Emma Simmonds
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The King Of Marvin Gardens
10 May 2013Reissue of forgotten 70s film starring Jack Nicholson by director of Five Easy Pieces
'In the fun house how do you know who's really crazy?' that's the pertinent question in The King of Marvin Gardens, Bob 'Five Easy Pieces' Rafelson's third film. This reissue is a chance to re-appraise the 1972 financial flop starring Jack Nicholson and…
Simon Killer
4 Apr 2013A sinister, smartly shot dramatic thriller starring Brady Corbet and Mati Diop
Antonio Campos follows his striking debut Afterschool with another cinematic punch to the gut. Simon Killer is a film which chills and confounds. Featuring a complex performance from Brady Corbet (Funny Games, Melancholia), it signposts its…
Promised Land
26 Mar 2013Gus Van Sant's eco-drama is fundamentally likeable but shies away from deeper issues
Director Gus Van Sant is no stranger to tackling challenging subject matter, be it school shootings (Elephant), gay rights (Milk) or critically derided remakes (Psycho). His latest effort takes on the controversial gas-mining process fracking, with a…
Evil Dead
26 Mar 2013Fede Alvarez's horror remake doesn't better the original, but is still satisfyingly gory
Plumping for back-to-basics terror over quips and innovation, Evil Dead transcends its remake status with exuberant displays of blood lust, dousing a largely bland cast in buckets of the stuff. The feature debut of acclaimed shorts director Fede Alvarez…
The Spirit of '45
13 Mar 2013
Admirable documentary from Ken Loach about the creation of the welfare state in post-war Britain
With the coalition’s axe in full swing, Ken Loach takes us back to 1945 and the creation of the welfare state. His documentary is part history lesson, part rallying cry, and is a timely reminder of the benefits of pulling together and of what we stand…
Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters
25 Feb 2013Unsatisfying horror, comedy and action combo starring Gemma Arterton and Jeremy Renner
Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters is the dunderheaded English-language debut of Norwegian director Tommy Wirkola (best known for highly entertaining Nazi zom-com Dead Snow). Despite a promisingly (and characteristically) daft concept it's a film that lacks…
For Ellen
11 Feb 2013An occasionally moving portrait of a failed musician starring Paul Dano
So Yong Kim's modest, fitfully moving third feature launches us straight into the middle of a divorce. Joby Taylor (Paul Dano) is a struggling musician, the frontman of the appallingly monikered Snake Trouble. As the film begins, he's driving through…
Movie 43
28 Jan 2013A sloppily slung together anthology film starring Hugh Jackman and Kate Winslet
Movie 43 is as star-studded as it is puerile and therein lies its solitary appeal. With directors including Peter Farrelly, Brett Ratner and Elizabeth Banks, it’s an anthology that’s sloppily slung together, combining spectacular immaturity with…
Profile: Ben Lewin, director of The Sessions
15 Jan 2013
The film is inspired by poet and journalist Mark O'Brien's experiences with a sex surrogate
Born Poland, 1946. Raised in Melbourne, Australia. Background In 1971 Lewin quit his job as a barrister to study filmmaking at the National Film and Television School in England. Lewin’s work to date includes Ally McBeal and the films Georgia and…
Dead Europe
Eerie and alienating drama about family ties
A tale of family secrets, cultural detachment and lingering prejudices with a generous helping of European misery, Dead Europe is Australian director Tony Krawitz’s second narrative feature, following 2005’s Jewboy. Ewen Leslie plays Isaac, an…
Crossfire Hurricane
24 Oct 2012Spirited documentary celebrating 50 years of The Rolling Stones
Marking the 50th anniversary of The Rolling Stones, this spirited documentary from Brett Morgen (The Kid Stays in the Picture) is made up of vintage footage of the Stones during their prime and is brought bang up to date with new audio reflections from…
Seven Psychopaths
24 Oct 2012Unabashed violent comedy from director of In Bruges
Martin McDonagh’s follow-up to In Bruges is as fiercely violent as its title suggests, and a whole lot funnier. Its film-within-a-film concept finds alcoholic screenwriter Marty (Colin Farrell) troubled by writer’s block; he’s got a title – Seven…
Quartet
