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  • Carmen Review | Film Reviews

    Carmen film review by UK film critic George Wolf. Starring Melissa Barrera, Paul Mescal directed by Benjamin Millepied. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Carmen Film Review average rating is 3 out of 5 Critic: George Wolf | Posted on: May 17, 2023 Directed by: Benjamin Millepied Written by: Loic Barrere, Alexander Dinelaris, Lisa Loomer Starring: Melissa Barrera, Paul Mescal For this latest reimagining of the classic story, director Benjamin Millepied credits inspiration from Prosper Mérimée’s original novella from 1845, and Alexander Pushkin’s poem “The Gypsies” from 1824. Flashing more modern vibrancy through culturally rich music and dance, this new Carmen arrives as a wonder of visionary composition that struggles to find an equally compelling connection to its characters. The writing team of Loic Barrere, Alexander Dinelaris and Lisa Loomer crafts a surface-level tale of lovers on the run. Aidan (Paul Mescal) is a troubled Marine veteran volunteering on a night patrol along the Mexican border, while Carmen (Melissa Barrera) is trying to cross after the death of her mother. A violent altercation leads to casualties, and the two are soon trying to stay one step ahead of authorities. Millepied (choreographer and co-star of Black Swan ) knows his way around a dance number, getting an assist from flamenco specialist Marina Tamayo for sequences that sport some thrilling fluidity. The acclaimed talents of cinematographer Jörg Widmer (The Tree of Life, V for Vendetta ) and composer Nicholas Britell (Moonlight, If Beale Street Could Talk ) are also on full display, rounding out a veteran stable of technical skill that consistently lifts the film’s imagery and scope. Mescal (Aftersun ) continues to show a gift for quiet nuance, Barrera (In the Heights, Scream , Scream VI ) finally breaks out of her reliance on posing, and the veteran Rossy de Palma (various Almodóvar projects) steals scenes as a savvy nightclub owner, but the script seems content to keep depth at a distance. Pushkin’s centuries-old themes of noble savages and the tragedy of life are too often given a heavy hand, needing a rescue by the visual poetry on display. This Carmen tells us “dancing will you heal you.” Indeed, it’s one of the cures for what ails a less than passionate romance. About the Film Critic George Wolf Theatrical Release < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Close Review | Film Reviews

    Close film review by UK film critic Joe Beck. Starring Marco Fausto Daidone, Gianluca Meotti directed by Lorenzo Sicuranza. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Close Film Review average rating is 2 out of 5 Critic: Joe Beck | Posted on: Dec 15, 2024 Directed by: Lorenzo Sicuranza Written by: Lorenzo Sicuranza, Francesco Teselli Starring: Marco Fausto Daidone, Gianluca Meotti What makes a relationship a close one? Is is the quantity of time spent in another’s company or the quality of that time? How quickly can you form a close relationship? In minutes or does it take hours and days? Those are the questions ‘Close’ raises, though it doesn’t necessarily explore them to a satisfactory level of nuance and depth. ‘Close’ begins with an extract from a poem by Ferdinand Freiligrath - “O love, as long as you can love! O dear, as long as you love! The hour is coming, the hour is coming; Where you stand at graves and lament!” - and the essence of those four lines is felt throughout the rest of the film as well. It’s a poem that expresses the need to love while you can love, because it may not last forever, and whilst that is effectively captured in ‘Close’, the film doesn’t spend enough time exploring the relationship between its characters to truly understand the bond that they share. Franz (played by Marco Fausto Daidone) is all alone in an unfamiliar city as he prepares for a piano competition. Alone in his hotel room he cannot get through to his mother on the phone and is left overwhelmed by his own solitude. All that changes when Andrea (played by Gianluca Meotti) bursts in looking for shelter from the police. Andrea is clearly a dangerous fugitive and angrily remonstrates on the phone to his accomplice but this doesn’t perturb Franz, and very quickly the two strike up something of a friendship. Emphasis must be put on how quickly this happens. One moment Andrea is yelling on the phone, the next he and Franz are sat at the piano playing together with a