2 July 2012

EIFF 2012: Sun Don't Shine Review

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★★★1/2☆



Amy Seimetz's debut feature film, Sun Don't Shine recently received its international premiere at this year's Edinburgh International Film Festival. This indie picture feels like a fusion of a road movie, psychological drama and thriller - proving to be an impressive feature debut and stirring watch.

Two young lovers, Crystal (Kate Lyn Sheil) and Leo (Kentucker Audley) go on the run in rural Florida, the pair both haunted by a dark secret that bounds them together. With a gun in the glove compartment and ever growing paranoia - their relationship begins to hit new extremes.    

Seimetz creates a tense and brooding atmosphere, using the humid Florida landscape as a canvas for this paranoia-infused drama. Sun Don't Shine is a film shrouded in mystery, the opening thrusts us into one of the couples' heated disputes, immediately spurring the question what have they done? Seimetz screenplay is a slowly unravelling puzzle which eventually reveals to us that Crystal stabbed her abusive husband, whose body lies in the car trunk.

Once this crucial detail is revealed Seimetz amps up the tension with the inclusion of encounters with suspicious passers-by or simply by reflecting an ever-recurring police presence. The fusion of this brooding atmosphere, combined with Seimetz's grainy, dreamlike direction produces a completely stirring, haunting film.

The dreamlike direction of Sun Don't Shine bares resemblance to the issues of one of the central characters, Crystal. Crystal seems completely unaware of her actions or the effect that her behaviour has on others - baring an almost childlike presence throughout the film. The character is somewhat of an enigma, who she herself does not even understand. Kate Lyn Sheil's performance mostly reflects  this, but some flaky line-delivery means that she does not always convince.

Kentucker Audley's performance as Leo is perhaps one of Sun Don't Shine's strongest assets. The actor always gives us an insight to the gears turning in Leo's head, as he attempts to fix Crystal's problems. No sooner has one issue been dealt with, then another arises - as he is slowly becoming bound to her by their dark secret. Audley's performance gradually unveils the effects that these mounting problems have on Leo as looks for release from an old flame.

Sun Don't Shine is a thoroughly impressive feature debut from Amy Seimetz. The director's haunting fusion of genres results in a tense, atmospheric drama with strong performances, most notably from leading man, Kentucker Audley.


Andrew McArthur



Stars: Kate Lyn Sheil, Kentucker Audley, AJ Bowen
Director: Amy Seimetz
Release: 23rd June (EIFF)

SUN DON'T SHINE Teaser from David Lowery on Vimeo.

EIFF 2012:Kotoko Review

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★★1/2☆☆


Japanese director and actor, Shin'ya Tsukamoto, latest project Kotoko sees him team up with folk rock artist, Cocco for disturbing horror drama, Kotoko. 
Tsukamoto's film follows a woman, Kotoko, balancing life as a single mother, alongside her threatening mental problems. Gradually, the boundaries between what is real and what is simply a product of her dark imagination, begin to blur.

Shin'ya Tsukamoto is on top form visually, dragging us into Kotoko's harrowing nightmare world filled with twisted double vision and hallucinations of the dangers that could affect her child. Kotoko's disturbing apparitions are particularly difficult to watch - seeing the mentally unstable mother standing on a rooftop, slowly loosening her grip of her baby, is completely unsettling. This combined with Kotoko's high pitched, shrill screams, builds up an a chilling atmosphere throughout.

Kotoko does become rather tedious, simply overstaying its welcome (even at a relatively short 91 minutes). Pacing slows down after the introduction of Kotoko's stalker, turned boyfriend - Seitaro Tanaka (played by Tsukamoto) - and they say true love is dead. The relationship between the pair feels particularly unconvincing - Kotoko takes out her violent rage on her boyfriend, at one point completely destroying his face, yet he is still infatuated by her. 

