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!

  • Review: Warriors (2015)

    Review: Warriors (2015)

    In a community deep with tradition, change can be slow and painstaking. Warriors documents the frustrating battle of a group of young Maasai warriors as they fight to eliminate Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) from their community, using only their words, experiences and…Cricket.

    Warriors is beautifully directed with innovative shot choices and inspiring animations that map beautifully the content of the film and the hope shown by these great young men. Initially opening with detailed accounts of FGM and with eye-opening statements from both victims and the village elders who believe firmly in their traditions, this is a balanced and fair account of the issues faced by young Maasai girls. Strongly opposed to FGM, but in no way judgmental or damning of those who have perpetrated the tradition for years Warriors is how a documentary should be. Free from exaggeration and the unnecessary shock factor, Warriors easily places the audience beside this group of men and takes them along for the fight. You can’t help but feel that this is your fight too.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=otCQ0Je3pIQ

    The initial ‘educational’ portion is well paced and is followed up well by the excitement of the cricket and the Last man standing tournament the Maasai warriors have been invited to attend by the ECB. A much lighter portion of the film, it feels very different and eases the audience away from the hard-hitting facts to the light and breezy joy of a cricket tournament but manages this very tastefully, soon returning to the films true message. Their choice to play in traditional dress makes for some fantastic and artistic shots and the warriors grace and confidence behind camera provides some of the most enjoyable interviews you’ll ever watch. The piece ends as it should, with the Maasai warriors returning home to face their elders in their battle to end FGM.

    Perfect for those interested in Africa, human rights and even cricket, but truly, Warriors is for everyone and I can’t think of anyone who won’t enjoy watching this film. Not a groundbreaking by any means but enjoyable and fun to watch, if a little harrowing in parts.

    Excellent!

  • Blu-Ray Review: Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls (Meyer, 1970)

    Blu-Ray Review: Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls (Meyer, 1970)

    By Last Caress.

    “I’d like to strap you on sometime.” – Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls

    Action. Drama. Comedy. Musical. Sex. Romance. Horror. Social commentary. Sections in a video store? Well, yes, probably. But they’re also the many genres well represented in Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (Meyer, 1970), arguably the most accessible – and certainly the most successful – movie by auteur Russ Meyer, the purveyor supreme of camp comedy, high sleaze and powerful women with wide-eyed, elfin faces and gargantuan breasts. Arrow video, those purveyors supreme of cult classic movies, have released Beyond the Valley of the Dolls in a wonderful blu-ray package chock-full of extras, not least of which is a DVD presentation of The Seven Minutes (1971), Meyer’s seldom-seen second movie for 20th Century Fox (Beyond the Valley of the Dolls was his first).

    The Kelly Affair are an all-girl three-piece psychedelic pop-rock combo, fronted by Kelly (Dolly Read) and managed by her boyfriend Harris (David Gurian). They travel to Los Angeles to connect with Kelly’s aunt Susan (Phyllis Davis), who is heir to a large family inheritance and who is willing to share a considerable amount of it with Kelly, much to the chagrin of Susan’s odious accountant Porter (Duncan McLeod), who is secretly attempting to steal the inheritance.

    Whilst in the City of Angels, The Kelly Affair are introduced to the wild and eccentric pansexual music mogul Z-Man (John LaZar), who immediately takes The Kelly Affair under his wing, changing their name to The Carrie Nations and alienating Kelly’s boyfriend/manager in the process. From here, the movie follows several plot strands at once: Kelly is seduced by Lance (Michael Blodgett), an actor and male escort; Porter tries at first to discredit and then to ingratiate himself with Kelly, to keep himself close to Susan’s inheritance; Band members Pet (Marcia McBroom) and Casey (Cynthia Myers) enter into relationships with aspiring lawyer Emerson (Harrison Page) and lesbian fashionista Roxanne (Erica Gavin, star of Meyer’s 1968 movie Vixen) respectively; Harris, upset at the increasing distance between himself and Kelly, allows himself to become the plaything of porn star and party girl Ashley (Edy Williams). These waters are muddied further by Pet’s fling with a champion boxer (James Inglehart), and by Harris’ one-night stand with Casey which leaves her pregnant and him trying to fling himself from the rafters of a studio set. Kelly and Harris in particular become increasingly enamoured of the drug scene around which they’re all spinning, and everything comes to a head – literally – at Z-Man’s drug-addled psychedelia bash, during which he has a proposition rebuffed and makes a bizarre and staggering confession…

