In an alternate universe where orcs, elves, fairies and other mythical creatures exist, L.A.P.D. Officer Daryl Ward (Will Smith) returns to work after a shooting incident in which he was injured. He is partnered with Nick Jakoby (Joel Edgerton), the departments first and only orc police officer. Jakoby is unpopular across the board. His fellow officers despise him for his difference and his own people hate him because he is unblooded and thus not affiliated with any orc clan.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/bright-movie-review/
IMDB: Bright
Saturday, 30 December 2017
Thursday, 14 December 2017
STAR WARS : THE LAST JEDI (full review at The Reel Word)
After the events of The Force Awakens the Resistance is on the run. Pursued with merciless intent by the First Order, and unable to escape their tracking systems. In a last ditch attempt to save the waning Resistance fleet, Finn (John Boyega), Rose (Kellie Marie Tran) and BB-8 set off in search of a hacker who can disable the First Order’s hyperspace tracking device. All the while, far across the galaxy, Rey (Daisy Ridley) looks to Luke Skywalker for guidance and teaching as her force powers become unleashed, preparing to either recruit Luke in the fight against the First Order, or confront Kylo Ren on her own.
Read the full article at The Reel Word website:
https://www.thereelword.net/star-wars-the-last-jedi-movie-review/
IMDB: Star Wars The Last Jedi
Read the full article at The Reel Word website:
https://www.thereelword.net/star-wars-the-last-jedi-movie-review/
IMDB: Star Wars The Last Jedi
Monster Fest 2017 Terrorises Melbourne (full article at Rue Morgue)
Monster Fest took place over 23rd – 26th November at The Lido Cinema in Melbourne. Over the course of four days, Monster Fest premiered both domestic and foreign genre movies and paired each movie with a short film. The 2017 roster included, amongst others, Lost Gully Road, The Last Hope, Cold Hell, Another Wolfcop, Horror Movie: A Low Budget Nightmare and the Larry Cohen documentary King Cohen, followed by an all-night Cohen movie marathon.
Read the full article at the Rue Morgue website:
https://www.rue-morgue.com/monster-fest-2017-terrorises-melbourne/
IMDB: Boar
IMDB: Housewife
IMDB: Revenge
Read the full article at the Rue Morgue website:
https://www.rue-morgue.com/monster-fest-2017-terrorises-melbourne/
IMDB: Boar
IMDB: Housewife
IMDB: Revenge
Labels:
Boar,
Can Evrenol,
Chris Sun,
Coralie Fargeat,
film festival,
horror,
Housewife,
Monster Fest,
Monster Pictures,
revenge,
Rue Morgue
Wednesday, 29 November 2017
REPLACE (full review at The Reel Word)
Replace, from writer-director Norbert Keil and co-writer Richard Stanley (Hardware), is a decent attempt at body horror/sci-fi cross-pollination, with a surprising reveal and a strange, almost ethereal style to it.
After a night out, Kira (Rebecca Forsythe) starts to suffer confusion and memory loss. At the same time she notices a patch of dry, eczema-like skin on her finger. In the hallway of her building she meets her neighbour, Sophia (Lucie Aron), and the two begin a relationship. After suffering a blackout, and with her hand getting worse, Kira visits Dr. Crober (Barbara Crampton) for treatment. Crober prescribes medication, but as Kira soon discovers: her skin can improve if she replaces it with fresh tissue from a living person. In desperation, Kira’s need for transplant flesh pushes her to murder and Replace starts to go a bit Frankenstein, as new parts replace old. Except here, it’s more a case of pre-emptive graverobbing.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/replace-movie-review-horror-2017/
IMDB: Replace
After a night out, Kira (Rebecca Forsythe) starts to suffer confusion and memory loss. At the same time she notices a patch of dry, eczema-like skin on her finger. In the hallway of her building she meets her neighbour, Sophia (Lucie Aron), and the two begin a relationship. After suffering a blackout, and with her hand getting worse, Kira visits Dr. Crober (Barbara Crampton) for treatment. Crober prescribes medication, but as Kira soon discovers: her skin can improve if she replaces it with fresh tissue from a living person. In desperation, Kira’s need for transplant flesh pushes her to murder and Replace starts to go a bit Frankenstein, as new parts replace old. Except here, it’s more a case of pre-emptive graverobbing.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/replace-movie-review-horror-2017/
IMDB: Replace
Monday, 27 November 2017
DOWNSIZING (full review at The Reel Word)
Downsizing is the seventh feature film from American writer / director Alexander Payne. It takes an irresistible sci-fi notion, populates it with typically rich characters, and to top it all off, decides to say a thing or two in the process. In other words, it’s absolute magic.
