Archive for the ‘Reviews P-T’ Category

 

Sixty Six

Betwixt & Between

August 29th, 2008

sixty-six-01

“Sixty Six” is an overcooked Christmas cake. And director Paul Weiland allows his corpulent impulses to overwhelm what could have been a charming gem of a film. Coated in sticky-sweet icing but filled with darker themes, the movie is so stuffed with competing ideas and tones that it regrettably collapses in on itself.

Bernie Rubens (Gregg Sulkin) is a North London lad in 1966 with the ignominious fate that his bar mitzvah could fall on the World Cup final day, which England, he hopes, won’t make. We first meet Bernie in a bittersweet scene as he’s picked last for his gym class football team. And if the film had been satisfied with this concise concept, a small but sincere story regarding a young man‘s anxious months-long journey towards his important day, “Sixty Six” had a chance to be special. But it throws in an obsessive compulsive, depressive dad (Eddie Marsan) who with his brother runs a fruit and veg shop which is under threat from a national competitor. And the drama keeps being heaped on, till the movie topples over from the weighty matters.  The project would have been well served by a more frugal Weiland tossing out several of the dramatic elements and reigning in writers Bridget O’Connor and Peter Straughan from their sweeping impulses. 

But Weiland suffers from a difficulty shifting between the serious and lightheaded.  Therefore, the switch between the joyful and sad moments just feels jumbled. It’s not as though people don’t wade through life with a plethora of tumultuous events but this film does it so jarringly that the emotional see-saw feels exploitive.  At times, scenes seem plunked in for the sole reason that a very light moment must be followed quite suddenly by an intense one. The tragedy especially doesn’t feel connected to the basic story but instead tagged on to simply prompt an audience reaction.  It’s a scattershot approach which similarly bewitched a movie like “The Full Monty.”

The treatment of the father’s character is particularly perplexing.  He’s more than simple quirky; he’s a troubled, damaged, and peculiar man. But the film treats his mental health like so many swings and roundabouts.  The father’s depressive malaise, which leads him to be hospitalized, can be brushed aside, the film appears to suggest, with a glorious extra time goal. Marsan does a commendable job with a character undermined by oversimplification.

In the final reel, the film dissolves into a scenario so soaked in fantasy it‘s laughable. Let’s just say that there’s not a chance in Hull City FC that the dad could have snagged tickets to that football match in the manner in which he does. The scene could have worked if Weiland had incorporated an airy, nostalgic mood throughout.  Plainly, it would have been a fitting resolution if the film had been steeped in a whimsical, fantastical tone from the onset. But, as presented in this film, the untenable ending is utter tosh.

The cast can’t be faulted for any of the film’s shortcomings.  Helen Bonham Carter is endearing against type as Bernie’s self-possessed mum.  Playing Bernie’s aunt, British comedienne Catherine Tate again proves that in roles outside of her own creation she is a genuine actress.  And Peter Serafinowicz, a tangential member of Simon Pegg’s comic entourage and a phenomenal mimic in his own right, provides a good natured turn as Bernie’s cheeky uncle. 

It’s disappointing to see a film like “Sixty Six” miss an opportunity, a sitter, really, because along with the cast there are highlights in the presentation as well.  Both the art and set direction by Lynne Huitson and Jille Azis are redolent with a Swinging London vibe. Rebecca Hale’s costume design is equally adept at capturing the more outrageous fashions of the time and the simplest of school uniforms.

There’s a better film here if Weiland had trimmed the excess.  Too bad there won’t be a second helping.


Tell No One

He Shoots? He Scores!

August 11th, 2008

tell-no-one
When France rose to their greatest footballing heights at turn of the century, Zinedine Zidane was the talismanic figure of infinite artistry.  But a crucial component of those World Cup and European Championship winning squads was an unassuming central midfield stalwart named Emmanuel Petit.  Blessed with matinee idol good looks and a blond d’Artagnan ponytail, Petit was a methodical talent who was capable of the moment of magic but mastered the simple rather than the sublime. He perfected the skills of completing short, sensible passes, defending doggedly, and soaking up the excesses of teammates. Petit was indispensable to his nation’s success and replicated this influence for his resurgent club side, Arsenal, as well.  In essence, he made the elemental an art form.   

So in the afterglow of seeing “Tell No One” it is only fitting that I thought of Petit as I contemplated this wholly satisfying work from the 35-year-old romantic heartthrob of French cinema, Guillaume Canet, who has stepped behind the camera to superbly craft a taut, swift and enthralling mystery thriller.

Based on a novel by American author Harlan Coben, it is a familiar tale: a wanted man seeks to prove his innocence against suspicion of a most heinous crime.  But Canet transcends this common device by delivering a thoroughly entertaining film surging with a griping plot, engaging characters and urgent suspense.  Opening quietly enough with a tranquil midnight swim, the film spirals suddenly into a frenetic quest for redemption. Refreshingly adult and smart, “Tell No One” possesses a vibe reminiscent of another redemptive tale, “Three Days of the Condor.”

