Sunday 25 March 2012

21 JUMP STREET


dMYD
Starring Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum
M

  Pick a side. You want to make that guy cry? You want him to relive his high-school nerd-bath through a prism of pretty people, tap him up full of memories and leave him to puke his insecurities out over the aisle in a stream of regret and Minstrels? Or do you want him to laugh so much that they fly out of his nose like a defective rabbit? PICKCHOOSE.
  Or don’t, do both a bit, just cram whatever jokes you can think up into 109 minutes and try to shoehorn some crumbs of meaning and moral in there wherever there’s a couple of free seconds. 21 Jump Street knows it hasn’t got a lot of cultural cache, the pitch being thrown out by a bit-part police chief in the first couple of minutes; people don’t have any new ideas anymore, so why not just take something from a while back that tickles a couple of synapses, put some hot young studs in there and wuzzabluzzablah movie or something.
  It’s Starsky and Hutch. Nearly ten years on from Bowen Willer propping up the corpse of a half-loved old TV show and stuffing it with scat-humour, screenwriter Michael Bacall’s picked a show from a decade later and done exactly the same thing; it’s nonsensical, it’s stupid every couple of seconds, there’s even a bit where one of the cops gets stabbed in the back, in a film which doesn’t know what a metaphor is. There’s nothing new here.
  It also pretty majorly fails in the light/shade department. Falling so heavily on the Minstrel-nostriling chuckle spike means that any real sentiment or commentary on age-divisions doesn’t get the heft to make you care, with only the ever-excellent Brie Larson providing any capable naturalism. It’s a shame that more stuff can’t go full on comedy-mental; if it’s making you spasm with laughter every fifteen seconds then you couldn’t give a flying one about character development or backstory. Films used to do it. They should try doing it some more.
  But hell, it’s funny quite a bit, and that’s enough. Drug drug-outs, severed dicks and dry-humping all raise a laugh gargle, whilst Channing Tatum and the aforementioned wonder-Larson compete admirably in the physical comedy stakes, the former proving as limbically talented as he is small and weak and the latter flailing about in the most subtle display of roll-around backseat car-chase stupidity ever seen on film. There’s even a surprisingly brutal neck-shot cameo from someone who really doesn’t have to be here, adding kudos just by their presence, which is nice. Overall it’s relentlessly stupid, nobody seems that interested and there’s an amazingly desperate beg for a sequel, but tank yourself up on hooch and you might be lucky enough to throw up all over the armrest in hilarity. See you for the Due South remake in 2018!

THE SWEATBOX


dMYD DVD
Starring Sting
M

  Homoerotically-monikered epic documenting the creature Sting’s early 2000s assault on art and the Disney Corporation: the dreams that were shattered, the lives that were lost and the haircuts that looked inappropriate on a 49 year old tantric-demon. There’s a lot of bad press about the suits at Disney – they love plastic tat, they don’t actually stand for any sort of creativity anymore, they eat the children of ethnic minorities; but none of these alleged crimes has ever come close to the damage the thing calledSting has done to our world, a string of ‘song-cycles’ and woodwind atrocities that have served to destabilise culture as we know it and ruin at least one otherwise great Luc Besson film. Here the bleach-blonde man-twat gets hired by House Mouse to score their new passion-project Kingdom of the Sun and proceeds to dump rubbish songs all over it in much the same way fellow balding-evil-doer Phil Collins did toTarzan a few years earlier, resulting in a curse falling over the whole production that fudges up pacing, story, characterisation and possibly sanity. Disney, realising their mistake, hastily disintegrated the whole thing into a fine mist of paint residue and buddy-comedy, resulting in the departure of the original director and The Emperor’s New Groove, a likeable enough latter-period lightweight that provided some giggles but wouldn’t trouble the oversized costume department of Disneyland Anaheim.
  The doc shows some interesting insights into the terrifying world of creation by corporation, with a candid approach that’s missing from everything else Disney have ever stomped upon in court that’ll lead to it being taken down from YouTube in a few minutes. The problem is that, being directed by his wife, Sting dominates the film like a lute-wielding pug-faced mantis, mooning around the Himalayas and Tuscany and whining about how he likes to keep things simple as the artistic aspirations of everyone involved crumble back in California. At one point he even admits that he can’t write songs about things like family and love anymore, preferring to pen something with a more epic scope and a chorus that goes Dooba dooba shebab shebab doopolopopodeeba. He’s an ill-suited monster whose first Disney film was Sleeping Fucking Beauty. He wasn’t even born in the 90s!
  All of which makes it heartening to see his contribution dwindle to just a couple of cackholes over the credits. Whilst it’s soul-cauterising to watch the creative types get stomped down by men who seem to run on a diet of money and stupid decisions, it’s notable that Sting only ever seems to see the project as a quirky financial transaction, using the songs as a dislocation of meaning from his own feelings and emotions in the same fashion as the Disney executives view their charges. Without seeing the early mixes of Kingdom of the Sun it’s hard to know who’s really in the right here, if there is a right at all; half of these guys did make The Lion King, so you’d think the project was in safe paws. Alas, alack. Whatever the morality the quick scene at the end where they see their noble ambitions turn into Burger King toys pretty much sums up the moneyland we live in.
  Heads up to the wunderbar Ultra Culture for posting a heads up, but how does a guy that points out the Flanderisation of the project neglect to mention Thomas Schumacher, one half of the bad men who derailed the whole thing?
 His paedo-collection moustache probably made someone at the studio scream ‘call The Police!’ in the first place, releasing the Sting and dooming everyone to a couple of years of pan pipes and forthright wankery. Make good decisions world, don’t be Sting.
Edit: Whoops. It’s been taken down. New series of ANT Farm coming soon to the Disney Channel, buy your lunchboxes and pre-teen sexualisation culture-fucking kits now!