Norwegian scientist, Dr Jorgen Asbjørnsen (Rolf Lassgård), makes a historic scientific breakthrough. He discovers a way to shrink organic matter down to a fraction of its original size. This irreversible shrinking process, or ‘downsizing’, is used in a bid to combat overpopulation. Participants who downsize are given incentives. Not only are they helping the planet, but their quality of life increases exponentially, their smaller footprint means they can live in far greater luxury.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/downsizing-movie-review/
IMDB: Downsizing
Norwegian scientist, Dr Jorgen Asbjørnsen (Rolf Lassgård), makes a historic scientific breakthrough. He discovers a way to shrink organic matter down to a fraction of its original size. This irreversible shrinking process, or ‘downsizing’, is used in a bid to combat overpopulation. Participants who downsize are given incentives. Not only are they helping the planet, but their quality of life increases exponentially, their smaller footprint means they can live in far greater luxury.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/downsizing-movie-review/
IMDB: Downsizing
Friday, 24 November 2017
THE MARSHES (full review at The Reel Word)
The Marshes is a slasher/survival horror picture from writer/director Roger Scott.
Pria (Dafna Kronental), Ben (Mathew Cooper) and Will (Sam Delich) are three university researchers, who set out on a trip to collect field samples from a remote, unnamed section of Marshland. They arrive at their campsite, having encountered an aggressive local en-route, and Ben regales the party with a ghost story concerning the ‘Jolly Swagman’ in the erstwhile Aussie classic Waltzing Matilda. Turns out, he’s not as ‘jolly’ as you might think.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-marshes-movie-review-australia-horror/
IMDB: The Marshes
Pria (Dafna Kronental), Ben (Mathew Cooper) and Will (Sam Delich) are three university researchers, who set out on a trip to collect field samples from a remote, unnamed section of Marshland. They arrive at their campsite, having encountered an aggressive local en-route, and Ben regales the party with a ghost story concerning the ‘Jolly Swagman’ in the erstwhile Aussie classic Waltzing Matilda. Turns out, he’s not as ‘jolly’ as you might think.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-marshes-movie-review-australia-horror/
IMDB: The Marshes
Labels:
Dafna Kronental,
horror,
Mathew Cooper,
Roger Scott,
Sam Delich,
Swagman,
The Marshes
Saturday, 18 November 2017
BODIES (full review at The Reel Word)
Rosie (Lisa Ronaghan) and Ben (Joseph Baker) Whittaker are a young, financially challenged, married couple. On the verge of losing their house, they agree to participate in a week long scientific experiment in the country. The aim of the experiment is to study and test the human survival instinct. The financial reward for successful completion of the week would solve their money problems.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/bodies-movie-review-2017/
IMDB: Bodies
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/bodies-movie-review-2017/
IMDB: Bodies
Labels:
Bodies,
Joseph Baker,
Lisa Ronaghan,
SCI-FI,
Tom Large
Tuesday, 24 October 2017
WHEELMAN (full review at The Reel Word)
Wheelman, written and directed by Jeremy Rush and starring Frank Grillo (Captain America), is a hard boiled crime drama, distributed by, and currently screening on Netflix.
Grillo plays a getaway driver, fresh out of prison and in debt to the mob. He juggles his responsibilities to work and his debts, with the more conventional problems of having a rebellious teen daughter and prickly ex-spouse. Uncomfortable sharing anything other than professional information with his gun carrying passengers, and particularly keen to withhold his name, we know him only as the Wheelman. While driving for a heist crew, things go predictably wrong and the Wheelman finds himself with a trunk full of money, and a situation spiralling rapidly out of control.