Praise must go to Cocco's raw and brutal performance, the singer completely dedicates herself to this part - mentally and physically. Several scenes of Kotoko self-harming appear so realistic, one may finding oneself questioning their perception of what is real and what is fiction. Unfortunately, Tsukamoto makes no effort to help the viewer show any empathy towards Kotoko - with no attempt made to understand her mental illness. We are simply shown her outrageous behaviour and left to regard her as a lunatic. Tsukamoto's supporting turn, which is supposed to add comic relief does not gel with the darkly intense subject matter - resulting in the role simply feeling off-key and incomprehensible. 


The strength in Tsukamoto's film comes from his rich visual design. One notable sequence prior to Kotoko's conclusion shows the title-characters' son's toys come to life, in a fusion of bright colours and outstanding visuals.

Kotoko is a harrowing piece of cinema, that unfortunately overstays its welcome. Despite a fascinating and dedicated performance from Cocco and some extraordinary visual design, Kotoko becomes tedious and relentlessly nasty, making no attempt to discuss mental illness in a sympathetic light. 


Andrew McArthur


Stars: Cocco, Shin'ya Tsukamoto
Director: Shin'ya Tsukamoto
Release: 24th September 2012 (UK DVD)
Pre-Order/Buy:Kotoko On Blu-ray / On DVD

Kotoko (Shinya Tsukamoto, Japan - 2011) UK trailer Published via LongTail.tv



DVD Review: Margaret

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★★★★★


Sometimes, to tell a story is to hold a mirror up to life: to reflect, and so capture a time and a place and an idea all at once. It’s an awful cliché to state that truth is beauty. But no phrase better encompasses the seminal achievement that is Margaret.

But before I get into that, a caveat. I am 20. Currently I am unemployed, and am a university student. I subsist on a governmental loan and parental handouts. In short, I live in a state of extended adolescence. And yet, I can clearly see adulthood as a looming future possibility, a prospect both desirable and utterly terrifying. Which puts me in a very similar place to Lisa Coen.

Lisa (Anna Paquin) is your average intelligent 17 year old. She is beautiful, passionate and startlingly articulate. She is a woman, with the usual set of desires, and one who is clearly aware of her sexual power. She thinks herself all grown up, but has no real concept of what adulthood means. That is, until she goes out on a shopping trip looking for a cowboy hat. While out in town she catches sight of a bus driver (Mark Ruffalo) sporting a particularly awesome cowboy hat and tries to get his attention, so she can find out where he got it. He thinks she is flirting with him, and hell, maybe she is a little. So his attention is distracted. And because of that he runs over a woman, who ends up dying in Lisa’s arms.

Lisa has an adult’s drives, and an adult’s knowledge. Now she has a responsibility only an adult could handle. Unfortunately she has none of an adult’s perspective. Lisa is an earnest young woman. She cares so much, that she twists the world around her into one where she has a personal stake in this tragedy. And thus begins Lisa’s crusade for justice. A child of a director and actress, she is naturally predisposed to theatrics. As such, her involvement in the death of Monica Patterson (Allison Janney) becomes tragic fuel for a dramatic stampede.

This unconscious dramatisation is brilliantly constructed. Lisa’s speech is verbose and articulate to a degree that almost strays beyond believability. I mean, what normal person uses the word ‘strident’ in the midst of an argument? Paquin’s delivery does make it sound naturalistic, but regardless, there is a feeling of preplanning to her speeches, like Lisa is following a script of her own making. Lisa’s behaviour is also melodramatic. She makes brittle confessions of love, yells hotly in her arguments with her mother and classmates, and indulges in sobbing reconciliations. Indeed Paquin displays a mind-boggling range and quality of performance, in being able to convey all of Lisa’s rollercoaster emotions believably. The classical score by Nico Muhly provides the orchestral accompaniment that no high drama could be without, and the moment when I realised the irony inherent in the film’s music was a golden one.

There is a problem however with having a character’s core trait be that they believe themselves the heroine of a drama: after all, in a story, they are. So Margaret takes pains to undercut Lisa’s pretentions. It does this by avoiding seeing the world through Lisa’s eyes. On occasion a scene will begin, and though part of it will involve Lisa, she will be in the background, or included late. Instead of her concerns we are treated to the friendly chat of two old ladies, or the argument of a couple heading out to dinner. It is emphasised that though she might think otherwise, she is not the centre of this world.

