Issue 696

167 articles

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The Angels' Share

23 May 20122 stars

Loach and Laverty's latest suffers from attempts to attract all-comers

Here persists the noble quest of Ken Loach and screenwriter Paul Laverty to create accessible, populist films about the lives of the UK’s so-called underclass. Unfortunately, The Angels’ Share is straining so hard to be accessible and populist that it…

The Dictator

11 May 20123 stars

Sacha Baron Cohen’s latest has moments of solid satire but still feels stale

From the naked scrotum-in-the-face wrestling of Borat to the manifold outrages of Brüno, Sacha Baron Cohen is not a man overly acquainted with subtlety. His latest, The Dictator, drops the improvisational feel of those earlier films, but doesn’t lower…

A Fantastic Fear of Everything

11 May 20123 stars

Crispian Mills' directorial debut starts well but quickly loses pace

A film by the former lead singer of Kula Shaker might not sound an appetising prospect. But before dismissing A Fantastic Fear of Everything, we should remember that Crispian Mills’ film pedigree is pretty spot-on. He is, after all, the son of Hayley…

Casa de mi Padre

11 May 20122 stars

Will Ferrell's Spanish-language comedy is at once unfunny and too silly to take seriously

Funnyman Will Ferrell as a tough rancher in a violent Spanish-language Western? It could only be a joke, and that’s exactly what Case de mi Padre is, a ragged, silly spoof in the Airplane/Naked Gun mode. Unfortunately, as jokes go, it’s a not…

The Pact

11 May 20123 stars

An unoriginal, low budget thriller that’s light on gore and stronger on tension

The latest US horror/thriller to be granted a UK release has a slightly better pedigree than most: writer/director Nicholas McCarthy’s film was developed from his own short, which was shown last year at Sundance, quickly developed into this feature…

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Ill Manors

11 May 20124 stars

A jarring, grimy and a searing indictment of Broken Britain, from debut director Ben Drew aka Plan B

To say Ill Manors doesn’t pull punches is like saying Mike Tyson hits quite hard. Raw, uncompromising and brutal, this urban tale of violence, prostitution and drugs smacks you round the face, then kicks you in the groin for good measure. It marks the…

Free Men

11 May 20123 stars

A Prophet's Tahar Rahim stars in worthy but flawed WWII espionage drama

Loosely based on real events, this espionage drama set during World War II focuses on the largely overlooked cooperation between Arabic immigrants and the French Resistance. Tahar Rahim (who shot to fame in A Prophet) plays a North African worker named…

The Innkeepers

11 May 20123 stars

A genuinely involving and disconcerting chiller that thankfully eschews any trendy post-modernism

Having established his credentials as a serious genre fan with a spot-on homage to 80s horror movies in The House of the Devil, writer-director Ti West reaches even further back into the past with this slow-burning thriller. Like all good haunted house…

A Royal Affair

11 May 20123 stars

A skillfully delivered but coldly aloof period drama from the Swedish Dragon Tattoo team

Reuniting the writing team behind the original Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, A Royal Affair is a welcome break from the current plethora of morbid Scandinavian thrillers; instead, Rasmus Heisterberg and Nikolaj Arcel have co-adapted an unfamiliar but…

Red Tails

11 May 20122 stars

George Lucas pet WWII project suffers from thin characterization, cliché and crude simplification

Star Wars creator George Lucas used clips from his favourite aviation dramas to stand in for battle scenes in the original rough-cut of Star Wars, so it’s no surprise that several decades later, Lucas has invested some of his personal wealth in an…

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T Break 2012 line-up announced

11 May 2012

Beerjacket, Randolph's Leap and Capitals among the unsigned acts to appear at T in the Park

The full line-up for T in the Park's unsigned talent stage has been announced. The T Break stage will host Scottish up-and-coming acts over Saturday 7 & Sunday 8 July at T in the Park. The tent has earned a reputation for highlighting the next big…

Trailer for The Lucifer Effect marries found footage with hyper-viral marketing

10 May 2012

Cinema has had its fair share of found footage thrillers recently. While some have had some success on a semi-stale horror circuit (such as the almost genre-defining Blair Witch Project and the Paranormal Activity series), others have failed massively…

Lawrence of Belgravia

10 May 20124 stars

Intimate and touching documentary about the eccentric Felt frontman

Lawrence - surnameless former front man of the variably appreciated 80s-90s indie bands Felt and Denim, and current leader of the barely-appreciated-at-all Go Kart Mozart – is a bit like the picture in Jarvis Cocker’s attic, psychologically speaking.