IN BRUGES


dMYD DVD
Starring Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson
M


  Poundshop Sopranos starring Colin Farrell looking like a Colin Farrell making a desperate plunge to be remembered as a Not-a-Dickhead and not the dickhead he’sincreasingly appeared to be over the past decade. He’s good. Brendan Gleeson’s better, with the sad bleary eyes of an always-also-man peering out of his weather-smacked face. They trade lines written by a coked-up up twelve year old boy, dialogue that’s just as stupid and good as that sounds, words about dwarves and shooting people and medieval masonry, an alternate reality Boondock Saints by a man who actually knows what he’s doing most of the time. The funnies and gunnies never sit easily next to each other and the tone slips about like Farrell in one of his home-videos, whilst the always despicable Ralph Fiennes shows up for the final third with a stage-school cock-a-knee accent, looking like a posh, face-stretched Christopher Eccleston and bludgeoning whatever subtle delights the film had hinted at beforehand. If you like him you’ll be fienne, but watching Peter Serafinowicz’s jitteringly pervy take a few years ago will ruin whatever credentials Fiennes had before his nose fell off and he started showcasing the most ridiculous giggle in cinematic history.
  The film’s pretty great really, all whippy wannabe-Quentin dialogue and bleary philosophy shifts, probably holding up to a repeated viewing that it’d be great to be bothered with. There’s an admirable attempt to try an old story in a new setting and an off-kilter wobbliness to the whole thing that never quite goes far enough but remains pretty charming and discombobulating all the same. Again, like most things in the modern world, it’s a problem of perception and expectation. The past couple of years have chucked the film into the cult hit bucket, and it can’t possibly live up to the lofty ideals of being thrown around the blogosphere and poured out of cultural mouths for the umpteenth paragraph. Still, a great lump of redemption for Farrell, and a fitting prequel for the nightmare that was Daredevil, where Colin wakes up, carves a target into his head and tries to poke bits of church into the stoned, bleary eyes of Ben Affleck. Actually, that sounds pretty good. Maybe it’s time to watch Daredevil again and OH GOD NO LOOK AT THAT TRAILER HOW HAD THE WORLD FORGOTTEN JENNIFER GARNER SHE’S AWFUL AHHH GODDDDDDDD