closeness and sensuality between them. It’s as though a chunk of the film were taken out between the two scenes and we are supposed to just believe that they struck up a friendship just like that. There’s connective tissue between the events and this is a pattern that continues throughout the film. It’s a fault in the screenplay by Lorenzo Sicuranza and Francesco Teselli as they fail to effectively set up any of the events of the film. You sense that had the film been perhaps longer and more able to bridge the gaps between scenes then it would have been a far more moving rumination on loneliness and the human need for closeness and relationships. As it is, Lorenzo Sicuranza’s impeccably beautiful directing is let down by the gaps in the screenplay and the film feels rather unfulfilling. ‘Close’ is a disappointing film. It’s one that is full of unfulfilled potential as it fails to properly explore the depths of its questions and themes, and instead feels rushed and incomplete. About the Film Critic Joe Beck Short Film < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Hood Witch Review | Film Reviews

    Hood Witch film review by UK film critic Hope Madden. Starring Golshifteh Farahani, Amine Zariouhi, Jérémy Ferrari directed by Saïd Belktibia. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Hood Witch Film Review average rating is 3 out of 5 Critic: Hope Madden | Posted on: Mar 20, 2025 Directed by: Saïd Belktibia Written by: Saïd Belktibia, Louis Penicaut Starring: Golshifteh Farahani, Amine Zariouhi, Jérémy Ferrari Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live. It’s a popular sentence in the Old Testament, one used to excuse a lot of needless suffering, mainly women’s. It’s not the only spot in the Bible that condemns sorcery, divination and what not. Jesus never mentioned it, though. (He never said anything about women being submissive to their husbands, either.) Islam is no more forgiving, and Nour (Golshifteh Farahani, Paterson ) is about to run afoul of keepers of both faiths and keepers of none in Hood Witch . Co-writer/director Saïd Belktibia examines the muddy difference between a religion’s acceptable magic and harmful witchcraft. However similar the practice, the differentiator seems to be based primarily on whether a woman benefits. Nour makes a living smuggling exotic animals into Paris, mainly to be used in rituals of healing. Newly divorced and struggling financially to raise her son Amine (Amine Zariouhi), Nour is in the development stages of a new app that will link users to a variety of different healers. Nour knows it’s all smoke and mirrors. Her impressionable son is not so sure. Her abusive ex (Jérémy Ferrari, sinister) is willing to believe, as long as it’s a man of religion wielding the mirror and blowing the smoke, and as long as it’s his ex-wife who suffers. Though Hood Witch is far more a drama/thriller than an outright horror film, it does follow a longstanding genre tradition of using witchcraft to point out religions’ hypocrisy and misogyny. But the filmmaker goes further, complicating characters by implicating capitalism as being equally dangerous—particularly to the desperate and easily manipulated—as religion. Farahani delivers a fierce, passionate performance full of rage, compassion and vulnerability. Nour is sharp and not without a conscience, but when tragedy strikes it’s because of her meddling. The consequences, though, are deeply unsettling. Belktibia’s pacing and framing match Nour’s panic, and it’s impossible not to panic along with her. Hood Witch is a tough watch, as misogyny and apathy play out in the film the same way they play out every miserable day, infecting each generation like a poison. The rage that fuels Nour and the film is what feels most relatable. “People think I’m possessed by the devil. I think I’m just angry.” There are unexplored ideas and mixed messages that keep Hood Witch from becoming a great film, but it’s an angry, observant thriller and solid reflection of the time. About the Film Critic Hope Madden Theatrical Release, Digital / DVD Release, World Cinema < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • George Review | Film Reviews

