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  • The Go-Go’s:  Sheffield Doc Fest Review

    The Go-Go’s: Sheffield Doc Fest Review

    BRWC is at Sheffield Doc Fest 2020 watching The Go-Go’s

    Esme Betamax | @betamaxer

    Director Alison Ellwood provides The Go-Go’s with a second chance to tell their story in full.

    The Go-Go’s are the first all-female band to have a #1 album in the U.S. Forming in the late 70s, and bookended by The Runaways and The Bangles, their songs have hooks. Be prepared to have a couple of earworms after this.

    Twenty years since the last documentary, the Go-Go’s have been reluctant to open up as they felt that VH1 did a bit of a hatchet job. They don’t look kindly on it for numerous reasons: Too negative, the tabloid style, a man’s perspective. The residual feeling from the VH1 documentary was that the girls were in over their heads or that women are simply not cut out for the rock n roll lifestyle. Ellwood’s new documentary counters that narrative with praise from members of The Specials, The Police, and I.R.S. label founder Miles Copeland. VH1 Behind The Music (2000) is available to watch here, complete with its cheesy voiceover. 

    The Go-Go's

    The Go-Go’s bring up certain performances, notably their SNL appearance, as examples of their most debauched. However, with it being available online, Elwood chooses to leave out that footage and use photos instead. It’s a painfully slow performance. Like a drunk trying to pull up a zip. They get there in the end, but only through dogged perseverance. It’s more important to see the women laughing about it now.

    The Go-Go’s (2020) is a compassionate film, thoughtfully arranged, in the same vein as The Punk Singer (2013).  And as much as they try to distance themselves from the VH1 documentary, the simple fact is that the story remains the same: Charlotte Caffey was still a heroin addict; Belinda Carlisle would use anyone in the pursuit of fame; Gina Schock still wanted songwriting royalties for songs she didn’t write. Cutthroat in their ambition, jealous and bitter from betrayal, it would be disingenuous to suggest otherwise.

    Carlisle proves to be the canniest of them all. Pulling the plug not long after Jane Wiedlin’s departure, and securing the Go-Go’s primary hitmaker Charlotte Caffey as songwriter for her solo career. Indeed, she’s the only one to continue at that level of fame. Lucky for Belinda someone else (Wiedlin’s replacement Paula Jean Brown) had stepped in and helped Caffey go to rehab in time.

    Ellwood creates space for former members to speak, which gives the story a more rounded quality—not merely glossing over the past—and what comes out of it is a fondness for the LA punk scene of the late 70s. Although the Go-Go’s display greater or lesser degrees of regret about how they treated some people, there is no clear reconciliation with past members. Some of the emotions are still so raw for them recounting the difficult times, especially for their former manager Ginger Canzoneri. She invested everything in The Go-Go’s, including selling her belongings in order to get them on their UK tour. But, inevitably, their drive and determination for success meant her days as manager were numbered.

    Caffey refers to The Go-Go’s as a marriage, and that’s what comes across. They are in each other’s lives for better or worse. The five have made peace with each other, if not with those they ditched along the way.

    The Go-Go's

    Alison Ellwood succeeds in putting the women at ease, partly through her experience (Magic Trip: Ken Kesey’s Search for a Kool Place, 2011, History of the Eagles, 2013, and simply because she is a woman. This is the documentary they wanted to make back in 2000. But they simply weren’t ready to tell a well rounded story then. In their 40s, the group was still too close to the chaos and drama of those formative years 1981-1985. Schock had sued the band only three years prior to its release, and Kathy Valentine was yet to file her lawsuit, so differences were far from being resolved.

    The women are keen for people to understand that they have love and respect for each other. Now that they are in their 60s, and have put the lawsuits behind them, they have mellowed enough to look at the bigger picture. That in itself makes for better viewing. 

    The Go-Go’s is released on Showtime 1st August 2020. Alison Ellwood’s documentary Laurel Canyon, about the musicians and counterculture of the area in the 1960s and 70s, was released in two parts at the end of May 2020. 

  • Military Wives Sing Their Way To Number 1

    Military Wives Sing Their Way To Number 1

    Military Wives flies to Number 1 on this week’s Official Film Chart following its release on DVD and Blu-ray.

