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Wednesday 24 October 2018

London Film Festival 2018: the best of the fest - part 2

With the London Film Festival 2018 now over, here follows the second half of my round-up of the films to look out for in the coming months.

Fahrenheit 11/9: the latest Michael Moore documentary looks at how the hell Donald Trump became the US President. It’s typical Moore: too long, too many targets, but it is never less than compelling and informing; it’s an urgent call to arms to liberals everywhere to get off their backsides and get in the political fight and protect ‘democracy’ being abused.

ROMA: master director Alfonso Cuaron finally follows up Gravity with something completely different, something of a personal passion project (he produced, directed, wrote, shot and edited). In beautiful, crisp black and white photography, ROMA tells the very simple story of a few months in the life of a maid living with a well-to-do Mexican family in 1970: nothing much happens and yet everything happens. As well as the gorgeous cinematography, this intimate epic is buoyed by impressive and immersive sound design that is best experienced in a cinema.

Sunset: Hungarian director Laszlo Nemes follows up his successful debut Son Of Saul with this fever dream. Set in the dying days of the Austro-Hungarian just before WWI, the film focuses on Irisz Leiter, a young woman with a mysterious past returning to Budapest whose true motivations may not be clear even to herself. The narrative is deliberately dream-like. The sumptuous cinematography apes Son Of Saul, the camera closely following Juli Jakab as Irisz. Needs to be seen in a cinema.

Duplicate: excellent meditation on mental health via a small helping of sci-fi. Ansel Elgort (Baby Driver himself) wakes every day and watches a video message from an almost identical man (his twin brother?); he concludes every day with a video message of his own, detailing the day’s apparently banal facts. Why are they leaving messages for each other? Why the boring facts of their days? As thoughtful a slice of sci-fi as we’ve seen in a while.

They Shall Not Grow Old: Peter Jackson’s Weta crew have colourised and added audio to black and white footage from WWI to stunning effect. With the aid of the recordings of veterans’ recollections, the film tells the story of war from the Army soldier’s point of view, from war being declared, through enlisting, training, being sent to the front line, experiencing the battlefields and finally returning home. The film may cause you to muse on many things, few of them positive, but at least a copy of the film has been sent to every school in the UK so that every teenager has the opportunity to learn from the mistakes of the past.

The Raft: excellent documentary about a human behaviour experiment carried out on a raft sailing across the Atlantic in 1973. A renowned anthropology professor gathers together 10 volunteers to sail across the Atlantic, their skills a mixture of those necessary to survive the trip, their personalities likely to cause internal conflict; he joins them on the raft to ‘observe’ in the hope that the 10, in the battle to survive the elements, will find a way to avoid or resolve conflict and that their method can be used to end international conflict. However, things do not go as the professor planned…

The Man Who Killed Don Quixote: Terry Gilliam finally delivers his passion project with Jonathan Pryce in the lead role. By some margin, this is Gilliam’s most straight-forwardly entertaining film since Twelve Monkeys. It has strong echoes of Brazil: better to excel in your dreams and be deemed mad, than to be sane and live in mediocrity.

The White Crow: Ralph Fiennes directs this retelling of Rudolf Nureyev’s defection to the West. Cross-cutting with key moments in Nureyev’s life that lead him to the biggest decision of his life, the film evokes the impact that Paris (and the great works he saw there) had on him. Ukranian dancer Oleg Ivenko is astonishing as Nureyev: not only is he convincing as Nureyev the dancer, but also as Rudolf the artist, the free spirit, a young man coming to terms with who he is and what he could be.

The Favouritehugely entertaining, blackly comic period romp from Yorgos Lanthimos (The Lobster, and The Killing of a Sacred Deer) that will garner multiple nominations from every major awards body, in particular for its trio of leading ladies: Olivia Colman, Rachel Weisz and Emma Stone. Colman channels Miranda Richardson’s Queenie as Queen Anne in the early 18th Century, struggling with her health and to lead England in the war against France. In both matters, she relies heavily on her friend and right-hand woman, Weisz’s Duchess of Marlborough. Their sympatico is rent asunder by the arrival of Stone’s Abigail and a battle of wits ensues. Nicholas Hoult lends excellent support as a leading Whig. Be warned this is not a traditional British period piece: the language is fairly salty with a number of delicious deployments of the c-word.
Opens 1 January

Assassination Nation: this year’s gender war incendiary grenade in which the Salem witch trials are reconfigured for the modern age.
Perhaps guilty of trying to have its cake and eat it, the film features four attractive, barely-dressed teenage girls, engaged in social media, chasing boys and abusing booze, who end up being hunted down by their townsfolk (in Purge-like scenes). Partly a warning about what you say and how much you reveal about yourself on social media, and partly a rallying cry to women everywhere to not take any shit from any man.

