Wednesday, 14 May 2025

Conclave (2024 Edward Berger)

Was finding Volker Bertelmann's music over-emphatic and annoying (he also scored the director's All Quiet on the Western Front) but soon was caught up in the intrigue, helped along by marvellous performances initially from Ralph Fiennes and Stanley Tucci. The screenplay by Peter Straughan won BAFTA and Oscar - it appears to be very true to Robert Harris's novel with all the same twists and turns.

BAFTA also awarded the editor Nick Emerson for sensible choices, and gave it Best Film and Best British Film, which seems a bit unnecessary. Stéphane Fontaine's photography was also nominated - I found it too dark - but that could be the way Amazon streamed it. I just can't tell any more. Might have to stop watching films streaming. Good sound mixing '# design Ben Baird.

Funnily enough I am reading Ingrid Bergman's autobiography and when I saw Isabella Rossellini I thought 'There's Ingrid!'

Rest of good cast: John Lithgow, Brian F O'Byrne, Sergio Castellitto, Carlos Diehz, Lucian Msamati (The Good Liar).


"It is a war!"

It was weird timing as Vatican City has literally just had a conclave and a new Pope elected.

Tucci in his second book 'What I Ate in a Year' reports that Cinecitta (where it was filmed) was in the same sad state of misrepair that it was 25 years ago and that the catering was 'disgusting. Really. Disgusting.' - which is not what you'd expect at all.

D.O.A. (1949 Rudolph Maté)

Why does Edmond O'Brien want to get away from hopeful fiancée to be Pamela Britton? That's not a good start for him, and then he starts ogling women in San Francisco hotel (accompanied by a Carry On like whistle), goes off with a group of salesman to a jive club where the sax player isn't moving his fingers, and tries to pick up a woman. Is it a morality tale - he's poisoned with 'luminous toxin' because he's a worthless skunk? 

Memorably told in flashback in a police station, it begins to unweave a plot of double-crossing and murder, with untrustworthy dames at every turn. Talking of dames, there's zero chemistry between O'Brien and Britton.

An unknown cast includes Luther Adler, Beverly Garland, Lynn Baggett, William Ching, Henry Hart, Neville Brand (the psychopath), Laurette Luez.

Ernest Laszlo shoots good night on location stuff in San Francisco - the Bradbury Building is briefly featured - and Dmitri Tiomkin provides a suitably dramatic score. An independent - Harry M. Popkin production, released through United Artists.

Is it a film noir, according to my own strict definitions? Despite the lack of Chandlery dialogue, I guess it is. Written by Russell Rouse and Clarence Greene.


O'Brien we should know from White Heat, The Man Who Shot Liberty Vallance, The Barefoot Contessa, The Hitch-Hiker (also overdue) and The Wild Bunch.

Tuesday, 13 May 2025

Hacks - Season 4 (2025 Aniello / Downs / Statsky)

There's a great pull going on here because Ava has blackmailed her way into Head Writer position on Deborah's late night TV show, so there's huge conflict between them, though at the same time, there's a connecting pull of friendship that's trying to break through the hostility.

Monday, 12 May 2025

The Studio (2025)

It's quite tricky to make comedies about film making and the conflict between money and art - there have been more failures than hits. But this starts out with Seth Rogan being hired as the new studio head by Bryan Cranston and briefed to make a film about Cool Aid Man when what he really wants to do is work with Scorsese (who he manages to completely alienate in a funny scene). It turns out he really is not producer material (and anything he has been involved in sounds crap).

With Catherine O'Hara (former producer), Ike Barinholtz, Chase Sui Wonders, Kathryn Hahn.

Has that 'single take' technique, not sure if that adds anything, and Antonio Sanchez drumming, which definitely does. Second episode is actually called 'The Oner' and is one; documents Rogan repeatedly interrupting a single take shot, which we found intensely irritating! Then he chickens out of telling Ron Howard the last section of his new movie stinks. His behaviour continues to irritate, e.g. in episode where he insists that films are as important as healthcare. (His own films aren't even art - they're dross.)

So in a way we think this could all have been better than it is.

10 multi-length episodes for Apple. Somewhat ironically, it took five people to 'create' this concept: Seth Rogan, Evan Goldberg, Peter Huyck, Alex Gregory and Frida Perez.

