Weekly Rundown 14-20th January 2013

Pickpocket

Xiao Wu 小武

Jia Zhangke 1997

Jia Zhangke’s earliest (feature) film is a hard hitting character study of a petty thief trapped in criminality in a small mainland town. Rough and raw it paints an uncomfortable picture of modern Chinese life.

The House I Live In

A tough documentary which posits that the ‘war on drugs’ is only perpetuated because it’s politically (and finically) expedient even though those in power are aware their actions carry little social good.

Padre Padrone

Story of a small town shepherd boy cruelly ripped away from his education and childhood by an overbearing father who forces him to protect his flock from bandits. A harsh look at a primitive way of life and the relationship between a violent father and his helpless children. Haunting.

Nostalgia for the Light

Another moving documentary which links the astronomers gazing into space in the Chilean desert with the women still gazing down into the sands looking for the remains of loved ones disappeared during turbulent years of revolution and dictatorship. Profound and devastating but ultimately imbued with a sense of hope.

Street Mobster

現代やくざ:人斬り与太  Gendai Yakuza: Hitokiri Yota

Another Fukasaku and the last from Eureka’s first box set. I preferred this one to Yakuza Graveyard.

Dragon Head

Full review here. Much more impressive than you’d think post-apocalyptic adventure with Satoshi Tsumabuki and Takayuki Yamada.

Another Earth

Light sci-fi film that’s more about guilt, responsibility and introspection. Interesting but perhaps little too indie for its own good.

Zero Dark Thirty

Full review coming soon. This film is already attracting a lot of controversy because its politics or at least those some people have inferred from the film. I had a range of complex reactions and I’m not sure I’ve really sorted them out yet.

Flashpoint

Generic martial arts film with Donnie Yen. I actually thought it was much better than its reputation – yes, the plot is paper thin (even for a kung-fu movie) and the characters are poorly drawn and mostly just genre stereotypes but the action’s pretty good and it does what it claims to do fairly well. No masterpiece certainly but watchable.

Dragon Head (ドラゴンヘッド, Joji Iida, 2013)

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Judging from the scene that surrounds Teru (Satoshi Tsumabuki) as he struggles to open his eyes, he’s either just waking up after the best party ever or something truly awful must have occurred. Where is he? Feeling around it seems like there are a lot of seats – a plane, or a train? Yes, a train. He remembers being on some kind of trip with his school mates – they were all on the train together so where is everyone? Struggling to get up, stumbling against walls he finds them – dead, all dead. Seemingly the only survivor of some kind of accident, Teru tries to get off the train to find out what’s happened and look for other survivors. It seems the train is trapped in a tunnel, both ends blocked by fallen rubble. Beginning to fear he really is all alone he comes across another boy perched in the window of an adjacent carriage. Small relief however as Nobuo (Takayuki Yamada) seems to be acting very strangely and muttering on about red lights and embracing the darkness. Evading him leads Teru further along the train where he finds another survivor, a girl – Ako, desperately hiding from Nobuo after witnessing him completely losing control whilst looking for survivors.

You might think this is where our three plucky teenagers club together to figure out how to escape the train wreck and get home, but no this is not that type of film. Quicker than you can say Lord of the Flies, Nobuo has gone completely crazy – painting a strange grin on his face with some lipstick he found and dotting his his chest with it too, he even makes a makeshift spear go with with new tribal outfit as a sort of dedicatory effort to his new red light god. He’s very much of the opinion that this stretch of tunnel is the only safe space left on earth and its three inhabitants have inherited a new eden, if they’d just learn to accept it. Teru and Ako though, clearly terrified by Nobuo’s transformation, do little other than wait for help to arrive. When serious tremors start to shake the tunnel and they no longer have any choice but to act they finally manage to climb out through a supply tunnel. What they find on the other side though is a vast desert of ash – all visible signs of human civilisation have been destroyed and they seem to be alone in the world.

