Monday 28 July 2008

Wall.E

An animated film of exceptional quality from the Disney/Pixar stable. I was so impressed by
this film! A fairly standard sci-fi plot - loosely based on the Noah's Ark Biblical tale. We open on earth many generations in the future. It is devoid of human habitation, Wall.E is one of the few remaining robotic machines invested with the task (apparently insuperable?) of compressing the huge quantities of rubbish that have accumulated in ages past. It is a lonely existence - the only fellow creature that he has is a cockroach. In between collecting and compacting Wall.E watches Hello Dolly with Michael Crawford on an endless loop. He has no conversation, but makes a series of electronic noises. One day a space ship lands and into Wall.E's world steps Eve - another robot - well armed, feminine and collecting and analysing 'life' on earth. Wall.E is fascinated, frightened, obsessed and desperate for the love of this new creature. Eve returns to the ship and as it leaves Wall.E becomes a stowaway in his determination to be with Eve forever. Eve turns out to be one of the regular probes from Axiom one of the many vessels sent into space 700 years before with the aim of preserving the human race. The inhabitants of this ship have been looked after by machines for so long that they have lost the use of their limbs, spending their time floating on little vehicles constantly starring at screens, never having any human interaction. The film then, with much suspense, excitement and humour follows Wall.E and Eve as they battle against the robotic controllers of this ship and achieve the revealation of the human population that they need to return to Earth and regain a proper life. Although a U certificate this is a film enjoyable at all levels - funny, moving, a love story, a romance, a parable, action, adventure and thought-provoking. The animation is truly outstanding so deserves a rating an 8/10.

Tuesday 22 July 2008

Mama Mia

Now this film probably isn't to everyone's taste and has certainly got extremely mixed not to say poor reviews - especially from male reviewers, but I just love this movie! It makes you feel so uplifted and it is fun, fun, fun. Really the story doesn't matter terribly much, but lets go through
it. Sophie is about to get married, and her mother (played by Meryl Streep) a former member of a 'girl band' running a run down hotel on a remote Greek Island can't be certain which of three men she slept with 21 years ago was her daughter's father. Sophie reads her mother's diary for that fateful summer and invites the three contenders (including Colin Firth and Pierce Brosnan) along for the ceremony. Julie Walters is one of Meryl Streep's friends who is along for the ride. The tumultuous two days are illustrated by a string of ABBA hits - sung by the main actors (not dubbed) and Meryl Streep is an absolute revelation, and belts out the fast numbers with aplomb, and the slower songs with feeling (Slipping Through My Fingers is emotional). Neither Colin Firth nor Pierce Brosnan are your conventional singers - but that doesn't detract from the performance - it seems somehow more endearing - and Colin's rendition of Last Summer, made the hairs stand up on the back of my neck. Bennie & Bjorn (the composing duo of ABBA) really did write some truly cracking stuff - and the whole essence of pop songs is that they resonate and are associated with moments in your life - and ABBA songs have always been a commentary on mine - maybe Mama Mia will become part of the soundtrack of a new generation. A feel good rating of 9/10

Friday 18 July 2008

The Visitor

The story of widowed academic, Walter (Richard Jenkins) disaffected from his work, and seeking some kind of connection with his late wife - a classical pianist. He goes to his rarely visited flat close to a conference he's attending in New York and discovers it has been unwittingly and illegally occupied by Syrian Tarek (Haaz Sleiman) and Senegalese girlfriend Zainab. Walter allows the couple to remain (I found that slightly unbelievable - you walk into your own flat and enter your bathroom containing a naked stranger having a bath who screams prompting her boyfriend to pin you to a wall, but you then naturally welcome them both, befriend them and let them stay). Anyway, Tarek teaches Walter the drums (not your classical timpani or rock drumkit) and the two of them become buddies. Then Tarek is arrested for a minor charge on the subway and he turns out to be illegally in America (as well as in Walter's flat). He is sent to a detention centre and his mother turns up from Michigan and Walter and she become emotionally entangled. The film is a bit preachy, there is overuse of ironic symbolism - notices in the detention centre waiting room proclaiming the postive gains of immigration, the statue of liberty, etc. Perhaps this is a theme that is done better in the UK, but there were moments of entertainment and enjoyment here, and fortunately sentimentality and mawkishness were avoided, for once. Rating? 6/10

Wednesday 16 July 2008

Female Agents


Another excellent French film starring Julie Depardieu, Sophie Marceau and Marie Gillain. It is the Second World War and in the days leading up to D-Day a British geologist has been lost in France. SOE sends a motley group of women agents to find him and bring him back before he is captured and spills the beans about where the landings will take place. The agents include the former mistress of a German local head of military intelligence in Normandy. Unfortunately the mission to re-capture the geologist isn't the entire picture and the women have to go on to Paris to assassinate the German colonel. This isn't your average war movie, it is thoughtful, the violence is well balanced, the suspense terrific, and the whole thing is extremely well paced. It is all very believable, and is another insight into the part played by women in the resistance in France. Rating 8/10