    The heartwarming British comedy-drama starring Kristin Scott Thomas, Sharon Horgan and Jason Flemyng is up eight places on last week, joining its namesake as an Official Chart Number 1 – the original Military Wives Choir, led by Gareth Malone, earned the UK’s coveted Christmas Number 1 single with Wherever You Are in 2011, and a Number 1 album on Mother’s Day 2012 with In My Dreams.

    Military Wives tells the story of a group of women whose partners are away serving in Afghanistan, who form a choir and find themselves the centre of a media phenomenon; along the way their unique friendships helping to overcome their fears for their loved ones. 

    Elsewhere on the chart, Sonic The Hedgehog zooms back up to Number 2 just ahead of family favourite Frozen 2, as Birds of Prey (4), Dolittle (5) and last week’s Number 1, thriller The Invisible Man (6) all drop. 

    1917 is also down a place, while Academy Award-winning Joker starring Joaquin Phoenix takes a leap up eight places to return to the Top 10 at Number 8 – its highest placing since April.

    Finally, Dark Waters drifts down two to Number 9, and Onward hangs on for a tenth consecutive week in the countdown at Number 10.

    If you’re looking for ways to stay entertained at home this Summer, FindAnyFilm.com’s guide to the best brand-new movie releases, remasters and TV shows is here to help. Check out the trailer for the summer’s biggest home entertainment hits here: 

    To plan your movie night, head over to FindAnyFilm.com.

    This week’s Official Film Chart features a sneak peek at Julia Garner in critically acclaimed drama The Assistant, available to buy on DVD from July 20.

    The Official Film Chart Top 10 – 15th July 2020

    LWPosTitleLabel
    91MILITARY WIVESLIONSGATE
    52SONIC THE HEDGEHOGPARAMOUNT
    43FROZEN 2WALT DISNEY
    34BIRDS OF PREY AND THE FANTABULOUSWARNER HOME VIDEO
    25DOLITTLEUNIVERSAL PICTURES
    16THE INVISIBLE MANUNIVERSAL PICTURES
    671917ENTERTAINMENT ONE
    168JOKERWARNER HOME VIDEO
    79DARK WATERSENTERTAINMENT ONE
    810ONWARDWALT DISNEY

    © Official Charts Company 2020

    VIEW THE FULL TOP 40 – https://www.officialcharts.com/charts/film-chart/

  • Day & Night: Disney+ Talk

    Day & Night: Disney+ Talk

    While the Pixar shorts seem to be scarce nowadays before their feature films, Pixar have still created some of the most beloved animated short films. However, none is as relevant today as it was 10 years ago than ‘Day & Night’.

    Released near 10 years ago (release date was 19th July 2010), ‘Day & Night’ is a 7-minute short film that showed before ‘Toy Story 3’ It follows the personifications of daylight and night-time. When they meet each other for the first time, they immediately dislike each other, but then learn that they are actually similar on the inside and learn to let along.

    In current times such as Pride Month and the Black Lives Matter movement, this is still an important film. While each person may look different, we are human and we are all the same on the inside: we all breathe the same air and we all have the same vital organs. If we pushed aside our differences, then we can learn to get along too. Near the end, a radio host that is seen in Day’s body even makes a speech about this prejudice, stating that ‘They are afraid of new ideas and are loaded with prejudices, not based upon anything in reality, but based on…If something is new, I reject it immediately because it’s frightening to me.’

    It’s in our nature to stay in our comfort zones, but times are changing for the better, and that has to be accepted; if people constantly stick to what they’re used to, then progress will never be made. The cartoony nature of the short also makes this accessible to anyone of any age and can be used as a morale lesson.

    The visual styles of daylight and night-time are also fantastic: images inside their bodies project what is happening during the day and night, but also interacts with what’s happening outside. An example of this is when Night hits Day, but the sounds are that of a lumberjack cutting down a tree, which is seen on Day’s body. 

    ‘Day & Night’ may be nearly 10 years old, but it is still such an important, and enjoyable, film and relevant to current times. If you have not seen this, then I would really recommend seeing it. 