    George film review by UK film critic Patrick Foley. Starring Jack Sambrook directed by Jack Sambrook. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS George Film Review average rating is 4 out of 5 Critic: Patrick Foley | Posted on: Jan 20, 2024 Directed by: Jack Sambrook Written by: Jack Sambrook Starring: Jack Sambrook Mockumentary George is quietly a smart, insightful short which follows its eponymous subject as he is freshly released from the clink, offering an amusing critique of the prison and rehabilitation system with a light touch. When a documentary team receives only one response to their requests to recently released prisoners, they spend a day following him as he navigates his new liberty. However, George (writer and director Jack Sambrook) seems to have learnt little from his time inside, reverting to his old ways of drug-dealing, drinking and unemployment. Though he believes he can easily slot back into his previous life, the world has changed around him – with unexpected consequences… Using its faux-documentary format, George manages to both entertain and provoke with its tale of a reprimanded young man who seems to have learnt or benefitted little from a system that is designed to act in a self-fulfilling cycle. George as the protagonist is quite clearly someone who takes limited interest in improving his life or living within the law, but as the film demonstrates, it seems that there is little effort being made to ensure he does so anyway. By framing the film through a ‘documentarian’s’ lenses, the viewer feels an intimate connection with the ‘subject’ – seeing that his life is allowed to drift without any significant direction. The viewer spends most of the film anticipating George’s re-arrest – effectively questioning what the whole point of the prison system is meant to be. Jack Sambrook impressively realises George – capturing a sense that despite his eccentricities, he is not a bad person at heart. George as a ‘subject’ rather than a protagonist allows the viewer to take on the ‘observer’ role that the documentary team present. Sambrook cleverly utilises this to leave a sense of uncertainty around George’s nature; sometimes presenting as mildly threatening and other times as wholesome and welcoming. It makes the viewer question their own perception of criminals and former prisoners, even as we witness George committing petty crimes. The plot does meander at points – though this is likely an intentional choice on behalf of the filmmakers to show George’s purposeless and drift. A shocking twist at the film’s conclusion is also somewhat out of sync with the film’s message, but is in line with the dark humour woven throughout the story. George leaves enough of an impression to make its audience ask questions of its setting and subject without making grandiose or dramatic statements. A shorter runtime, humour and absurd conclusion soften its critical edges somewhat, but there’s significant depth and thought in Sambrook’s film. About the Film Critic Patrick Foley Digital / DVD Release, Short Film < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Speak No Evil Review | Film Reviews

    Speak No Evil film review by UK film critic William Hemingway. Starring Teni Osho directed by Shayaan. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Speak No Evil Film Review average rating is 3 out of 5 Critic: William Hemingway | Posted on: Jul 28, 2024 Directed by: Shayaan Written by: Shayaan Starring: Teni Osho In the interests of avoiding confusion, it may be worthwhile mentioning that at this point in time, production studio Blumhouse are releasing their newest film, starring James McAvoy, called Speak No Evil . It is a remake of the Danish horror film of the same name which was released two years ago, and as you might expect, has nothing to do with the film we are reviewing today. So, today’s offering from WM Productions, writer/director Shayaan, and co-writer Kieran Rees, is a four-minute short containing only one character and a short TV cameo from Boris Johnson. We follow our unnamed protagonist (Osho) as he gets himself jazzed up, ready for a night of low-level terrorism; dancing around his kitchen, pointing finger guns at himself in the mirror, and putting on his faintly creepy Phantom of the Opera mask as he heads out onto the streets of the city. Boris has been on the telly lying to the public and the Home Affairs Select Committee, and we see him bumbling over his words as our guy flits past in a pirouette as he’s warming himself up for the night ahead. The first scene plays a lot like a music video, with some wild and winsome tones getting us all in the mood while our guy throws some shapes on the kitchen dancefloor. With no dialogue forthcoming it looks as though this might be all we get – and that in itself would have been no bad thing – but soon