Wednesday 14 March 2012

NETFLIX PICK N MIX


  Hey kids, take your DVDs, break them up on your neighbour’s tree stump and SHOVE THE SHARDS INTO YOUR NECK IN A DESPERATE ATTEMPT TO BLEED THE LAST DROPS OF CULTURE FROM THEM. Nothing’s real, you can’t cradle the latest Nicole Kidman vehicle in your arms as it cries itself to death anymore and you’ve got to pluck the movies from the air around us with a pair of big red £6.99 a month gloves that you’ll wear and damn well be happy with. They’re called Netflix, and they’re the supposed future of film distribution, as long as you’re not a thief or a Betamax Luddite or one of those pirates who had an adventure with scientists. Netflix has recently started streaming on Xbox Live, Microsoft’s premier service for teenage swearing and dishonestly-priced digital code, so here’s some of the chuff you can wring out of their 30 day free trial; BASEketball was on there too, but that would have made seven films, which would have ruined the very clever and charming Netflix Pick n Mix Six thing that’s going on here. It does have lactation though, which is more than you can say for…


FIGHTING
Starring Channing Tatum
M
  Durr durrr punch punching funk soundtrack wallop. Poor Terrence Howard thinks he’s in an Oscar contender, he’s weaving and dodging with the best of them, underplaying and whispering his lines and generally being better than the crudstacks around him. Aside from the moustache man acting everyone else out of the ring it’s an admirable attempt at keeping it real, at least until the initially-measured plot start to spiral out of control in a back-story of fist-loving absent fathers and deranged rivals with only three whisps of motivation. Worse, for something that tries to veer on the side of reality, it never attempts to apologise for its fixation on smacking people, presenting every antagonist as a personality-void Virtua Fighter character who’s purely there to be pummelled to death by Channing Tatum’s corn-fed fuckwad decent-guy-on-a-mean-street. This isn’t a sensitive insight into a world of violence. There’s a bit where he prangs a man’s head into a porcelain water fountain! He’s horrible!
  Better to think of it as an above-average Streets of Rage adaptation than a real film with real depths; sunk to the level of pure action-fodder it fails, with a disappointing fight-to-mooning-about ratio and the most annoying old-woman character this side of Liza in Hook. But as a tank-top bulging try-hard attempt at updating the timeless side-scrolling Mega Drive pixel-a-thon it actually becomes fairly quality, rising above the more dumb-ass entries in its genre with attempts at character and realism that most barely bother with. Admittedly the main guy never eats a chicken in one gulp or repeatedly beats the same man to death with an iron pipe two hundred and sixteen times, but it does feature a fat guy who looks like those bosses that breath fire and a final confrontation on a rooftop so brutal that it should really come equipped with a ninja henchman and a slicked-back tommy-gun enthusiast, both of which probably feature in a Jean Claude Van Damme flick at some point. The sad fact remains:Fighting could have been a contender by punching a little below its weight and embracing the stoopid.



CON AIR
Starring Nicholas Cage
Y
  Steve Buscemi is the greatest rat-faced lizard man who ever lived, a goofy-toothed forehead-nightmare who’s lit up every film he’s been in since the eighties whilst single-handedly rescuing Martin Scorsese’s bloated, increasingly-egotistical career with his turn as a man called ‘Nucky’ in Boardwalk Empire last year. But what the fuck is he doing in Con Air? No really, what is he doing? Not in the sense that he’s too good for it – the goggle-eyed beauty-phobe’s shown up in plenty of schlock-crap over the years, from Robert Rodriquez’s Spy Kids 2: A Grown Man’s Cry for Help, to pitching in on whatever bollocks John Turturro felt like spewing out when he was tired of tugging off the Coens for that week in 1999. What’s tough to understand is what’s happening here in his role as ‘Garland Greene’, the man who ‘makes the Manson family look like the Partridge Family’. That’s a line from the film. It’s not the worst.
  By and large Con Air’s a fairly non-stop steel carnival of fire, casual homophobia and Cage-hair, a pre-CGI thrill ride that’s generally thrilling and even better for the slim chance that it might be a conceptual prequel to Being John Malkovich. It slices, it dices, it’s chock with delirious accents and stupidity piled upon fifty foot piles of stupidity, but also brilliant and fun and bone-crushingly enjoyable. Then halfway through Steve Buscemi turns up in a straitjacket and gimp-mask, the rest of the hardened criminals wet themselves and everybody spends the rest of their time whispering his name through teeth gritted in perpetual, soul-shuddering fear.
  He doesn’t do anything for the rest of the film. Amid the carnage and explosion-chains he’s allowed to spit a couple of vaguely thought provoking dumbalogues in a clear but failed attempt at creating a memorable character, but he never touches the plot. Later he gets a literal moment in the sun chatting to a girl who inexplicably lives in the middle of a swimming pool in the desert; he stares at her like a paedo, he looks like he’s about to eat her, sick her up and eat her again, and then he doesn’t. He lets her go. The film treats this as some sort of Christ-a-like redemption by having the guy walk free at the end into the wilds of Las Vegas to presumably win his fortune and retire to a mansion made of human skin.
  What’s odd here is how the character is at odds with the rest of the film; the whole idea is explosions, but the vague spine behind that is of good-criminals (Marines, friendly black people) battling bad-criminals (rapists, Malkovich, annoying black people) for control of the sky. ‘Garland Greene’ is set up as the ultimate extension of this, the vilest bastard in a scum laden sea, then nothing happens, nobody fights him and he gets off scot-free after a short-lived sub-plot that had nothing else to do with the rest of the film. It’s a bizarre detour in an otherwise near-perfect post-Die-Hard plane-gasm, and the annoying niggling of Buscemi’s presence near the top of the bill can only be explained in one of three sad, overly-thought-out ways:
1. There was meant to be a sequel. Child-Touch-RailroadBuck-Toothed Sea? Crime Ditch? We’ll never know.