Opens 23 November

London Film Festival 2018: the best of the fest - part 1

With the dust now settling on the London Film Festival 2018, it’s time to look back and highlight the best films I saw so you know what to look out for in the coming months.

I saw 30 films at the LFF this year (taking my lifetime total to 480 films seen at the LFF), and I’ve highlighted 20 to look out for. Where known, I have listed the film’s release date.

Thunder Road: intense, blackly comic character study of a cop on the edge. At times more excruciating than The Office (I didn’t know whether to laugh, cry or exit the cinema), the film belongs to writer-director Jim Cummings who also fearlessly plays the ‘hero’ to stunning effect.

Bill Murray Stories: who knew a documentary could be so life-affirming?! This features the real stories of Bill Murray ‘gatecrashing’ ordinary people’s lives and taking them on mini-adventures. Quite moving in its own way.

The Guilty: Hitchcockian thriller from Denmark. The less you know the better, but the set-up is simple: the action focuses on an operative in the police call centre handling incoming emergency calls; we see only him and his colleagues, but we can hear the distressed persons he hears on his headset. By the end of his shift, he will not be the same. Perfectly executed. Probably my favourite film of the festival. See it ASAP!
Opens 26 October

Arctic: Mads Mikkelsen does All Is Lost… on ice! Gripping survival thriller. Mads, as expected, gives his all. Watch on the biggest screen that you can find.

Border: a modern fairytale that has shades of both Shyamalan and Lynch, where the fantastic is real, and the real is fantastic. It’s based on a book by the man who gave us the original story for Let The Right One In: so expect some gender-bending and some pyscho-sexual weirdness. A beautiful piece of work anchored by a strong performance from Eva Melander as the customs officer who seems to have the power to smell guilt on a person.

Green Book: hugely entertaining, feel good crowd-pleaser, buoyed by engaging performances from co-leads Mahershala Ali and Viggo Mortensen as, respectively, the successful African-American pianist who hires an Italian-American to be his driver/hired muscle while on a tour of the American South in the 1960s. Directed gently by, would you believe, by Peter Farrelly of There’s Something About Mary, Dumb And Dumber fame.
Opens 1 February

The Old Man & The Gun: another crowd-pleaser that sees Robert Redford dominating the screen with his easy charm as an elderly gentleman bank robber. Humourous, touching and a reminder that you’re never too old to continue to embrace life. Redford’s scenes with Sissy Spacek are delicious morsels to be savoured.
Opens 7 December

Utoya – 22 July: not to be confused with Paul Greengrass’s film of the same terrorist attack (nor to be thought of as ‘entertainment’), this Norwegian mini-epic is utterly compelling and justifiably uncomfortable. Its 92-minute runtime includes one 72-minute take that details the terrorist's massacre of 69 young people on an island holiday camp. Giving no oxygen of publicity to the attacker, the film immerses the audience (courtesy of cinematographer Martin Otterbeck’s sterling work), ensuring we share the victims’ horror and fear.
Opens 26 October

Destroyer: neo-noir thriller that could see Nicole Kidman pitching for Oscar and Bafta glory as a grizzled, washed-up LAPD cop facing a fresh case that may have connections to the case that broke her and made her what she is now. Great soundtrack and cinematography, and two classic, tense bank robberies.
Opens 25 January

The Front Runner: classy political thriller nominally charting the three weeks in which the wheels come off Gary Hart’s run for the Democratic presidential nomination in spring 1987 after the press got wind of his affair with Donna Rice. Hugh Jackman plays Hart with aplomb, but the real joy in this is its detailing of a watershed moment for the US press as political coverage goes tabloid and notice is served on white male entitlement.

Opens 11 January

Continue with my round-up.

Tuesday 9 January 2018

Golden Stans 2017

The drift of one year into the next means it’s time to reflect on the films that grabbed my attention in 2017. I saw 115 films last year, 35 of which were classics or repeat screenings, leaving 80 to compete in the Golden Stans.