the mood shifts, the music takes a much more sinister tone, and the visuals show us that our man may not be the happy-go-lucky optimist that he first seemed. There is a great attention to lighting throughout the whole of Speak No Evil , which Shayaan uses to fill their frames and highlight their character. Similarly, the sound design creates a real sense of atmosphere and plays a large part in expressing the intentions of the main character to the audience. It’s just unfortunate that there are no credits from which to reference the skilled workers behind these technical aspects, and if it so happens that Shayaan did all the work behind the scenes theirself – in what was a one day shoot and five hours of post-production – then they should be commended greatly for the level of outcome achieved. It’s not so easy to determine a message or a moral from Speak No Evil ’s denouement, ending as it does on a bit of an arthouse note. The title obviously alludes to the theme of the film, but still it’s hard to figure just who or what is being aimed at, even if the only spoken words in the film are “Fuck Boris”. It is unclear whether Shayaan is suggesting we take the law into our own hands, or that we should speak truth to power through demonstrable acts, or if those in power should speak truth to the people lest they suffer the consequences, or what. There is a slight niggling sensation that Speak No Evil could be glamourising or endorsing terrorist acts, but to be honest everything is so low-key and vague that anything expressed is unlikely to have any impact at all. Still, the film looks good and the music’s great, so even if you don’t agree with the sentiment, or the message gets lost along the way, there’s still lots to like in this four-minute short. About the Film Critic William Hemingway Short Film, Digital / DVD Release < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Farewell Symphony Review | Film Reviews

    Farewell Symphony film review by UK film critic Chris Olson. Starring Qunxi Wang, Joy Sung Kim, Anne Ruttencutter, Jianshe Zhou directed by Xiwen Miao. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Farewell Symphony Film Review average rating is 4 out of 5 Critic: Chris Olson | Posted on: Feb 14, 2022 Directed by: Xiwen Miao Written by: Xiwen Miao Starring: Qunxi Wang, Joy Sung Kim, Anne Ruttencutter, Jianshe Zhou “Brave women always pay a higher price.” Having recently interviewed filmmaker Xiwen Miao , I jumped at the chance to watch (and review) one of her short films. Farewell Symphony is a sumptuous and aching portrayal of life’s journeys and the loyalties we have to face, and break, if we are to ever find happiness. Qunxi Wang plays the younger version of the lead role Yang Yang, a talented cellist whose family expects her to toe a life of preordained expectations. When she defies them and moves to New York to pursue her dream of playing music, we can see the sacrifice still troubling her decades later through the life of older Yang Yang (played by Joy Sung Kim). Farewell Symphony is full of beautifully short music sequences, such as younger Yang Yang furiously playing her cello after a disastrous dinner with her family, or the older version playing solo on a stage without an audience. These scenes are the true highlight of the short film, Miao seems completely capable of mesmerising her audience with a few simple ingredients. The scenes between the older Yang Yang and her partner Maria (played brilliantly by Anne Ruttencutter) are perhaps the most emotionally affecting. With Maria’s ailing health clearly provoking a multitude of buried hurts for our protagonist, it is their loving affection for each other that becomes a much-needed antidote to the cruel abandonment shown to younger Yang Yang by her parents (Yuebo Wang and Xiaolan Wang). But the crossroads that our lead finds herself in seems just as crushing as her one decades ago, whether to continue to pursue her musical career at the cost of leaving those closest to her. It’s a film that deftly touches upon expected gender roles and social conventions without ever needing to spell it out for the viewer. Yang Yang’s numerous dilemmas create instant empathy from an audience who will understand to varying degrees the expectations thrown on to them by their own family members. The migration that the central character takes is also key. The idea of uprooting one’s self to another country in order to pursue a dream is hard enough, let alone when her loved ones condemn her for it. This severed connection plays out particularly brilliantly with the Grandpa character, expertly played by Jianshe Zhou. Farewell Symphony is a subtle family drama with a rich musical tapestry that makes it engrossing for the audience throughout. There are a few bum notes along the way, such as some wooden dialogue being performed in the dinner scene but these are far and few between. Largely, Miao composes a generously engaging story and then delivers it spectacularly on the parallel stages of young life and older life. About the Film Critic Chris Olson Short Film, World Cinema < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Emily Review | Film Reviews

