Way is a hilarious tale of friendship, betrayal, MMORPGs and a revolutionary burger.

    Wizard’s Way trailer from wizard’s way on Vimeo.

    Filmed on a budget of £400 on a secondhand video camera and a boom pole made from an Argos lamp , Wizard’s Way, is the debut feature of Metal Man  a collective of three published authors, Socrates Adams-Florou (writer of the novel ‘Everything’s Fine’), Chris Killen (the novel ‘The Bird Room’ ) and Joe Stretch (author of ‘Friction’, ‘Wildlife’ and ‘The Adult’).

    Shot in their home city of Manchester the three not only wrote and directed, but also starred in the film – Chris & Joe as the budding filmmakers, Socrates as Barry. They then persuaded their friend Kristian Scott to play ‘Windows’ and for reasons still unclear to the filmmakers Sadie Frost makes an unexpected, but excellent cameo appearance. It is produced by Lloyd Stanton, who in turn persuaded Oscar-winning editor Chris Dickens (Slumdog Millionaire), to finish the editing as a favour. Music Industry legends Jazz Summers & Tim Parry are overseeing the rollout via their Big Life Pictures company.

    Metal Way declared: “We hope Wizard’s Way demonstrates that if you have a good idea, some likeable characters and a lot of spare time at the weekends, you can make a feature film without any external support or funding. This isn’t about taking on Hollywood or Soho, this is about genuine indigenous British filmmaking –without the bodices and/or royalty!”

  • UNIVERSAL SOLDIER: DAY OF RECKONING

    UNIVERSAL SOLDIER: DAY OF RECKONING

    Jean-Claude Van Damme, Scott Adkins, Andrei “The Pit Bull” Arlovski and Dolph Lundgren star in UNIVERSAL SOLDIER: DAY OF RECKONING, which ups the ante in the UNIVERSAL SOLDIER series, giving you more hard-hitting, bloody, no-holds-barred fighting action.

    John (Adkins, The Expendables 2) wakes up from a coma to discover his wife and daughter were slaughtered in a brutal home invasion. Haunted by images of the attack, he vows to kill the man responsible, Luc Deveraux (Van Damme). While John tries to piece his reality back together, things get more complicated when he is pursued by a relentless UniSol (Arlovski). As John gets closer to Deveraux and the rogue army of genetically enhanced warriors led by back-from-the-dead leader Andrew Scott (Lundgren), John discovers more about himself and begins to call into question everything he believed to be true.