I watch a lot of Silent Comedy but if I had to ask someone
to watch just one short silent picture it may well be this one. The Goat is packed full of wonderful
jokes, ingenious set ups and incredible stunt work. I laughed more at twenty
seven minutes of this film than I have during probably every comedy I’ve seen
so far this year combined.
Sunday, 8 July 2012
The Goat
Buster Keaton is walking past a jail when he grabs the bars
and peers inside. On the other side of the bars is notorious murderer “Dead
Shot Dan” who is being photographed. Seeing that Keaton is behind him, Dan
ducks out of shot and once he escapes, a photo of Keaton, seemly behind bars is
published. As a result of this Keaton is forced to go on the run from various
police officers including a persistent Police Chief who just won’t give up.
Labels:
1921,
9/10,
Buster Keaton,
Comedy,
Joe Roberts,
Malcolm St. Clair,
Short Film,
Silent,
Silent Comedy,
The Goat,
Virginia Fox
Saturday, 7 July 2012
Don't be Afraid of the Dark
"La Di Da Di, We likes to party, we don't cause no trouble, we don't bother nobody"
Sometime in the past, the owner of a large Rhode Island mansion summons his housekeeper
to the basement where he kills her and removes her teeth with a hammer and
chisel. The man offers the teeth to some unseen creatures inside a fireplace
and asks for the return of his son. He doesn’t get his wish. Fast forward to
the present day and a man (Guy Pearce) and woman (Katie Holmes) move into the
mansion along with Pearce’s estranged and reclusive daughter (Bailee Madison). Sally,
depressed at being separated from her mother discovers the now hidden basement
(which was somehow missed by surveyors, estate agents and owners but discovered
by an eight year old) and awakens whatever lies inside the old fireplace. Once
the creatures are out they want one thing; to take someone back down with them.
Considering this is a horror film it's less scary than when Nemo’s dad
loses his son. The slow and tedious opening lasts for half an hour, during
which time there is no atmosphere and little tension. One of the reasons that The Woman in Black was so successful is
that it created atmosphere and suspense. Here there is none. We just get
panning shots of what feels like quite a nice and not at all creepy house.
Red Riding Hood
"There's a big, bad wolf and someone has to stop it"
Following an unconvincing swoop through a CGI Medieval
landscape we somehow arrive in what appears to be an American Medieval village
that is being ravaged by a werewolf. Our heroine, Valerie (Amanda Seyfried) is
a young woman who lives in the village. She is in love with woodcutter Peter
(Shiloh Fernandez) but has been betrothed to the son of a wealthy blacksmith called
Henry (Max Irons). Shortly after the wolf returns from a long absence and
begins to kill, a (possibly) Dutch witch hunter called Father Solomon (Gary
Oldman) rides into town inside a giant metallic elephant with a retinue of some
African fellas and a Japanese chap. Solomon tries to hunt the wolf down while
Valerie, given a red hood by her grandma, and her two love interests track the
wolf as well.
This film is just an excuse for yet another tween Twilightified
love triangle story. This effort has added fairytale elements, silly dancing
and awful music. The plot is preposterous and the dialogue feels like it’s been
lifted from half heard conversations at a Californian mall. This is by far the
worst film I’ve seen in months, possibly all year.
Tuesday, 3 July 2012
Breakfast on Pluto
"Well, fuck me pink with a hairy arse!"
A boy is born in conservative 1940s Ireland to a Priest (Liam Neeson) and an unknown
woman who flees to London
after the birth. Bought up by a strict Catholic foster mother he shows signs of
difference at an early age when he is caught in a dress and heels. By the 1970s
the teenage Patrick ‘Kitten’ Braden (Cillian Murphy) is a proud and open cross
dresser, still living in the small, conservative Irish town. As he gets older
he wonders about his mother and discovers that she fled to England . He
decides to try to find her and along the way joins a glam rock band, has
brushes with the IRA, turns to prostitution and comes close to death on a
number of occasions.
The entire film is set against the backdrop of the ‘troubles’
in Ireland
during the 1970s. Kitten comes face to face with both sides of the war on a
number of occasions and the conflict forms a major stand throughout the story.
Another stand is her struggle to fit in with a world that tends to reject her
choice of lifestyle and her difficulty with everyone taking life so seriously.
The film is cut up into thirty or so chapters. Each is numbered and titled but
the plot flows smoothly throughout. This mostly worked well to set up a scene
but did become a little tiresome after a while.
Monday, 2 July 2012
The Five Year Engagement
"You ate the old doughnut"
Tom (Jason Segel) is a sous chef at a top end San Francisco restaurant but is forced to move to the mid
west when his fiancée Violet (Emily Blunt) gets a post graduate position at the
University of Michigan . This occurs shortly after the
couple’s engagement and they decide to put their wedding on hold for a couple
of years until they return to the West Coast. Their relationship is strained
though when Tom fails to fit in or find a satisfying job while Violet’s career
takes off and leaves Tom alone to ponder the career he left in San Francisco .
As soon as the film opens you are able to chart its plot
pretty much to a tee but the journey to the finale is both funny and intelligent.