2. Jerry Bruckenheimer is a terrible, terrible man, getting away with his own secret crimes and laughing at the world by inserting an inconsequential subplot as a form of confession. Get an FBI warning out before he announces the next Pirates aborto-fest.

3. It was planted there as the ultimate critic-pounding dick-move, anticipating a world of infinite film blogs where everyone has to scramble for something new to write about from the past hundred years of celluloid wonder. And this one’s fallen straight into the trap of tapping nearly seven hundred words of analysis on Garland Fucking Greene from Con Air. This isn’t over, Con Air! THIS ISN’T OVER!
Though it almost definitely should be.



THE PRINCESS BRIDE
Starring Cary Elwes
M


dMYDfilmreviews - Rapier Sharp Wit



HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN
Starring Rutger Hauer
M
  A gigantic kiddie pool filled with blood and amateur acting, starring a valiant Rutger Hauer flailing about just above the surface, desperately trying to suck dignity from the air around him: Grindhouse has a lot to atone for. Despite Tarantino and Rodriguez’s ’07 B-Movie piss-up flailing and burning at the multiplexes, the film nonetheless spawned a resurgence in semi-ironic craptitude pictures being rush released with half-decent budgets, a couple of them actually being spawned from the spoof trailers that propped up their grossly extended retro fun-fest. Hobo With a Shotgun is the second but hopefully not last, a brutal love letter to cheap violence and anorexic plotting that suffers from the same problems as Machete, and, to an extent, Tarantino’s work before it, a niggle that’s never wandered the mind of Brett Ratner: it knows too much.
  The ‘best’ B-Movies work because they’re trying to be something better, but they’re failing miserably and adorably. Take the late Donald G. Jackson’s exemplary ape-shit apocalypse marathon Frogtown series, a moth-budget nightmare who’s biggest star was Rowdy Roddy Piper beating up a group of passing drunks in frog-masks moulded with plastic so cheap it probably gave them cancer. It’s incredible, but for entirely different reasons than if it had been made by Christopher Nolan, given the money of an African nation, and charged with being the thinking blockbuster’s metaphor for corporate greed, or poor library funding or whatever he’d read about in the Guardian that morning. It’s got long hair, rotting sets, ugly nudity and costumes whose creepy Halloween store cheapness makes you feel sick rather than any sort of clever design or genuine quality. But it couldn’t be any better; this is all they could do, and that’s where the charm sits, in a camping chair, confused with the notion of irony.
  Hobo With a Shotgun, like others of its ilk, is a fake, a pastiche that sucks the soul out of a beloved movie subset by never trying to outdo itself. Like the current spate of advertisers copying bad adverts, the result is an empty skin bag parading as something intentionally awful, and perversely, that’s awful in a whole different way. When someone like Tim and Eric does this it’s genius, because it’s fast and deformed and stuffed full of Richard Dunn, but here it just comes across as Ben Kingsley levels of lazy, and Christ knows there are fifty-eight thousand three hundred and seventy four better B’s out there desperate for your time and money, most of which are probably a damn sight more entertaining and don’t come with the unending feeling that its making-of documentary consists of the filmmakers snickering to themselves. If you really must do another ironically crap movie, at least be a clever-dick like Tarantino, or insanely lucky and prone to deranged spates of child-naming like Robert Rodriguez.
  In short, a huge waste of time for everyone involved, but the prostitute girl-persondoes look like Jemina Pearl from Be Your Own Pet, which is TOTALLY RAD.