    Emily film review by UK film critic Hope Madden. Starring Emma Mackey, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Fionn Whitehead directed by Frances O'Connor. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Emily Film Review average rating is 4 out of 5 Critic: Hope Madden | Posted on: Feb 22, 2023 Directed by: Frances O'Connor Written by: Frances O'Connor Starring: Emma Mackey, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Fionn Whitehead Wuthering Heights was always a conundrum of Gothic literature. It is mean, its tragedies ugly, its heroes selfish and boorish. It’s a dark and misanthropic piece of fiction often mistaken as romance. Lucky for all of us, Frances O’Connor appreciates the twisted nastiness of the novel and suggests a vividly unusual inner life for its author in her feature debut, Emily. Emma Mackey stars with an understated but authentic weirdness as the misfit Brontë sister. Emily doesn’t seem suited for teaching, or for much of anything. The stories she tells are childish and they embarrass her sisters, and she won’t let anyone read what she’s writing. She seems to disappoint everyone around her except her brother, Branwell (Fionn Whitehead). In O’Connor’s loose biopic, Emily finds the space to explore once her sisters are gone off to teach and she is alone with Branwell. The filmmaker slyly inserts memorable scenes from Brontë’s novel as moments, here more innocent, between brother and sister. These moments work on many levels, but mainly because writers draw from their own lives. The dynamic complicates and Emily’s transformation deepens as an unexpected, almost involuntary suiter comes into the picture. Untethered by the judgments of her sisters, Emily is free to determine her own course and the journey is intoxicating to witness. Mackey glows as her character slowly, finally comes into her own, giving us a dimensional, tender and delicately genius young woman you yearn to know better. Whitehead charms in a slightly underwritten but nonetheless poignant role. Oliver Jackson-Cohen – so different than the unrelenting narcissist of The Invisible Man – delivers the greatest arc of any character as assistant parson William. His performance is never showy, but moments of vulnerability give the film its heartbeat and heartbreak. O’Connor breathes life with all its chaos, misery and joy into the Brontës’ 19th century. Emily feels less like the vision of a newcomer than the product of a passionate kindred spirit. About the Film Critic Hope Madden Theatrical Release < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Bird of Paradise Review | Film Reviews

    Bird of Paradise film review by UK film critic Joe Beck. Starring Neda Davarpanah, Jeffery Thomas Johnson, Brian Ronan Murphy, McKensie Lane directed by Reza Amidi . HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Bird of Paradise Film Review average rating is 2 out of 5 Critic: Joe Beck | Posted on: May 30, 2024 Directed by: Reza Amidi Written by: Reza Amidi Starring: Neda Davarpanah, Jeffery Thomas Johnson, Brian Ronan Murphy, McKensie Lane To many people around the world Los Angeles is the pinnacle of arts and entertainment. Reaching it is like making your way to the summit of Everest for artists in industries ranging from film, music, television, and art. It’s the City of Angels for a reason, where a miraculous big break could be just around the corner, with the fame and millions that might come with it. It’s also the City of Broken Dreams, where for every star that is born, another five people have their aspirations crushed, and are forced, reluctantly into a life they never wanted. ‘Bird of Paradise’ has its protagonist caught between the two, and after a slow start, becomes a tense and unnerving thriller. Reza Amidi’s film attempts to navigate the commentary on the shallowness of Los Angeles