Dragon Head is a bleak, seventies style post-apocolyptic drama in which our ‘heroes’ discover that the threads that hold society together are incredibly weak and snap the moment the slightest pressure is placed upon them. Without spoiling too much, we never find out exactly what it is that has happened, only that whatever it was caused people to turn on each other in a terrible fashion and those few who have survived only want to forget. During in their travels our, frankly unbelievably clueless and incredibly lucky, duo come across a town full of men who’ve decided not to go on and don’t want anyone else to either; mercenary soldiers with dubious motivations; a pair of strange brothers who’ve been surgically altered to remove all trace of fear and sadness and myriad other examples of humanity’s darkest places.

In facing the successive crises, it has to be said that Teru and Ako are not exactly survival buffs. They react to each new situation in what might be termed a realistic fashion as far as two teenagers faced with seemingly impossible odds would do. Largely this means there is a fair amount of panic, crying, blind stumbling and a the recurrent idea of simply giving up. This realistic portrayal of ordinary people caught up in an extreme situation is quite refreshing and a direct contrast to the super smart, seemingly indestructible, level headed teens you often find in such movies. However, the vulnerability of the central couple may also be turn off those viewers who find them simply too whiny and wonder why they don’t get on with trying to find a better way to survive.

For what was seemingly quite a low budget picture shot on early digital, Dragon Head features some very impressive visuals. Making use of old school techniques like matte paintings alongside CG effects, the post apocalyptic landscape is rendered in an extremely convincing way and this is certainly one of those films that has made the best of what it had. In fact it benefits greatly from not relying on CGI to the extent other films of its era often did and so appears much less dated in comparison. Its real world effects and attention to detail mark it well above the some of the big budget disaster epics that began to appear around the turn of the century and help it become much more engaging as a result.

Dragon Head is not without its faults – it’s based on a manga which lends it an episodic structure which isn’t always conducive to good cinematic story storytelling. It’s also possible that some of the overarching mythology which isn’t really explored during the course of the film is more fully explained in the manga (not to mention the Seventies style ending) but really these are small problems. Dragon Head turns out to be much more impressive than you’d originally think it would be and offers a refreshing dose of bleakness that’s been absent from our screens for much too long.

Reviewed on R2 Japanese DVD release

Les Misérables

les-mis

Tom Hooper’s starry adaptation of the long running Boublil & Shönberg musical (itself of course adapted from Victor Hugo’s novel) arrives, with curious serendipity, just in time for awards season. Although the RSC’s original stage production was not universally well received, even if its notices were not necessarily as damning as common perception would have it, Les Misérables went on to become one of the most popular musical productions of all time and at the point of writing still regularly sells out in London’s West End more than twenty-five years later. During that time it has gathered a rather fanatical fan base and become a phenomenon in its own right. As might be expected then, interest in a big screen outing has been high for much of the show’s lifetime but for one reason or another plans have never quite come together – until now. Riding on the coattails of the success of the (vastly overpraised) The King’s Speech, Les Misérables: the movie is now a reality.

The big selling point of this adaptation seems to be the decision to allow the actors to sing live, rather than lip-synch to a pre-recorded vocal track as was usual in the classic Hollywood musicals, and it is, frankly, the correct one. Singing live allows the actors to fully inhabit their roles and give a truer, more rounded performance than they would otherwise be able to do. However, it does have its downsides as in the vocals are necessarily rougher, obviously not as polished as they might be sung in a booth free from the real world set constraints and helped along in post by talented sound technicians. Whether one prefers a stronger acting performance or a totally flawless vocal one (leaving aside the ideal of having them both) is perhaps a personal preference and very much open to debate but singing live certainly eliminates the old stuffiness and forced emotion that often characterised the classic musical. Now that the technology exists to make this much easier to accomplish, the practice of live singing could be what finally wakes the movie musical from its long slumber.

Unfortunately, not many of Hooper’s other decisions are as helpful and where Les Misérables falls down it is by his own hand. Largely the directorial problems that plague the film are similar to those of The King’s Speech but here are vastly magnified by the epic nature of the material which, it seems clear, is simply too unwieldy for this style to handle. Broadly speaking, despite its large scale, Les Misérables is guilty of the sin most British cinema is accused of (often unjustly, but not in this case) – it is effectively a big TV movie rather than something which looks authentically cinematic. Much of the film is shot in extreme close up and even with the actors singing directly into the camera like an awkward soliloquy in a televised Shakespearean production. You might think that giving us such supreme access to the actor’s face, something which can never happen in a theatre of course, would allow us ever deeper into the actor’s performance but what it really ends up doing is forcing us into contemplating their performance rather than the drama. That Hooper uses this same technique so often lends the film an odd sort of formulaic monotony which actively works against the audience’s ability to engage.

