“Money. Cock. Promotion.” Welcome to the inner thoughts of British women! Beloved British actress Billie Piper (Doctor Who, Penny Dreadful, Yerma) takes the reigns, acting as writer, director and star of the fantastically dark, anti-rom-com, Rare Beasts. The film opens with a dinner where Mandy (Piper) and her date Pete (Leo Bill) attack each other... Continue Reading →
Hitler-ious – Film Review: Jojo Rabbit ★★★★1/2
Mix together The Producers, The Tin Drum, Hope And Glory, Moonrise Kingdom, Life Is Beautiful, The Diary Of Anne Frank, Hogan’s Heroes, Inglourious Basterds, and anything Monty Python and you still would not come close to describing the wondrous tone and sheer brilliance of Taika Waititi’s Jojo Rabbit, the winner of the Audience Award at... Continue Reading →
LFF 2019 Film Review: Yves Saint Laurent: The Last Collections ★★★1/2
Controversially suppressed for nearly two decades, Olivier Meyrou’s documentary (also known as Celebration) is finally seen, and the picture it paints is a melancholy one. Filmed over the course of Yves Saint-Laurent’s final collections in 1998 (a decade before he would pass away), the documentary was subsequently blocked by Pierre Bergé, Saint-Laurent’s partner in life... Continue Reading →
LFF 2019 Film Review: Marriage Story ★★★★★
Noah Baumbach’s Marriage Story is full of feels and left me yearning for a revival of Stephen Sondheim’s Company starring Adam Driver, but I’ll get into that a little later. In many ways, it’s like Baumbach has produced a “designer-movie” to appeal to all my foibles. Set an emotional drama in the world of theatre... Continue Reading →
2019 LFF Film Review: Death Will Come And Shall Have Your Eyes (Vendrá La Muerte Y Tendrá Tus Ojos) ★★★
José Luis Torres Leiva’s Death Will Come And Shall Have Your Eyes (Vendrá La Muerte Y Tendrá Tus Ojos), is not an easy watch. It’s poetic, small, intimate, and fairly opaque. Full disclosure: I’ve had to read some interviews with the director to fill in the gaps. The film focuses on the last days in... Continue Reading →
LFF 2019 Film Review: Rialto ★★★★
There have been a number of queer films at the 2019 BFI London Film Festival which examine the role of shame in gay men’s lives. Tremors and Walking With Shadows both examine the effect of societal shame on gay men and Rialto spins this off in a new direction. Colm is a 40-something year old... Continue Reading →
LFF 2019 Film Review: Official Secrets ★★★
Headlining the London Film Festival’s Debate strand is Gavin Hood’s Official Secrets, the true life tale of a British whistleblower who tried to stop the Iraq war, and one horrendous use of spell check. The collection of British acting talent here is an impressive and interesting mix. Keira Knightley stars as Katharine Gun, a translator... Continue Reading →
LFF 2019 Short Film Reviews
A number of great short films were screened at the London Film Festival this year, covering a whole range of topics. Here were some of the queer shorts (and a few more I just enjoyed). Dawn of a New Gay by Rosie Gaunt-Mathieson Jack Rooke walks us through his first sexual experience as an 18... Continue Reading →
Film Review: Gemini Man ★
Hot take: Decidedly mediocre yet technologically impressive. Ang Lee’s Gemini Man may be notable for its tour de force innovative visual special effects, but sadly by every other measure it’s a thoroughly pedestrian action film. With a paint by numbers plot, the surprises are nowhere to be found, resulting in a movie that’s lifeless and... Continue Reading →
LFF 2019 Film Review: Walking With Shadows ★★★
Walking With Shadows covers some familiar territory, but spins it out with a fresh take thanks to its setting and culture. Irish writer/director Aoife O’Kelly takes on Jude Dibia’s book about a Nigerian man maliciously outed to his family and friends and gives it a pensive, cinematic treatment. The initial outing happens quickly, a terse... Continue Reading →