and the lifestyle often associated with it, alongside the mystery and thriller elements necessary to keep the story engaging. The commentary is far from tactful, and often heavy handed in it’s approach with regards to the struggles of trying to make the initial breakthrough, and then in the sinister backroom dealings that run Hollywood, which have their shadiness amped up to the max. This gives us a series of characters that are full of tropes - the dodgy talent rep, the stuck up producer, the uncaring agent - making the film seem less and less believable, which is fine for a straight thriller, but bad for a thriller that wants to depict the Hollywood system and its murkiness. The film immediately establishes its thriller elements by opening with the abduction at gunpoint of Sasha (McKensie Lane), the wife of bad comedian, and by all accounts even worse husband, Bobby Garrison (Brian Ronan Murphy). We are then thrust into the life of aspiring actor Kat (Neda Davarpanah), and her struggles to get her career off the ground when she is suddenly presented with the opportunity of a lifetime by talent rep Dominic Dunaway (Jeffery Thomas Johnson) - a supporting role in a studio film called ‘Bird of Paradise’. Kat wants to be an actress but is far from ready from the pressures that fame, celebrity, and working at the height of the film industry in Hollywood, and begins suffering a series of breakdowns, which only heighten her anxiety surrounding the disappearance of Sasha, who had previously been cast in her role. She fears deeply for her safety, and with her world turned upside down begins seeing things and having mysterious dreams, as she becomes more and more involved in the mystery behind Sasha’s disappearance and murder. Reza Amidi directs the film well, particularly in terms of building suspense and tension as the film develops, and in establishing an unnerving sense around so many otherwise ordinary interactions, and a horror film with his directing would almost certainly be an exciting watch. However, the script, also by Amidi, is lacklustre, particularly in regards to dialogue which is often one-note and devoid of any subtext, which doesn’t help the actors, whose performances lack note, and never particularly endear themselves or their characters to the audience. ‘Bird of Paradise’ thrives in building suspense and tension, however as a portrait of Hollywood and Los Angeles it feels shallow, whilst its screenplay detracts from the story, ultimately making the film feel altogether very surface-level. About the Film Critic Joe Beck Indie Feature Film < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Maria Review | Film Reviews

    Maria film review by UK film critic George Wolf. Starring Angelina Jolie, Pierfrancesco Favino, Alba Rohrwacher directed by Pablo Larraín. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Maria Film Review average rating is 3 out of 5 Critic: George Wolf | Posted on: Nov 29, 2024 Directed by: Pablo Larraín Written by: Steven Knight Starring: Angelina Jolie, Pierfrancesco Favino, Alba Rohrwacher After 2016’s Jackie and 2021’s Spencer , director Pablo Larraín wraps his Grand Dame trilogy by shining a slightly less engrossing spotlight on legendary opera diva Maria Callas. Angelina Jolie is outstanding as the American-born Greek soprano “La Callas,” allowing Maria’s indulgence of her own iconic status to land as more realism than caricature. Jolie meet the demands of Larraín’s fondness for lip-synching close ups, and moves through the lushly detailed production design like a queen walking to her throne. Cinematographer Edward Lachman, who earned one of his three Oscar nominations for last year’s Larraín collaboration, El Conde , elegantly captures the image of a solitary figure traveling an exquisite if lonesome city. There is much to admire in the film, but this time screenwriter Steven Knight (who also penned Spencer ) keeps the biography a bit too much at arm’s length. Anchoring the timeline in the last week of Callas’s life and then flashing back via Maria’s interview with a reporter (Kodi Smit-McPhee), Knight never lets us glimpse the full-of-life Maria that calls to us from archival footage over the closing credits. Both Pierfrancesco Favino and Alba Rohrwacher bring needed warmth to their scenes as Callas’s devoted staff, but the balance of the film feels too tidy and glossy to be telling a life’s story. As with both Jackie and Spencer , Larraín is able to illustrate the loneliness and isolation of an iconic woman. We see it again in Maria , we just don’t feel the tragic arc quite as deeply. About the Film Critic George Wolf Theatrical Release < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Mary Review | Film Reviews