As is tradition, I shall start with the Cone of Shame: I was tempted to offer up the Warner Bros studio exec who approved Blade Runner 2049’s run time (two hours and 43 minutes FFS!), or Zack Snyder & co for the limp Justice League (in extreme contrast to the success of Wonder Woman), but I’ve opted to direct my ire at Alexander Payne. I really enjoyed Election, Sideways, The Descendants and Nebraska but Downsizing was very disappointing indeed, a promising premise and cast utterly wasted. The essential plot device (shrinking people down to only a few centimetres high) could have made a thought-provoking slice of sc-fi in Alex Garland’s hands, but Payne and his regular co-writer graft on a Capra-esque journey of self-discovery and a rom-com, neither of which convince. And the characterisation of Hong Chau’s cleaner and inspiration for the hero’s journey is, as some of my friends would say, a bit ‘racist’.

That’s the negativity done with: on with the positives. The shortlist for Best Score features three outstanding pieces of work: Ola Flottum’s themes emphasised the weirdness and unknown at the heart of Thelma; Erik Friedlander took a leaf out of the original Planet of the Apes for his rhythmic soundscapes in Thoroughbreds; and Carter Bulwell helped leave me in a blubbery mess by the end Wonderstruck. However, the Golden Stan goes to Rupert Gregson-Williams for his stirring themes in Wonder Woman, in particular during the set piece in No Man’s Land.

Staying with sound, Darren Aronofsky’s mother! was notable for spatial deployment of sound effects, and thus Paula Fairfield & co secure a special nod.

Aronosky’s biblical parable also features on the shortlist for Best Editing:
  • Andrew Weisblum for mother!
  • Tania Galis for Erase and Forget
Weisblum’s work on mother!, like much of the film, was a technical tour de force, bombarding the viewer’s senses. Galis, however, secures the Golden Stan because she fundamentally shaped the narrative that makes the documentary about Bo Gritz, the Vietnam vet who served as the inspiration for John Rambo, so compelling and astonishing. Her eye for judicious cross-cutting (from talking head interviews, to archive news footage, to movie footage, and back again) is something else.

The shortlist for the Golden Stan for Best Cinematography reflects some diverse approaches:
  • Benji Bakshi for Brawl In Cell Block 99
  • Roger Deakins for Blade Runner 2049
  • Matthew Libatique for mother!
  • Giles Nuttgens for Grain
  • Aleksei Rodionov for The Party
  • Lyle Vincent for Thoroughbreds
  • Ari Wegner for Lady Macbeth
There’s no doubting Deakins’ brilliance in Blade Runner (arguably the only unqualified success in the movie) – he was surely always the only contender for the task?! Bakshi gave Cell Block 99 its own feel, the bright, bleached look in the opening act in severe contrast to the dimly-lit violence that follows. Libatique, like everyone involved in mother!, had a challenge on his hands but consummately met and surpassed it. Nuttgens amd Rodionov both showcased crisp black and white photography, while Vincent and Wegner highlighted intriguing angles in their compositions, adding to the feel of the films.
It’s almost too obvious to give the award to Deakins, so the Golden Stan goes to Aleksei Rodionov for The Party, each frame a beautifully conceived work of art in itself.

Here’s the shortlist for Best Adapted Screenplay:
  • Park Chan-wook and Chung Seo-kyung for The Handmaiden
  • Scott Frank, James Mangold and Michael Green for Logan
  • Paul King and Simon Farnaby for Paddington 2
Taking Sara Waters novel, Fingersmith (adapted for TV by the Beeb in 2005) and firmly planting it in another culture while staying true to the spirit of the original yet still reflecting the director’s key peccadilloes was a remarkable feat for Chan-wook and Seo-kyung.
Paul King and Simon Farnaby almost pulled off the impossible, delivering a sequel almost equal to the first Paddington.
However, Frank, Mangold and Green take the award for distilling the essence of Mark Millar’s celebrated Old Man Logan comic, crafting on huge chunks of Unforgiven and creating a treatise on the effects of violence that pulls no punches, offering no easy answers and an utterly unheroic super hero.