Grillo plays a getaway driver, fresh out of prison and in debt to the mob. He juggles his responsibilities to work and his debts, with the more conventional problems of having a rebellious teen daughter and prickly ex-spouse. Uncomfortable sharing anything other than professional information with his gun carrying passengers, and particularly keen to withhold his name, we know him only as the Wheelman. While driving for a heist crew, things go predictably wrong and the Wheelman finds himself with a trunk full of money, and a situation spiralling rapidly out of control.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/wheelman-movie-review-netflix-frank-grillo/
IMDB: Wheelman
Labels:
action,
Caitlin Carmichael,
crime,
Frank Grillo,
Garret Dillahunt,
Jeremy Rush,
Netflix,
Wheelman
THE MEYEROWITZ STORIES (NEW AND SELECTED) (full review at The Reel Word)
Writer/Director Noah Baumbach’s track record speaks for itself. From his collaborations with Wes Anderson through to the wonderful Squid and the Whale, and engaging indie dramas like Frances Ha and Mistress America, he set his stall out as an interesting and highly watchable filmmaker, with a focus on character, rather than plot driven stories. So the prospect of a Baumbach movie with a quality cast and Netflix’s distribution behind it ought to be a shoe-in shouldn’t it? Well, it ought to be, but sadly The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) misses its mark quite badly. It represents an excruciating low point for the usually excellent Baumbach.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-meyerowitz-stories-movie-review-netflix-sandler-stiller-hoffman/
IMDB: The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-meyerowitz-stories-movie-review-netflix-sandler-stiller-hoffman/
IMDB: The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)
Friday, 20 October 2017
IN DEFENCE OF NATIONAL TREASURE... (full article at Junkee.com)
My first time writing for Junkee. com, and I defend the National Treasure movies with terminal intensity!
Upon its release in 2004, National Treasure received a grossly underwhelming response from critics. Slammed by most reviewers, it was unfairly labelled as derivative. Empire called it a ‘rushed-out knock-off’ of The Da Vinci Code, judging it ‘simultaneously moronic and mildly educational’. Rolling Stone, rating it 1 out of 5 stars, said it possessed a ‘robotic cheerlessness’ and called it a ‘paycheck movie’ for Nicolas Cage. Not to be outdone, USA Today dismissed National Treasure as a ‘tepid Indiana Jones knock-off’ with a ‘flaccid execution and stupefying premise’.
Read the full article at Junkee.com:
http://junkee.com/national-treasure-defence-adventure/131531
IMDB: National Treasure
IMDB: National Treasure 2: Book of Secrets
BLADE RUNNER 2049 (full review at The Reel Word)
In the year 2049, blade runner’s operate as an arm of the police force, ‘retiring’ rogue and older model replicants. K (Ryan Gosling) is a newer model replicant blade runner. Sent to a protein farm to retire the replicant Sapper Morton (Dave Bautista), K happens on a discovery that will lead him to question everything he knows about replicants and humans, as well as his own existence. Played by all sides, he is ordered by his boss Lt Joshi (Robin Wright) to cover up his findings, while simultaneously pursued by the Wallace Corporation, and its enigmatic head Niander Wallace (Jared Leto), who have absorbed the Tyrell Corporation and lead the market in replicant manufacture. K’s investigation leads him inexorably to the doorstep of former blade runner Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford).
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/blade-runner-2049-movie-review/
IMDB: Blade Runner 2049
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/blade-runner-2049-movie-review/
IMDB: Blade Runner 2049
Monday, 9 October 2017
HELL HOUSE LLC (full review at The Reel Word)
Hell House LLC is a found footage / faux-documentary horror movie from writer / director Stephen Cognetti. This review is of the DVD-only extended cut.
On the opening night of a Halloween Haunted House attraction in upstate New York, something goes wrong resulting in the deaths of fifteen people. With the incident cloaked in silence by both the local community and first responders, what happened inside the walls of the former Abaddon Hotel remains a mystery until a documentary crew receives a delivery of video footage from a survivor. Presented as part found footage, part talking head documentary Hell House LLC shows us haunted house creators Alex, Sarah, Tony, Mac and Paul as they begin prep work on the attraction. Once the electricity is up and running they opt to stay in the house full time and gradually we start to notice some strange goings on.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/hell-house-llc-movie-review/
IMDB: Hell House LLC