THE SEVENTH SEAL
Starring Max Von Sydnow
Y

  Nowhere near as sombre and maudlin as legend suggests, it’s surprising at how much Hollywood’s packed in here to offset the stench of death; there’s the common bog-standard bond of a group of archetypes ganging up to travel, as well as an agreeably stubbly turn from Gunnar Bjornstrand as a stereotypical bad-ass, able to sort out everyone else with a couple of gruff words and a glare from his forehead scar. There’s even bizarre comedy half-way through, a weird mid-film crisis that becomes a Shakespearian farce of arses, tree climbing and fake stabbings, all of which make the film far more accessible than a quick glance at its Google images would suggest.
  Ultimately though, easy to dip in as it is and beautiful as the imagery and cinematography are, the piece earns its place by jousting and jostling with the depths of human understanding. The theme of faith sears through every frame and loaded line of dialogue, from errant knight Antonius Block’s constant searching for a light beyond the darkness to the problem of perception, how he can’t see the demons that plague a condemned girl just as his companions can’t see the creepy monk that follows his every move. Bergman’s playing with images of the unknown here; an early preoccupation with painting, costumes and statues instils the problem of portraying something taken on faith, how the spastic flailings of the loveable actor troupe are no less informed than the supposed piousness of the flagellant parade, an assault on organised religion that shines through the obliqueness of the rest of the plot. At times the use of imagery is almost playful, from the childlike daubing in the pictureman’s house to Scat’s gurning skull mask, to the shit-eating grin spreading across Block’s face as he meets the ultimate end of the universe for the first time. As a celebration of life the scenes between the chess pieces are alternately charming and heart-breaking, specifically the beauty of a mother and son and the realization that a group of people who have death literally stalking them all the time are probably not all going to make it to the end credits.
  Visually lyrical, astoundingly acted with a script that drips with symbolism and depth, it’s a fascinating study of human love and spiritual emptiness, the warmth of the characters battling desperately against the coldness of the landscape. And it’s responsible for a large swathe of Bill and Ted’s Bogus Journey, and thus the film that’s given the most back to the world.


NETWORK
Starring Faye Dunaway and Peter Finch
D

  The Doomsayer, the prophet, the truth no one wants to hear, which goes some way towards explaining its £3.49 asking price on Play.com. Screenwriter Paddy Chevesky woke up one morning, combed the pop tarts out of his beard and saw the future, a terrifying mass of wires running through our minds and looping our wrists, connecting everyone on the planet not with love, or trust or even beauty but money, money and profit and the vast pyramid that squats over our planet funnelling everything upward like some rubbish grey CGI thing from Battle Los Angeles. The Seventh Seal is an unsettling film because it deals with death and the unknown, it contains a mysterious undercurrent that disturbs and delights in equal measure; Network is the greater horror, because it reveals the truth that we know in the back of our heads; it doesn’t deal in death, but with the meticulous machine hell that our earth has become, in the boardrooms, the numbers and now the very air around us.
  It has to be a good movie though; otherwise this blog would look mental. Chevesky’s lines vary from pin-point Mad Men-style period spitting to large tracts of quasi-Shakespearean rants, giving every actor a chance to shine, particularly Robert Duvall as a shouty shouty bald man who you just want to smack into a desk and Faye Dunaway being incredible as the blank, unknowing face of the monstrous revolution. Satire of the highest order, it begins funny, starting with a joke and as a joke, the last human interaction of Howard Beale on a New York sidewalk before he jumps off the deep end of sanity and finds the rest of the world already there with him. From this point on it escalates, from the excellent William Holden’s drunken pitching for blood-drenched programming to the last declarations of humanity in a world of lists and figures, via the most terrifying boardroom scene in modern cinema as every suspicion you’ve had about money comes true.
  The power lies in the slightly nudged-reality; like a lot of great satire it presents something entirely plausible, if in this case terrifying, whilst time has been kind to it and raised its stature by systematically making all its fears a reality. Think about what you knew of the film before you saw it; just clips of a feral man ranting, his eyes bulging out above his trench coat as he spills doom all over the floor. There’s Howard Beale t-shirts now, and his story has been broken down into easily gulped YouTube chunks, pockets of emotion to take in at lunch breaks. When the film juddered to its other level climax, as the studio lights fell down and the credits rolled, the Netflix pop-up window appeared, cramming the film’s makers into a small cube and suggesting four other films that I might enjoy watching. They’d been given some stars to rate them, tailored to suit my wants and needs and interests, so I turned the Xbox off and realised I’d have to give an unquestionable masterpiece a small letter in the top corner of my blog post. We’re a new species now, and it’s not exactly what you used to call human.
  Netflix is nearly rubbish. It’s not worth selling your hands to pay the £6.99 a month, the service is largely soulless and there might be a copy of Kangaroo Jack in there somewhere, jumping around the foreign films section and generally pissing over Jerry O’Connell’s career. Still, nothing a month? I think we can swing that, and for 30 days at least you can cram as much bargain-bin shit/genuine wonder down your throat as you can stomach, just like Jesus did back in the desert. Network’s the essential order, but if you prefer something more beautiful, timeless and grey then head straight for

