8 September 2012

Anton Corbjin : Inside Out DVD Review

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★★★1/2


Anton Corbjin : Inside Out is a recent doc that seems to have went straight to dvd about the brilliant photographer and sometimes film director Anton Corbjin. Anton Corbijn is probably most famous for his work with Joy Division, U2 and Depeche Mode. He also directed the films Control (biopic about Ian Curtis of Joy Division) and The American (with George Clooney).

The film is basically a snapshot about Anton’s transition from famed photographer to film director and his lifestyle in the last few years. He is very much a loner who travels the world photographing the rich and famous. It’s deals with his small family with his sisters, and aging mother.

The film could have used a bit more input from his friends talking more about his work. It also features quite a bit of making of footage from The American but a bit of making of footage from Control would have been nice. It does features quite a lot of photography and his music video work but still could have used a bit more. However it does tell you a about his why he started photographing musicians and why a lot of his work has religious imagery, because his father was a pastor in his native Holland.

It’s overall a insightful documentary on the best rock photographer since Mick Rock. As previously said a little more input from friends about his work would be good and less scenes of him looking bored in a hotel room. It does leave much to be desired about explaining his motive into making feature films. It is certainly worth watching especially since it’s a grand total of 80 minutes.

Ian Schultz

Rating:15
UK DVD/BD Release Date: 17th September 2012
Directed By: Klaartje Quirijns
Cast: Anton Corbijn, Bono, James Hetfield, Martin Gore


'Kill Zombie' DVD Review

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★★★☆☆


Dutch zombie horror Kill Zombie (original title Zombibi)tackles the horror genre with a ballsy understanding of its fan base and a quick sense of humour. Unfortunately its up against stiff opposition; Shaun of the Dead (2004) and Juan of the Dead (2011) are two stellar zombie features that handle the apocalypse in a similar bro-mantic black comedy style, still the film does well at holding its own.

Cutting straight to the action, Kill Zombie proves it’s for genre fans, no real exploration of the apocalypse and not too much focus on the concept of Armageddon as a social issue, Kill Zombie rolls up its sleeves and dives headfirst into the gory glory with a good sense of where its going and who its playing to. The film follows two brothers who after spending a night in jail, awake to find their city ravaged by zombie invasion. Joining forces with a police officer and two crazy criminals the group set off on a reluctant rescue mission through the deadly gore-splashed streets of Amsterdam.

Kill Zombie has some fantastic set pieces showing off a creative flair that lacks in many run-of-the-mill zombie features: a mini-gun sequence that’s grotesquely satisfying and a play park defence to name a couple. The more striking action sequences seem connected by typical zombie stock, but it’s incredibly tricky for a zombie film to maintain originality when so much has gone before. Even Romero seems to have lost some innovation. A key strength of the film is its comic timing and the skill with which its cast carry off the genuinely funny scenes. Kill Zombie is a prime example of what a good cast can do for a smaller production.

Though it looks good and has plenty of fun, Kill Zombie still lacks the heart of Juan or Shuan, heart that helped push those movies up past your bog-standard zombie massacre. And even though there’s a welcome and sometime innovative aspect to the design of the film, some things just don’t gel. The use of Tekken style fighting sequences is a marmite decision that threatens the integrity of the film, seeming just a little too unrealised and amateur.

Kill Zombie is for genre fans specifically, its lack of plot around the main characters stops it hitting the emotional impact of other mainstream cult black comedies but it does a good job of entertaining and showing off some really cool zombie action sequences. Its also one of few horror comedies that actually gets its comedy fairly spot-on.

SCOTT CLARK


Rating:15
UK DVD Release Date: 17th September 2012
Directed by: Martijn Smits, Erwin van den Eshof
Cast:Yahya Gaier, Mimoun Ouled Radi, Sergio Hasselbaink, Noel Deelen 

7 September 2012

Anna Karenina Review

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★★★★★

Anna Karenina is a story about love, and its place in society. It’s also a whirling, passionate film that picks up the phrase “all the world’s a stage” and runs with it. This is period drama stripped of the confines of realism. Is it perfect? No. But it is theatre, bold and striking, a little bit funny, and in a nutshell, achingly beautiful.