And that’s not the end of the film’s worldbuilding effort. I’m not sure that enough praise can be lavished on the character writing and actor direction and acting talent that brings to life the world of Margaret. For this last matter, well, I feel that too many positive adjectives get meaningless after a while. So Jean Smith-Cameron is…wordlessly good as Lisa’s mother Joan. There are so many different facets to the skill of acting that it is probably ridiculous to laud any single ability above another. But what I find really impressive in actors is the ability to wordlessly convey information, and to do it in a fashion that is noticeable without being telegraphed. Well Smith-Cameron can do that. This may sound strange, but I have never before seen an actor express boredom with such perfection.

In addition to this we have the excellent work of Ruffalo and Jeannie Berlin (as Emily, Monica’s best friend) and indeed all the rest of the cast. All of them inhabit deep characters, with personality and problems of their own. Lisa’s visit to bus driver Maretti’s house uncovers a harassed breadwinner, who clearly feels under pressure from his jealously-suspicious wife. An unpleasantly venal cousin of Monica’s, who might, from Lisa’s perspective, have become a villain of the piece is similarly humanised. In her arrival into New York, and, in her tentative attempts at helping a cabbie unload luggage, we see the nervousness of a country woman suddenly surrounded by urban jungle. In that moment we empathise with her. Through touches like these, writer/director Kenneth Lonergan creates a rich, full world that places Lisa’s self-involvement into perspective. In doing so, he reaches a filmmaking pinnacle. The power of stories comes from how they relate to an audience and I saw so much of myself in Lisa Coen. Not just in the way I too get a wee bit passionate and ranty in political discussions, or in the fact we share a tendency towards quasi-academic pretentiousness. I also recognised the emotions that lie beneath this behaviour, the anger and perversity that overpowers sense. But Margaret’s masterstroke goes one step beyond this. The film sets up a justification for why this behaviour exists. It creates a mental dichotomy, between adults, who see themselves as part of the world, and teenagers, who still see themselves as the focus of the world. And it charts the progression into adulthood as a shift from one mindset to the other.

It’s not an earth-shatteringly novel conclusion to draw, that much of teenage behaviour comes out of an unconscious assumption that the world revolves around them. But that doesn’t matter, because the point is not made didactically. It is not shoved in your face. It is a subtle truth that is left to the audience to realise, and is conveyed all the better because it is done without words.

In short, what lies at Margaret’s core is a beautiful truth. That makes for an amazing movie.

Adam Brodie


Rating: 15
UK DVD Release Date: 2 July 2012
Directed By: Kenneth Lonergan
Cast:Anna Paquin, Mark Ruffalo, Matt Damon, Jean Reno, Kieran Culkin
Buy: Margaret On DVD

Margaret - Official Trailer - 2011 Published via LongTail.tv


1 July 2012

Win The Rise and Fall of a White Collar Hooligan on DVD

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To celebrate 2nd July UK DVD release of The Rise and Fall of a White Collar Hooligan (Momentum Pictures) we are offering three winners the chance to win a copy of the DVD and a bonus DVD of The Football Factory. 

Soccer hooliganism explodes into the world of white-collar crime head on as two recently reunited footie friends find themselves way out of their league in this hard-hitting compelling British crime-thriller – based on a true story - from the producers of “The Last Seven” and “Elfie Hopkins”.

Unemployed and desperately seeking work, Mike Jacobs bumps into an old friend, Eddie Hill, during a post-match riot and arranges to hook up for a drink later that evening. Fortuitously, Ed’s got a business opportunity for Mike – working as a courier, cash-in-hand, no questions asked. Concerned that he might be getting involved in drug dealing, Mike’s somewhat relieved to learn that Ed’s scam involves credit card fraud and the only victims as far as they are concerned are the banks. What Mike doesn’t know is Ed is in the pocket of notorious London gangster whose choice of crime may have changed but whose methods certainly haven’t. Seduced by the money, drugs women and new life his new career delivers, Mike ignores the warning signs and, with circumstances spiralling way out of control, is eventually forced to make a life-changing decision, the repercussions of which will affect everyone close to him.

