Category: REVIEWS

Here is where you would find our film reviews on BRWC.  We look at on trailers, shorts, indies and mainstream.  We love movies!

  • The Miseducation Of Cameron Post: The BRWC Review

    The Miseducation Of Cameron Post: The BRWC Review

    The Miseducation of Cameron Post is an important film and shines a light on something that has often be dismissed as “pray the gay away”. This a practice that was big in the 1990s and still ongoing. The Miseducation of Cameron Post embodies what film diversity means and  takes a different look at the gay coming of age genre. This film aspires to be a lot of things and whilst the direction by the co-writer and director of the film, Desiree Akhavan’s is assured, the script lets the whole thing down.

    Cameron Post (surely an award winning performance from Chloe Grace Moretz) is caught with Quinn Shephard (Coley) in the back of her date’s car making out. Her aunt presumably influenced by her pastor sends her niece to a gay conversion therapy centre. The centre is run by Dr Lydia Marsh (played by the astounding Jennifer Ehle) and her brother, who it transpires she “converted” from his “sinful ways”. We learn of how the other members of camp are there through examination of their icebergs and their interactions with Cameron. What incident lead them to be at the camp, how will they survive and can any of them actually be converted?

    The paradox of this film, and what makes it interesting, is that it is that it’s episodic rather than thematic in nature and therein lies the problem. There isn’t really a narrative arc rather we the audience follow the daily struggles of those in the camp and the various incidents that happen. That is not a dramatic enough story. The ending denotes something of hope although it went on too long as if it was an excuse to play one full track off the Breeders album.

    We don’t really know how Cameron came to be living with the person assumed to be her Aunt and all we are told is that her parents are dead. The middle is quite passive both for the audience and actors – nothing much happens aside from the brutal pivotal act. This is an examination of ideas rather than storytelling. At one point in the film Cameron jumps up on the kitchen table and starts singing What’s Up (What’s Going On) by the 4 non blondes and it is precisely at that point that the viewer is questioning what is actually going on with the story.

    In some ways it does capture the essence of The Breakfast Club but it is dealing with too important of a subject matter for this to be a worthy comparison. The weakest character may actually be Cameron herself because not enough time is given to providing a context for who she is, where she came from etc.

    At times the film felt too self aware when what we really wanted was the  story to be told: a beginning, middle and end.  Representation matters on screen and if teens can see themselves in these characters and this helps them that is vital as well. Ultimately, the Miseducation of Cameron Post aspires to be a lot of things but the script lets it down.

    Cameron Post is released in cinemas across the UK on 7 September 2018.

  • Anchor And Hope: The BRWC Review

    Anchor And Hope: The BRWC Review

    Chorizo the cat has died and Eva’s mum Germaine (Geraldine Chaplin) has given it a spectacular burial. On their return to their houseboat, talk turns to Roger (David Verdaguer), a friend from Barcelona about to arrive in London. “If we let him stay one night, he’ll never leave”, says Eva (Oona Chaplin) to her girlfriend Kat (Natalia Tena). 

    So begins an absorbing story full of questions regarding the creation of a baby: Is it possible to not conform to a typical plan when planning on having a baby? Or to live on a canal boat, not have traditional jobs, and have a live-in friend who donates his sperm? And when Eva’s plan does become a reality, the complications of exchanges like this: “You’re not the father” says Eva to Roger: “Yeah, but you needed me to make it real”. 

    The premise is interesting and timely. The pragmatic and hardened Kat, offering cups of tea and ready to do almost anything but imagine herself as a mother, speaks the truth throughout the film and in a passionate retort to Germaine questions how ready people really are for non-conforming families: “I think you like the idea of rebellion but you always knew that you’d eventually conform. Two women can reproduce but only if we reproduce exactly what straight people have always been doing. Be a safe family unit and make money”.