Liked the advice Aaron Sorkin gives to starting out writers. "1. Shorter is better. 2. Faster is better. 3. Don't listen to anyone's advice."

And as we film buffs know, Wings of Desire wasn't in 70mm - some writer is trying to catch us out. Like seeing 'The African Queen in CinemaScope' - wasn't that in this show too?

Modern Family (2009 - 2020 Creators Steven Levitan, Christopher Lloyd (not that one))

We just finished watching the entire 11 seasons. I still think my favourite scene is Phil christening / Godfather.

Where are they now? is a good question.

Ed O'Neill is still working - was in TV series Clipped last year. He's 79. Sofia Vergara's most significant work has been 2024's Griselda as a ruthless cartel head - she was Emmy and Golden Globe nominated. Rico Rodriguez has taken to posting pictures of himself trying to look cool on Insta.

Over in the Dunphy family, Ty Burrell has done voiceover for Amy Poehler's animated comedy Duncanville (not that highly rated), Julie Bowen was in drama The Fallout (2021) and also voiced an animated show. Sarah Hyland's been in a Pitch Perfect TV series, Ariel Winter has also done loads of voice work and Nolan Gould is fairly low billed in rated drama Miranda's Victim, with Abigail Breslin.

Meanwhile Jesse Tyler Ferguson has appeared in The Good Fight, the notorious Cocaine Bear and 2024 drama All That We Loved. Eric Stonestreet and Aubrey Anderson-Emmons neither much of significance.

According to Buzzfeed the adult actors were earning $30-60,000 an episode in Season 1 (Ed a bit more - $95,000 plus a share of profits), which is still a hell of a lot, but $500,000 an episode by the end! When you consider that had 18 episodes, each one earned $9 million and the combined budget for the top stars was $54 mil! So - no one has to work, basically.





Speed (1994 Jan de Bont)

An utterly extraordinary idea written by Graham Yost and no doubt earning a ton of cash. Entertaining tosh. Do not get on board Bus 2525, that's all I can say.

With an emphatic Keanu Reeves and an empathetic Sandra Bullock are Dennis Hopper, Jeff Daniels, Joe Morton, Alan Ruck, Glenn Plummer, Carlos Carrasco.

You have to laugh, and not just at the bits you're supposed to laugh at.


In the days when big Hollywood Explosions were real


How come the bus is going up? I don't think we're supposed to ask

Photographed by Andrzej Bartkowiak. Something of an accomplishment by editor John Wright (Die Hard with a Vengeance, The Hunt For Red October, Secretariat, from 1973) who must have had a mountain of footage to work through (Barbara Dunning assisted).


Your Friends & Neighbors (2025 Creator Jonathan Tropper)

Though various writers credited.

In episode one, everything conspires against John Hamm. Following his wife's adultery (Amanda Peet) he's divorced and having to pay alimony so his wife and kids and stay in his house. He has an affair with a co-worker and is promptly sacked and his share of the firm's capital stolen. Takes to theft.

Two shows us a little more of the ex and her relationship with the kids and new boyfriend. Then plot shifts into more interesting waters when he realises the South American network of maids to the wealthy are a useful source of knowledge for a burglar...

As we near the end, the police investigate, and Hamm and his wife reconnect...

Sunday, 11 May 2025

Nonnas (2025 Stephen Chbosky)

Chbosky has two broadcasters in his name - HBO and Sky - what does that tell us? I don't know, but there must be something wrong with the way Netflix is streaming its content - there's no way Florian Ballhaus would have shot something so dark and murky that in places you just can't see what you're looking at.

A fairly predictable film, based on a true restaurant in Staten Island where nonnas do the cooking (shown at the end).

Vince Vaughan is the restaurateur, and the nonnas are an unrecognisable Lorraine Bracco, Brenda Vaccaro (Death Weekend / The House By the Lake), Talia Shire and Susan Sarandon, who, despite their differences, become blah blah.

So it was OK despite vision problems, quite entertaining but predictable. With Joe Manganiello, Linda Cardellini (that stupid Dead To Me thing), Drea de Matteo, Campbell Scott (the food critic, Big Night appropriately enough).

The car magically comes back at the end. Yeah.

