Wednesday, 30 May 2018

FUTURE MAN (full review at Screen Realm)

Future Man is a sci-fi comedy written by Kyle Hunter and Ariel Shaffir, (Sausage Party), and produced by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, this review is for the first three episode of the debut series. 

Underachieving janitor Josh Futturman (Josh Hutcherson) lives at home with his parents (Ed Begley Jr and Glenne Headly) and works shifts at a local science lab run by Dr Kronish (Keith David). In his spare time he plays videogames and battles the feeling he was destined for greater things. One day, Josh completes a seemingly unbeatable game, Biotic Wars, which turns out to be used as a recruiting tool by time travellers, exactly like the plot of The Last Starfighter, as the show is keen to point out. Two soldiers from the future, Tiger (Eliza Coupe) and Wolf (Derek Wilson) travel to the present day to enlist josh and prevent the downfall of humanity.

Read the full review at Screen Realm:
https://screenrealm.com/future-man-review-season-one-episodes-1-2-3/

IMDB: Future Man

Monday, 14 May 2018

MANHUNT (full review at Screen Realm)

In the late 80s and early 90s, if there was one name synonymous with genre defining action cinema, then it was John Woo. Exploding out of Hong Kong with a laundry list of classics – The Killer, A Better Tomorrow, Bullet in The Head, Hard Boiled – and a dynamite partnership with regular leading man, Chow Yun-Fat, he took action movies to another level.

Read the full review at Screen Realm:
https://screenrealm.com/manhunt-movie-review-john-woo/

IMDB: Manhunt

Tuesday, 8 May 2018

TEN MUST-SEE SCI-FI MOVIES ON NETFLIX ANZ (full article at Screen Realm)



The age old ‘What-do-I-watch-on-Netflix?’ question is almost as old as time itself isn’t it? But fear not, we have you covered. Here’s our rundown of ten must-see sci-fi movies, ranging from classics to underrated gems, currently available on Netflix ANZ.


Pacific Rim
There’s not really a lot more you need to know about that time Guillermo Del Toro brought a giant robot to a Kaiju party. Pacific Rim is as self-explanatory as it is deliriously enjoyable. For all its simple maths, Pacific Rim grabs you by the hand and leads you straight down into an intricate universe laden with heroic mech pilots, colossal interdimensional beasts from the depths of the sea and eye popping black markets in monster guts...

Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://screenrealm.com/ten-best-science-fiction-movies-netflix-australia-new-zealand/

Monday, 7 May 2018

SCREEN REALM, formerly The Reel Word & Adam Fleet Movies social media links

The Reel Word, who I have been writing for regularly for a little while now, has undergone a bit of a revamp, including a change of name, to Screen Realm. You can't find them online at the following link:

https://screenrealm.com/
 
I will go through and correct the Reel Word links where possible so that they lead to the new site. But in case any of the older links are no longer working, my full Reel Word / Screen Realm archive can be found here:

https://screenrealm.com/author/adam-fleet/

You can also catch up with me at:
Screen Realm can also be found at the following social media accounts:

Sunday, 15 April 2018

2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY

2018 marks the 50th Anniversary of Stanley Kubrick’s science fiction masterpiece 2001: A Space Odyssey. I remember walking out of the cinema after I saw it for the first time feeling distinctly… underwhelmed. It was long, hard to understand and a little weird, and my legs ached from the ancient cinema seat. I could not work out what all the fuss was about.

But something about it stuck with me and refused to budge. I spent the whole following week thinking about it. I started reading as much as I could about the production and Kubrick and Arthur C Clarke's collaboration on the dual creation of screenplay and novel. Learning of Kubrick’s intention for the movie to be a subjective experience, as if music or a painting, so that 2001 “hits the viewer at an inner level of consciousness”* brought the film into fascinating perspective.

Likewise the attention to detail and accuracy that made it a benchmark for Hard SF started to get inside my head. But the most astounding fact turned out to be one that had been staring me in the face. That 2001 was released in April of 1968, a full year and change before Neil Armstrong set foot on the surface of the Moon!

With tiny mind officially blown, I revisited 2001 and it all gradually developed into a bit of an obsession with the film. I've watched it many times since, enjoying it more with every viewing. I love it.

IMDB: 2001 A Space Odyssey

*1970 interview with Joseph Gelmis (well worth a read!)
http://www.visual-memory.co.uk/amk/doc/0069.html




Tuesday, 3 April 2018

THE SONG KEEPERS (full review at The Reel Word)

The Song Keepers tells us the story of the Central Australian Aboriginal Women's Choir. 30-35 Central Australian women from remote communities, sing hymns originally taught to their grandparents by German missionaries, translated and composed in Indigenous languages. In 2015 they went on tour to Germany, bringing the hymns back to their point of origin, having taken on their own meaning and relevance to the communities they were brought to. Filmmaker Naina Sen documented the journey.

Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/the-song-keepers-documentary-review/

IMDB: The Song Keepers

Wednesday, 28 March 2018

PACIFIC RIM: UPRISING (full review at The Reel Word)

Guillermo Del Toro’s Pacific Rim landed on our screens back in 2013 and certainly had its fair share of detractors, as a brief trawl through the popular movie aggregators will attest. But while many laud Del Toro for his weightier works, some of us find his genre fare far more appealing. Sure, a melancholy tale of fish-man love will win you an Oscar, but does it have mind-melding robots punching the crap out of giant interdimensional monsters? And so with that, and a decent box office behind it, Pacific Rim: Uprising is here. With Stephen S. DeKnight (Daredevil) taking over the helm and Del Toro relegated to producing duties, can it live up to the lunkheaded majesty of the original?

Read the full article at The Reel Word:
https://www.thereelword.net/pacific-rim-uprising-movie-review-2018/

IMDB: Pacific Rim Uprising