    Based on the 2015 book Maternidades Subversivas (Subversive Motherhood) by renowned Spanish feminist and activist Maria Llopis. Marques-Marcet and his co-screenwriter Jules Nurrish have transformed the book vividly and with just the right amount of humour, gravity and beauty. The star of the film are London’s canals, and cinematographer Dagmar Weaver-Madsen has created some really stunning scenes – from Eva emerging from the darkness of a bridge to the reflections in the water. The film is full of real and well-portrayed awkwardness, incorporating deep sadness as well as comedy thanks to Verdaguer’s Roger (Best Male Lead 2018 Gaudí Awards), brilliantly straight-faced, inept but loving. A co-production between Spain and the UK, the film was world-premiered at the most recent London Film Festival, and in November opened the Official Section of the 2017 Seville European Film Festival where it won Best Film.

    Director, screenwriter, and editor Carlos Marques-Marcet (Barcelona, 1983) won the Goya Award from the Spanish Film Academy for Best New Director for his first feature film 10,000km (2014).  He went on to win the Special Jury Prize at South By Southwest Film Festival SXSW (2014) and five awards at the Spanish Malaga Film Festival

    In 2015 he directed 13 Dies d’ Octubre, winner of the Gaudi Award for Best Film for Television in 2016.

  • Heathers 30th Anniversary: The BRWC Review

    Heathers 30th Anniversary: The BRWC Review

    There aren’t any films that escape looking dated 30 years after their release. Michael Lehmann’s Heathers is strange in that sense, managing to capture absolutely the style and tone of the 80’s, whilst still feeling scarily relevant today. Released in 1988, Heathers follows Winona Ryder’s Veronica as she navigates new found popularity in high school. With it comes inescapable friendship to those girls, you know the ones – 3 in this case, who all happen to be named, you guessed it, Heather. Frustrated by the way her friends act and treat their fellow students, Veronica seeks comfort in the arms of the new, ‘cool’ kid, JD (Christian Slater). But when JD jokingly suggests a violent solution to Veronica’s Heather problems, the film takes a turn for the surreal.

    It’s difficult to say anything negative about Daniel Waters’ script. Nailing teen angst more effectively than anything before, and much copied since, each of the archetype characters thrive in the ludicrousness that takes hold of Westerburg High School. It is here that Heathers differs from John Hughes fodder of the period. Those 5 stereotypes Hughes introduced in The Breakfast Club are here too, but they feel more natural somehow, more real despite the deliberate step away from reality. Yes, the popular girl likes the jock and not the nerd, and everyone has their own issues beneath those regimented facades. But the slipping of that mask is here less contrived, forced by threat rather than proximity. Heathers achieves nuance that way, escaping the clichés Hughes imposed on a generation, and delivering a host of strongly developed characters – even characters with just one or two moments in frame. Not to mention some of the sharpest dialogue ever penned: “Fuck me gently with a chainsaw,” Heather Chandler says, and we’re just getting started.

    Ryder’s performance is surprisingly complex, perfectly showcasing the competing emotions bubbling away inside a seventeen year old. One minute she wants to be popular, the next to be in love with the outcast. Because of Ryder’s naïve excitement, childish anger and brilliant sarcastic deadpan, nothing feels wrong for the character. “I just want my high school to be a nice place,” she prays, and you get the feeling that in that moment, she means it. 

    Prior to his wonderful performance in Mr Robot, JD was probably Slater’s best role, and certainly his most iconic. He feels utterly at ease in the part, as if no one else could embody such stylish psychopathy. 

    Pulling all of the strands together with a firm hand, Lehmann’s work here is easily the strongest of his career. His vision is eclectic, but works seamlessly with the tongue in cheek tone. A stylistic ancestor, in a way, to Zhang Yimou’s Hero, the colour palette here is totally on point. Red represents power within the school, but Veronica is never found out of blue – even at a funeral. The score is wonderfully reminiscent of that 80’s sound, emanating Beverly Hills Cop and Manhunter to name just two. 

    “Whether to kill yourself or not is one of the most important decisions a teenager can make,” hippy teacher Pauline advises. Heathers never takes itself seriously enough to be a cautionary tale, but that doesn’t detract from the poignancy of the events taking place. When JD eventually announces that this microcosm of high school life is emblematic of society on a grand scale, he’s sort of right. Sure, we may grow out of those uncomfortable teen stereotypes (if they exist at all), but it is undeniable that the modern world is governed by popularism, a proclivity for mass hysteria, and violent terror tactics – all of which exist within the world of Westerburg. Waters’ script may not be prophetic, but it remains relevant 30 years on. And besides that, it’s a hell of a film. 