On the opening night of a Halloween Haunted House attraction in upstate New York, something goes wrong resulting in the deaths of fifteen people. With the incident cloaked in silence by both the local community and first responders, what happened inside the walls of the former Abaddon Hotel remains a mystery until a documentary crew receives a delivery of video footage from a survivor. Presented as part found footage, part talking head documentary Hell House LLC shows us haunted house creators Alex, Sarah, Tony, Mac and Paul as they begin prep work on the attraction. Once the electricity is up and running they opt to stay in the house full time and gradually we start to notice some strange goings on.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/hell-house-llc-movie-review/
IMDB: Hell House LLC
Labels:
found footage,
Hell House LLC,
horror,
Stephen Cognetti
Monday, 2 October 2017
BAD BLOOD (full review at The Reel Word)
Vincent (Xavier Samuel) is a respected author with a tortured past. As he begins the follow up to his successful novel, and embarks on a whirlwind romance with Carrie (Morgan Griffin), he is approache
d by a private detective intent on proving that Vincent was responsible for the murder of his first wife. Needing to get his thoughts together for the book, and keep away from the attentions of the investigator, Vincent suggests to Carrie that they take a short break to the country. After arriving at the house where they are staying, Vincent’s mood changes and Carrie begins to suspect that he is not quite all that he seems. Events begin to take a more homicidal direction.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/bad-blood-movie-review-2017-aussie/
IMDB: Bad Blood
d by a private detective intent on proving that Vincent was responsible for the murder of his first wife. Needing to get his thoughts together for the book, and keep away from the attentions of the investigator, Vincent suggests to Carrie that they take a short break to the country. After arriving at the house where they are staying, Vincent’s mood changes and Carrie begins to suspect that he is not quite all that he seems. Events begin to take a more homicidal direction.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/bad-blood-movie-review-2017-aussie/
IMDB: Bad Blood
Labels:
Bad Blood,
David Pulbrook,
Morgan Griffin,
thriller,
Xavier Samuel
Friday, 15 September 2017
POINT BREAK (full review at The Reel Word)
14th September 2017 marks eight years since the untimely passing of Patrick Swayze, and what better way to remember him, than by taking a look back at one of his greatest movies, the action masterpiece that is Point Break.
Keanu Reeves’ magnificently named hero, Johnny Utah, begins his first day at the F.B.I. with his new partner Angelo Pappas (Gary Busey). Together they are tasked with solving a series of bank robberies by a professional gang known as the Ex Presidents. They hit banks quickly, dressed as Reagan, Carter, LBJ and Nixon. Pappas has a theory the bank robbers are surfers, chasing waves around the world. Utah goes undercover to surveil the beaches and infiltrate the gang. He meets local surfer Tyler (Lori Petty) and forms a fast friendship with surf legend Bodhi (Patrick Swayze). As the friendship grows, Utah learns Bodhi is responsible for the robberies, as he plans to travel for a 50 year storm which will provide the ultimate surf waves.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/point-break-keanu-reeves-patrick-swayze-1991-classic-movie/
IMDB: Point Break
(poster by James Fosdike)
Keanu Reeves’ magnificently named hero, Johnny Utah, begins his first day at the F.B.I. with his new partner Angelo Pappas (Gary Busey). Together they are tasked with solving a series of bank robberies by a professional gang known as the Ex Presidents. They hit banks quickly, dressed as Reagan, Carter, LBJ and Nixon. Pappas has a theory the bank robbers are surfers, chasing waves around the world. Utah goes undercover to surveil the beaches and infiltrate the gang. He meets local surfer Tyler (Lori Petty) and forms a fast friendship with surf legend Bodhi (Patrick Swayze). As the friendship grows, Utah learns Bodhi is responsible for the robberies, as he plans to travel for a 50 year storm which will provide the ultimate surf waves.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/point-break-keanu-reeves-patrick-swayze-1991-classic-movie/
IMDB: Point Break
(poster by James Fosdike)
Friday, 25 August 2017
THE VOID (full review at The Reel Word)
In the middle of a night shift, country police officer Daniel Carter (Aaron Poole) comes across an injured and bloodied young man, James (Evan Stern), on the edge of a forest. Bundling him into the back of his car, he races him off to the local hospital, which is running a skeleton staff due to a recent fire. On reaching the hospital it transpires that James is being pursued by a mysterious knife-wielding cult, dressed in white hooded robes. They lay siege to the hospital while Daniel and the staff, including his estranged wife, Allison (Kathleen Munroe), must find a way out.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-void-movie-review-2017/
