British film
The Receptionist – London’s underground sex industry laid bareThursday, 19 July 2018When director Jenny Lu graduated from university, the promise of a big city career quickly turned into a series of rejections. Around this time, a close friend of hers committed suicide by jumping off a bridge – unbeknownst to their circle of... Read more... |
DVD: New Town UtopiaFriday, 13 July 2018You come to Christopher Ian Smith’s New Town Utopia expecting a damning indictment of post-war British planning. But while there are melancholy moments, this is mostly an upbeat documentary. Smith manages, without the use of CGI, to make the much-... Read more... |
DVD/Blu-ray: Woodfall - A Revolution in British CinemaWednesday, 11 July 2018Woodfall was the independent film production company responsible more than any other for launching and realising the British New Wave of the early 1960s. The outfit was formed in 1958 by theatre and film director Tony Richardson, playwright... Read more... |
Pin Cushion review - a twisted fable of daydreams and bulliesTuesday, 10 July 2018On the surface, Pin Cushion is a whimsical British indie, packed with imagination and charm. But debuting director Deborah Haywood builds this on a foundation of bullying and prejudice, creating a surprisingly bleak yet effective film.Teenager Iona... Read more... |
Swimming with Men review - Rob Brydon and co sinkFriday, 06 July 2018Swimming with Men is a British comedy which must have looked like a dead cert when it was pitched. “A bunch of middle-aged male losers do synchronised swimming. They have a bossy female coach who persuades them to go to the world championships. How... Read more... |
The Happy Prince review - Wilde at heartFriday, 15 June 2018Oscar Wilde did not have a dignified departure. As soon as he died, his body began to emit a river of fluids from various orifices. At the graveside in Père Lachaise there were unseemly scenes which no witness was indiscreet enough to describe, but... Read more... |
Edie review - Sheila Hancock gets summit feverWednesday, 23 May 2018There have been plenty of films about mountains, and they are mainly about men. The plot tends not to vary: man clambers up peak because, as Mallory famously reasoned, it is there. Whether factual or scripted, often they are disaster movies too:... Read more... |
On Chesil Beach review - perfect playing in a poignant Ian McEwan adaptationSunday, 20 May 2018Ian McEwan has said that he decided to adapt his 2007 novel On Chesil Beach for the screen himself at least partly because he did not want anyone else to do so (with earlier works, including Atonement, he was glad not to have taken on the adaptation... Read more... |
Lean on Pete review - a different kind of road tripFriday, 04 May 2018British director Andrew Haigh's Lean on Pete is a heartfelt and surprisingly stark affair. Based on the novel of the same name by Willy Vlautin, the film follows a young boy and his stolen horse across America. Despite its simple premise, Haigh and... Read more... |
Brighton Festival 2018 PreviewWednesday, 02 May 2018This weekend sees the Brighton Festival 2018 kick off. Anyone visiting the city on Saturday 5 May would find this hard to miss as the famous Children’s Parade makes its way around the streets, a joyous dash of colour and creativity. This year’s... Read more... |
Beast review - mesmerising and murky in equal measureSaturday, 28 April 2018Two fast-rising actors, Jessie Buckley and Johnny Flynn, lend genuine flair to a thriller that needs its mesmerising star turns to rise above the murk. Densely plotted, if sometimes suffocatingly so, TV director Michael Pearce's feature film debut... Read more... |
DVD/Blu-ray: They Came to a CityFriday, 27 April 2018Ealing Studios veteran Basil Dearden may have directed it, but 1944’s They Came to a City is mostly a JB Priestley film, an engaging blend of the mundane and the metaphysical. The work’s stage origins are clear; apart from the newly-written prologue... Read more... |