Described by Nuts as a “Hard as nails Brit gangster thriller,The Rise and Fall of a White Collar Hooligan (Momentum Pictures) is available to download and on DVD from 2nd July.

For a chance to win this film on DVD along with The Football Factory answer the following question:

Q.What was the name of the Film Trilogy Simon Tanter directed starring Simon Phillips?

A.Jack & Jill

B. Jack Talks

C.Jack Says

Send your answer , name, address, to have your email to  cinehouseuk@gmail.com header As ‘white collar’. Deadline:July 22nd, 2012 (2359hrs) .

Terms and Conditions



  • This prize is non-transferable.
  • No cash alternatives apply.
  • UK & Irish entries only
    The Peoples Movies, Cinehouse and Momentum Pictures have the right to alter, delay or cancel this competition without any notice
  • The competition is not opened to employees, family, friends of The Peoples Movies, Cinehouse, Momentum Pictures employees
  • This competition is promoted on behalf of Momentum Pictures
  • The Prize is to win win The Rie and Fall of the white collar hooligan on dvd with The Fotball factory dvd
  • To enter this competition you must send in your answer, name, address only, Deadline July 22nd, 2012 (2359hrs)
  • Will only accept entries sent to the correct email (cinehouseuk@gmail.com), any other entry via any other email will be void.
  • The Peoples Movies, Cinehouse takes no responsibility for delayed, lost, stolen prizes
  • The competition is opened to Aged 18  and over 
  • Unless Stated Please  Do Not Include Telephone Numbers, we don’t need them
  • The winning entries will be picked at random and contacted by email
  • By sending your entry for this competition you are confirming you have read and agreed to these Terms & Conditions.
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CROWS ZERO II DVD Review

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Hedge Your Bets This August With OUTSIDE BET On DVD

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Hedge your bets on this summer’s feel good romantic comedy as Outside Bet arrives on shelves on 20th August 2012. 

It is 1985: Thatcher is in power, Sade is on the radio, and the print workers have gone on strike. But nothing, not even a scale eight earthquake can dishearten a group of close friends that meet every Sunday in their regular South London pub for a pint and free flowing banter of the highest order.

An impressive host of British acting talent including Academy Award® nominee Bob Hoskins (Mona Lisa, Made in Dagenham), BAFTA® winner Jenny Agutter (An American Werewolf in London, Equus) and Phil Davis (Fast Girls, Notes on a Scandal) are joined by relative newcomers Emily Atack (The Inbetweeners), Calum McNab (The Football Factory, The Firm) and Adam Deacon (Anuvahood, Kidulthood).

Set against the backdrop of a changing way of life—as Rupert Murdoch moves the printing of his newspapers from Fleet Street to Wapping—this is a tale of seven firm friends, who embark on a unique journey that eventually leads them to gamble all of their savings and redundancy money on a single race. Sure to charm and based on the semi-autobiographical novel The Mumper by Mark Baxter and Paulo Hewitt, Outside Bet is released on DVD by Universal Pictures UK Ltd. on 20th August 2012.

For Mark and his mates in eighties South London, life doesn’t promise much more than a day job at the printers and nights out at the local boozer. But when they’re given a chance to buy a young racehorse, Mark sees an opportunity to change everyone’s lives forever. After some gentle persuasion, the six lads and their beautiful friend Katie pool their savings and take a gamble on this potential winner. Can ‘The Mumper’ really go the distance and win Mark the girl of his dreams?
Join Bob Hoskins, Calum Macnab, Jenny Agutter, Emily Atack and a great British supporting cast for a feelgood adventure that beats the odds.

Because sometimes getting what you want, means making an OUTSIDE BET.




