Definitely Maybe

Definitely-Maybe

Will Hayes (Ryan Reynolds) is a soon-to-be-divorced advertising executive. The highlight of his week is when he gets to pick up his middle school daughter Maya (Abigail Breslin) from school. One afternoon, the school is an uproar after a particularly graphic sex education class and in an attempt to calm his daughter, Will tells the […] Read more »

Elles

Elles

Juliet Binoche gives a truly remarkable in this otherwise forgettable, flat and superficial film. Binoche plays Anne, an investigative journalist, who is writing a piece on female university students who support themselves by working as prostitutes. Binoche is captivating in her portrayal of Anne and Anaïs Demoustier has some excellent moments as one of the […] Read more »

B.A. Pass

BA-PAss

B.A. Pass is a bleak, noir-ish and sexually charged parable of life in contemporary Delhi. Shadab Kamal plays Mukesh, a first year college student who, after the sudden death of his parents is sent to live under the reluctant care of his aunt and uncle. There he meets the wealthy and fashionable Sarika (Shilpa Shukla) […] Read more »

August Rush

August-Rush

Lyla Novacek (Keri Russell) an acclaimed concert cellist who, by chance, meets the lead singer of a rock band, Louis Connelly (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) at a party in New York City. They spend a night together and the next morning promise to reunite at a nearby square. But, Lyla’s controlling father and manager, Thomas (William […] Read more »

REVIEW: The Towering Inferno

The-Towering-Inferno

After a highly successful run, as a producer of hit TV Science Fiction shows like Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Lost in Space, The Time Tunnel, Land of the Giants, Irwin Allen returned to the big screen in 1972, producing The Poseidon Adventure, a star-studded, technically innovative, action-disaster film. He followed this up […] Read more »

School Of Rock

School-Of-Rock

Jack Black plays the semi talented guitarist Dewey Finn in this light-hearted 2003 comedy. Largely reprising his performance as Barry, the socially dysfunctional rock music obsessive from High Fidelity, Black is at his best as Finn, dumped from his band, fakes being a teacher and leads a group of unsuspecting students (including Miranda Cosgrove from […] Read more »

Meat Hooked

meat_hooked

As the TV comedy Portlandia so eloquently quipped, “the dream of the 1890s is alive,” and not just in Portland it seems. Meat Hooked traces the rise of butchery, or perhaps we might call it neo-butchery, as a hip artisanal industry. After years of declining interest in small, local butcheries, with consumers ever more reliant […] Read more »

Dispatch 42 – Thor, The Day Of The Jackal and The Hunger Games

The-Day-Of-The-Jackal

On this week’s podcast we discuss Thor: The Dark World and The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, as well as the joy of seeing classic films on the big screen – such as The Day Of The Jackal, which recently played as part of Tokyo’s Toho 10am Festival. Podcast: Play in new window | Download Read more »

The Day Of The Jackal

The-Day-Of-The-Jackal

Screened as part of Toho Cinema’s ongoing 10am series of classic films, The Day Of The Jackal (1973) is an adaption of Frederick Forsyth’s acclaimed novel. Set in 1963, the story traces a fictional attempt to kill the former president of France, Charles de Gaulle. de Gaulle had made enemies over the independence of Algeria […] Read more »

The Family (Malavita)

The-Family

Originally marketed under the name Malavita, The Family sees Robert De Niro and Michelle Pfeiffer as the parents of the Manzoni family, hiding in France under assumed names (Blake being the latest), under the watchful eye of Tommy Lee Jones and the FBI witness protection programme. One assumes The Family is meant to be a […] Read more »

The Godfather Part II

The-Godfather-Part-Two

Having recently seen The Godfather on the big screen I was thankful for the chance to see the extraordinary second part of this story in the cinema as well. It’s often said The Godfather Part II is an example of a film where the sequel was better than the original but, the story is a […] Read more »

The Internship

The-Internship

Let’s assume you are in your 30s or 40s, into what we now call “tech,” though you are old enough to remember when the same thing was called “computers” and although you are feeling “older,” you certainly don’t think of yourself as “old.” If that sounds familiar, then there’s a pretty good chance you will […] Read more »

The Godfather

The-Godfather

A true classic and widely regarded as one of the best films of all time, Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather is a true masterpiece. Seeing the film on the big screen, in a 4k digital restoration, I was reminded of The Godfather’s operatic scope. From the immersive opening act, which occurs in and around a […] Read more »

Zombieland

Zombieland

There’s been a trend, in recent years, to play the Zombie Apocalypse for laughs. While Shaun Of The Dead and Go Goa Gone do this well, the pick of the bunch, for me, is this smart and original 2009 comedy Zombieland, directed by Ruben Fleischer. Originally conceived as a TV Show, Zombieland was Fleischer’s first […] Read more »

Forma

Forma

Winner of the Japanese Cinema Splash Best Picture Award at the 26th Tokyo International Film Festival, Forma is a dark, troubling and memorable film. Perhaps too long and slow in the first hour for some filmgoers, this really is an extraordinary film from a new director, Ayumi Sakamoto. A challenging, but ultimately rewarding film experience. […] Read more »

The Bling Ring

The-Bling-Ring

Sofia Coppola’s The Bling Ring was a special screening at the 26th Tokyo International Film Festival. A bleak and acerbic look at today’s celebrity obsessed youth culture, The Bling Ring might just be the most misunderstood and underrated film of the year. Expect massive critical re-evaluation some time around 2026. You can read Fernando’s full […] Read more »