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The Bigger Picture

  • Down to Earth (2001)

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    Under discussion:

    Heaven Can Wait  (1978)

    Down to Earth  (2001)

    If the plot of Chris Rock's Down to Earth feels familiar it is possible that you have seen it before. This is a remake of Warren Beatty's Heaven Can Wait (1978) which was, in turn, a remake of Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941). That film was an adaptation of a play, also entitled Heaven Can Wait.

    Here the basic plot of man's life is ended too early as a result of a mistake by an angel and he is granted a new body with which to live the rest of his life is given a Chris Rock twist. His character, hopeless commedian Lance, is given the body of a rich caucasian man which gives Rock plenty of opportunities to talk about race and offer social commentary.

    It is therefore a surprise how cosy this film feels. There are few big laughs and the whole tone is very broad and awkward. Rock is certainly a charming and fun lead, yet the material does not test him, nor the cast.

    The whole affair resolves itself far too cleanly and I felt uninvolved and disappointed with the film's conclusion. Things feel too tidy and shifts in character are too sudden.

    Yet the film remains watchable throughout thanks to its charming lead actors and decent production values.


  • Top 5: Carry On Films

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    Under discussion:

    Carry on Cleo  (1965)

    Carry on Doctor  (1968)

    Cleopatra  (1963)

    Carry on Loving  (1970)

    Carry on Spying  (1964)

    The Carry On series are a British institution and one of my guiltiest pleasures. Unashamedly low-brow, they are packed with terrible puns and wonderfully hammy performances.

    I first discovered the series of films when I was in elementary school and they have remained favourites ever since. I certainly would never claim that they were great or even particularly good films, but the cheeky humour and (in the later years) heavy use of innuendo amused me and fundamentally affected my sense of humour.

    To date there have been twenty nine original Carry On films and one compilation (That's Carry On!), the most recent being released in 1992. Amongst those films are parodies of Cleopatra, James Bond and Beau Geste, as well as more original stories based around national service, the medical profession and holidays.

    So below are my top five films from the Carry On series. I will not argue that they are great films but I hold enormous affection for them, and the series to this day. To the list...

    5. Carry On Cruising - the early films were penned by writer Norman Hudis and followed a very tight formula. Cruising, the first of the colour Carry Ons and the last to be penned by Hudis, is the story of the inept new crew of a cruise liner and its passengers. It is fun, lively and colourful with all of the cast given a chance to shine. My favourite scene: Esma Canon, Dilys Laye and Liz Fraser getting drunk in the liner's bar.

    4. Carry On Loving - I never rated this one but at University a friend who disliked the series told me it was the one film that he liked in the run. I gave it another go and found it much more enjoyable as an adult than I had as a child or teenager. There are some great gags and Richard O'Callaghan and Jacki Piper made for a very cute couple. My favourite scene: the opening scene between Terry Scott's character and the priest on the train.

    3. Carry On Cleo - filmed on sets left over from the film Cleopatra, Carry On Cleo is a romp through one of history's best known stories. Here Caesar, played with gusto by regular Kenneth Williams, is portrayed less as an awe-inspiring general but a rather pathetic coward. Believing a British slave to be responsible for saving his life, he installs him as his official bodyguard and goes to Egypt to meet Queen Cleopatra. My favourite scene: Caesar running through the Temple of the Vestal Virgins crying out "Infamy! Infamy! They've all got it in 'fer me!" - a line that has been voted the funniest film one-liner.

    2. Carry On Up The Khyber - perhaps the best-loved of the series, it is the wonderful portrayal of the British Empire mentality that makes this film so enjoyable. The story is suitably ridiculous (a group of soldiers attempt to recover a photograph that proves they were wearing underwear under their kilts) and the Boys Own adventure style is suitably lampooned. My favourite scene: another obvious one - the dinner sequence where the British leadership sit at the dinner table and ignore the building being blown up around them.

    1. Don't Lose Your Head - at first not labelled as one of the series, Don't Lose Your Head is my favourite because it has so much going on. It's certainly not the funniest of the films (being more of an adventure-comedy than a comedy) but its over the top characters and its star turns from Jim Dale and Sid James as the two foppish aristocrats saving their French counterparts from the revolution are amongst the best the series ever offered. My favourite scene: Citizen Camembert's executioner getting tricked into lying under his own guillotine.

    So there you have it - my top five. Amongst those that were on the verge of being put on this list were Carry On Spying (my first!) and Carry On Doctor.


  • The Dark Knight (2008) - Contains Spoilers

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    Under discussion:

    Batman  (1989)

    Batman Returns  (1992)

    Batman Forever  (1995)

    Batman & Robin  (1997)

    Batman Begins  (2005)

    The Dark Knight  (2008)

    It's been three years now since Batman Begins was released and to say that anticipation for The Dark Knight was high would be an understatement. I cannot remember a film other than The Phantom Menace for which anticipation has been so high.