How I Spent my Summer Vacation

10 May 20123 stars

Tightly directed action-comedy that even ardent Mel Gibson-haters will find difficult to dislike

There are probably quite a few people – not least screenwriter Joe Eszterhaus, judging by his recently published missive – who would probably like to see Mel Gibson languishing in a filthy Mexican jail. But sadly for them, How I Spent My Summer Vacation…

Dark Shadows

10 May 20123 stars

A fun, if forgettable vampire movie, starring Johnny Depp, Eva Green and Michelle Pfeiffer

Like a kid who turns up late to a Halloween party, Tim Burton arrives with his latest, vampire movie Dark Shadows. After Twilight, 30 Days of Night and Let The Right One In, not to mention TV’s True Blood…aren’t fangs, dusty coffins and dissolving in…

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Beloved

10 May 20123 stars

A sprawling, messy epic on unrequited love from French director Christophe Honoré

Christophe Honoré's Love Songs (2007) established a talent for musical melodrama that eschewed all the traditional razzle-dazzle trappings of Hollywood. Characters break into song as they casually stroll down a city street and the often banal…

New trailer for Danish comedy Klown

10 May 2012

Filthy, funny antics that diverge from Scandinavia's current reputation for serious TV drama

Every now and then, something comes along that makes you laugh, wince and sneeze coffee through your nostrils, in that order. Today, that experience comes courtesy of the trailer for Danish comedy Klown. The film follows Frank (Frank Hvam) and Casper…

Anne Boleyn

9 May 20124 stars

Howard Brenton's iconoclastic historical drama is a hands-down crowd-pleaser

You can see why the original Globe theatre production of Anne Boleyn sold out, and why Howard Brenton’s iconoclastic re-imagining of Henry VIII’s second wife was subsequently sent on a tour of the UK: the show is a hands down, no-arguments…

Roman Bridge

9 May 20124 stars

An unflinchingly claustrophobic production with bold performances and muscular dialogue

There’s a knowing nod to Samuel Beckett in Martin Travers’ Roman Bridge, the first full production in the National Theatre of Scotland’s Reveal 2012 season. The main protagonists are a pair of ragged-trousered hobos, who cling to each other, eat, sleep…

Le Quai des Brumes

4 May 20124 stars

Marcel Carné’s 1938 romantic crime drama gets a well deserved restoration

One of the definitive examples of the ‘poetic realism’ style of French cinema of the pre-war and wartime years, Marcel Carné’s 1938 romantic crime drama has been treated to a well-deserved state-of-the-art restoration. Thanks to the digital dust-off…

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Juan Of The Dead

4 May 20123 stars

Cuban zombie comedy features cheerful mixture of political comment and splatter

Another zombie film. Really? It sounds like the last thing anyone would want to encourage but Juan Of The Dead overcomes any zombie fatigue with a cheerfully anarchic mixture of splatter and political comment. If that just brought the early films of…

American Pie: Reunion

4 May 20123 stars

The cast regroup for a fourth time, and still manage to raise some laughs

The cast of American Pie may have matured since we last saw them nine years ago at Jim and Michelle’s wedding but their antics remain juvenile for this latest slice of raunchy comedy - and for the most part that’s a good thing. Written and…

Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai

4 May 20123 stars

A quietly dignified film about 17th century honour and vengeance from Japanese director Takashi Miik

The rigorously restrained Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai is prolific Japanese director Takashi Miike’s follow-up to the exhilarating 13 Assassins. A companion piece, rather than a direct descendant, it’s a story of 17th century honour and vengeance which…

Clone

4 May 20122 stars

Stilted science fiction psychodrama starring Matt Smith and Eva Green

Originally entitled Womb, 2010 film Clone proves to be a painfully earnest slice of sci-fi psychodrama that attempts to meld burning questions of genetic ethics with the starkness of a Greek tragedy. The clipped, stilted script often appears to have…

Angèle and Tony

4 May 20123 stars

Beguiling and slow-moving story charting unlikely romance in remote Normandy fishing village

A beguiling and slow-moving story about an unlikely romance in a remote Normandy fishing village, director Alix Delaporte’s debut feature film certainly doesn’t force its way into audiences’ attentions. But for cinemagoers looking for some considered…