16 Oct 2012Joyful, if formulaic, drama from Dustin Hoffman
Set in the fictional Beecham House, an opulent home for retired musicians, Quartet is the directorial debut from Dustin Hoffman. Studded with vintage stars, it’s joyful if formulaic matinee fare, like a posh, apolitical Brassed Off. It’s based on the…
The Master
16 Oct 2012Paul Thomas Anderson's latest film includes an astounding performance from Joaquin Phoenix
Following up There Will Be Blood was always going to be a daunting task, but Paul Thomas Anderson truly delivers in The Master. It's the story of two men: Freddie Quell (Joaquin Phoenix) is a restless ex navy man, a rough bundle of nerves; Philip…
The Sessions
16 Oct 2012Charming and gently moving story of a polio survivor and a sexual surrogate
The Sessions is the true story of the poet and journalist Mark O’Brien’s experiences with a sexual surrogate. O’Brien was a polio survivor who spent much of his life paralyzed from the neck down, largely confined to an iron lung. As a consequence he…
Radioman
9 Oct 2012Documentary about the homeless New York film mascot
Mary Kerr’s feature-length documentary debut tells the extraordinary story of Craig Castaldo - a.k.a. Radioman - a New York film set ‘mascot’ who has appeared fleetingly in over 100 features, beginning with The Bonfire of the Vanities in 1990. Defined…
My Brother the Devil
9 Oct 2012Occasionally predictable but heartfelt story of London gang culture
A story of the ties that bind and break young men, My Brother the Devil is the heartfelt feature debut of writer-director Sally El Hosaini. It’s a convincing, intermittently powerful portrait of those on the forgotten fringes. My Brother the Devil…
Revisiting: Santa Sangre
25 Sep 2012Jodorowsky's 1989 cult circus slasher returns to cinemas
The circus has long provided rich cinematic pickings, from Freaks and The Greatest Show on Earth to La Strada and Lola Montès. In Alejandro Jodorowsky’s 1989 contribution to the canon, the circus is the stuff of wild nightmares and childhood trauma. Set…
Keyhole
10 Sep 2012An exquisite and sorrowful offering from Guy Maddin
Keyhole is a haunted house movie unlike any other. Told in majestic monochrome, it’s sorrowful and exquisitely barking – a giddy waltz of grief. The brainchild of Canadian director Guy Maddin (My Winnipeg), one of the most idiosyncratic and ingenious…
Hysteria
6 Sep 2012An irreverent drama about the invention of the vibrator, starring Maggie Gyllenhaal and Hugh Dancy
Boasting a story that’s based on true – albeit improbable – events, Hysteria is a period drama with a helping or two of sex comedy, making it a cross between a Jane Austen adaptation and a Carry On film. The third feature from American director Tanya…
The Watch
Unabashed crowd-pleaser triumphs thanks to uproarious script by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg
Akiva Schaffer’s comedy sees nosey neighbours morph into a force to be reckoned with, as a gang of suburban misfits go from investigating a murder to thwarting an alien invasion. After a colleague is killed in bizarre circumstances, proud resident…
Revisiting: Red Desert
27 Jul 2012BFI re-release of Michelangelo Antonioni's exquisite 60s film
In 1964 cinematic maestro Michelangelo Antonioni directed his first colour film, the exquisitely expressive, elegantly tortured Red Desert. To mark the 100th anniversary of Antonioni’s birth the BFI are reissuing the film, restored to something of its…
Lola Versus
27 Jul 2012Floundering rom-com that lacks punch
Despite the combative title, which suggests a film with attitude, Lola Versus is a rom-com so lacking in fizz and confidence it’s virtually apologising for its own existence. Directed and co-written by Daryl Wein (Breaking Upwards) it stars former…
Comes a Bright Day
Attractively shot but dramatically hollow British heist flick
Reminding us that all that glitters certainly isn’t gold, Comes a Bright Day dazzles superficially but is dramatically hollow. Simon Aboud’s debut as writer and director boasts a cross-generational cast of British talent, alongside immaculate interiors…
The Players
Perky French comedy drama that brings together a series of short films about male infidelity
This perky French portmanteau sees Gilles Lellouche (Point Blank) and recent Oscar-winner Jean Dujardin (The Artist) tackle the subject of male infidelity, as they assume a variety of predatory and buffoonish guises. The Players brings together short…