    Fortunately this film delivers on most of that expectation and is, in my opinion, the best Batman film to date.

    Spoilers follow

    When Tim Burton returned to the Batman franchise to shoot Batman Returns, he imposed a darker style on the film than in his first effort. Nolan follows the same path, albeit to more acclaim, as he shows us a world threatened by anarchism and the breakdown of order.

    This world is less stylised than the Gotham of previous films - this feels much more like a modern, Western city. The banks look real, the buildings look real and as a result the violence that hits this city feels more immediate and disturbing.

    Opposite Christian Bale's Batman is the excellent Heath Ledger who deserves the critical acclaim his performance received. I am not ready to say that he wipes the floor with Bale's more subtle and mannered portrayal of Wayne/Batman but you find yourself on the edge of your seat whenever he appears on screen.

    This Joker is unhinged and anarchistic. He toys with that audience as much as he does with Batman, feeding us conflicting stories of his origin and what he wants. By the end we know that all he desires is chaos and to shake our confidence in our neighbours. He wants to twist those characters around him and manipulate them emotionally.

    He succeeds in doing this with the vulnerable Dent, Gotham's new district attorney whose biggest flaw is believing his own hype. The Joker, in one of the movie's best scenes, convinces him in the power of chaos and turns him into a loose, unpredictable weapon.

    What I loved about that scene is that the Joker gives Dent power. All through the movie there is this recurring pattern of the Joker urging people to kill him, almost as if he wants to be put out of his misery. He is not a criminal - Eric Roberts' mafia boss and their ilk are clearly flagged up as the criminals. No, this Joker is simply unhinged and psychopathic.

    There were several scenes that I found myself closing my eyes during, unsure about just how brutal they were going to be. I wanted to watch but found this Joker so complete a characterisation that I found myself feeling uneasy.

    Aaron Eckhart's Two Face conversely is a character whose story is raced through far too quickly for us to appreciate him. To call him the second villain on the piece is misleading. He is no more, nor no less than the Joker's weapon. The bomb he has planted that is about to go off (incidentally, I love that when he is turning Dent into that weapon he is wearing an "I believe in Harvey Dent" sticker).

    His make-up is effective, albeit slightly too ridiculous to be genuinely scary. If I have nightmares about the way a character looks tonight it will not be him but rather the Joker in my mind. We see his change and I felt I understood it but I wished that we could have spent longer with him.

    These final portions of the film feel rushed and a dramatic change of pace. Eckhart's performance does not have the manic energy of Ledger's and the result is that suddenly the adrenaline falls away. The Joker is in custody, we know we shall not see him again in the movie, and the people on the boats are now safe. The danger we have been building up to has passed and that which remains feels smaller and disconnected from the emotional drive of the film.

    I disagree with critics who think that Two Face should have been in the next movie instead of tacked onto the end here. That would require a very different characterisation and a decidedly different journey. This character is motivated by a very personal hunt for revenge. This character is not capable of playing at master criminal (which never felt all that realistic in Batman Forever anyway) - it would not be true to the journey that Nolan has begun in this film.

    Nolan uses the Dent storyline to reinforce the question that Batman keeps asking himself throughout this movie - "am I a force for good or evil in the end?", "have things become worse because of me?". The answer Nolan hints at is that Batman is needed because ultimately all are corruptable. He wants to give up the fight, hand his mantle onto Dent - an elected figure - but even as a human we see that Dent does not match up to his perfect picture he has painted.

    Yet the messages of this film seem confused. It displays fears about the use of surveillance technology and even has Lucius say "no, I think this is wrong" - yet Lucius is prepared to utilise the very systems he criticised moments before "just this one time". It talks about the dangers of handing power to just one individual and yet suggests that no one but Wayne/Batman is capable of holding this degree of power without becoming a monster.

    I was left feeling that Gotham had been made more "real" to make a political point and yet I was unsure at the end what the point was. Perhaps that makes it a success - I am sure that there will be many people leaving the film debating what its message actually is. In some ways I prefer a movie that asks difficult questions of us without presenting us with set or easy answers.

    I look forward to seeing where the franchise heads next and I hope that Nolan and Bale stick around. I am a little uncertain how they can top this - after all, the villains left are decidedly second tier (Mr Freeze has been suggested but would bring back unfortunate memories of Batman and Robin) - but I think this movie demonstrates that a film can be complex and thought-provoking and yet still be a massive box office draw. It feels to me to be so much closer to the spirit of the comic books than anything that has come before it.

    And to think - I haven't even had space here to talk about Jim Gordon, Alfred, the Batbike, Rachel Dawes or the more subtle humour used throughout this effort... I'm sure however that this is a movie that will be talked about for some time to come - particularly when we get to Oscar season.