The Best Original Screenplay shortlist features four distinct voices – all of them writer/directors:
  • Julia Ducournau for Raw
  • Greta Gerwig for Lady Bird
  • Jordan Peele for Get Out
  • Taylor Sheridan for Wind River
I really enjoy Sheridan’s neo-westerns and his latest featured another strong sense of locale, once again beyond the reach of the law.
Peele’s Get Out script was a rare example of medium and message combining perfectly.
Gerwig’s not-so-autobiographical script gave plenty of space for its key characters to breathe, gently subverting coming-of-age tropes as it went.
But the Golden Stan goes to Julia Ducournau for Raw: similar to Peele, she doesn’t allow her use of symbolism and desire to get a message across to cheapen the utterly believable characters.

On to the acting categories, and first up, it’s Best Supporting Actor:
  • Maged El Kedwany for Sheikh Jackson
  • Cillian Murphy for The Party
  • Dev Patel for Lion
  • Simon Russell Beale for The Death of Stalin
  • Adam Sandler for The Meyerowitz Stories
  • Timothy Spall for The Party
Adam Sandler, if not a revelation in Meyerowitz, is nevertheless outstanding, delivering the best performance of his career.
Spall and Murphy expectedly make the most of their small roles in The Party, while Russell Beale spits out every line to comedic perfection in Stalin.
Dev Patel really proved himself in Lion (I think the physical bulking up for the role genuinely improved his screen presence), but the Golden Stan goes to Maged El Kedwany for his conflicted father, a character and performance that suggests there could be light at the end of the tunnel for Egypt.

Here’s the shortlist for Best Supporting Actress:
  • Patricia Clarkson for The Party
  • Laurie Metcalf for Lady Bird
  • Julianne Moore for Wonderstruck
  • Kristin Scott-Thomas for The Party
  • Sarah Silverman for Battle of the Sexes
Clarkson as the cynic with the acerbic one-liners and Scott-Thomas as the shadow minister on the edge were predictably excellent in The Party.
Sarah Silverman dealt her one-liners with panache and not a little venom in Battle, while Moore was heart-breaking in the heart-breaking Wonderstruck.
However, the Golden Stan goes to Laurie Metcalf for her loving but vexed mum in Lady Bird.

The shortlist for Best Actor is short, highlighting a dearth of great roles and performances in 2017:
  • Timothee Chalamet for Call Me By Your Name
  • Steve Carrell for Battle of the Sexes
  • Ahmad El-Fishawy for Sheikh Jackson
  • Hugh Jackman for Logan
  • Rolf Lassgard for A Man Called Ove
  • James McAvoy for Split
  • Charlie Plummer for Lean On Pete
  • Vince Vaughn for Brawl In Cell Block 99
Chalamet was stunning in Your Name; Carrell was born to play Bobby Riggs; El-Fishawy undoubtedly did his bit to fashion such an intriguing and realistic Michael Jackson fan torn between his muse and his faith; and Jackman put himself and his best-known screen alter-ego to the sword.
Vaughn and McAvoy both enjoyed a mini-renaissance (for the record, I always thought Vaughn was good but just hadn’t found enough of the right roles): they’re astonishingly effective in their respective roles.
Rolf Lassgard, as the titular Ove, had much to sink his teeth into and did so without falling into an obviously comedic-tragic performance.
But the Golden Stan goes to teenager Charlie Plummer: he is the entire focus of Lean On Pete, and while surrounded by some of the best character actors Hollywood has to offer, his performance has to carry the film – and carry it he does, with assured aplomb. One to watch in the future.

Given the year Hollywood has had, it’s pleasing to report that there were so many great performances by actresses (noticeably more so than for the men), such that my shortlist for Best Actress is not very short:
  • Emily Beecham for Daphne
  • Carla Gugino for Gerald’s Game
  • Sandra Huller for Toni Erdmann
  • Jennifer Lawrence for mother!
  • Garance Marillier for Raw
  • Aubrey Plaza for Ingrid Goes West
  • Florence Pugh for Lady Macbeth
  • Samantha Robinson for The Love Witch
  • Saoirse Ronan for On Chesil Beach, and Lady Bird
  • Anya Taylor-Joy for Split, and Thoroughbreds
It’s a shame that Emily Beecham’s performance appeared after Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s Fleabag: her Daphne felt like a less comedic Fleabag, but her performance was fine on its own terms.
Other British actresses also had a field day: Florence Pugh was an utterly compelling screen presence in Lady Macbeth; Saoirse Ronan walked fine lines of comedy, drama and tragedy in her two coming-of-age roles; and Anya Taylor-Joy showcased resilience in Split and was delightfully disaffected in Thoroughbreds.
Aubrey Plaza gave a nuanced and clearly deeply thought-out performance as the titular Ingrid.
Samantha Robinson’s deliberately blank and affected performance helped hold Love Witch together.
Carla Gugino pulled out all the stops as the [spoilers – redacted] tied to the bed for the vast majority of the Gerald’s Game. Similarly, J-Law had to go for it in Aronofsky’s mother!
Sandra Huller was brilliant in Toni Erdmann as the daughter with significant daddy issues, and in any other year, she would probably win the award, however the Golden Stan for Best Actress goes to Garance Marillier. She was completely convincing as the first-time cannibal at the heart of Raw: I can’t think of a more fully realised character in 2017 than hers.