Confidently photographed by Christophe Offenstein and expertly edited by Herve de Luze, it is 125-minutes long but skittles along like a pebble across a pond.  There are times during a film this engrossing I don’t try to think ahead or guess as to whodunit.  When they’re good, as good as “Tell No One,“ I don’t think of them as a puzzle to be solved but instead as a clever story to savor.  

The film crackles with a superbly realistic and earthy chase scene. The chase is infused with elements of Parkour during a frenetic dash through Paris markets, shops and homes, though because our protagonist is a busy doctor venturing on middle age, it’s undignified, disjointed and panicked.

Francois Cluzet, a hunkier Dustin Hoffman, offers an impeccable axis performance as the doctor on the run. He discovers painful truths and personal transgressions which challenge the simplest notions he held of the people closest to him.  He displays a compelling breadth of ever-changing emotions, with moments of disbelief, terror, anger and even compassion all jumbled together during his steadfast quest for justice.

The diverse supporting cast is provided with roles both well written and substantial.  Even the eccentricities of a sympathetic detective are rounded off and muted.  A richly tanned and fluent Kristin Scott Thomas is a welcome presence.

Funnily enough, the final scene of the film feels a tad tacked on.  It’s like scoring a wonder goal and celebrating by running to the corner flag, dropping to all fours, and lifting a leg in a symbolic “taking the piss.”  But this is just a quibble because it surely doesn’t spoil the beauty of the goal.

So just as a supporter would have exited Highbury in the heady days of New Labour after seeing another assured Petit display musing, “If only every footballer…“, as the final credits of “Tell No One” roll, one will ponder “If only every crime movie…”


Son of Rambow

Skills on Toast

June 26th, 2008

son_of_rambow_filmstill1
An assured and charming sophomore showcase from director Garth Jennings and producer Nick Goldsmith — the team which helmed 2005’s “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” — “Son of Rambow” is the winsome tale of two unlikely, young English lads creating their own videotaped version of “Rambo: First Blood.” Credited as “a Hammer + Tongs film,” the movie is delivered with a far more deft touch than the filmmaker’s nom de plume suggests.

Set in England during an undetermined year in the 1980s, “Son of Rambow” is shot with resounding confidence, consistently providing lovely visuals, immaculate framing and a magical tone. Infused with songs of the era, the soundtrack is bolstered by the beguiling original music from composer Joby Talbot, equal parts jaunty, intense and evocative. “Son of Rambow” seems less an homage to Stallone’s cable classic than a paean to unbridled enthusiasm for filmmaking; it’s as though a burgeoning Spielberg grew up in Essex and was handed a FilmFour budget.

The story presents a taciturn pre-teen, Will Proudfoot (Bill Milner), who cherishes a notebook of imaginative illustrations. Milner suggests the innocence of the young Lukas Haas in “Witness.” His father has recently passed prematurely and Mary, his concerned mother, aptly played by Jessica Hynes, has sought succor in her life-long faith. After a school incident, he meets chav-in-training Lee Carter, (Will Poulter), who has a face like a bruised orange and a penchant for juvenile delinquency. A reference to Steve McQueen’s baseball scenes in “The Great Escape” only enhances his anti-authoritarian streak, a mode of behavior perhaps a consequence of far afield parents. While possessing disparate temperaments, the duo quickly bond. Enthralled to find a visceral outlet for his artistic impulses, Will is the perfect companion to help Lee complete his nascent movie being filmed on a camera gained by questionable means.

A wonderful comic presence and a rival for Will’s attention is provided by the introduction of slinky French exchange student, Didier (Jules Sitruk), whose androgynous curls, skinny jeans and pointed red boots have him resembling an honor roll candidate at an Andre Symone summer camp.

However, while the film is consistently amusing – with visual gags abounding — the story is still tinged with the realistic perils of pubescence. A flashback told to Will by his mother about a sacrifice forced upon her as a young girl is moving and meaningful. The flashback packs a punch with only a few well-crafted images. To suggest that the scene illustrates the filmmakers’ background as video directors is no slur. There’s an economy of visuals which evokes genuine emotion. It’s a deftly designed vignette and also reminds you that the film could have presented Hynes — best known by her maiden name Jessica Stevenson for roles in the classic television comedies “The Royle Family” and “Spaced” — with a more substantive role.

And this may be a regret which can be translated to the entire movie. The film at times feels as though it’s skimming instead of delving. Yet this is more a mere trifle than a complaint. “Son of Rambow” avoids twee sentiment. And the denouement which in lesser hands would have oozed with hokiness is heartfelt and understated.

“Skills on toast,” Lee exclaims after a particularly pleasing shot, and Hammer + Tongs have spread skills all over this film. Much like Michel Gondry‘s “Be Kind Rewind” earlier this year, “Son of Rambow” finds earnestness and sincerity in a film re-creation plot pining for mockery. And, as with Gondry, one looks forward to the next venture from an abundantly talented and original voice.