    Phew! If that sounds like a lot to take in… well that’s because it is. Beyond the Valley of the Dolls was co-written by the late great movie critic Roger Ebert, and he and Mr. Meyer seemed determined to throw the kitchen sink at the script. Fox, having bought and made Valley of the Dolls (Robson, 1967), based on the successful novel by Jacqueline Susann, had an option to make a sequel and wanted to exercise that option. However, Valley of the Dolls was panned by critics and Ms. Susann began legal proceedings against Fox, claiming their awful movie had damaged her credibility as a serious novelist. Thus, Fox’s “sequel” had to bear no similarity or correlation to Valley of the Dolls whatsoever and, moreover, had to state as much during the opening credits.

    Why still call it Beyond the Valley of the Dolls at all, then? Beats me. But Messrs. Ebert and Meyer elected to make a parody of what they perceived to be the whole LA “scene” at that time although, since neither were familiar with LA or its “scene”, a lot of it was guesswork, speculation and good old imagination. The characters of music mogul Z-Man and prize fighter Randy Black for instance are loosely based on Phil Spector and Cassius Clay respectively, but only on exaggerations of their public personas as Roger and Russ saw them; they didn’t actually have a clue who these people were in truth although, in light of Spector’s conviction for murder many years later, Beyond the Valley of the Dolls gains a morbid prescience as regards the character of Z-Man, played at the zenith of camp caricature by the wonderful doe-eyed John LaZar, who also featured in Mr. Meyer’s 1975 pic Supervixens. Indeed, the last portion of the movie takes a morbid turn – albeit a wacky and blackly humorous one – as Ebert & Meyer put a full stop on their camp and crazy drugged-up love-in with a series of vicious acts designed to vaguely echo the murders of actress Sharon Tate and her friends by Charles Manson’s so-called “Family”, itself a full stop on the camp and crazy drugged-up love-in of the “hippie” movement (and drawing one more connection to Valley of the Dolls, in which Sharon Tate featured). But, despite that and despite Beyond the Valley of the Dolls being Russ Meyer’s major studio bow, it’s also unmistakably a Russ Meyer picture: His stars, unblinking, angelic and Amazonian; his cuts, rapid fire, as though spat from a machine gun; Charles Napier, in there somewhere; comedic Nazi imagery, ditto.

    So, how does it look? Well, Arrow have once again done a sterling job. Beyond the Valley of the Dolls – presented here in its original 2.35:1 aspect ratio –  is an incredibly vibrant movie aesthetically, full of colours and light, retro-cool (although of course it wouldn’t have been retro at the time) and it looks every inch as much on this blu-ray. The movie could’ve been made yesterday. Audio is presented in the movie’s original mono state, as God intended, so although it won’t melt your face off in that satisfying way that the most impressive soundtracks do, it is however crystal clear without fault or overlap.

    Extras are as follows:

    • Introduction by John LaZar – Recorded in 2006 for the movie’s DVD release by Fox, John LaZar (Z-Man)  provides an ad-libbed and in-character introduction to the Special Features section.
    • Above, Beneath & Beyond the Valley – A hugely entertaining and informative half-hour documentary, managing in its brief runtime to touch on Russ Meyer’s career in general up to Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, into which it delves more deeply.
    • Look On Up at the Bottom – Only a ten-minute feature, this, but it packs in a lot of opinion on the music of Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, which of course is plentiful since it’s about a rock band.
    • The Best of Beyond – Critics and stars of the movie discuss their favourite scenes in this twelve-minute feature.
    • Sex, Drugs, Music & Murder – seven-minute piece touching on the hippie counterculture of the sixties and the dark side which ultimately smothered it.
    • Casey & Roxanne: The Love Scene – Erica Gavin and a decidedly flirty and coquettish Cynthia Myers discuss their lesbian love scene in Beyond the Valley of the Dolls in this four-minute feature.
    • Screen Tests – Just what it says on the tin. Seven minutes’-worth.
    • Stills Galleries – Over a hundred incredibly interesting pics, segregated into four sections: Behind the Scenes, Cast Portraits, Film Stills and Marketing Materials.
    • Trailers – Take a guess!
    • Commentaries – For me, the highlights of the extras on Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, even though neither is original to this release (both were commissioned for Fox’s 2006 DVD release): First up is from the late great Roger Ebert, co-writer of the movie and arguably the finest movie critic who ever lived. This is an incredibly informative yet fun and light commentary which I could listen to again and again (indeed, I intend to), and which stands right up there among the best commentaries I’ve ever heard. The second – featuring actors John LaZar, Erica Gavin, Dolly Read, Harrison Page and Cynthia Myers – finds this quintet in fine form, full of anecdotes and clearly enjoying the commentary and the work on which they’re commenting.

    As mentioned at the top of the review, Arrow’s blu-ray presentation of Beyond the Valley of the Dolls comes packaged with a standard-definition DVD presentation of Russ Meyer’s second picture for 20th Century Fox, The Seven Minutes (1971). Based on a novel by Irving Wallace, the movie concerns the trial of a bookstore owner for selling an obscene publication, a novel entitled “The Seven Minutes”. The trial focuses on the novel itself, trying to ascertain whether the novel – which may have motivated a young man to rape a woman – is indeed obscene. With its heavily trial-based setting, The Seven Minutes is without doubt the most straightforward and conventional Russ Meyer movie I have ever seen; unfortunately, it’s also the driest and least interesting, despite some enthusiastic gyrations in a more typical Meyer vein by Baby Doll Devereaux early on. Deejay Wolfman Jack has a cameo and Charles Napier turns up (of course! It’s a Russ Meyer pic!) but, aside from an early sighting of Tom “Magnum, PI” Selleck – and his moustache! – there is little to commend this movie to anyone but Russ Meyer completists. An interview with Russ Meyer and Yvette Vickers (Attack of the 50ft. Woman) on David Del Valle’s Sinister Image talk show from 1987 is the only additional feature on the disc, but it’s best I think to view this entire disc as an extra to the main feature and nothing more. Looked at in that light, it’s a pretty bloody good extra.

    So there we have it. A hyperreal and gorgeous-looking slice of funny, camp, sexy sixties psychedelia, a superb jump-off point for anyone unfamiliar with the great Russ Meyer – and if you ARE unfamiliar: WHY?? – and another triumph for the almighty Arrow Video.

    Released 18/Jan/2016, get it before it’s gone. Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls is highly recommended.

  • The BRWC Review: The Revenant

    The BRWC Review: The Revenant

    The Revenant explores one fundamental question is the human spirit powered by survival or revenge?

    No matter if you’re a born survivor by the end of 2hrs42 mins you learn a number of things: either wee before the film starts if you know you have a weak bladder or make this an immersive cinema endurance experience and train your bladder right there and then, there’s safety in numbers, go to a cinema that allows you to buy booze and drink it as this is one intense movie that leaves you thinking Bear Grylls is a Boy Scout because I never saw him sleep in a freshly gutted dead horse!

    Loosely put The Revenant is set in the early 19th century when the West was still wild, fortunes could still be made and the Native Americans were still fighting against the immigrants who they initially welcomed but slowly realised were stealing their land etc. The film starts with the settlers hunting for furs and a bloody battle ensues. Hugh Glass (Leonardo DiCaprio) was employed by the immigrants to help get everyone back safely to the fort but through his own pride or independent spirit goes off into the woods one morning alone and learns an important lesson – there’s safety in numbers – as he is mauled by a bear. What follows is little short of a miracle that spans 2 hours of screen time as he recovers from the horrific injuries and returns back to the fort to seek his revenge against John Fitzgerald (Tom Hardy) who took everything from him when he was at his weakest.