The film is helped in no small way by two delightful characters played by two
very watchable actors, Blunt and Segel. They appear to have great chemistry and
Blunt in particular comes out of her shell and puts her comedic chops to great
use.
Friends with Kids
Six New York
thirty-somethings see their lives change over the course of several years as children
come into their lives. Alex and Leslie (Chris O’Dowd and Maya Rudolph) are a
married couple with two children, struggling to keep their heads above water. Ben
and Missy (Jon Hamm and Kristen Wiig) are a sexually charged couple who find
things difficult once a baby arrives while Jason and Julie (Adam Scott and Jennifer
Westfeldt) are best friends who know each other inside out. Fearing that they
are getting old and seeing how difficult managing a marriage and child can be,
they decide to have a child as friends with no emotional attachment. Both are
free to carry on with their separate love lives after the child’s birth and
agree to joint custody of the baby.
There have been comparisons to last years smash hit Bridesmaids but that is purely down to
casting. This is a completely different film. While Wiig, O’Dowd, Rudolph and Hamm all starred in Wiig’s
massively successful comedy, Friends with
Kids reminded me more of a Woody Allen film, only without the wit or
humour.
A Woman
Charlie Chaplin’s ninth Essanay film is perhaps one of his
most controversial. A Gentleman (Chaplin) is out walking through a park when he
comes across a family (Charles Inslee, Marta Golden & Edna Purviance). The
father, Inslee has his attention drawn towards a flirt (Margie Reiger). Reiger
blindfolds Inslee after suggesting a game of hide and seek. Chaplin meanwhile
discovers the blinded man and leads him towards a lake where he pushes him in.
Later Chaplin comes across Golden and Purviance who fall for the cheeky chappy
and invite him home. When Inslee arrives home soaking wet to find his attacker
in the house Chaplin resorts to disguising himself in an unorthodox manner.
This film is most famous for Chaplin’s cross-dressing,
something that must have been quite brave and scandalous 97 years ago. For a
twenty-first century audience it isn’t particularly shocking or even funny so
you have to imagine a late Edwardian audience’s reaction in order to understand
its significance.
Labels:
1915,
5/10,
A Woman,
Billy Armstrong,
Charles Inslee,
Charlie Chaplin,
Edna Purviance,
Film,
Leo White,
Margie Reiger,
Marta Golden,
Movie,
Review
Saturday, 30 June 2012
Killer Joe
"Who's dick is it?"
A young man, Chris (Emile Hirsch) in debt to a drug dealer
and his father Ansel (Thomas
Haden Church )
decide to hire a contract killer known as Killer Joe (Matthew McConaughey) to
kill Chris’ mother in order to claim $50,000 life insurance money. Unable to
pay upfront, Joe suggests taking Chris’ innocent young sister Dottie (Juno Temple )
as a retainer, something that doesn’t sit easily with Chris.
This is a darkly comic and extremely violent film which is
likely to repulse some and delight others. There were several walk outs in the
packed screening I was in and many audible gasps as well as perhaps the biggest
laugh I’ve ever heard in a cinema. For an example of how it will polarize
people I turned to my girlfriend on the way out and said “what did you think?”
She replied “I hated it. It was awful. One star”. I on the other hand thought
it was excellent.
Bronson
"You don't want to be trapped inside with me sunshine. Inside, I'm somebody nobody wants to fuck with do you understand? I am Charlie Bronson, I am Britain's most violent prisoner."
Bronson is a
biopic of Charles Bronson, real name Michael Peterson, Britain ’s most
famous prisoner. After being sent down for seven years in 1974 for armed
robbery, Bronson got a name for himself by attacking guards, prisoners and
holding hostages. This film starts Tom Hardy in the title role and takes place
mostly during his incarcerated life (38 years and counting) but also briefly
touches on his childhood and a brief stint of freedom. The narrative uses both
a traditional plot account and a sort of talking head from Bronson in which he
comments on various parts of his life from the present. There are also some
quite superb and eccentric scenes in which Bronson is on stage, performing to
an audience.
I’d seen this film upon its release in 2008 and had bought
the blu-ray in about 2010 but hadn’t watched it again until last night when we
had some friends visiting. I remember being blown away by the violence and Tom
Hardy’s performances back in 2008 but don’t remember laughing so much. This
film is funnier than the majority of mainstream Hollywood
comedies.
Friday, 29 June 2012
Work
Izzy Wake (Charles Inslee) a paperhanger and his assistant
(Charlie Chaplin) slowly make their way to the house of Billy Armstrong and Marta
Golden where they are due to hang wall paper. After experiencing difficulty
even getting to the house, once they get there things go from bad to worse.
This film made me laugh, a lot, but overall it was messy –
much like the on screen action. I didn’t really get any sense of who any of the
characters were and to be honest apart from inhabiting the house at the centre
of the story, Billy Armstrong and Marta Golden’s characters weren’t really
necessary. They and Leo White were only really used during the films frenetic
ending which is somewhere between a chase and a farce. That being said, there
is still much to like about this Chaplin Essanay effort.
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