Sunday 11 March 2012

CARNAGE


dMYD
Starring Jodie Foster and John C. Reilly and Kate Winslet and Christoph Waltz
M

  The hot topic around London town right now is that famed astrophysicist and former Ecstasy-chugger Brian Cox’s pet hates are rape and stage-to-screen adaptations, with a particular focus on rape because of all the evil. In a recent interview for fictional magazine ‘COCKS’ Cox was quoted as saying; ‘If you’re going to transpose a play script to film then at least make sure your dialogue’s up to snuff. There’s an inherent lack of naturalism in theatre that doesn’t lend itself well to film, unless you’re Baz Luhrman or deaf, and if your words aren’t all non-stop zingers or heart-wrenching parables for the human condition then it’s not really worth the stilted over-emoting that’s going to dribble out of your actor’s mouths. Comets are really, really brilliant.
  Cox are always right. Despite the talent on hand here the central conceit just doesn’t work; whereas on stage it might be a delight to watch the four characters socially immolate themselves, here, trapped in the confines of Polanski’s flat, it just feels like you’re spending an hour and a half with people you desperately want to punch in the face whilst they react to harsh words in ways that’d never pass muster in real life. Winslet plays a game drunk and Foster flexes her neck muscles to breaking point, but it’s Waltz who’s the most out of place here, seemingly believing that everything he does has to echo the camp villainy of Hans Lander regardless of setting, space or time. He glowers in the corner, chewing over his lines with an ill-defined accent, swooping in occasionally like a big grey bat to suck homo-erotically at John C. Reilly’s neck on a metaphorical level. It’s ridiculous. Reilly comes out best by at least attempting to bring some reality to the party, but ultimately the endeavour fails because the characters are hateful, the script ain’t entertaining enough, the setting’s too contrived, and nobody likes Roman Polanski because he used to be a rapist.
  Stupid title too, even if it would be great to have this cheery fellow ring the doorbell halfway through and proceed to tear everyone a new set of nostrils. On their arses. 