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-void-movie-review-2017/
IMDB: The Void
Thursday, 24 August 2017
THE HITMAN'S BODYGUARD (full review at The Reel Word)
Michael Bryce (Ryan Reynolds) is an elite bodyguard, down on his luck and catering to low-rent clients after an incident on a high-profile job sent his career into a tailspin. Darius Kincaid (Samuel L. Jackson) is an incarcerated contract killer who, in exchange for his wife’s freedom, agrees to testify in The Hague against infamous war criminal Vladislav Dukhovich (Gary Oldman). As fate would have it, Kincaid is being transported from England by Bryce’s ex-girlfriend, Interpol agent Amelia Roussel (Elodie Yung), whom he blames for his professional nosedive. When the Interpol convoy is ambushed, and suspecting an inside job, Roussel calls on Bryce to help get Kincaid to The Hague intact.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-hitmans-bodyguard-movie-review/
IMDB: The Hitman's Bodyguard
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-hitmans-bodyguard-movie-review/
IMDB: The Hitman's Bodyguard
FAULTS (full review at The Reel Word)
Dr Ansel Roth (Leland Orser) is a disgraced expert in mind control and cult deprogramming. Following a scandal, the cancellation of his TV series and being in hoc to his agent, he trawls around poorly attended speaking engagements, trying to sell his book. When his agent sends a debt collector after him, Ansel is given a looming repayment deadline. Soon afterwards he is approached at an event by the parents of a girl called Claire (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), who has been indoctrinated into a cult. In need of the money, Ansel agrees to return to his former profession and help them.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/faults-movie-review-orser-winstead/
IMDB: Faults
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/faults-movie-review-orser-winstead/
IMDB: Faults
Labels:
cult,
deprogramming,
drama,
Faults,
Leland Orser,
Mary Elizabeth Winstead,
Riley Stearns
THE BELKO EXPERIMENT (full review at The Reel Word)
On a normal day, in a normal office building just outside Bogotá, Colombia, the morning routine has barely started when the employees of the Belko Corporation receive an unusual ultimatum. Via intercom they are told they must kill a specified number of their colleagues or suffer fatal consequences. Initially believing it to be a prank, the employees congregate in the lobby and try to figure things out. But after the mysterious person on the end of the intercom locks them inside and proves they mean business, everything goes a bit pear shaped.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-belko-experiment-movie-review/
IMDB: The Belko Experiment
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-belko-experiment-movie-review/
IMDB: The Belko Experiment
BLOODLANDS (full review at The Reel Word)
Albanian/Australian horror movie Bloodlands is the follow-up to writer-director Steven Kastrissios’ little seen, yet terrific, Aussie revenge movie The Horseman.
Set in an impoverished Albanian community on the edge of a stunning, seemingly endless forest, Bloodlands nominally follows siblings Artan (Emiljano Palali) and Iliriana (Alesia Xhemalaj) in their daily life working in the family butcher shop. The family, rounded out by Skender (Gëzim Rudi) and Shpresa (Suela Bako), are plagued by weird dreams of a mysterious cloaked figure and there are periodic references to witchcraft, rumour and their great grandfather’s historical activities. After an altercation with a young man and woman caught rifling through their bins, the family becomes caught up in a feud with feral, possibly supernatural forest dwellers.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/bloodlands-movie-review-2017/
IMDB: Bloodlands
Set in an impoverished Albanian community on the edge of a stunning, seemingly endless forest, Bloodlands nominally follows siblings Artan (Emiljano Palali) and Iliriana (Alesia Xhemalaj) in their daily life working in the family butcher shop. The family, rounded out by Skender (Gëzim Rudi) and Shpresa (Suela Bako), are plagued by weird dreams of a mysterious cloaked figure and there are periodic references to witchcraft, rumour and their great grandfather’s historical activities. After an altercation with a young man and woman caught rifling through their bins, the family becomes caught up in a feud with feral, possibly supernatural forest dwellers.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/bloodlands-movie-review-2017/
IMDB: Bloodlands
KIKI, LOVE TO LOVE a.k.a. KIKI, EL AMOR SE HACE (full review at The Reel Word)
Kiki, Love to Love is a Spanish comedy / drama based on Australian director Josh Lawson’s 2014 film The Little Death. It follows the lives and unusual sexual preferences of a selection of Madrid residents.