  • Only the Lonely (1991)

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    Only the Lonely  (1991)

    There is nothing terribly original or inspiring about the plot in this Chris Columbus-helmed romantic comedy but that is not to say it is unenjoyable.

    Only the Lonely is the story of a grown man still living in the shadow of his dominant and prejudiced mother. When he meets Theresa Luna (played by the wonderful Ally Sheedy of Breakfast Club fame), things seem to be going well until his mother gets in the way.

    Danny, played by unlikely romcom lead John Candy, is torn between his love for Theresa and his mother's well-being. Unable to stand up to her, his relationship looks doomed to fail.

    The film is not tight, meandering towards its conclusion, but managed to keep my attention. Whilst I found it lacking in big laughs, it had buckets of charm courtesy of its three principle players who work together beautifully.

    Overall, I enjoyed this and found it happily diverting. Besides, any film with Jim Belushi in the buddy role is inherently worth a watch (cf. About Last Night - one of my favourite eighties romantic comedies).


  • City Hall (1996)

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    Under discussion:

    City Hall  (1996)

    Wag the Dog  (1997)

    Primary Colors  (1998)

    State of Play  (2009)

    State of Play  (2003)

    Spoilers follow.

    City Hall would be an average film if it were not lifted by the sheer quality of its star-powered performances. A story about disillusionment and political idealism, its tone betrays a cynical heart.

    The story is set around the accidental shooting of a young African American child who is caught in the crossfire between a cop and a member of the Mafia. John Cusack plays the idealistic aide to the mayor who begins to look into the affair and discovers that there is more to it than meets the eye.

    Cusack's performance is typical of his strengths as an actor - he draws us in and manages to convey the transition between naive idealism and more worldly understanding. However he is undersold by a script that moves too quickly - giving us too little time to understand and appreciate the causes behind it. We do not see the mental process leading to that enormous change, not because Cusack is not conveying it but because the script does not give opportunity to show it.

    Whilst I quibble about pacing however, the plot here is exciting and the dialogue is generally excellent. The scenes with the judge and Pacino are particular highlights that spark beautifully - I guess that's what happens when you combine fine actors with rich dialogue.

    Pacino plays John Pappas well, selling him both as a politician and a more complex, grey human being. His presence on this film is enormous and he looms over any scene he is in. Yet it is so large that we know we will only ever be led back to his door. The plot makes no attempt to mask this and no other figure of a similar stature is ever established. The inevitability of the reveal is one of the weakest aspects of this film although the quality of the confrontation at least ensures that it satisfies on some levels.

    Bridget Fonda appears as Marybeth Cogan, who investigates this case along with Cusack's character. Her performance is good and the scene between her and Cusack in the diner struck me as one of this highlights of this film. The emotions feel right and the ending stung just about enough to satisfy. What a shame that the film ruins her exit by reuniting them at the end and resolving their differences. It was too obvious and too smooth.

    It is this smoothness and this predictability that lets the film down in the end. It never surprises because it feels familiar. I wanted to see more of the shades of grey that Pacino talks about. I wished that there had been a few more twists in the tale, that it had surprised me more.

    That said, do not write City Hall off because of these failings. What it does well, it does very well. It does not have the satirical content of Wag the Dog (released a year later) or Primary Colors (two years after), nor is it a perfect political thriller (for that see the excellent BBC drama State of Play, soon to be remade into a movie) but it is cast well, suitably dramatic and features some excellent performances.


  • Batman: Gotham Knight (2008)

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    Under discussion:

    Batman Begins  (2005)

    The Dark Knight  (2008)

    Batman: Gotham Knight attempts to bridge the gap between Batman Begins and this year's Dark Knight with a collection of short adventures taking place between the two stories.

    Each episode in the anthology is 10-15 minutes long and is directed by a different anime director, giving each part a unique feel and flavour. The stories are linked in their goal to explain the character of the Batman and how his presence has been felt on Gotham since the events of the first movie.

    The concept is solid enough but the execution varies wildly between each of the installments making it feel choppy and lacking in depth. The short running time of each segment gives little time for a plot to develop - these are all about character and style. Fortunately Gotham Knight doesn't do a bad job of either.

    Some of the segments look stunning - of particular note for me was the filmic approach adopted in the Killer Croc story. Sprays of blood and movement capture the imagination and up until the point when we saw the "villain" I was thinking that Croc might actually work in the Nolanverse. On second thoughts though maybe not...

    Each portion reveals something about Wayne/Batman - his attitudes, how he is seen, the way he handles pain. I liked this but wished that there had been fewer stories given more time.

    Whilst far from perfect this is a great way to whet the appetite before you head to see The Dark Knight (though if you're considering this you've probably already been to see it more than once by now). I hope that Warner Bros release another Batman anime title at some point soon; the concept clearly has legs and based on this, the style suits the caped crusader well.


 

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