This is the shortlist for Best Director:
  • Darren Aronofsky for mother!
  • Julia Ducournau for Raw
  • Andrew Haig for Lean On Pete
  • Todd Haynes for Wonderstruck
  • James Mangold for Logan
  • Christopher Nolan for Dunkirk
  • Edgar Wright for Baby Driver
  • S Craig Zahler for Brawl In Cell Block 99
Aronofsky is not everybody’s cup of tea, but there’s no doubting his technical prowess: mother! is a technical tour de force (just would have helped if someone else had written the script!).
Impassioned grasps of technique were also showcased by Wright and Nolan – it will be interesting to see if any of the old guard learn lessons from these two or try to ape them.
Mangold and Zahler crafted meaningful art out of their pulpy scenarios, and drew career-best performances from their respective leads.
Lean On Pete was unmistakeably an Andrew Haigh film, with the director successfully relocating his sensibilities to backwater America.
Todd Haynes’ touch was delicate but firm on Wonderstruck, teasing the narrative and emotional twists and turns to a controlled crescendo.
But the Golden Stan for Best Director goes to Julia Ducournau: Raw is perfectly crafted, every frame and performance a delight.

Now it’s time for the final award, the big one, the Golden Stan for Best Film. There are some noticeable omissions (Toni Erdmann was too long and too slow; I only saw Blade Runner 2049 once and need to see it again to come to a reasoned opinion, but again too long and too slow). Here, in the order I saw them, are the films that affected me most in 2017:
  • The Love Witch: a delicious concoction that should have made Samantha Robinson the next big thing.
  • Logan: one of the most interesting (and certainly the bleakest) comic book movies since the genre became a thing with the X-Men in 2000; more than $600m worldwide box office proved Mangold and Jackman right – there is a market for R-rated comic book movies.
  •  Get Out: electric audience reaction made this a film that absolutely had to be seen in a cinema. 
  • Raw: a detailed examination of one of the last great taboos; sometimes hard to watch, but I couldn’t look away. Shades of Cronenberg and Fincher here.
  •  The Handmaiden: a deliciously decadent concoction; perversely, the standard cut is better than the Director’s Cut.
  • Clash: gripping Egyptian action drama set inside a police van during a citywide riot.
  • Split: M Night Shyamalan crafted a strange beast, almost imperceptibly ratcheting up the tension; can’t wait for January 2019 when he unleashes Glass.
  • Wonder Woman: Patty Jenkins, Gal Gadot & co delivered the second-best super hero movie of the year, but it was the mostimportant super hero movie of the year; featured the most stirring moment of the year in the No Man’s Land sequence.
  • A Man Called Ove: this could have been ‘just’ an extended episode of One Foot In The Grave, but the love and tragedy at its heart lift it beyond that; I was in bits at the end. It managed to deliver a gag that made me cry both because it was both funny and sad.
  • Baby Driver: Edgar Wright’s response to Mad Max: Fury Road? This arthouse action movie delivered in spades, especially the music video-style intro.
  • Dunkirk: masterpiece of pure cinema from a modern master. A film made for IMAX, delivering total immersion for the audience. Particular mention should go to Zimmer for that score and the inclusion of Nimrod.
  • Wind River: compelling neo-Western with one of the tensest scenes of the year. I can’t wait to see what Taylor Sheridan directs next.
  • Wonderstruck: ridiculously moving children’s fairy tale for adults; deserves to each a wide audience.
  • Lean On Pete: not at the same level as 45 Years, but this modern horse opera/road movie crossover was deeply affecting; what a performance from Charlie Plummer.
  • Erase And Forget: this headlong dive into the life and times of Bo Gritz, the Vietnam vet who served as the inspiration for John Rambo, is timely and never less than astonishing, touching on many hot topics (gun control, the lingering damage of Vietnam on the US psyche, the space where myth becomes fact and vice versa).
  • Small Town Crime: the whole is greater than the sum of its parts; this neo-Western features a great turn by John Hawkes as a wasted cop who loses his badge; notable support from Robert Forster.
  • Brawl In Cell Block 99: when you absolutely, positively need to crush someone’s head, best call Vince Vaughn. Unrelenting brutality, Shakespearean tragedy. Hard to watch, but I want to watch it again and again.
  •  Lady Bird: greater than the sum of its parts and substantially better than the trailer makes it look. An absolute delight.
  • 78/52: cracking documentary about the shower scene in Psycho; a must-see for any film fan.
  • Star Wars: The Last Jedi: it had its issues, but brave of Disney and Lucas Film to allow Rian Johnson to use a franchise film to explore the importance of failure and to debate the power and dangers of myth, both textually and subtextually.
There has to be a Best Film, and that Golden Stan goes to Raw, just edging Dunkirk. Both films highlighted directors with an exceptionally keen eye for detail in every element of the production, but Julia Ducournau’s Raw was even more riveting than Dunkirk. The sheer precision in every scene, every line, every composition, every location and lighting choice is awe-inspiring; Ducournau’s own script allows the key characters plenty of room to develop and breathe, generating audience empathy with these taboo-breakers – I was utterly immersed in their lives. We may have a long wait for another from Ducournau (Raw appears to have been something of a passion project), but I hope it will be worth the wait.

