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8/10
Timely Exploration of Toxic Masculinity
5 April 2023
A very timely French policier that has strong contemporary relevance in the UK given the recent focus on the role of the Police in investigating violence against women. We know that a young woman has been murdered in horrific circumstances from the first 5 minutes, but the focus is on an initially all male investigative team as they try and piece together the stories of potential suspects. It's probably the most accurate depiction I've ever seen of the drudgery of investigation and the difficulty in drawing conclusions amidst all of the evidence. Black cats appear in several scenes taunting the Police. As the film develops, it's clear we are seeing a critique of male assumptions about the case. The captain in charge is struggling to control his team while quietly crumbling inside. There's is a superb line at one stage where he says "Something is wrong between men and women. Every one of them could have done it. Every man could have." In light of the Casey Report, this gains more relevance than it would have and Dominic Moll has form as a Director in portraying toxic masculinity. "Harry He's Here To Help" from 2000 was a masterclass in creepiness. The Police are lost in this film and this is reflected in the lighting and camerawork: still or slow moving images with half light, the norm as if there is something lurking out of shot nobody can see.
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Don't Look Up (2021)
5/10
Far too pleased with itself
28 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
His feels like a rush job. Maybe they only had 6 months and 14 days to put it together. Too many of the characters are so ludicrous that any attempted satire falls flat: Ron Perlman, Jonah Hill and Meryl Streep are fine actors but some of the lines they have to deliver are so lame you don't believe in the characters in the world of the film. One scene had me shaking my head in despair: where Leonardo's character walks into a DC bar to have a confidential conversation (!) at a point where he is just about the most famous person in the world and nobody recognises him. Everyone's a bit too pleased with themselves and it's all a bit smug. Mark Rylance channeling Andy Warhol, Elon Musk and Chancey Gardener (Being There) gets away with it because he plays it for laughs but pretty much everyone else has a virtual placard saying " Big message coming" on them. Armageddon it wrong? I don't think so and this is no Dr Strangelove.
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10/10
Captures the Spirit of Highsmith
15 August 2021
Rather stunned at the low average score. I saw this when it came out and was amazed. Watched for a third time today, 22 years later and it's just as good. Brilliant cast, beautifully filmed and scored yet preserves the dark heart of Highsmith' s novels.
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9/10
Beautiful Humanist Film
26 July 2012
Saw this last night as part of a Canadian Film Festival. It's a real gem that negotiates it's way around trauma and intimacy with tact while never preaching. It's a true humanist film in that it attempts to deal with the real issues of being a human being in a realistic and sympathetic way. I'm a fan of Ken Loach, but at times he can make his films too didactic. This movie never does that. The performances are universally excellent and it's open ended structure allows you to go away with multiple endings to think through. I wanted to know so much more about Mr Lazhar after the story ends. Similar to A Separation in many ways and also its equal.
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