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!

  • #LFF Review: Taxi Tehran Or Taxi [EDIT – DVD Release Date]

    [EDIT – The DVD and Blu-ray release is coming out on February 22nd]

    Driving round the streets of Tehran in a taxi fitted with a hidden camera. In my opinion that can either go one of two ways: bum numbingly dull or the ride of your life. Mercifully Taxi Tehran or Taxi is a thoroughly engaging and often hilarious, despite the precocity of Tahani’s position, drive through the streets of Tehran that lifts the veil and shows us that sometimes reality is truly more absurd and stranger than fiction.

    We meet a variety of characters: are they actors or real people? Who knows and does it actually matter. The absurdity of real life is stranger than fiction. The freelance mystery man who would string people up for stealing car tyres with the teacher in the back saying what exactly do you do. He looks back and says: a freelance thief. It could be a Jean de La Fontaine fable – forget the hare and tortoise and behold the freelance conservative thief and moderate teacher. Then the old ladies and their goldfish sloshing around in bowl of water that they must ensure doesn’t die before they arrive at their destination. Pahani’s little madam of a niece, Hana, who almost steals the show. The lady with roses and finally, my favourite couple: the “dying” man who laments in his delirium that his wife will only be left with a few turkeys and will be homeless so he must leave a will that Panahi and the dvd seller video on an iPhone. As he is leaving it she starts wailing and he tells her to hush or no one will hear him speak. It is comedy gold and utterly absurd yet simultaneously gut wrenching at the reality the widowed wife might face : it rivals the final inimitable scene of Monty Python‘s Life of Brian as they are singing Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life.

    The reason this documentary film works is Panahi. His clandestine direction, he is banned by the authorities, but even with a hidden camera as his attempts to drive around the city pretending to be a taxi driver is incredible. It’s akin to Steven Spielberg or Danny Boyle driving round LA or London with a hidden camera pretending to be a taxi driver picking up customers. He is a master storyteller – providing often hilarious vignettes of everyday Iranian life: the good, bad, absurd and tragic. It reminded me very much of Raymond Carver’s collection of short stories: What We Talk About When We Talk About Love – and here on screen Pahani does the same thing – he perfectly constructs a story in 5 to 10 minutes and then turns his attention to something else, in so doing, leaves the viewer wanting to know more. That is the true mark of a master director: short perfectly formed stories are the hardest to tell and Panahi does it so well. Tehran is his city and the social commentary is provided by the city itself: its’ inhabitants. This won the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival 2015 and was shown at the BFI London Film Festival 2015.

    This is a must see, a gem of a film whether reality or fiction it doesn’t matter. A film made by someone whose passion is storytelling and the risk of prison or detection by the Iranian government won’t stop him from doing what he loves.

    Taxi Tehran is released in cinemas across the UK on 30 0ctober 2015.

    [EDIT – The DVD and Blu-ray release is coming out on February 22nd]

  • Review: Her First Black Guy

    Review: Her First Black Guy

    By Louise McLeod Tabouis.

    Cynical Kevin on a blind date set up by a friend, shares his past dating woes. Apparently none of the women are up to his standard. Exotic night out? He fears he’s become the exotic attraction.

    Then Claire turns up. Initially put off by her stereotypical response to his perfect skin, he is stunned as her friends unexpectedly turn up to the bar, revealing more and more of her intriguing life involving amongst other things, pink mist and Ukrainian military. Kevin looks both fascinated and horrified. Is this a setup? A joke? Finally they ask, “And what do you do?”. Ah…the revealing moment.

    Writer, producer and in the role of Kevin, Christopher T. Wood appears in his second film after ‘Time to Kill’ (2014). Sam Auster directs this short, sharp and funny tale.

  • Film Gems Galore At BFI London Film Festival #LFF

    Film Gems Galore At BFI London Film Festival #LFF

    Festivals are great except when you are a film critic and there are so many films and just not enough hours in the day. What did you manage to see at the BFI London Film Festival 2015; Suffragette, Steve Jobs, Grandma, Carol, Brooklyn, The Lady In The Van, yes, no? I sound as if I am complaining and in a way I am; days need to be at least 36 hours long so I can manage to watch all the films, write reviews and sleep. Festivals for those who are in the film industry are like a two week zombie existence of coffee, blistered fingers from copious note taking, sore legs – running to screenings and a serious lack of vitamin D – watching on average 3 films a day in a dark room. Yet, I feel strangely bereft when it is all over.