Pre Order /Buy:Outside Bet On DVD

29 June 2012

Zombie Myth Goes New Wave In Promo For MODERNGRUMBLE

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As regular Cinehouse/The Peoples Movies we do love the odd film or two in the zombie genre and it's always nice to see someone try something a little different. Toby Venable is trying something a little different and it was only a matter of time we got a arthouse zombie film and that film is MODERNGRUMBLE  and we now have an extended promo trailer. This is actually been sold as a coming of age film of a young monster on a road trip through an alternative deep south and he could possibly be the messiah. It seems this is a visual poem inspired by Tarkovsky and Bresson, visually looks fantastic very gloomy but when does a post apocalyptic world actually be cheerful.!
This is actually 8 minutes long and plays out like a short film than a actual promo trailer, check it out below I'm sure you'll be perfectly surprised.

MODERNGRUMBLE Full Trailer from Toby Venable on Vimeo.

source: Quietearth

Managa Entertainment Bringing Rin Okumura's BLUE EXORCIST This August

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A lot of teens are embarrassed by their parents, but Rin Okumura has more right than most - his father turns out to be Satan himself! Combining sizzling action scenes, quirky comedy and luscious art design, Blue Exorcist follows Rin on his quest to become the strongest exorcist at the True Cross Academy so that he can give his demonic dad the ass-kicking he deserves.

Quick tempered and fond of a good scrap, 15-year-old Rin Okumura has grown up being called a ‘demon child’ but it's still a shock to discover that he is, in fact, the literal son of Satan. When his guardian, Father Fujimoto Shirou, dies defending him against demons, Rin defies his Hellish heritage and enrols at the True Cross Academy, determined to become the world's strongest exorcist.
Starting any new school is a challenge, but Rin's got it tougher than most. Not only must he master his deadly demonic powers and fight the forces of darkness, but Rin also finds himself in the unenviable position of being instructed by his genius twin brother Yukio, who is already a teacher at the Academy! Then there's the question of how Rin's fellow classmates - shy Shiemi, hot-blooded Bon and haughty Izumo - will react if they ever discover his true parentage…

Blue Exorcist is a genuine all-rounder, an anime that's equally at home with hi-octane fight scenes, fast-paced comedy, bittersweet drama and even a dash of romance. Starring a strong pair of protagonists in Rin and Yukio, the shonen series also features a substantial supporting cast, gorgeous graphics and surprisingly deep character development. All in all, Blue Exorcist is one Hell of a show.

Manga Entertainment are bringing this one to UK&Ireland and August 20th is the day of reckoning, check out the film' trailer below.

Blue Exorcist Trailer #3 Published via LongTail.tv

EIFF 2012: V/H/S Review

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★★★★1/2


Found footage horror, V/H/S has completely revitalised a played-out, repetitive style of filmmaking with six chilling anthology tales. Ti West (House of The Devil), Glenn McQuaid ((I Sell The Dead) and Adam Wingard (A Horrible Way To Die) are just three of the directors to contribute to this chilling anthology.

V/H/S opens with a group of criminals assaulting young women and vandalising property. They are hired by an anonymous client to break into an abandoned house and obtain a mysterious video tape. The group begin to work their way through a series of terrifying tapes, each revealing a different short film.

V/H/S manages to fuse so many horror sub-genres together in an innovative and chilling manner, capturing all that fans love in the genre. However, this is not clear from the shaky onset, where teenagers victimise young women, whilst filmed on a handheld camera - it was a struggle to engage with this. As these young men break into the abandoned house and the horror starts, director, Adam Wingard completely pulls it together. This over-arching story is just as tense and disturbing as any of the segments that it flawlessly seems together.

The first segment from David Bruckner (The Signal) entitled Amateur Night follows three college freshmen with video recording spy glasses, hoping to pick up some easy girls and make a sex tape. However, one of the girls who has been brought back's behaviour is a little troubling. This chilling short film is thoroughly well developed, with some completely unexpected and unsettling gory twists.