Liz Maccie wrote it. Google thinks Stanley Tucci is in it, for some reason (maybe the Big Night connection). Edited by Anne McCabe.

Is this what cinematography now looks like or is it the way Netflix is streaming it?


Saturday, 10 May 2025

The Bucket List (2007 Rob Reiner)

Justin Zackham is the writer, created series Lights Out (2011) about a retired boxer, and One Chance (2013) the James Corden opera singer one.

Last time I had the feeling that they weren't actually anywhere in the world they visited. I think that is true and apparently even the skydiving scene was CGI, otherwise I think there would have been a lot of publicity about it. And as Q points out, the insurance probably would have prohibited it.

Mostly enjoyable though.

Edited by Robert Leighton. Photographed by John Schwartzman.




Thursday, 8 May 2025

VE Day Double Bill: Mrs Miniver (1942 William Wyler) / A Royal Night Out (2015 Julian Jarrold)

Teresa Wright should also have won the Oscar for The Best Years of Our Lives, in which she gives her best performance - she wasn't even nominated. Also won for Greer Garson, Film, Screenplay (Arthur Wimperis, James Hilton, George Froeschel, Claudine West - the same team who did the same year's Random Harvest), Photography Joe Ruttenberg. Harold Kress edited, music Herbert Stothart.

Churchill said its propaganda value was worth several battleships. Certainly the bombed out house and church, both with the sky visible, are potent symbols.

Greer Garson sporting the fashionable spaghetti look

Teresa Wright mopping the floor with Richard Ney

The true story on which A Royal Night Out is based is of course much more mundane than the one presented by writers Trevor de Silva and Kevin Hood. Elizabeth and Margaret were 19 and 14, for one thing. And here they are:

They were accompanied by a household staff of sixteen and of course did not experience the film's hi-jinks, though did conga in the Ritz. The film isn't the best in the world though does have a good last third, and as that's where Roger Allam appears it is perhaps no coincidence.

I remember talking to a lady dog walking - she had been allowed to go into London as a young lady to experience the jubilations. She got off the train and about the first thing she saw was a couple bonking in an alleyway!

Still, does capture the exuberant chaos of that night when the lights were finally turned back on.

I'm sure if Her Maj had watched it she would have thought it was bollocks.


Wednesday, 7 May 2025

Malpractice - Season 2 (2025 Grace Ofori-Attah)

Tom Hughes is a harassed psychiatric registrar involved in the suicide of a new mother, but there's a trail of incompetence and cover-up, also involving Selin Hizli, Zoe Telford, Jessica Layde, Tobi Bakare (Death in Paradise). That 'the Trust' ends up the bad guy I thought quite funny. Good writing. exciting drama.

Investigating: Jordan Kouamé, Helen Behan. 




Do You Know This Voice? (1964 Frank Nesbitt)

A boy has been kidnapped, a plucky Italian woman has seen the kidnapper's shoes, offers to make herself the target so the (useless) police can trap the kidnapper(s).

She is Isa Miranda (was in Summertime, La Ronde). With Dan Duryea, Gwen Watford, Peter Madden, Barry Warren.

Unknowns behind camera. Based on a novel Evelyn Berckman. British Lion.

Seen worse.



Funny Woman - Season 2 (2024 Morwenna Banks)

Oliver Parker directed. This is new material not based on Nick Hornby's writings.

The Gemma Arterton character is still trying to fight her way through sexism and old-fashioned values. At least finds an agent, an American. Just 4 x 45 this time.

Friends: Alexa Davies (rather good, I think) and Clare-Hope Ashitey. Writers Leo Bill and Matthew Beard. Useful new lawyer friend Lydia Leonard, Josie Lawrence (didn't recognise her). Director / lover Arsher Ali (who we just saw in Arthur and George). Barmaid Roisin Conaty comes in to save the show.



Good comedy routine at end proves the show will be a hit. Definitely room for one more.

Monday, 5 May 2025

The Secret of Roan Inish (1993 John Sayles & scr)

From the novel 'Secret of the Ron Mor Skerry' by Rosalie K Fry.

Another film about foreign cultures, folklore and myth, the sea and its inhabitants. Here, seals are most important.