Saturday 6 January 2018

2017 box office review


2017 was another banner year for Disney with six of the 20 most successful films of the year, including five of the top 10!

The live-action remake of Beauty & The Beast was the worldwide number 1, hauling in more than $1.2bn. It took £72.4m in the UK, holding the weekly number one spot for three weekends. As 2017 closed out, its top position in the UK came under threat from The Last Jedi. Belle and her beastly partner finished second in the US chart and finished fourth on the international chart. The only territory that the film didn’t perform to an exceptionally high level was China, where it pulled in just less than $86m.

The Fate of the Furious drove off with the worldwide number two and international number one position at $1.2bn and $1bn respectively: that’s right, Fate’s performance was very heavily skewed to the international and Chinese markets – its $225m US take is not to be sniffed at, but its biggest single market was China with nearly $400m. So, the eighth instalment in the franchise was slightly bigger than the previous series high in China, but in the US fell behind the seventh and sixth films.

The ninth and 10th films are already on the slate for 2020 and 2021 in case you’re suffering withdrawal symptoms…

The eighth part of the Star Wars saga gatecrashed the charts in the final fortnight of the year. While not the once-in-a-generation phenomenon that Force Awakens was, Last Jedi easily dominated screens and the box office, just nabbing third place worldwide on new year’s eve as it crossed the $1bn mark. It topped the US chart with $517.4m, was eighth internationally on $523m (noticeably driven by the traditional international markets like the UK, Germany and France), and just fell short of catching Belle in the UK with £68.3m. It will be released in China in early 2018.

The world’s fourth most successful film performed in much the same way as Fate: Despicable Me 3’s total of $1bn included a 28% fall from the previous film in the US to $264.6m as the international haul increased 28% to nearly $800m. It ranked fourth in the UK and 13th in China.

Less than $100m separated the next six films on the chart. The Marvel-produced but Sony-owned-and-distributed Spider-Man ended the year as the most successful comic book adaptation with $880m worldwide: it crossed the $300m barrier in the US, the £30m barrier in the UK and the $500m barrier internationally.

Next up is Wolf Warrior 2, a Chinese megahit that took more than $800m in China alone.

Marvel Studios’ Guardians 2 and Thor 3 were neck-and-neck. Overall Thor was more successful internationally, but Guardians trumped the Thunder God in both the US and the UK.

While only the fourth most financially successful comic book movie, Wonder Woman was undoubtedly the best to watch and the most culturally significant. It rode a wave of female empowerment in the US, pocketing more than $400m; however, it couldn’t hope to perform as well internationally – the character isn’t that well known – but it still pulled in another $409m. Diana didn’t seem to catch fire with UK audiences in the same way as in the US: I can’t put my finger on the reason why. Nevertheless, a total of £22m in the UK isn’t to be sniffed at.