Even though it deals with the fetishes and uncommon sexual foibles, it’s not as bawdy or crass as its synopsis sounds. And although the film is most certainly a comedy, the central message of Kiki, Love to Love is one of positivity. We’re not laughing at the weirdness (well, okay, maybe we are to begin with), but rather celebrating it. We are invited to look at these characters and the uncommon things that arouse them and realise there really is no such thing as ‘normal’. That while these proclivities might make for some very funny circumstances, there’s no shame or derision for anyone involved.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/kiki-love-to-love-movie-review-spain/
IMDB: Kiki, Love To Love
Even though it deals with the fetishes and uncommon sexual foibles, it’s not as bawdy or crass as its synopsis sounds. And although the film is most certainly a comedy, the central message of Kiki, Love to Love is one of positivity. We’re not laughing at the weirdness (well, okay, maybe we are to begin with), but rather celebrating it. We are invited to look at these characters and the uncommon things that arouse them and realise there really is no such thing as ‘normal’. That while these proclivities might make for some very funny circumstances, there’s no shame or derision for anyone involved.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/kiki-love-to-love-movie-review-spain/
IMDB: Kiki, Love To Love
HOUNDS OF LOVE (full review at The Reel Word)
Set in Perth in 1987, Hounds of Love is a horror/crime story dealing with the abduction, torture and imprisonment of a young girl by a sadistic couple, John and Evelyn White. Vicki Maloney is taken from the street at random one night, and with no clue as to her whereabouts and in the face of an apathetic response from local law enforcement, her distraught family face an uphill battle to find her.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/hounds-of-love-movie-review/
IMDB: Hounds Of Love
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/hounds-of-love-movie-review/
IMDB: Hounds Of Love
Labels:
Ashleigh Cummings,
crime,
Emma Booth,
horror,
Hounds Of Love,
Stephen Curry
RAW a.k.a. GRAVE (full review at The Reel Word)
Julia Ducournau’s Raw (a.k.a Grave) has an intimidating festival reputation and a delicious vegetarian-turns-cannibal concept. Vet student Justine (Garance Marillier) arrives for her first week of university, but must first endure a bizarre and endless stream of initiation rituals instigated by the older students. Justine, nervous and unsure of herself, is peer pressured into ditching her vegetarianism when she eats a rabbit kidney as one of the oddball hazing stunts. Justine starts to find her feet at uni, with the help of her sister Alexia (Ella Rumpf) and roommate Adrien (Rabah Naït Oufella), but before long a craving begins to manifest for a particular kind of meat… human.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/raw-movie-review/
IMDB: Raw
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/raw-movie-review/
IMDB: Raw
Labels:
cannibal,
Ella Rumpf,
Garance Marillier,
horror,
Julia Ducournau,
Raw
20th CENTURY WOMEN (full review at The Reel Word)
Writer / director Mike Mills follows up the wonderful Beginners with 20th Century Women, a semi-autobiographical drama/comedy that centres on the relationship between single parent Dorothea (Annette Bening) and her 15-year-old son Jamie (Lucas Jade Zumann). Set in California in 1979, Dorothea and Jamie live in a large, mouldering old house with tenants Abbie (Greta Gerwig) and William (Billy Crudup). Dorothea enlists Abbie and Jamie’s best friend Julie (Elle Fanning) to help raise him in areas where she, as his mother, cannot make a connection. We follow this unconventional family through a character rather than plot-driven narrative.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/20th-century-women-movie-review/
IMDB: 20th Century Women
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/20th-century-women-movie-review/
IMDB: 20th Century Women
FREE FIRE (full review at The Reel Word)
In 1970s Boston, a small IRA group led by Frank (Michael Smiley) and Chris (Cillian Murphy) meet on a dockside to conduct a transaction with South African arms dealer Vernon (Sharlto Copley) and his group of henchmen. Directed by facilitators Ord (Armie Hammer) and Justine (Brie Larson) to a dilapidated former factory, the two groups immediately fail to get along. As everyone begins to needle each other it appears the deal could fall apart at any second. Cooler heads appear to prevail, but an incident sets tempers flaring and the situation inevitably descends into violence.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/free-fire-movie-review/
IMDB: Free Fire
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/free-fire-movie-review/
IMDB: Free Fire
Labels:
action,
Armie Hammer,
Ben Wheatley,
Brie Larson,
Cillian Murphy,
Free Fire,
Sharlto Copley
THE GREASY STRANGLER (full review at The Reel Word)
Big Ronnie (Michael St. Michaels) and Big Brayden (Sky Elobar) are a father and son duo who live together and work together in the family business – fleecing tourists in a garishly fluorescent L.A. disco tour of spurious pedigree. Their prickly relationship soon becomes even more strained when they meet disco tour customer Janet (Elizabeth De Razzo) and compete for her affections. Meanwhile, a slathered up serial killer known as The Greasy Strangler is offing community members in conveniently deserted locales.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/greasy-strangler-movie-review/
IMDB: The Greasy Strangler
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/greasy-strangler-movie-review/
IMDB: The Greasy Strangler
DENIAL (full review at The Reel Word)
Denial is the true story of the 1996 libel case brought against Deborah Lipstadt and Penguin Books by the notorious Holocaust denier David Irving. Taken to the British High Court over her book, she is compelled to prove under British libel law, that Irving willingly lied and misrepresented facts in order to support his own twisted world view.