I’ve never read the famous novel of which the film is a stripped and streamlined interpretation. I have dallied with the Russian masters on occasion, but though I recognise the elegance of their prose, my reaction has always been that of The Guard: they take way too long in getting to the point. That is not the case here. If anything, you could say the film climaxes too early, in a fraught, heart-expanding sequence that brings me close to tears just thinking about it. But the main point is that Anna Karenina does not drag, which, considering that it’s a period drama, is nothing short of miraculous.

The reason for this is a brilliant union of technical talent and theatrical artifice. The conceit of Anna Karenina is that it’s shot largely on a single set. The lives of the characters play out within a giant ornate theatre, a setting that reflects the place drama has as the lifeblood of Russian aristocratic society. Their world is, symbolically and literally, a stage. It is a cramped world, a universe where multiple places exist within the same space. As characters move from scene to scene, the world changes shape around them. This practised flow of walls and windows sets a pace for the film, holding attention as a strong current might hold a swimmer: with subtle, unshakeable force.

Though of course, such smooth sailing requires a sharp cutter, so kudos is due to editor Melanie Oliver. Meanwhile, for the artifice itself, we have to thank director Joe Wright. The last-minute nature of his decision, to cast Tom Stoppard’s script in this theatrical mould, makes its silky execution all the more impressive. Anna Karenina is also an audio treat, with Dario Marianelli’s score accompanying the camera in a courtly dance through the drama.

But most importantly, this is a film of beautiful camerawork. To be frank, cinematographer Seamus McGarvey has had a blinding couple of years, his last two films being the haunting We Need To Talk About Kevin and the riotous joy of Avengers. The visuals in these films were practised, inventive and beautiful, and there is no difference here. Whether capturing the golden rolls of a cornfield in summer, or the depths of a lovers’ passion, McGarvey’s evocative imagery is the heart of Anna Karenina.

As for the story, the film proves to be a discussion about love from multiple viewpoints. Karenina herself (Keira Knightley) feels love to be a force of passion, something that is as much agony as pleasure. Her lover, the charming (and somewhat smouldering) Count Vronsky (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) feels the same way. This whirlwind however is contrasted with another form of love, held by Levin (Domhnall Gleeson) for Princess Kitty (Alicia Vikander). This is a quieter, but perhaps deeper emotion altogether. Arranged around these two pairings are Alexei Karenin (Jude Law) for whom love is a spiritual, dutiful thing and Oblonsky (Matthew Macfadyen) who treats love and passion as separate, but equally necessary. As such he is married, but likes to supplement this with some more ‘freshly baked’ experiences.

This story is well written. Stoppard’s dialogue is a mixed bag, but of style more than quality. The characters mostly speak in the mannered form you would expect from period drama, but now and again he flavours a scene with a dose of natural frankness. It’s a little jarring, but, at the same time, keeps the film from overdosing on highbrow. The story’s structure, as I alluded to earlier, is perhaps a little lacking. There’s a slight issue where Anna Karenina’s plot dominates the film’s second half, what with Levin and Kitty’s arc finishing about halfway through it. But to be honest, that’s only to be expected. The film is named after Karenina after all. Also the second half has much to like in it, including some very sharp commentary, the best of which is a single sentence summarising Karenina’s ostracism. She is isolated by society, not because she broke a law, but because she broke unwritten rules. It is a dark piece of wit that skewers an unpalatable aspect of human society and custom.

In comparison then to the writing and visuals, it is the acting that left the least impact. This is fairly odd: normally actors are the face of a film, the gilt on a visual foundation, but here it is the visuals that gild and the performances that support. Knightley and Law give fairly broad performances, strong but without much subtlety. Gleeson and Vikander are more noticeable: it is their chemistry that makes the aforementioned climactic scene such a delight. But still, the performances are not Karenina’s selling point.

Rather, Anna Karenina is a film of visual beauty, theatrical flow and endless movement. It is an immersive rush of an experience, a multifaceted exploration of love, and a tragic commentary on how society constrains the expression of pure feelings, while enforcing unhappy stability. It is, without a doubt, one of the best films of 2012. But this greatness is not elitist. Anna Karenina may be built on highbrow source material, but the film wraps this up in a slick package, easy on modern eyes, resulting in a film that is intelligent but also incredibly immersive.

Adam Brodie

Rating: 12A
UK release Date: 7th September 2012
Directed By: Joe Wright
Cast: Keira Knightley, Aaron Johnson, Jude Law, Kelly Macdonald, Domhnall Gleeson