The fifth Pirates movie, like its predecessor, relied heavily on the international market, which contributed more than 75% of its worldwide take.

Alongside Wonder Woman, the other shock performer was It: nearly $700m worldwide (without securing a release in China) off a budget of just $35m meant somebody took home a huge xmas bonus. It grossed more than Thor 3 in the US and the UK (nobody would have offered you odds on that at the start of the year)!

The comic book disappointment of the year is next: Justice League earned less than Wonder Woman, its gross at the $650m mark as 2017 finished. The League failed to make the UK top 20, and struggled to match Logan in the US (which was R-rated!). Again, nobody would have given you odds on that a year ago! Next for DC is Aquaman in time for Xmas 2018.

Among the remainder of the worldwide top 25, the other performances worthy of mention are: Dunkirk, with $525m, nearly one sixth of which came from the UK (where it spent four weeks at number one in the height of the summer); Pixar’s Coco ended the year with more than $500m in the bank and has yet to open in many traditional box office strongholds; and La La Land, singing and dancing to more than $400m (including £30m from the UK).

Aside from the Last Jedi, other films were just beginning to make their presence felt as the year ended: Jumanji made the top 25 in both the UK and the US after less than a fortnight on release; and Paddington 2 picked up where its predecessor left off and was closing in on the £40m mark as 2018 started.

It should be noted that the top four international performers in 2017 beat 2016’s champ, Captain America: Civil War.

In many traditional key markets, the question now is whether franchise fatigue has set in.
50 Shades Darker whipped up one third less of a frenzy than the first entry in the series (yet still pulled in more than £23m in the UK).

War for the Planet of the Apes performed only marginally better than the first instalment of the new trilogy from 2011 ($490m against $492m) and fell substantially short of the peak reached by the second film in 2014 ($710.6m).

Pirates 5 was the lowest entry in the franchise in the US and the UK. Indeed, across eight of the largest territories (Australia, Brazil, France, Germany, Japan, Mexico, Russia and the UK), Pirates 5’s total was just $225m against Pirates 4’s $423m…

Transformers: Last Knight’s worldwide haul was 45% lower than its $1bn predecessor. Its top nine traditional markets generated just $125m compared with $292m from its predecessor.
In both cases, China saved the day, generating $172m and nearly $229m respectively.

China was the single largest territory for the likes of Kong: Skull Island (nearly 30% of its worldwide total), XXX3 (47%) and Resident Evil: Final Chapter (51%).

But in some cases, even China couldn’t save the day. Yes, it’s time to talk about those embarrassing flops. Probably the worst case was Guy Ritchie’s King Arthur: with a budget of $175m, it pulled in less than $150m worldwide. Following on the back of the Man from UNCLE, Ritchie needs a proper hit – and he’s guaranteed it, as he’s in the hot seat for the live action remake of Aladdin, due for release in 2019.

Luc Besson went from feast to famine, from Lucy’s $463m off a budget of $40m in 2014 to the disaster that was Valerian and the City of A Thousand Planets: with a budget of $177m, it took just $225m.

The Tom Cruise-fronted Mummy was meant to launch Universal’s Dark Universe, and while $409m would seem OK for an entirely new and original franchise launch, for an age-old property that cost £125m and was fronted by Tom Cruise, it’s simply not enough. The film’s largest single territory was China with $91.7m. Like Transformers 5, The Mummy couldn’t clear the £10m barrier in the UK.
Ghost In The Shell cost $110m and generated just less than $170m, while the Dark Tower pulled in nearly $112m off a positively modest $60m budget.

Blade Runner 2049 cost $150m and fell just short of $260m, and thus a little too closely mirrored the financial performance of its illustrious origin.

On a more positive note, the most successful truly original films (ie not based on an existing story or characters, fictional or not) were La La Land, Sing (a holdover from 2016 into 2017), Split ($278.3m) and Get Out ($254.3m, most of that from the US it should be noted). Indeed, the top three horror films of the year (It, Split and Get Out) cost a total of $48.5m and generated a total box office of more than $1.2bn!