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/denial-movie-review-rachel-weisz/
IMDB: Denial
Read the full review at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/denial-movie-review-rachel-weisz/
IMDB: Denial
Labels:
courtroom drama,
Denial,
Rachel Weisz,
Timothy Spall,
Tom Wilkinson,
true story
Sunday, 21 May 2017
Thursday, 11 May 2017
GHOST IN THE SHELL
In an unnamed, neon flecked future city, the Major (Scarlett Johannson) heads up a counter-terrorist squad called Section 9. Following her parents’ death and severe personal injury in a terrorist attack, the Major’s brain is loaded into a cybernetic body. In a world dominated by robotic appendages and cybernetic enhancements, the Major represents the first complete merger of human and artificial intelligence. Her consciousness within the metal frame personifying the ‘Ghost in the Shell.’ Torn between her desire to remember more of her former life, and dedication to duty, the Major and her team must track down the illusive cyber terrorist Kuze, as he wreaks murderous havoc upon the executives of the Hanka Robotics company.
Drawing on elements from Masamune Shirow’s revered manga, the TV series and Mamoru Oshii’s iconic 1995 animated feature, Ghost in the Shell is a lustrous piece of cyberpunk tech noir, which impresses on a visual scale, but struggles to make a connection elsewhere.
Scarlett Johansson gives an oddly subdued performance as the Major. Disturbed by glitches and memories of her former life, she comes across Robopcop-Lite, but remains perpetually aloof. Where Verhoeven’s android copper drew us in, Ghost in the Shell keeps us firmly at arms length, so we’re never fully on board with what she’s trying to do. The movie’s heart has been replaced with cold circuitry.
Juliette Binoche has more success as Dr Ouelet, scientist and surrogate parental unit in charge of the Major’s general wellbeing. She brings much needed emotion to the sterile proceedings. Takashi Kitano also fares better, on reliably good form as the enigmatic head of Section 9, muttering in Japanese yet being fully understood by his English speaking subordinates. Most of the other characters fail to leave much of an impression. The villains are uncharismatic, and the Section 9 team have no real motivation beyond catching bad guys and patting dogs.
Structurally, the set up is unclear. At some points Section 9 are beholden to the whims of Hanka Robitics, and at others they adhere to orders from the (unseen) Prime Minister. It feels underdeveloped, as if the filmmakers didn’t quite make their minds up about how this universe operates before they started filming.
Ghost In The Shell’s problem is not style over substance, because there is substance here – the meaning of existence, personal identity, simultaneously conflicted and sympathetic protagonists – it’s just never satisfactorily explored. And whether or not it’s bringing anything new to these themes rolled over from the original, is a question for the fans to debate.
The fans will also likely be pleased to see scenes lifted directly from the source material, and the tightly packed, hologram enhanced cityscape makes for a perfect Tokyo/Blade Runner mash up. There’s an extensive array of stylish tech and robots on display, intricately designed and perfectly realised, that nail the ‘high tech, low life’ aesthetic.
What makes Ghost in the Shell disappointing is the hints that it was nearly a great film. It’s better paced than the slow burn anime, and credit is due to any sci-fi in the modern era, that doesn’t feel compelled to over explain or over contextualise its universe. But it’s too loosely drawn, and we never really understand the importance of the stakes involved. The ultimate irony is we have a movie that centres on what it means to be human in an artificial world, yet it comes across so impersonally.
IMDB: Ghost In The Shell
Drawing on elements from Masamune Shirow’s revered manga, the TV series and Mamoru Oshii’s iconic 1995 animated feature, Ghost in the Shell is a lustrous piece of cyberpunk tech noir, which impresses on a visual scale, but struggles to make a connection elsewhere.
Scarlett Johansson gives an oddly subdued performance as the Major. Disturbed by glitches and memories of her former life, she comes across Robopcop-Lite, but remains perpetually aloof. Where Verhoeven’s android copper drew us in, Ghost in the Shell keeps us firmly at arms length, so we’re never fully on board with what she’s trying to do. The movie’s heart has been replaced with cold circuitry.