Further to that the film as a whole is totally monotone, everything only comes in one variety of ‘loud’. Trevor Nunn, the musical’s original stage director is often criticised for his tendency to produce needlessly long productions Hooper’s film version by contrast moves at an extremely fast pace. However, where the stage version has its various moments of introspection or levity everything in Hooper’s construction is quite literally in your face. There’s very little difference in tone between Valjean’s soliloquy and the bombast of One Day More or Do You Hear The People Sing. The comedy numbers, Master of the House & Beggars at the Feast, even in a much compressed format fall completely flat and only serve to hold up the action – the added santa jokes also aren’t in any way humorous and are, if anything, cringeworthy.  Similarly, cutting Dog Eat Dog and relegating the Thérnadiers to comic relief only eliminates the darkness of their characters and paints them as slightly ridiculous Dickensian like rogues rather than the ruthless, selfish, cruel characters they actually are (though it is to be acknowledged that their primary role in the stage musical is that of comic relief).

Hooper also employs several seemingly random canted angles and odd compositions which do nothing except distract. This is further exacerbated by some extremely misguided editing decisions such as in the ensemble number One Day More in which the fast cutting between extreme close-ups makes it near impossible to follow the action or engage with the emotion of the song. Everything just seems to move from one thing to the next with very little connecting it and in the end it feels like a series of music videos connected only by a vague theme.

The saving grace is the high quality of the performances the actors contribute to the film. Anne Hathaway’s Fantine is rightly gaining high praise everywhere for her extraordinary rendition of I Dreamed a Dream with all the pain and bitterness of a woman seduced, betrayed and degraded by life. Eddie Redmayne however, who seems to be getting far less attention, is something of a revelation in the often thankless role of Marius with his impassioned innocence and sweetly powerful singing voice. Jackman in fact turns out to be something of a disappointment, especially when it comes to Valjean’s stand out song Bring Him Home which doesn’t suit him vocally and never quite ignites (in part due to Hooper’s direction). Russel Crowe’s performance as the righteous Javert is an odd one, even if not as bad as some reviews have made out – his singing is not exactly bad but perhaps incongruous with those around him. He also fails to integrate his performance sufficiently and there’s a curious disconnect in his performance when singing. Both Jackman and Crowe come more alive during the confrontation scene, however, the effect of this is somewhat lost through unfortunate sound mixing. Aaron Tveit also gives a very strong performance as the doomed leader Enjolras but it’s a shame that he seems to be so low on the sound mix that we often cannot hear him. As a bonus for those followers of the London theatre scene there are also many cameos from the cream of the West End ranging from background support to featured lesser roles and it maybe that this film has the highest Olivier award count ever seen on the big screen.

It is perhaps a fault in the musical, though the stage has more mitigating factors, but given there have been so many films with a revolutionary bent recently it’s odd that the uprising itself should come across as merely plot point and there’s very little time given over to the plight of the poor other than a few throw away lines about having had a failed revolution already and wound up with another king on the throne and everything worse than before. The student uprising lacks any sort of wider context and one might be forgiven for thinking that it really is ‘a game for rich young boys to play’ and that the people do not join them is not altogether unexpected. In short, despite the commitment of the actors, it lacks passion and comes across as a soulless exercise that fails to rouse the audience let alone the people of post-revolutionary Paris.

Where Les Misérables succeeds it does so because it is ‘Les Mis’ rather than any particular aspect of the filming and in fact often succeeds in spite of itself. It is certainly not the disaster that it might have been and the sung live approach helps ground it in a reality where it may have become even more overblown with non-sync singing but Tom Hooper’s Les Misérables fails on a cinematic level. It doesn’t manage to provoke the instant standing ovation that the closing music is engineered to – where the theatre audience is thrown to its feet the cinema one is wondering where it parked the car. As a film it’s pleasant enough for the most part but will leave you hungry for something more fulfilling later on.

