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chrismorrell Blog

  • His favourite colour is Plaid

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     I love "The King Of Comedy".  This was in a run of Scorsese/De Niro collaborations where they could do no wrong. It's an effective portrayal of the delusions of a fantasist , with enough reality ,rooted in the overhyped U.S talk-show scene to grab any pop-culture fiend. It hasnt aged too much yet either,as all the elements of the still precient "The Larry Sanders Show" are there.. and the real-life format is still almost the same with Leno ,Conan and Letterman. The Daily Show puts the most contempory twist on things.  British counterpart Jonathon Ross has only really got the more liberal attitude to sexual innuendo and swearing in the U.K. to account for any real variance. These guys remain  the highest paid and most famous T.V. stars.

    Kidnapping one of them would be a big deal and logical for a psychotic stand-up trying to get his foot in the door....what i'm just trying to say is that it's not too dated,jerry Lewis is great,at being almost "himself" Sandra Bernhardt is nuttiness personified, De Niro is so subsumed by the character as to be almost absent. The Marty cameo, as the floor manager is great.. The Clash appear , in the street as Rupert and Masha argue.. it's all good.


  • Stoned

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    Stoned  (2005)

     I was always going to be interested in Stephen Wooleys first film as director..and i found it no dissapointment... i found my enjoyment of this "semi-reconstruction" of events leading to the death of the enigmatic Brian Jones,enhanced by running  Nic Roegs "Performance" in my head at the same time.. (Mick Jaggers character is based on Brian ).. The strength of the supporting cast to Leo Gregory's Brian says it all. Paddy Consadine and David Morrissey, Ben Wishaw as Keef... This serves to bring  some sort of closure to the story,while still keeping the myth of the hedonistic ,and idealist Jones alive...


  • Criminal Justice

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    Stoned  (2005)

    Criminal Justice  (2008)

    This was a total treat that snared many tennis fans,scheduled as it was for five straight nights after the Wimbledon coverage,during the second week of the tournament.

    The wan ,blinking visage of Ben Wishaw (Perfume ,I'm Not There , Brideshead Revisited) carries the piece,with the support of the remarkable Pete Postlethwaite. As with "the Wire" those on the "wrong side of the law can often seem more "together" than those in the "Justice" system... Bill Patterson portrays a jaded,corner-cutting Policeman.David Harewood seems much more assured as the Prison "King-Pin".. Lindsay Duncan is the driven lawyer professional to the point of callousness. Con O'neill (Learners) has never been better as the cynical but effectively pragmatic journeyman lawyer. Ben Wishaw is going from strength to strength ( a bit like a British Ryan Gosling?)..i had only seen him in "Stoned" as Keith Richards.. In an inversion of his role in the Fairy Tale Perfume the story of a murderer here he plays an innocent convict, and the serious flaws of the system are layed bare by writer Peter Moffat ,ex barrister.


  • This was England

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    This is England  (2007)

     Saw Shane Meadows' This Is England.. as a download from Channel Four a while back....visceral stuff.. a very politically coloured piece ... The title sequence could be a short, entitled "We Hate Thatcher,and this is why"...it includes some horrific footage from the Falklands campaign ,that i had not seen before.(.A similar montage ,these days would be entitled "We hate Bush and Blair,and this is why"..) The Falklands War was seen by many of us as a very politically expedient adventure,and the image of  Britain,more specifically England,as the triumphal World Power, flexing it's moral,military muscles,cast Margaret Thatcher as the "War" Prime Minister,and contrasted strongly with the unrest at home..Three million unemployed,social unrest in the racially divided inner cities.. and we know how extremism can thrive under these conditions...ringing any bells? Main character "Shaun" is only eleven or so,has lost his father to "The Falklands ". ..gets inculcated into the "skinhead" culture. Firstly with "Woody" and his group of well-meaning,friendly ,integrated types,who mainly love the Ska music..then,he graduates ,catastrophically, to the psychotic racist nut-case , "Combo" (Stephen Graham)with his twisted political agenda. Despite the integrated ,Jamaican music loving roots of the movement,  skinheads were recruited by the British National Party. "This is England" is, apparently strongly auto-biographical for the director,and charts these political currents in society .I experienced first hand,the ripples and eddies that went through the music business..Socialist Worker activists The Redskins attempted single-handedly it seemed ,to wrest the the hi-jacked Motown and Ska away from the Skinheads,freshly recruited by the BNP (British National Party).I was at the "Save the GLC" concert where the boot-boys rumbled them..Following "punk" ,which was rooted in New York of course,and "New Wave" The British music scene of the early eighties was highly politically charged and marked with violence.Remember "Ghost Town" by The Specials? This band helped hugely with the already strong anti-rascistmovement. In the Film,things get darker and darker,and visually we are payed off with a very effective image,that echoes the "Goose Green" footage...Acting is great,despite many being "first timers" i guess..but the young kid (Thom Turgoose)  is probably the best performance .. a tough watch,but very rewarding.


 

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