    Mary film review by UK film critic Joe Beck. Starring Juliette Regnier, Logan Cutler-Smith directed by Jo Rou, Dan Riordan. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Mary Film Review average rating is 4 out of 5 Critic: Joe Beck | Posted on: Oct 25, 2022 Directed by: Jo Rou, Dan Riordan Written by: Justin Lazor Starring: Juliette Regnier, Logan Cutler-Smith Loss is difficult for everyone, especially the loss of a parent. They are the people who we always, whether consciously or subconsciously look towards for help and guidance, who helped to shape our being. As we ourselves grow older and forge our own lives, separate from those of our parents, we often come to appreciate them all the more, making their death, though we understand it to be inevitable, all the more profound. Most of us grieve for a short period of time, carrying that burden on our shoulders, making our lives just a little bit heavier. However, we still mourn the loss each day, merely in different ways - there is a wonderful quote from Keanu Reeves: “Grief changes shape, but it never ends” - and occasionally it’ll come to the surface, whether that be in tears, anger, or even terror. ‘Mary’ details the last of those three, as Rich (an impressive Logan Cutler Smith), a by-the-books insurance salesman, makes a house call on an elderly woman, Mary (Juliette Regnier), a year after his mother’s passing. What begins as an ordinary visit becomes an exercise in coming to terms with his sense of responsibility for his mother’s death, and the wide range of emotions that in itself ensues. Rich begins to see parallels between Mary and his deceased mother - their tastes in ornaments and the way in which they bake their brownies, not to mention the mannerisms inherent in any sweet, old lady. The parallels are unnerving, amplified by the continued confusion by both characters in referencing each other as ‘mother’ and ‘son’, but the film doesn’t become terrifying until Mary lists, in excruciatingly long fashion, the ways in which Rich feels responsible for his mother’s death, and tensions reach their boiling point. Elderly women have long had the ability to terrify us. Think of Mrs Bates in Psycho, or the rotting old woman in the bathtub in ‘The Shining’ - both of those women are terrifying not through words but through actions, however. Mary is more like the Blind Medium in ‘The Others’, save for the fact that she possesses the sweet voice of a woman her age rather than the uncanny voice of a child. She is hidden in the shadows for the first half of the short, as directors Jo Rou and Dan Riordan build up suspense through words and darkness alone. Juliette Regnier is excellent as the unsettling title character, each word manifests terror the second it leaves her lips, and her eyes have that air of decrepitude about them, which just suggests that something is off. In fact, were it not for the fact that the script, penned by Justin Lazor, is a little too obvious, then Regnier’s performance would be all the more convincing. Unfortunately, the script fails to cajole the viewer into falling for Mary’s initial charm - lines like ‘difficult to find…difficult to leave’ make it plain that there’s something off about her - and similarly weakens the suspense created through Rou and Riordan’s crafty direction. The film is shot with an artistic flourish and feels like an 80s B-Movie with modern-day editing, as the directors insert deeper layers into a film which is, at times, and particularly towards the end, a bit of fun. Whereas normally you would deem that to be out of touch with the otherwise serious tone of the film, throughout ‘Mary’ is embedded with an undercurrent of the absurd, and that is briefly let loose in its climax. As such, ‘Mary’ is an amalgamation of three words which don’t usually go together - ‘loss’, ‘terror’, and ‘fun’. Make of that what you will, but if nothing else, after watching ‘Mary’ maybe you’ll think twice before accepting the next brownie you’re offered. About the Film Critic Joe Beck Short Film < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Corsage Review | Film Reviews