The Foreign Duck, The Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker (アヒルと鴨のコインロッカー, Yoshihiro Nakamura, 2007)

YgoLt - ImgurReview of The Foreign Duck, The Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker over at uk-anime.net I really enjoyed this one – great movie!


Director Yoshihiro Nakamura once again returns with another adaptation of a Kotaro Isaka novel, The Foreign Duck, The Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker (アヒルと鴨のコインロッカー, Ahiru to Kamo no Coin Locker). Having previously adapted Fish Story (also available from Third Window in the UK and itself a very fine film) and Golden Slumber, Nakamura and Isaka seem to have formed a very effective working relationship and this latest effort is another very welcome instalment from the duo. Elliptical, melancholic and thought provoking The Foreign Duck, The Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker is a minor gem and every bit as whimsical as its name would suggest.

Shiina (Gaku Hamada) has just left the small town shoe shop his parents own to study law in Sendai. Moving into his new apartment he attracts the attention of his neighbour, Kawasaki (Eita), who overhears him signing Bob Dylan’s Blowing in the Wind. Kawasaki is himself a great admirer of Dylan remarking that his is ‘the voice of God’. Aloof, cold, at once dominating and indifferent the prospect of developing a friendship with the mild mannered, short and shy Shiina seems an odd one but nevertheless the two seem to develop a bond. Kawasaki therefore proposes Shiina help him with a rather peculiar problem.

Shiina’s other neighbour, who rudely rebuffed Shina’s introduction and moving in present, is apparently a foreigner – Bhutanese to be precise – and although speaks fluent Japanese cannot read. He’s particularly perplexed by the different between ‘ahiru’ – the native duck, and ‘kamo’ – the foreign duck, and is sure that if he had a good dictionary he’d be able to understand the two fully and thus perfect his Japanese. To this end Kawasaki has decided to steal a Kanji Garden Dictionary for him and wants Shiina to help. Understandably confused Shiina originally declines but is soon bamboozled into helping anyway. There’s a lot more to all of this than a simple semantic quandary though and the only thing that’s clear is that Shiina has gone and gotten himself embroiled in someone else’s story.

‘That sounds like something you just made up’ is one of the first things Shiina says to Kawasaki and indeed everything about him seems studied or affected in someway as if he were reciting someone else’s lines – essentially performing the role of himself. Half of the crazy stuff he comes up with, like his warning Shiina to avoid a particular pet shop owner completely out of the blue, sounds as if he’s just invented it on the spot for a laugh were it not for his distant and humourless manner. Without spoiling the plot too much, you start to get the feeling that there’s really something slightly off about everything you’re being told, that crazy as it seems it is the truth in one sense but perhaps not in another. This is where the mystery element of the film begins to kick in – who is Kawasaki really? What is he on about? Is any of this really happening?

Wistful in tone, The Foreign Duck, The Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker is only partly a mystery, it’s also a bittersweet coming of age tale and an, admittedly light, examination of the Japanese attitude to foreignness. Away from home for the first time Shiina is obviously keen to strike out on his own and be his own his own person but at the same time wants to fit in and be liked by his classmates. A particularly telling incident occurs when a confused Indian woman tries to get some information at a bus stop only to be ignored by those waiting. Shiina seems to feel as if he ought to help her but having just heard two of his classmates complaining about ‘stupid foreigners’ does nothing. Feeling guilty he tries to reach out to his Bhutanese neighbour but is again rebuffed. Kawasaki wants to know the difference between the foreign duck and the native one – is there such a fundamental difference? As one character says ‘you wouldn’t have talked to me if you’d known I was a foreigner’ ‘Of course I would’ Shiina replies ‘no, you wouldn’t have’ his friend responds with resignation. Isn’t it better to just help those who need it, whoever or whatever they happen to be?

The Foreign Duck, The Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker maybe a little darker than its title suggests but its tone is definitely to the wistful/whimsical side – this juxtaposition might irritate some who’d rather a more straightforward mystery or a lighter, more conventional comedy but its refusal to conform is precisely what makes it so charming. That it also manages to pack in a decent amount of social commentary in an interesting way is to its credit as is its ability to make the totally bizarre seem perfectly natural. The Foreign Duck, the Native Duck and God in a Coin locker is another impressive feature from the creators of Fish Story and fans of that earlier film will certainly not be disappointed by their latest work.