DEEP END


dMYD DVD
Starring John Moulder Brown and Jane Asher
Y

  All the best films have a swimming pool as a creepy rippling metaphor and this one’s no exception, a lost seventies cult-fest rescued by the BFI last year and trumpeted by Film Four as an apology for screening Zoolander sixty-eight times a week. Boy in a Bowie mask John Moulder Brown plays a blinder as Mike, box-fresh from school and embarking on a journey of poor-dubbing and sexual discovery down the local dirty-man bathes, while he’s ably mirrored by proto-Kelly Reilly Jane Asher as the spoon-licking object of his pent-up frustration. Both characters are layered like one of Asher’s cakes, taking blink and you’ll lose it twists every few minutes and indulging in a tete-a-tete up there with the best in cinema history, whilst the film’s missing years result in a lack of foreknowledge that clouds any suspicions you may have about where the wonky plot’s going.
  Like many of its seventies ilk it’s a stylistic ball-grabber, the cinematography and soundtrack giving the everyday a good bludgeoning of auteurist madness. From the pre-school primary colours of the bathes themselves to Burt Kwouk’s inexplicably sinister Hot-Dog salesman the film’s a triumph of druggy reality twisting, never explicitly strange but with a constant undercurrent of oddity that infests the players and their surroundings. Support characters drift in with ill-defined motivations  - the pervy boiler-man, the one legged hooker, unresolved figures moving in and out of the dream-like narrative, whilst one scene in particular sums up the creeping dread; Susan slowly licking her way around a yoghurt pot as the weirdo-receptionist looks on, a solitary man with a big red paintpot sliding his brush around the walls behind them. It’s a masterpiece of this weirdery, but would lose its greatness if it weren’t for the grounded work of the two leads; their conversations in the baths’ loft and corridors ring true to the strange intensity of work-relationships, the boredom, the ribbing, the ripping of posters to make a boy look pregnant. Their connection is the beating heart of the film’s weird blood, which makes it all the more disturbing as their strange little world comes dripping down around them.
  A brilliant, deranged film with the beauty of a Goddard and odd wonder of last year’sSubmarine, its multi-angled musings on sex and innocence put it up there with some of the 70’s best, even if it does go off THE DEEP END in the last few frames.
  Oh, and it has Diana Dors ranting like John Motson whilst she tries to smother a fifteen year old in her tits. Classic, and this version’s in German.

G.I JOE: THE RISE OF COBRA


dMYD DVD
Starring Some Pretty Unlikely Actors
M

  Remember when you’d smash your Ninja Turtle figures into the sinkhole outside just to get away from Grandma’s spittle? Or throw your Transformers as high as you could and pretend to be surprised when they broke into £9.99 worth of plastic arm-bits on the concrete? Or when you put out cigarettes on that Furby from the loft? Stephen Sommers doesn’t; he’s a relatively soulless Hollywood auto-directing device who was raised by CGI wolves, an experience that came in handy with his previous incredathonVan Helsing, the film that tried to throw every piece of 1800s literature together to make a credible modern action movie. It failed, but it failed spectacularly.
  G.I Joe tries the same thing, but with toys and the past decade of comic book movies. Suck a lungful: there’s ninjas, Iron-Men, explosions, Doctor Who, guns, green explosions, black guys whose cracks are wise, tits, falling Eiffel Towers, underwater bases, huge stoic black guys, impractically clothed gurls, blue explosions, Ray Park, fist-punching and more product-placement than the Superbowl crossbred with Waynes WorldCramming in this much relentless box-ticking doesn’t leave time for dialogue, characters or anything approaching a story, but at its best the film does approach the giddy joy of seeing a ten year old boy let loose with $175 million dollars and a bizarrely inept CGI studio.
  Unfortunately that personal best only lasts for twenty minutes, the bit in Paris in the middle where everything plays out like an unironic stage-school production of Team America. The whole sequence is an unpretentious run-fun-gun-athon, two divs in supersuits desperately chasing a van full of baddies and causing endless collateral damage to the city that hillbillies whoop to hate, culminating in lots of glass-smashing, explosions and explosions. It’s great. Everything else is too damn fast.  Sommers’The Mummy may have been a shameless Indy knock off but at least it had the luxury of being filmed in 1998, when actors were given time to say their lines or even attempt characterisation. Van Helsing exists on the cut-off point around 2004, when studios decided they had to kick the shit out of videogames by becoming them, but even that mess had time for a quick Lion King homage and Richard Roxburgh screaming about chess and coins.
  There’s nothing here except a big finger to the source plastic. Ten years ago it would have been charming and kitsch to see Christopher Eccleston, Sienna Miller and Jo Jo Gordo Levitt spout lines about action figures and planes and nnnneeeeeooow, but nowadays there’s no time to give them anything funny to say before the next burst of light and sound. Still, it’s pretty fucking nuts at times, it occasionally brings to mindthis, and you may as well see it instead of the amazingly cookie-cuttery looking ‘grittier’ Rock-hard reboot this year. Who’s the market for it? And why did Dennis Quaid sign on for two sequels without reading the script when knowing is half the battle?