A young girl is sent to her grandparents on the west coast of Ireland. They previously lived in faraway glimpsed Roan Inish but it's now uninhabited... or is it? She Jeni Courtney and cousin Richard Sheridan restore the dwellings to their former glory much to the surprise of grandparents Mick Lally and Eileen Colgan. John Lynch as another cousin is familiar from things such as Cal and The Secret Garden; sister Susan Lynch from Waking Ned, Cracker, plays the selkie.

Haskell Wexler's music and the traditional Irish songs are important factors. It's almost magic.




You & Me (2023 Tom Vaughan, Writer Jamie Davis)

Very glad to have found this finally on DVD (it was released in Australia). Nothing much to add to this. It just all comes together beautifully.

Davis' biggest body of work was an actor 169 episodes of Casualty. He hasn't really written anything else, which is a shame. Well, he has, it just hasn't been broadcast yet.




Mo - Season 2 (2025 Mohammed Amer)

Mo survives Mexico by working hard - one of his jobs is the wrestler 'Oso Pelestino' (the Palestinian Bear). Gets smuggled back to US but is caught, ends up being 'deported' but as he has no country remains in US. The family lose the olive farm. Mo's brother Omar Elba is finally told he's autistic. Mo and on-off girlfriend Teresa Ruiz are marred, which means he can join family and visit Palestine - which provides a suitably sober and emotional ending (actually filmed in Malta) - we see footage of Mo's real dad, and there's much comment about the Israeli stranglehold over the country. And the fight to remain positive.

It was a labour of love for Mo, who found the scenes back home emotional, and in interview says he now want to get back to stand-up.



Sunday, 4 May 2025

Training Day (2001 Antione Fuqua)

Denzel Washington won the Oscar for his role as a maverick and murderous LA detective; Ethan Hawke was nominated as the new-to-the-force cop who in one eventful day takes a crash course  in corruption. (not that there's anything he can do about it. the top cops are all aware of this corruption already.)

So a stinging screenplay from David Ayer. Loved the ending - tyhe community chooses not to back the renegade cop.

Photographed by Mauro Fiore, edited by Conrad Buff.




Benny & Joon (1993 Jeremiah Chechik)

Mary Stuart Masterson and Johnny Depp are terrific as eccentric couple.

With Declan Quinn, Oliver Platt, Julianne Moore, CCH Pounder, Dan Hedaya, Joe Grifasi, William H Macy.



Written by Barry Berman and Lesley McNeil. Photographed by John Schwartzman. Sensitievly edited by Carol Littleton. Good score from Rachel Portman.

Whale Rider (2002 Niki Caro & scr)

A most unusual film about Maori folklore, tradition and sexism. For Keisha Castel-Hughes it was her first acting job.

Rawiri Paratene, Vicky Haughton, Cliff Curtis, Grant Roa, Mana Taumaunu.

Lisa Gerrard's music is rather important.



Photographed by Leon Narbey.

Head (1968 Bob Rafelson & co-scr)

McGilligan dismisses it as a comedy that isn't funny, which I disagree with (e.g. 'waitress' to The Monkees - "Well, if it isn't God's gift to eight year olds"; later Peter Tork punches 'her' in the face) but also I think he misses the point - the film was supposed to appeal to stoners and acid heads, and was likely well received by that fraternity (co-writer Jack Nicholson and Rafelson had experimented heavily with both). In fact some of the ideas were composed by the boys themselves - Davy Jones, Peter Tork, Michael Nesmith and Micky Dolenz - over "a ton of dope", though they weren't credited. They are as engaging as ever.  And whilst it's impossible to sustain, and does ultimately disappear in a fizzle, there are plenty of eye-catching moments to a good soundtrack - notably the amazing black / white scene of Davy Jones, superbly choreographed to a Nilsson song and stunningly edited between the takes by Michael Pozen.

Some of the archive Vietnam / old TV edits work really well also. Also it's amusingly anti-Monkees - the band are mobbed and pulled apart by fans but turn out to be plastic dummies (as well as anti-corporate, anti-war etc.)



And following all the comments about being manufactured it's nice to see them actually performing live.

It was a total flop; was rediscovered at film retrospectives, and on TV, video and DVD, lately having had a Criterion reissue. I first saw it on TV in 1986 (Channel 4).

I have to say through that the films' montage to the Carole King / Toni Stern number 'As We Go Along' isn't as good as my own.