Original trailer (English subtitles)

2012 in Review – An Extremely Subjective Top Ten!

I kind of hate trying to come up with a top ten list for a huge variety of reasons: 1) I have an extraordinarily loose grip on time – I can never remember what I saw when or what was this year or last year or a decade ago so trying to even list ten films I definitely watched within a specific period of time is not something my brain is set up for 2) I change my mind all the time 3) I’ve almost certainly left something out due to point 1 4) I’m over sensitive and will probably burst into tears when the inevitable trolling begins OMG I CAN’T BELIEVE YOU THINK AI TO MAKOTO IS BETTER FILM THAN AMOUR, WHAT KIND OF IDIOT ARE YOU OH I SEE YOU ALSO LIKE SEVEN PSYCHOPATHS YOU EVIDENTLY HAVE NO EYES OR EARS, I PITY YOU – GOOD EVENING  5)I feel bad making a list when I didn’t see every film released this year, I don’t even think that would be possible but still it feels wrong from a scientific point of view 6)What does ‘best’ mean anyway? Closest to perfect? could we ever agree on the criteria for this? 7) as usual I’ve totally over thought the whole thing and wasted a whole 200 words on neurotic waffle. Oh well, neurotic waffle is what I do ‘best’, after all….

Ahem, all that in mind, I have come up with an extremely subjective, somewhat arbitrary, list of films I quite liked over the last year. As I say it’s a list of the films I liked the most, I’m not going to try and argue the artistic merits (or otherwise) of all the films on the list or debate the positioning – it’s a simply a list of the films that I either enjoyed the most, was most affected by, or impressed me in the most significant way. Are you all wearing your party hats? Right then, trumpets please

 

1 Himizu

I reviewed this over at Uk-anime back in June and was completely blown away by it – raw and tender it’s the story of two damaged children trying to find their way in world that’s all sorts of broken. Devastating yet oddly uplifting.

2 Tabu

A tale of longing, loss and the cinema Miguel Gomes’ Tabu is a beautifully made homage to silent cinema. Memory, the passage of time and the relationship between past and present come together to create one of the best European films from the last year.

3 The Master

To say The Master received a divisive reception is to understate the state of affairs. I don’t claim to have understood all of it, but on a first viewing found it utterly overwhelming.

4 Ai to Makoto

Fun, great ridiculous unrepentant FUN.

5 Holy Motors

Strange and extraordinary – the accordion scene might even make it into my top scenes in cinema history list!

6 Amour

An extremely powerful, and usually warm, film from Michael Haneke about the true nature of love. Undoubtedly difficult to watch but rewarding.

7 Berberian Sound Studio

An homage to Giallo with a strong performance from Toby Jones as the bewildered Gilderoy – an Englishman lost in the foreign world of slasher movies. Does extraordinary things with sound.

8 Dredd

A supreme effort that perfectly captures a genre and a place and time. Gritty, spare and punkish this is my favourite action movie for a very long time. Also excellent use of 3D.

9 Kotoko

A harrowing film about a woman who can no longer distinguish reality from imagined fears and her battle to protect her son. A horrifying experience in which we’re just as unsure as Kotoko is whether or not what we’re watching is actually happening. Truly impressive performance from leading actress Cocco.

10 Seven Psychopaths

Again, just a lot of entertaining meta fun as brilliantly dark and witty as the best of McDonagh’s stage work. Those expecting another In Bruges might be disappointed as this is altogether a lighter exercise but no less entertaining for it.

Life of Pi 3D

LOP-068    Pi Patel takes in the bioluminescent wonders of the sea.

Ever since Yann Martel’s Life of Pi won the Booker prize in 2003 there has been intense interest in translating it to the screen. Considered by many to be unfilmable, it seeks to tell the story of one boy’s journey from an idyllic childhood as the son of a zoo keeper in French India to his present life in Montreal by way of a terrible, life altering ordeal – becoming the victim and only survivor of a shipwreck. Only human survivor that is, the boy, Pi, is alone for his 227 day odyssey across the Pacific save for a Bengal tiger with the incongruous name of Richard Parker that managed to escape the wreck and climb aboard his life boat.