Sunday 4 March 2012

THE DESCENDANTS

dMYD
Starring George Clooney
Trailer
M

  Glorified Channel Five afternoon melodrama, and perhaps not the best time for a man to moan about how hard his life is when he’s the most handsome Y-Chromosome in existence who happens to own huge tracts of beautiful Hawaiian coastline. Still, it’ll get better with age and it’s worth going just to see these two engaging in a stupidly mis-matched love-battle over an unconscious crazy woman:

EXIT THROUGH THE GIFT SHOP

dMYD DVD
Starring Art
Trailer
M

  Wow, it’s a documentary about Thierry Guetta, aka Mr Brainwash, and his first ever gallery show! Oh. No it isn’t. He’s a street artist. Only he’s not. But he is. But he’s not. But he might be. It’s not going to be a Michael Bay film.
  There’s a bit in the first ever episode of The Thick Of It where that hapless MP guy who turned out to be a paedophile looks to the Alistair Campbell caricature and admits that he isn’t sure what level of reality he’s meant to be operating on at the moment; imagery, opinion and mass media have distorted what it means to be human so much in the past twenty years that politics, identity and everything else has been hopelessly chucked into a swirling maelstrom of nonsense, misunderstanding and pure lies, all in a desperate attempt to promote false integrity over reality itself. Nothing makes sense anymore, and nobody knows what anyone else is saying. Culture’s had the disease for years.
  Scott McCloud, the guy who writes books about comics, has a pretty simple definition of art. It’s human expression, something outside the fucking and killing to while away the hours trapped in our brains. The problems begin when that art is chucked out to be gawked at by someone else; then it becomes ‘for’ something, and everything quickly spirals out of control, like that time Jeremy Kyle tried to do his show in America and found himself dangerously out of his depth.
  Banksy is an artist, a man/men who does things in the streets and leaves them there, and some people look at them and some people clear them away and some people buy them for millions of dollars and lock them in their closet with all the bodies of their maids/ex-wives/postmen. And now he’s decided to make a piece of art on a DVD. It’s something called a film. It’s supposed to be a documentary, and it may or may not be a gigantic cauldron of bullshit that follows his unlikely protégé Thierry Guetta, a man so inept and stupid that he has to be real, because the world is full of people like him, people who gawp at his rubbish work and assess it and consider its meaning. But then again, he can’t be real because he’s a living piece of Banksy art, and everything here is a ginormous piss-grab on the insanity of the art world. Isn’t it?
 People like Guetta’s paintings. They get enjoyment out of them, so they’re worth something. Madonna liked them so much that she commissioned Mr Brainwash to produce the cover to her 2009 greatest hits album, which is the funniest joke on an old-bird ever if you’re a hipster wank-bag, or just a pretty album if you’re shopping for music in Tesco. Everything in the great circle of life exists in a subjectivity vacuum, a gigantic cultural Schrodinger’s cat yowling and burping hairballs across the sky: it’s only us stumble-apes that can reach up and slap a meaning on it, and we’re a bunch of dickheads. Playing with these concepts, throwing them around and seeing what sticks looks fun for Banksy and his parade of possibly-imaginary friends, but it doesn’t make for a very entertaining film. Imagine if Guetta was played by Chevy Chase, then we’d be getting somewhere.
  Essentially it doesn’t matter how much of the story’s real, what it means or who it’s laughing at. It’s a vaguely diverting transmutation of Orson Welles’ incrediballs F For Fake project, and if you spend too much time thinking about it you’ll go blind and waste a large portion of your life that can be spent kayaking, or huffing meth and watching Ghostbusters. It might be the cleverest film in the world, but it’s not as fun to watch as it is to wear the packed in cardboard amazo-vision glasses that spiral the lights in your room into a kaleidoscope of flashbulbs. Try wearing them outside! They turn natural light into priceless art!
  See it for yourself, make your own decisions. It’s better than this bundle of shit, but Adam and Joe did it better sixteen years ago, and if it’s all so real then why is Guetta played by Joaquin Phoenix? And why is there a shot of Beck Hansen in Guetta’s shop at the beginning?
What would Beck Hansen be doing in an L.A hipster clothing store in 1999?