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Tuesday, 23 October 2012

London Film Festival 2012: the best part 1


I saw 26 films at the recent London Film Festival and 10 new films really stood out. For whatever reason, there were fewer big films and more small films: that’s not necessarily a criticism, but certainly an all-too-clear observation.
There follows the first half of my 10 favourite new films that premiered at the festival. The entire top 10 are linked by a strong personal vision from the director about what the film should be and by delicious fusions of genres.

Cracking entertainment from Ben Affleck: this should finally lay to waste his lost years of Hollywood star vacuous vanity.
This true story of how the CIA got six Americans out of Tehran during the Iranian revolution is dramatic, gripping and funny. As time counts down to the Iranians realising that the six embassy staff escaped before their embassy was seized, the CIA is left with nothing but bad ideas to get the six out. The best bad idea is for CIA agent Tony Mendez (Affleck in full stoic Eastwood mode) to set up a fake sci-fi movie and then land in Tehran on a location scout and while there generate fake movie identities for the six.
The script keeps the fate of the six clearly front and centre even as Affleck’s Mendez strives to set up his space opera with a known producer with hilarious results courtesy of special effects guru John Goodman and producer Alan Arkin (“If I’m going to make a fake movie, it’s going to be a fake hit!”).
The final countdown, as Affleck and the six race to get out of Iran, is utterly gripping, and drew all-too audible reactions from the mesmerized audience.
Everything about Argo is top quality, including top work from cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto and composer Alexandre Desplat.
The question for Argo is: what legacy will it leave? A new generation of geek t-shirts focusing on the fictional space opera? Awards glory for Affleck and his crew? Certainly it reminds us all that Affleck has moved on and is a talent to watch.
Score: 9/10
Opens 7 November.

Compelling and shocking, this based-on-a-true-story indie will detonate like a flash bomb among the chattering classes.
Streamlined and lean, Compliance goes for the jugular and absolutely will not let go as the bizarre story escalates into surprises that are ever-more surprising than the last surprise twist.
In brief, we are introduced to Ann Dowd’s fast food joint manager. One Friday evening she receives a call from a man identifying himself as a police officer stating that a member of her counter staff has stolen a customer’s purse; he asks her to take the counter-girl to one side and question her for him… and so the nightmare starts.
Dunkini and I were left dumbstruck and slack-jawed by what ensues: it’s completely unbelievable – but the script is absolutely true.
The unknown leading players are simply superb, all suffering greatly at the hands of the script’s twists and turns.
This is one of those films that you can not have an opinion about unless you see it.
Score: 9/10
No UK release set yet.

With echoes of Black Swan as well as modern vampire greats (Anne Rice’s operatic Interview With The Vampire and the sex and gritty reality of Trueblood), this stylish and stylised gothic romantic tragedy surfs the wave of vampire popularity with panache and a ‘harder’ approach.
Boy (Milo Ventimiglia from Heroes) meets beautiful woman in bar (Josephine de la Baume); beautiful woman plays hard to get because she’s a ‘good’ vampire (she doesn’t feed on humans); nevertheless they fall for each other, she turns him and then her wildchild sister (Roxane Mesquida strongly echoing Mila Kunis’s turn in Black Swan) arrives to stir things up.
Chaos, madness and death ensue – but which sister has chosen the right path for eternal living?
Compellingly shot, Kiss does attempt to have its cake and eat it – and for the most part succeeds. Written and directed by Xan Cassavetes (yes, John’s daughter making her feature film directorial debut), the film is notable for its focus on women and its largely successful attempt to envelope the audience within a vampire’s heightened senses.
It’s as hardcore as Trueblood but with a more erotic edge (some reviewer somewhere will describe this as combining Twilight with 50 Shades of Grey, but not me!) and it certainly adds at least one new idea to vampire physiology that goes counter to Anne Rice’s take.
Score: 9/10
No UK release date set

How do you follow up In Bruges? That was writer-director Martin McDonagh’s task and he offers this ambitious gem in response.
It’s not as funny and shocking as In Bruges, but it stretches him and the audience. Colin Farrell is the alcoholic Hollywood screenwriter suffering writer’s bloc while working on his latest script, Seven Psychopaths, which he wants to be about peace not violence. His best friend is Sam Rockwell, who desperately wants his friend to overcome  his bloc – preferably by getting Rockwell to help him.
Rockwell earns a crust through dogknaping from the rich; his partner in crime is Christopher Walken. When they dogknap the shih tzu belonging to Woody Harrelson’s mob boss, only chaos and widespread murder can ensue. Oh, and this being a McDonagh script, there’s plenty of quality profanity and non-PC gags.
All four actors are well within their comfort zones, but sink their teeth into McDonagh’s dialogue with gusto.
Highly recommended.
Score: 8.5/10
Opens 7 December.

Wickedly and blackly funny, splendidly violent and gory: Sightseers made me laugh like a drain. Fresh from the buzz generated by his previous effort, Kill List, director Ben Wheatley delivers a cult crowd pleaser that could, with the right marketing, cross over into Hot Fuzz levels of success.
Written by its stars, Alice Lowe and Steve Oram, the film focuses on two strange souls Tina and Chris, now three months into their relationship, who go on a caravanning holiday, stopping off at various British tourist spots.
A fatal early encounter with a holiday-maker with less than perfect manners reveals Chris’s inner demons. When Tina realises that her man is a serial killer, she must make the choice: leave the only man who’s ever taken any interest in her or join in his hobby…
This is a cross between Bonnie and Clyde, The Trip and Nuts In May. I heartily recommend it to anyone with a strong stomach!
Score: 9/10
Opens 30 November. 

1 comment:

Frank Heaven said...

Were their walk-outs during your viewing of Compliance?

When I saw it, I reckon about a quarter of the audience left before the end.

One guy shouted out "I've had enough of this f***ing s***." Another shouted "Time to leave everyone."

It is skin crawling viewing at times, but very cleverly directed, and horribly claustrophobic. I liked the periodic cutaways to the deep fat fryer.