Rafe Spall’s Martel stand in, having  thrown out a recently completed novel, has come to hear Pi’s story after being told that it could ‘make him believe in God’. A bold claim indeed, it seems younger Pi was something of a spiritual enthusiast – collecting religions the way other boys collect heroes, and attempting to practice them all at the same time! It’s mostly down to this pan-spirtituality that Pi attributes his miraculous survival, that and of course the tiger. Having to fend off Richard Parker and find ways the two of them could co-exist together kept his mind focused and prevented him on dwelling on his greater fears or the earthly loneliness that comes from being the only one of your kind for hundreds of miles.

That said, for all the film’s constant talk about gods and the universe some of its philosophising can’t help but feel a little trite. As for the tale’s claim that it will make you ‘believe in God’, it’s difficult to see how this could be the case. Yes, the boy’s survival is, literally, incredible – miraculous even, as is the way the universe functions as a whole but this story isn’t necessarily any deeper than any other meditations of a wandering soul about why the world is as it is, or indeed how one chooses to view it. Ultimately the film suffers from never being as quite profound as it would like to be and perhaps feels it is.

The real strength of this film is in its visuals which are extremely impressive. There’s no arguing that what Lee has created is revelatory, a series of beautiful, digital vistas more akin to a moving work of art than we are used to seeing from mainstream cinema. The use of 3D might well be the first that justifies its use as a valid artistic tool that is part and parcel of a film’s artistic vision rather than something that can be tacked onto a movie’s name in order to add a few pounds onto the ticket price.

This artistic vision is what makes Life of Pi such an interesting film. Though many will find its storytelling banal or unconvincing, its technical and artistic proficiency cannot be denied. The weaknesses of the central narrative and its slightly saccharine tone mean that Life of Pi may not stand up to repeated viewings, however resisting a first viewing on these grounds would be a mistake as it represents a true evolution in the art of filmmaking.

Weekly rundown 17-23 December 2012

Goodness, I’m late already and this is only the second time I’ve done this! Must do better! Oh well, not so many films this week what with Christmas fast approaching – not sure how many I’ll get to see over the festive period as I’m staying with family so it’ll probably be mostly old favourites. My family don’t really share my taste in films so much but I’ve bought my mother some Scandinavian thrillers which she really likes at the moment (unfortunately we seem to have exhausted the available French policiers which are her favourite!) so hopefully we’ll be able to fit some of those in.

Yakuza Graveyard

Yakuza no hakaba: Kuchinashi no hana

やくざの墓場 くちなしの花

Eureka DVD

The second film in Eureka’s first Fukasaku box set, now OOP, and another genre classic from the prolific director. Police Corruption and Yakuza honour play out as mirror images as a complicated policeman ends up caught between two worlds.

Smuggler

HK Blu Ray

Slightly disappointing film from Katsuhito Ishii, director of The Taste of Tea, which sees Satoshi Tsumabuki’s failed actor being unwittingly forced into the criminal underworld. Unfortunately this is a film that might have benefitted from being more absurd as the darkness of the story and the humour of the script/direction never really gel. Still, the action scenes are entertaining and the performances are universally good it’s just a shame it never quite comes together.

The Silent War

Ting feng zhe 聽風者

HK Blu Ray

Chinese late ’40s war film about radio telephonists and code breaking – lacking in tension and high on propaganda it’s never quite as exciting as it promises to be.

Joyeux Noel

Film4

Maudlin film about the 1914 Christmas truce. Excellent performances from the international (and often multi-lingual) cast can’t quite enliven the uneven, unsubtle scripting.

Babycall

Soda Pictures DVD

Odd Norwegian psychological thriller with Noomi Rapace where a brutalised woman trying to protect her son becomes increasingly paranoid and believes she overhears a murder on her baby monitor. The ‘twist’ can be seen a mile off but at the same time nothing is actually explained adequately at the end making this quite a frustrating experience despite Rapace’s excellent performance.