    The Revenant is directed by Oscar winning director Alejandro González Iñárritu and he seems to be seeking to take the audience on an intense and immersive experience. Whilst the actors and crew may have shivered through the making of the film, you will as well as you watch Hugh Glass trek through snow and be tossed through the rapids like a broken twig. The cinematography is beautiful and for great swathes of the film there is little dialogue and a lot of grunting and straining as Hugh Glass makes his odyssey to avenge what was so brutally taken from him by John Fitzgerald. I applaud the endurance that actors undertook to get into the role and the cinematography is outstanding but for me the film lacked the poetic and almost lyrical style of The Last Of The Mohicans or Dances With Wolves. Not least because I didn’t shiver as I watched those two movies. Equally they didn’t seem as if they were trying hard to win awards instead appeared to truly want to tell a story. During parts of The Revenant, it was a question of whose story was the most important that of Hugh Glass’s odyssey and battle against the elements to survive or the Native American tribal leader searching for his daughter taken from him by the immigrants. There was also lots of social commentary that at times felt tedious and a little laboured.

    Also, lest I forget to mention the blood and guts and there was a lot of it sometimes a little too much. At 2hrs 30 into the film I felt like shouting out I understand it was a savage time!

    The Revenant opened in cinemas across the UK on 15 January 2016.

  • Review: Saigo No Yakusoku (The Last Promise)

    Review: Saigo No Yakusoku (The Last Promise)

    Directed by Yuicho Sato and starring Japanese idol group Arashi; Saigo No Yakusoku is more of a TV drama than a feature film, but remains an entertaining piece that holds your attention for the full running time, th a steady build up, and enough twists and turns to keep you entertained. Though the plot line is a little ‘far-fetched’ you can’t help but find yourself rooting for the characters, both bad and good. With strong introductions for all and enough individual personality to get you attached, writer Shigeki Kaneko has done a great job designed and preparing their protagonists.

    Idol group Arashi won’t be well known to those who don’t have a keen interest in Japanese culture or J-pop. More eagle eyed film viewers may be familiar with Kazunari Ninomiya due to his magnificent role in Clint Eastwood’s Letters from Iwo Jima, but for most this would be your first introduction to their exploits. Whilst most cringe at the thought of pop-stars becoming actors, especially when they also sing the theme-tune; but once again Arashi don’t embarrass themselves and give some strong performances, though the style of Japanese drama may not lend itself, to say, winning an Oscar.

    This is classic example of Japanese TV drama; complete with extended pauses, flawless melodrama and enough motivational speeches to fill philosophy textbook. Saigo No Yakusoku is great fun, and although released six years ago, this is a great gateway into Japanese TV drama for any fan of film.

    Watch it!

  • Sherpa: The BRWC Review

    Sherpa: The BRWC Review

    By Last Caress.

    Sherpa is in cinemas now and will broadcast globally on Discovery Channel in 2016

    http://sherpafilm.com/

    Pop quiz, everyone: Since Sir Edmund Hillary and his faithful Sherpa Tensing Norgay became the first people to scale the summit of Mount Everest in 1953, how many other people have managed to do likewise? Is it six? Ten?  A couple of dozen? No more than that, surely?
    Actually, it’s thousands.

    Precise figures are uncertain at this point but it’s likely to be as many as 3,100+ climbers, and over 5,000 climbs. Not so much a voyage into the unknown anymore, it’s become a bucket-list item for those wealthy enough to pay for the experience and, as in the case of Sir Edmund all those years ago, the Sherpa people of the Himalayan region of Nepal are there guiding the way and making the trip as comfortable and comparatively easy as it can be.

    In April 2013 international media outlets reported a fight which had broken out between a crew of Sherpas and a trio of European climbers. Exactly what had happened to trigger a brawl in such a perilous part of the world is unclear, depending as it does on which eyewitness is doing the explaining, but what’s clear is that Sherpas don’t appreciate being referred to as “Motherf*ckers”, and that something seems not to be sitting right with them. In 2014 Australian documentarian Jennifer Peedom, a specialist in “intimate portraits of people in extreme circumstances” as her website very aptly puts it, decided to head to Nepal to take a Sherpa’s-POV look at the Everest-climbing industry as it stands today and how it’s affecting them. This documentary, Sherpa, is the result and, as with so many documentaries, she got more than she bargained for.