    The selection at this year’s LFF was incredible and I had scribbled down a long list of films I wanted to see. Finally, I only managed four at LFF and one interview but they took me across continents and through time. A documentary from Chile: The Pearl Button by Patricio Guzman that marries together the source of life: water with the unimaginable suffering of the Chilean people under various dictators the last of whom was Pinochet. It imbues the viewer’s mind with the essence that was here before man, water, and the suffering man has cast into it, Pinochet’s men throwing their fellow countrymen into the sea to cover up the atrocities of the genocide that blighted Chile when Pinochet deposed Allende. Lighter but no less serious is Taxi Tehran or sometimes known as Taxi by Jafar Panahi, who deftly manages to make a film where the questions raised don’t necessarily require answers and shows us that despite what the sanctions the State threaten him with he will continue to do what he loves. Everyone can relate to humour. Taxi is funny. Can you imagine Steven Spielberg driving a taxi around downtown L.A. and filming and interacting with the passengers – well that’s what Panahi did.

    Youth by Paolo Sorrentino – an ensemble of greats: Harvey Keitel, Michael Caine, Rachel Weiss. The film begs the question what is youth – is it a state of mind, a routine and is it wasted on the young. Maybe the latter was Sorrentino’s premise but regardless it a visual feast for the eyes. Sometimes you reminisce and think my childhood and youth were the best time ever and how it’s inextricably linked to who you become in the present. That deals with one aspect of the multilayered film: My Golden Years by Arnaud Desplechin. The perfect end to my London Film Festival 2015 was to interview Arnaud Desplechin in French, without need of the interpreter, to hear what it’s like to revisit a character 19 years later and why he would never had written or even directed My Golden Years had Mathieu Amalric was not interested.

    The London Film Festival ran from 7 to 18 October 2015.

  • A Sound Marriage: Dolby Atmos And Game Of Thrones?

    BRWC was lucky enough to be invited to an exclusive screening of episode 9 of season 2 of Game of Thrones – the Battle of Blackwater in Dolby Atmos Sound a few weeks ago.

    Here at BRWC we’ve definitely got our Thrones on – what with an exclusive invite to the world premier of episode 1 of season 5 early in the year, and now this invite to see again Emmy award winning episode of the Battle of Blackwater in season 2. That was a pivotal battle in Game of Thrones and certainly the best episode to showcase the impressive and immersive sounds and sights of the battle that you could experience in your living room with Dolby Atmos.

    It’s all about sound right now in cinema as it should be. After all it is not just the image that pulls you in when watching a film but the sound that captivates and awakens the other senses. Dolby Atmos is immersive and cinemas across the country have had it since 2012 but what about having that immersive experience at home. Well, the wait will finally be over on Monday 26 October as seasons 1 and 2 of Game of Thrones have received the Dolby Atmos sound treatment and you can buy the Steelbook collectors editions. It is the first television series to receive the Dolby Atmos treatment. I predict watching a box set will never be the same again.

    Yes, I hear you say that sounds splendid but is it worth investing in new kit when the sound on my tv is just fine?

    Yes it is.

    Go on and treat yourself to a Dolby Atmos enabled AV receiver. However, your regular tv will still be fine. The steelbooks have received the Dolby Atmos sound treatment so your current tv will sound a little sharper but, why not buy the kit and feel as if you are standing next to Tyrion Lannister on the battlements trying to stem the onslaught from Stannis Baratheon’s men.

    The sound is incredible. When the archers shot their flame lit arrows across the castle battlements
    the sound was crystal clear. I almost felt as I was there. I am almost tempted to go out and upgrade my sound system.

    Still undecided – click on this link and watch a clip of Game of Thrones in Dolby Atmos:

    The limited edition Steelbooks will be available to purchase on Amazon for the suggested pricing of 22.99 (HD) on Monday 26 October.

  • Review: L’Eclisse

    Review: L’Eclisse

    ‘Less like a story and more like a poem,’ said Martin Scorsese of Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1962 classic, which now gets a new Blu-Ray release. The loose narrative serves the film as a melancholy meander through existential ennui, as Vittoria (Monica Vitti) drifts away from the end of an old relationship and into a new one.

    Her detached perception of life mirrors that of the film’s masterful use of subtextual drama and eloquent cinematic metaphor – from the subtle (the slow and steady drone of a desk fan) to the cacophonous (the pointless chaos of the stock exchange). At the core of the film is a woman in a domestic cage, her wildness tamed by convention, disenchanted and longing for escape; it’s in the windows she peers out of, the aeroplane contrails that scar the sky, and the empty concrete roads she paces.

    The film is exquisitely shot, with every haunting frame fit to be hung from a gallery wall, and Antonioni’s keen eye for angles and lines self-referenced in the opening scene as Vittoria, gazing at it through an empty photo frame, rearranges the objects around her. This HD transfer serves the film beautifully, with blinding lights, deep shades and crisp grey tones finding illusory images in everyday environments.

    Some might sniff at the paucity of extra features (an interview with Antonioni biographer José Moure only), but the film alone more than speaks for itself.