Third Window Announce 2013 Acquisitions

Ladies and Gentlemen, take a moment to prepare yourselves for I am about to tell you the best news you will ever hear. What’s that you say, they’ve finally finished The Grandmasters? No, unfortunately not but an even more exciting development has come to pass. Third Window announced via Twitch today that they will be releasing …..*drumroll please*…. AI TO MAKOTO on Blu Ray and DVD on 29th of April 2013. As you might remember I, and a few others of us here, were greatly impressed when this was screened at the LFF and it’s safe to say this is indeed very welcome, if totally unexpected, news!

If that wasn’t enough they’ll also be following up their recent Tetsuo release with another Tsukamoto double bill of Bullet Ballet and Tokyo Fist. Bullet Ballet is probably my favourite Tsukamoto film and I can’t wait to see it in HD!

They’ll also be releasing their ‘film of the year’ The Story of Yonosuke and the upcoming See you Tomorrow alongside the already announced Woodsman in the Rain, Vulgaria and the long over due Eyes of the Spider/Serpents Path from Kiyoshi Kurosawa! All in all these are a fantastic set of upcoming releases and Third Window continues to go from strength to strength!

Weekly Rundown 10-16th December

Seeing as I never have time to write about half the films I’d like, I thought I’d try keeping a weekly list of all the films I’ve watched during the week – mostly first time views with the occasional old favourite, plus anything else that crops up. I’ll just write a few words about each of them and expand some into full reviews.

Pickpocket

BFI – Passport to Cinema screening

I haven’t made things easy for myself have I? Bresson’s tale of redemption through love reads like a mid twentieth century French Crime & Punishment but is full of Bresson’s usual spiritual complexity. The pickpocketing scenes take on a sort of balletic quality and almost glamourise the crime being committed but leave the audience in no doubt that it is also a violation. Elusive but essential.

The Family Friend

L’amico di famiglia

Curzon on Demand

Not as beguiling as The Consequences of Love or as studied as Il Divo, Sorrentino’s The Family Friend is a modern day fairy tale with a central character so loathsome it’s difficult to see how the audience is expected to endure a whole film in his company. Certainly a very strange film but very Sorrentino and all the more welcome for it.

Battles Without Honour and Humanity

Jingi naki tatakai 仁義なき戦い

MOC DVD

An out and out classic, Fukasaku’s Battles Without Honour and Humanity is a landmark Yakuza movie that shows the gangster lifestyle for what it really really is – senseless violence fuelled by pride and greed. It was so successful it spawned FOUR sequels (and I can’t wait to watch them all)!

!I’m sorry about the weird aspect ratio and the German subs but it seems like there’s no other footage around!)

The Hobbit

Odeon Leicester Sq, HFR 3D

Full review already up, short story – eh, it was OK.

Life of Pi

Odeon Covent Garden

I’d heard really mixed things about Ang Lee’s latest but actually I was pleasantly surprised. Nowhere near as profound as it seems to want to be but the visuals are truly astounding. Look out for a full review soon.

Magic Mike

Mubi

Came up as Mubi’s film of the day and having heard quite positive things about it I decided to give it a go despite my misgivings – unfortunately my I should listened to my intuition, this film did nothing for me and I’m baffled by some of the critical praise.

Thermae Romae

HK Blu Ray

Hilarious movie about a Roman bath architect who accidentally time travels to modern Japan, steals all their modern bath technology and so ends up having to design baths for Hadrian and some of his cronies. Full review coming soon but this is so much fun!

35 Shots of Rum

35 Rhums

Channel 4 HD

Claire Denis’ homage to Ozu’s Late Spring set in a French lower class tower block – to quite as moving as Ozu’s film but brings its own lyrical sense of transience with perhaps more of a political component than you would generally find in an Ozu film.

Midnight Express

Film4

An oscar winner much trumpeted in its time that helped to jump start Alan Parker’s career but more than thirty years on it’s starting to feel its age and its extremely harsh view of the Turkish people is quite difficult to take.

The Keep

Film 4

Apparently the full version of this film was close to three hours long but studio execs were so unhappy with it they hacked it down to 90 minutes! It’s quite obvious a lot of material is missing and the film doesn’t really make that much sense but then how much sense do you really expect a movie about a strange rubbery monster accidentally let out of its cage by a bunch of greedy nazis to make?