  • The Truth: The BRWC Review

    The Truth: The BRWC Review

    Beloved Japanese auteur Hirokazu Kore-eda has molded a compelling career crafting intimate portraits of familial bonds, with 2018’s Shoplifters highlighting his immense abilities in one of his best projects to date (won the Palm d’Or at Cannes). Kore-eda’s latest The Truth marks a new page for the writer/director, constructing his first French-English feature to date with an all-star cast. While the film may not rank as one of the visionary’s most assured works, The Truth still highlights Kore-eda’s alluring, easy-going nature.

    The Truth follows Lumir (Juliette Binoche), a screenwriter traveling home to reconnect with her French mother Fabienne Dangeville (Catherine Deneuve), an acclaimed actress in the twilight of her career. Fresh off the release of Fabienne’s personal memoir and in the midst of a new film project, the pair confront their disconnected dynamic in search of common ground in their fragile relationship.

    Kore-eda’s portrait of familial detachment renders finite moments of sheer authenticity, avoiding melodramatic diatribes in the pursuit of lived-in dynamics. His meticulous camerawork enhances each personal frame, with his seamless use of focus and framing highlighting the character’s complex emotional states. The delicacy that the writer/director imbues his subjects with renders the most impact, allowing his characters to vulnerably air grievances while never over-simplifying their personas.

    The Truth’s greatest joy lies in its star-studded cast (Kore-eda cast the three actors he envisioned for the central roles). Catherine Deneuve steals the show throughout, sinking her teeth into Fabienne’s diva status while ringing biting remarks with her acerbic wit. It would have been easy to let the character become a diluted thespian, but Deneuve sympathetically portrays the actress’s ego-driven obsession to her craft with a sense of regret and self-reflection. Juliette Binoche is terrific as always as Lumir, displaying the whirlwind of confronting memories taking hold during her homecoming, while Ethan Hawke and Clementine Grenier present natural charisma as Lumir’s husband and daughter.

    There’s an innate warmth that rings true throughout The Truth’s run time, but its dramatic core feels relatively slight. This is far from the first feature to display an aging actress confronting her personal demons (Binoche played the role perfectly in Clouds of Sils Maria), with Kore-eda’s script offering little nuance on the dissected subject. The inclusion of Fabienne’s acting job as an allusion to her fragile mother-daughter bond with Lumir ends up being too pronounced to have a sizable impact, leaving certain subplots unexplored in the process (the relationship between Lumir and Hawke as Hank, a C-list actor with a damaged past).

    Hirokazu Kore-eda’s keen eye meshes with a well-matched cast in The Truth, an infectiously pleasant venture that brings life to its familiar ruminations on family bonds.

  • Secret Child: Review

    Secret Child: Review

    Gordon (Austin Taylor) and his mother, Cathleen (Fiona Glascott) live in North Dublin in a place called Regina Coeli, a place hidden away from the rest of society because Regina Coeli is a place where single mothers could go to raise their children. Gordon is just like any other boy of his age, curious about the world and always ready to defend his honour when faced with a fight – even if it lands him in trouble.

    However, Gordon is also curious about where his father is, he often sees other children with their fathers, but his mother has never talked about his. Then one day Gordon is surprised to see his mother so enamoured by once again meeting up with an old acquaintance, Bill (Aaron McCusker) leading Gordon, and the audience, to suspect that Gordon may be his real father.

    Secret Child is a bittersweet short film and directorial debut of Yew Weng Ho, based on the novel by Gordon Lewis and Andrew Crofts. Set in a time in Ireland where single mothers were frowned upon by the majority of society, Secret Child puts its audience into a time in the mid-twentieth century where everything seemed to be cheerful despite the darker secrets that people preferred not to talk about.

    Although charming and heart-warming with a particular shocking scene which is certainly a sign of the times, Secret Child never judges its characters or the society as a whole, instead deciding to just show things as they were.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jZjBXsA8t0

    The nostalgic setting and the production value will easily transport the audience back to what some may consider to be a simpler time, and so for the most part it’s an easy film to watch, despite the underlying themes that we would find unacceptable today. All the cast are excellent, especially Taylor who manages to put across the cheeky charm of a boy living in a more innocent time and will certainly warm the hearts of the audience.

    Secret Child may not be a particular ground-breaking or confrontational story about living in that time in Ireland, but the little hope that it brings the audience will certainly make them feel good.