  • The Last Movie Star: Review

    The Last Movie Star: Review

    Burt Reynolds stars in this reflective, self-referential movie about coming to terms with your lot in life, and accepting your past mistakes. The premise is interesting, with Reynolds basically playing himself – Vic Edwards, ageing movie star of decades past, with his best movies and his prime behind him (Sorry, Burt). However the movie itself is dotted with poor pacing, with the opening sequences being so slow that is sends a shiver of trepidation through your body for the rest of the movie. It does get better, but not by that much.

    We first see Vic saying goodbye to his beloved dog Squanto – named after one of his biggest films – a fitting device considering his movie career is now long dead. After his friend – Chevy Chase in the film – convinces him to accept his invitation to the ‘International Nashville Film Festival’, he treks across the country to accept the Lifetime Achievement Award, only to find out that the ‘festival’ takes place in the basement of a bar and the lifetime achievement award is made of fairy lights and gold spray paint. 

    The best parts of the movie come in Act 2, with Lil (Ariel Winter) chauffeuring the frankly dickish Edwards around Knoxville, as he revisits the town that made him what he was after the lamenting the loss of it all now, in the present. The movie has some truly unique sequences where they splice Reynolds, playing Edwards, with scenes from Reynolds’ earlier movies, and the two men talk to each other through the dialogue. This is great, and fun, but it needs more than that to reach the heights it’s striving for. 

    The acting can be poor at times, namely from Ellar Coltrane who plays a supporting character. At one point, Winter looks straight in to the camera a la Jim Halpert from Office US, which is definitely not what the scene is going for. Reynolds as usual is great, his no-longer-give-a-fuck attitude crumbling away to humility and begging forgiveness is a great, and very tough, arc to get through. What do you say to a man whose glory years are behind him? Nothing, just get him another whisky. I would also recommend one while watching this movie, to help them both go down a bit easier.  

  • Wajib: Review

    Wajib: Review

    In one month Abu Shadi (Mohammed Bakri) will be living alone. Reunited with his estranged son to hand deliver invitations for his daughter’s wedding, Wajib is a story of family, loss, and life in Nazareth. Intimate and unassuming, Wajib is a quintessentially arthouse film. Dealing with the politics of family, Israel and Palestine Wajib is both beautiful and hard-hitting. As a Son (Saleh Bakri) and Father disagree on what it means to survive and to fight in a modern Nazareth, we’re taken on a road trip through their lives as we discover the secrets, white lies and worse, all of which make up the complex web that is their lives.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXpZ4CyeYrw

    Mohammed Bakri is known for his politics and his defence of Palestinian rights. Similarly director Annemarie Jacir (Salt of this sea and When I Saw You) is known for several films on life as a Palestinian. Wajib chooses to deal with complex and difficult issues with a much softer touch, which makes them all the more poignant. Is life about enjoying what you have and making the most of life or is it about fighting for more? Is it braver to tear down walls or is it braver to do what is necessary to keep your family safe and well? These are the questions that Wajib asks but provides no answer.

    Yet you cannot forget the beautiful family tale opening up before our eyes. Abu Shadi, whose wife left him for a life in America and another man is faced with battling what’s best for his daughter and tackling resentment against his former wife, and his son who supports her. Mohammed Bakri gives an incredible deep and nuanced performance, with Saleh Bakribacking this performance with equal skill to create possible the most honest portrayal of father and son I’ve even seen in film. Dark humour is present throughout Wajib, and is back up by a beautiful pace coupled with simple but artistically crafted shots.

    Wajib
    Wajib

    We see all of Nazareth during their tour of the city, but we travel much further into the hearts of these characters. Wajib  is a beautiful film that makes you think, laugh and cry. It has everything, and although typically arthouse in that dialogue and not action makes up the bulk of this film, Wajib is a film I would thoroughly recommend.