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

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There’s no denying Peter Jackson’s return to Middle Earth has had its fair share of problems. Indeed, Jackson himself did not intend to direct, but following the high profile departure of (the extraordinary) Guillermo Del Toro reportedly unwilling to waste his talent waiting for the project to finally get going Jackson took up the reigns again. The Hobbit though is not Lord of the Rings and its now de facto position as a movie prequel is an awkward one. A comparatively slim volume aimed at a younger audience it obviously lacks the epic nature and imposing grandeur of the trilogy; it’s whimsical, playful even with its bumbling hobbit and perpetually singing dwarves where LOTR is heavy and melancholic – a world in danger of collapse. Jackson has, however, made the incongruous decision that The Hobbit will also be a trilogy of films and so has bulked out the Hobbit’s more meagre storyline with supplementary material which often foreshadows its bleaker successor. This first instalment, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, alone runs to a whopping 169 minutes. Can such small and comparatively simple book really fill almost nine hours of screen time?

On the basis of part one, the answer has to be almost certainly not. Of the many things that could be said of An Unexpected Journey, the least disputable is that it’s too long. It isn’t just a little bit too long either, to paraphrase (if you’ll forgive me) – it feels thin, like butter scraped over too much bread. There are obvious set pieces and then there are the great gaping gaps between them. The pace is undoubtedly slow with occasional dead stretches which only seem to exist only to offer some clumsily delivered exposition more relevant to the opus as a whole rather than the film, or even films, themselves.

However, the parts that are good are very good. The encounter with the trolls is every bit as frightening as it seemed in childhood while the escape from the orcs and stone giants are undoubtedly exciting; the stand out scene though is of course the ‘first’ encounter with Gollum. Technology has moved on significantly even since LOTR was completed and Andy Serkis’ motion captured/CGI rendered Gollum is ever more convincing. The interplay between Freeman and Serkis sparkles along with a real sense of danger interspersed with wit.

When it comes to the film as a whole the unevenness of the tone is not so well managed. There’s still a kind of childlike simplicity to the telling of the tale – the dwarfs are kind of idiots, constantly messing everything up and falling into certain death situations only for Gandalf to show up at the last minute and and do something flashy with his wand to sort it all out for them. Despite this, and you’ll forgive me the slight spoiler, they all seem to inconceivably survive completely intact like some kind of invincible cartoon character. Yet we have this tone of seriousness and melancholy which seems to have one eye on later events – yes it’s funny now but everything’s going to go bad in sixty years time so you’d better not laugh too much. Ultimately it can’t quite decide what it wants to be  – whimsical farce about a group of displaced people trying to get home or weighty precursor to a dark tale that tries to prove that the seeds of the present are sown in the past. Jackson’s (understandable) attempts to tie The Hobbit more closely with the celebrated trilogy in terms of sensibility only serve to undermine the the original tales biggest selling point – its lighthearted questing.

There is, of course, the question of the technical sides of this film – the decision to film in 48fps 3D. There have been varying opinions as regards how well this has worked for this particular film and how it might work in general but, having seen an HFR 3D presentation the overriding impression was something like that of watching a Hallmark Movie. Suddenly everything looks cheap or artificial, a higher frame rate might more accurately represent reality but is reality what we really want from cinema? For extreme close ups and shallow static shots it seems to work very well, but anything with extensive background action ends up looking curiously amateurish. Perhaps some will prefer a harsher, less cinematic aesthetic that more closely resembles TV but audience members more accustomed to a traditional film look will likely find The Hobbit, at least, visually less palatable. It would be wrong to write off 48fps filming on the basis of how it’s been used in one film (and it isn’t as if other filmmakers haven’t experimented with frame rates before) but hopefully this experimentation is something that can be learned from and, perhaps, improved in years to come.

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey is, therefore, something of a disappointment. It isn’t a bad film but neither is it the film many people were looking forward to. Bloated and confused it falls between two stools attempting to stay true to both its literary roots and cinematic brethren. Hopefully the next two instalments will have a little more to offer us.