Film
DVD: Children’s Film Foundation Bumper Box Vol. 4Tuesday, 02 May 2023![]() I can still (just) remember Saturday morning cinema being a thing, only because my big brother was old enough to attend weekly sessions at the local ABC and I was too young to go. He would presumably have watched several of the films in this latest... Read more... |
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry review - affecting tale of a late-life road tripFriday, 28 April 2023![]() Here's another small gem of a film graced with a fine central performance by Jim Broadbent, after his lovely turn in The Duke. The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry is, like the earlier film, the story of an eccentric older man who embarks on a... Read more... |
Berg review - a glorious visual meditation on the mountains of SloveniaFriday, 28 April 2023![]() It’s been a long time since I went walking in the mountains – too long. And Joke Olthaar’s film Berg (mountain) has intensified my longing for that very special experience.Three walkers follow the stony paths of the Alpine ranges in Triglav National... Read more... |
Rodéo review - heroine from the banlieues powers a rebel-teens sagaFriday, 28 April 2023![]() Reading an interview with the French director of Rodéo, Lola Quivoron, you come to realise her compelling film about dirt-bike-rider culture relied on a sage piece of casting. Despairing of ever finding a lead for her film project, Quivoron chanced... Read more... |
Little Richard: I am Everything review - a riveting account of 'the brightest star in the universe'Thursday, 27 April 2023![]() Lisa Cortés’s fast-paced documentary Little Richard: I Am Everything opens with a TV interview made in 1971, 16 years after the rock 'n' roll pioneer became an overnight success with groundbreaking hits like "Tutti Frutti" and "Good Golly... Read more... |
Blu-ray: EOTuesday, 25 April 2023![]() The ne plus ultra of donkey films remains Robert Bresson’s heartbreaking Au hazard Balthazar (1966). Veteran Polish director Jerzy Skolimowski’s EO, premiered at last year’s Cannes Festival, is a very loose variant, Skolimowski revealing in a... Read more... |
Pacifiction review - portending hell in paradiseMonday, 24 April 2023![]() Paranoia seeps into paradise in Albert Serra’s Pacifiction, a scathing critique of French colonialism on the Polynesian island of Tahiti. Acting on rumours that his overlords are about to resume nuclear testing in the region and fearing his... Read more... |
Sick of Myself review - queasy black comedy about self-obsessed youthSunday, 23 April 2023![]() Sick of Myself is being marketed as one of those oh so clever satirical comedies about privileged but fucked-up people. Think Worst Person in the World, Triangle of Sadness and The White Lotus and you’ll get the genre.... Read more... |
Pamfir review - a retired Ukrainian smuggler is forced to do one last jobSunday, 23 April 2023![]() It's fair to say that Pamfir, Ukrainian director Dmytro Sukholytkyy-Sobchuk's first feature, has been slightly overtaken by events.Set in the Carpathian mountains, on Ukraine's border with Romania, and filmed in the days and weeks leading up to the... Read more... |
A Thousand and One review - fighting the system in 1990s New YorkSaturday, 22 April 2023![]() AV Rockwell well deserved the Grand Jury award at Sundance in January for her debut feature film, A Thousand and One.It’s hard to believe that this subtle portrait of a troubled young woman trying to raise a child is the work of a first time... Read more... |
How To Blow Up a Pipeline review - can eco-terrorism be justified?Friday, 21 April 2023![]() “This was an act of self defence,” is the last message we hear as How To Blow Up a Pipeline approaches the end of its 104-minute span. The speaker, a revolutionary environmental activist called Xochitl, has been arrested for her involvement in the... Read more... |
Blu-ray: WandaThursday, 20 April 2023![]() In Sight & Sound’s recent Greatest Films of All Time poll, Barbara Loden’s Wanda (1970) placed joint 48th with Ordet (1955), just ahead of The 400 Blows (1959) and The Piano (1992). Loden’s existential indie drama about an uneducated working-... Read more... |