    Corsage film review by UK film critic Hope Madden. Starring Vicky Krieps directed by Marie Kreutzer. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Corsage Film Review average rating is 4 out of 5 Critic: Hope Madden | Posted on: Jan 3, 2023 Directed by: Marie Kreutzer Written by: Marie Kreutzer Starring: Vicky Krieps Neither hero worship nor maudlin tale of objectification, Corsage delivers a daring reimagining of the life of Empress Elisabeth of Hungary, played with mischievous relish by Vicky Krieps. This is hardly the first fanciful reworking of a historical biopic. Director Pablo Larraín has reconsidered two such lives as tragic cinematic poems – 2021’s Spencer and 2016’s Jackie . Just last year, Andrew Dominik turned America’s most recognizable icon into the object of punishment porn (Blonde ). While two of those films are lovely and one is unwatchable, it took filmmaker Marie Kreutzer to reimagine one iconic life without simplifying the tale’s heroine to a tragic beauty to pity. Kreutzer’s year-in-the-life is fictional, though Empress Elisabeth was certainly real. Her presence clearly influences this picture, but Kreutzer’s fantasy – replete with the most gloriously misplaced modern songs – looks askew at the renowned and misunderstood beauty. As Sofia Coppola did with her empathetic and under-appreciated portrait, Marie Antoinette , Kreutzer and Krieps establish the startling aloneness facing a royal woman, particularly a foreign sovereign married into royalty abroad. Krieps excels in particular during scenes where Elisabeth struggles to leverage what power is available to her. The audacity of Elisabeth’s behavior unveils a fiery joy and brittle vulnerability in Krieps’s performance. Wonderfully refreshing are the vanity and selfishness that are allowed to creep into the portrait. Corsage ’s hero is no saint. She’s a free spirit to be admired, as well as a self-centered brat willing to require the sacrifice from others she’s disinterested in making herself. Here again, Krieps is a superstar. Elisabeth’s flaws are outrageous, her strengths enviable, her oppression great. In Krieps’s hands, the composite is an endlessly compelling conundrum, as frustrating as she is fascinating. The film sees power as freedom and acknowledges how little of it there is for women, even women who seem to have it all. In the end, it’s the film’s and Krieps’s humanity that make the final moment of freedom feel earned and victorious rather than fraught with compromise. About the Film Critic Hope Madden Theatrical Release, World Cinema < All Reviews Next Film Review >

  • Joyride Review | Film Reviews

    Joyride film review by UK film critic Christie Robb. Starring Olivia Colman, Charlie Reid directed by Emer Reynolds. HOME | FILMS | REVIEWS Joyride Film Review average rating is 3 out of 5 Critic: Christie Robb | Posted on: Dec 22, 2022 Directed by: Emer Reynolds Written by: Ailbhe Koegan Starring: Olivia Colman, Charlie Reid A cozy story of mutual self-discovery, director Emer Reynolds and writer Ailbhe Keogan’s Joyride delivers a series of poignant moments but unfortunately not enough of them to result in a believable conclusion. The excellent Olivia Colman plays Joy, a solicitor that has recently given birth to a late-in-life baby that she wishes to give away to a childhood friend. The delightful Charlie Reid plays Mully, a teenager who has recently lost his mom to cancer and is left with a scumbag dad who wants him to steal money from a hospice fundraiser to clear his debts. Their lives intersect when the two try to use the same stolen taxi. The transitional nature of a road trip during a transitional period in both of their lives provides the opportunity for each of the two to learn things they never knew about themselves and to grow and mature as individuals. They are doing this while rolling through the Irish countryside, which is quite a pleasurable backdrop. The two leads are very talented and their banter is written naturally enough to be believable. However, the plot at times veers into the ridiculous, ignoring so much of the way the actual world works as to leave you wondering if you accidentally got the genre wrong and you are watching a fantasy. It’s a world in which you can evade the police by simply turning into the first driveway on the side of the road and 13 year-old-boys can function as effective lactation consultants. But, if you are looking for a movie to attempt to give you heart-expanding holiday feelings without the Hallmark tinsel explosion, Joyride might be the movie for you. About the Film Critic Christie Robb Theatrical Release < All Reviews Next Film Review >

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