Worldwide Top 25 in 2017
Beauty & The Beast $1,263.5m
The Fate of the Furious $1,235.8m
Star Wars: The Last Jedi $1,040.2m
Despicable Me 3 $1,033.5m
Spider-Man: Homecoming $880.2m
Wolf Warrior 2 $870.3m
Guardians of the Galaxy 2 $863.6m
Thor: Ragnarok $848.5m
Wonder Woman $821.8m
Pirates 5 $794.8m
It $698.1m
Justice League $650.5m
Logan $616.8m
Transformers: Last Knight $605.4m
Kong: Skull Island $566.7m
Coco $547.4m
Dunkirk $525m
The Boss Baby $498.9m         
War for the Planet of the Apes $490.7m
The Mummy $409.1m
La La Land $404.2m         
Kingsman 2 $395.5m
Cars 3 $383.5m
Sing $381.5m
50 Shades Darker $381m

UK Top 25 in 2017
Beauty & The Beast £72.4m
Star Wars: The Last Jedi £68.3m
Dunkirk £56.7m
Despicable Me 3 £47.7m
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 2 £41m
Paddington 2 £37.6m
It £32.3m
Thor: Ragnarok £30.9m
Spider-Man: Homecoming £30.5m
La La Land £30.4m
Fast & Furious 8 £29.6m
Sing £29.2m
Boss Baby £29.1m
The Lego Batman Movie £27.4m
Kingsman 2 £24.9m
Logan £23.9m
Murder On The Orient Express £23.9m
Fifty Shades Darker £23.1m
Wonder Woman £22.2m
War for the Planet of the Apes £20.8m
Pirates 5 £19.5m
Blade Runner 2049 £19m
Jumanji £17.8m
Justice League £17.4m
T2 Trainspotting £17m

International Top 25 in 2017
The Fate of the Furious $1,010m
Wolf Warrior 2 $867.6m
Despicable Me 3 $768.9m
Beauty & The Beast $759.5m
Pirates 5 $622.2m
Spider-Man: Homecoming $546m
Thor: Ragnarok $537.3m
Star Wars: The Last Jedi $523m
Transformers: The Last Knight $475.3m
Guardians of the Galaxy $473.8m
Justice League $425m
Wonder Woman $409.2m
Kong: Skull Island $398.6m
Logan $390.5m
It $370.6m
Coco $367.6m
Your Name $350.3m
War for the Planet of the Apes $343.8m
Dunkirk $337m
Never Say Die $333.9m
The Mummy $329m
The Boss Baby $323.9m
XXX 3 $301.2m
Kingsman 2 $295.3m
Resident Evil: The Final Chapter $285.4m

US Top 25 in 2017
Star Wars: The Last Jedi $517.2m
Beauty & The Beast $504m
Wonder Woman $412.6m
Guardians of the Galaxy 2 $389.8m
Spider-Man: Homecoming $334.2m
It $327.5m
Thor: Ragnarok $311.2m
Despicable Me 3 $264.6m
Logan $226.3m
The Fate of the Furious $225.8m
Justice League $225.5m
Dunkirk $188m
Coco $179.8m
The Lego Batman Movie $175.8m
Get Out $175.5m
The Boss Baby $175m
Pirates 5 $172.6m
Jumanji $169m
Kong: Skull Island $168.1m
Hidden Figures $167.4m
Cars 3 $152.9m
War for the Planet of the Apes $146.9m
Split $138.1m
Transformers: The Last Knight $130.2m
Rogue One $123.9m

China Top 25 in 2017
Wolf Warrior 2 $854.2m
The Fate of the Furious $392.8m
Never Say Die $333.9m                                             
Kung Fu Yoga $254.5m
Journey to the West: The Demons Strike Back $239.6m
Transformers: The Last Knight $228.8m
Dangal $193.1m
Pirates 5 $172.3m
Kong: Skull Island $168.2m
Coco $167.1m
XXX 3 $164.1m
Resident Evil: Final Chapter $159.5m
Despicable Me 3 $158.2m
Duckweed $152.4m
Youth $125.8m
Kingsman 2 $116.7m
Spider-Man: Homecoming $116.3m
War for the Planet of the Apes $112.4m
Thor: Ragnarok $112.2m
Buddies In India $109.8m
Logan $106m
Justice League $104.9m
Wukong $103.5m
Guardians of the Galaxy 2 $100.7m
The Mummy $91.7m


Box office data sourced from Boxofficemojo.com, Screendaily.com and the BFI