    Let’s stop for a brief lesson in the logistics of Mount Everest.

    My ignorant assumption of scaling the world’s highest mountain was that it was probably the subject of a couple of expeditions per year, made up of no more than maybe three or four guys plus a couple of Sherpas acting as happy human pack-mules, and that these expeditions took maybe three or four days on the way up, plus another couple coming down. Sounds fair enough, doesn’t it? About right?

    WRONG.

    It takes WEEKS to scale Everest. Climbers have to remain at each base camp for weeks just to acclimatise to the height. It takes ten days just to hike to Base camp at the foot of the mountain. And whilst it’s true that a mountain will, for obvious reasons, become ever more perilous the further up the mountain you climb, in the case of Mount Everest the most perilous section by some way is the 600ft route from Base camp to Camp 1. It’s called the Khumbu Icefall, and it’s a constantly-shifting tumble of enormous ice boulders at the head of a glacier at the southern foot of the mountain. Ms. Peedom makes great use of time-lapse photography to demonstrate just how fast and dramatically this area shifts. It really shifts. Because of this, the Sherpas can’t map it. No matter how experienced they are up that mountain, this section is new to them every time. It shifts so fast that it’s different on the way down than it was when they went up past it. Huge crevasses and ravines can open up at any moment, and in seconds. Huge blocks of ice could fall from the glacier above in the blink of an eye. There is no way around it. And as hazardous as that sounds for the western climbers who, in their desire to conquer the mountain, have to traverse it once going up and once again going down, the Sherpas have to traverse it again and again as they bring supplies from Base Camp to Camp 1. Maybe as many as a dozen times more than the tourists. And there aren’t three or four explorers at a time; there are entire caravans, dozens of travellers taken by each of several tour operators, many at the same time.

    While Jennifer Peedom and her crew were on the mountain in April of 2014, largely following the travails of experienced Himalayan guide operator, the New Zealander Russell Brice and his Sherpa crew led by Phurba Tashi Sherpa, an avalanche fell into the Khumbu Icefall, killing sixteen Sherpas making supply runs from Base Camp to Camp 1 for the paying customers.

    Sherpa begins as it was intended: Looking at the Sherpa’s lot. Phurba is proud that he has scaled Everest (or Chomolungma as they call it) 21 times already. His family are somewhat more reticent. They’re mindful of the dangers mountaineering presents, and the risks in constantly traversing the Khumbu Icefall. Many Sherpa are increasingly aware of how much harder they’re expected to work each year to make the experience as wonderful as possible for the tourists; we see them stocking the delightful-looking Base Camp with shelves of books, and widescreen televisions. They’re not scared of a bit of graft by any means, but the exorbitant amounts of money being kicked around from the tourists to the tour operators and on to the Nepalese government, doesn’t appear to be spilling down to the Sherpas themselves. Increasing risks to safety puts the operators in a bind, too. Russell Brice cancelled his tour in 2012, costing everyone a lot of money. Now he’s feeling the pressure to go on no matter what even when, halfway through the movie, the worst tragedy in Everest’s history happens. Naturally the focus of the documentary shifts past this point – although not by much of course; the potential for this sort of horror represent a large part of the resentment bubbling up on the part of the Sherpas, and now here it is. Now, not only is there uncertainty as to whether the climb will continue, there’s a chance that this expedition isn’t going to pass without angry conflict, and this is the last place on Earth where you want to start butting heads with the people around you, upon whom you’re depending to get you home alive.

    Jennifer Peedom co-directed the quite remarkable National Geographic/BBC co-production Solo, about the doomed attempt by Andrew McAuley to kayak 1000 miles across the Tasman sea. With that, her other Everest-based docs Miracle on Everest and Everest: Beyond the Limit and now Sherpa, Ms. Peedom is becoming an important voice in the study of human beings at the very edge of their capabilities, and Sherpa is likely to be one of the finest documentaries you will see this year.