This is followed by Ti West's Second Honeymoon, a tale of a loving couple staying at an isolated Texas motel whilst on vacation. However, when a creepy young woman starts banging on the door things take a shocking turn. West's short tackles the idea of home invasion, with the intruder filming the sleeping victims on their own handheld camera, showcasing a disturbing twist on handheld camera norms.

The third short, Glenn McQuaid's Tuesday The 17th follows four teens venturing into the woods, where gruesome murders previously took place. This may read like the traditional Friday The 13th teens in the wood style slasher, but McQuaid's killer is created with a completely innovative twist.

Joe Swanberg's The Strange Thing That Happened to Emily When She Was Younger proves to well-crafted, suspenseful ride. Swanberg's tale follows the Skype conversations of a couple, terrorised by ghosts. As a viewer we are thrust into dark, grainy rooms left to scan for the source of terror.

My personal favourite segment, 10/31/98 by collaborative group called Radio Silence proves to be a spectacularly crafted and completely unsettling piece of filmmaking. It follows four men looking for a Halloween party - they end up at a creaky old house with some macabre practices going on in the attic. Radio Silence allow the house to completely come alive, with walls moving and doors disappearing - it is a true visual feast of terror, fusing elements of The Amityville Horror with Rosemary's Baby.

V/H/S is a sure fire treat for horror fans, bringing a much needed spark of energy to the handheld camera style of filmmaking. Each segment is flawlessly crafted and diverse enough to maintain your interest for the near two hour run time. I would go as far to say that it is the strongest horror film of 2012.

Andrew McArthur



Stars: Calvin ReederJoe Swanberg ,Jas Sams
Directors: Adam Wingard, David Bruckner, Ti West, Glenn McQuaidJoe Swanberg , Radio Silence
Release: 28th June (EIFF)

EIFF 2012: Berberian Sound Studio Review

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★★★1/2☆


Director, Peter Strickland (Katalin Varga) presents us with the truly unsettling look at the power of sound in his latest feature, the Toby Jones lead, Berberian Sound Studio - which makes its world premiere at this years' Edinburgh International Film Festival.

Set in the 1970s, Berberian Sound Studio follows British sound technician, Gilderoy, as he works in Italy on a gruesome horror film. Soon Gilderoy's work on this dark feature slowly begins to bleed into his everyday life.

Berberian Sound Studio is certainly not a horror film, instead more of a psychological thriller reminiscent of Hammer Films "Mini-Hitchcocks". This completely absorbing and brooding drama manages to be unsettling, rather than scary. Strickland's direction immediately emphasises a sense of foreboding, with the distinctive use of the sounds created in the studio capturing Gilderoy's troubling mental state.

The vibrant and unsettling power of the sound is so strong, that we never see any of the imagery linked to this gruesome horror film (apart from its blood red opening titles) it is simply talked about, yet seeing these sounds created still has a sinister impact. Who knew hacking a watermelon or smashing some courgettes on ground could have such a chilling impact.

Berberian Sound Studio is at its best when capturing the changing mental state of Gilderoy - most notably one frantic, dream-like sequence where the technician's life blurs with the Italian horror film as he believes there is an intruder in his apartment. Jones performance is terrifically understated, managing to capture both his initial coyness to his more extreme infuriation whilst working on the project. For an actor, that is traditionally cast in supporting roles, Jones proves to be equally impressive in a leading role.

Unfortunately, a utterly confusing and unnecessary twist ending spoils the foreboding and impact so carefully established throughout Berberian Sound Studio. This extreme twist is not given the build-up that it deserves only working as a method of shocking the viewer, but lacking any clear explanation or clarity. It marks a disappointing end to an otherwise well-crafted piece of cinema.

For the most part, Berberian Sound Studio is a unsettling, brooding psychological horror, boasting a magnificent turn from Toby Jones. The well-crafted narrative and powerful sound use are unfortunately spoilt by an over-ambitious twist ending.

Andrew McArthur


Stars: Toby JonesTonia Sotiropoulou , Cosimo Fusco
Director: Peter Strickland
Release: 28th June (EIFF) August 31st, 2012 (UK)