Juliette Binoche has more success as Dr Ouelet, scientist and surrogate parental unit in charge of the Major’s general wellbeing. She brings much needed emotion to the sterile proceedings. Takashi Kitano also fares better, on reliably good form as the enigmatic head of Section 9, muttering in Japanese yet being fully understood by his English speaking subordinates. Most of the other characters fail to leave much of an impression. The villains are uncharismatic, and the Section 9 team have no real motivation beyond catching bad guys and patting dogs.
Structurally, the set up is unclear. At some points Section 9 are beholden to the whims of Hanka Robitics, and at others they adhere to orders from the (unseen) Prime Minister. It feels underdeveloped, as if the filmmakers didn’t quite make their minds up about how this universe operates before they started filming.
Ghost In The Shell’s problem is not style over substance, because there is substance here – the meaning of existence, personal identity, simultaneously conflicted and sympathetic protagonists – it’s just never satisfactorily explored. And whether or not it’s bringing anything new to these themes rolled over from the original, is a question for the fans to debate.
The fans will also likely be pleased to see scenes lifted directly from the source material, and the tightly packed, hologram enhanced cityscape makes for a perfect Tokyo/Blade Runner mash up. There’s an extensive array of stylish tech and robots on display, intricately designed and perfectly realised, that nail the ‘high tech, low life’ aesthetic.
What makes Ghost in the Shell disappointing is the hints that it was nearly a great film. It’s better paced than the slow burn anime, and credit is due to any sci-fi in the modern era, that doesn’t feel compelled to over explain or over contextualise its universe. But it’s too loosely drawn, and we never really understand the importance of the stakes involved. The ultimate irony is we have a movie that centres on what it means to be human in an artificial world, yet it comes across so impersonally.
IMDB: Ghost In The Shell
Thursday, 27 April 2017
NEWS: Freak Shift
Ben Wheatley participated in an audience Q&A following a screening of his latest movie Free Fire, at The Lido Cinema in Hawthorne last night. Wheatley fed us a few facts about his next movie, Freakshift, a science fiction movie originally mooted as his follow up to Kill List back in 2012. He confirmed that Free Fire’s Armie Hammer is on board and that at this stage it looks all set to begin in August.
The eponymous Freak Shift are a special police unit engaged to fight monsters who emerge at night to terrorize the populace. Wheatley went on to succinctly summarise it as “a group of women fighting giant crabs.” Freakshift, once again co-written with Amy Jump, will be Wheatley’s seventh feature film and his first foray into science fiction in a filmography that comprises an eclectic mix of genre and art house fare. His latest movie Free Fire opens in Australia this week, and is a hugely entertaining black comedy / action movie meld.
Ben Wheatley has an almost perfect track record so far and it sounds like Freak Shift is ticking all the right boxes.
IMDB: Freakshift
The eponymous Freak Shift are a special police unit engaged to fight monsters who emerge at night to terrorize the populace. Wheatley went on to succinctly summarise it as “a group of women fighting giant crabs.” Freakshift, once again co-written with Amy Jump, will be Wheatley’s seventh feature film and his first foray into science fiction in a filmography that comprises an eclectic mix of genre and art house fare. His latest movie Free Fire opens in Australia this week, and is a hugely entertaining black comedy / action movie meld.
Ben Wheatley has an almost perfect track record so far and it sounds like Freak Shift is ticking all the right boxes.
IMDB: Freakshift
Labels:
Armie Hammer,
Ben Wheatley,
Freak Shift,
news,
sci fi
Wednesday, 8 February 2017
WITCHFINDER GENERAL (full review at The Reel Word)
The year is 1645. The English Civil War rages and as half the country fights, the other half borders on anarchy. Superstition runs rampant in the lawless countryside. Young Roundhead soldier Richard Marshall (Ian Ogilvy), takes leave to see his girlfriend Sara (Hilary Dwyer) and her uncle, the local priest John Lowes (Rupert Davies) in the village of Brandeston. Sensing trouble afoot, Lowes encourages Marshall to marry Sara and take her away from an increasingly volatile local atmosphere. As the war rages on and Marshall and his colleagues are well occupied with the fighting, Witchfinder Matthew Hopkins (Vincent Price), and his associate John Stearne (Robert Russell), patrol the East Anglian countryside torturing, molesting and executing alleged witches and Satan worshippers... so long as the price is right.
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/witchfinder-general-conqueror-worm-1968-horror-classic-vincent-price/
IMDB: Witchfinder General
Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/witchfinder-general-conqueror-worm-1968-horror-classic-vincent-price/
IMDB: Witchfinder General
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)