Monday, 15 June 2026

The Capture - Season 2 (2026 Ben Chanan)

The Secretary of State is murdered in a televised conference. ("He's about to be assassinated" Q says. After he is I say "That was your fault" to which she replies "If we wind it back I could say something different" which I thought was absolutely in character with the show - say something different and something different happens!) Holliday Grainger identifies the killer Killian Scott but the murder has been deep faked and shows a different culprit. When the new Head of Station is appointed he turns out to be the murderer, leaving Holliday and us in a very confused state.

(The writers once again have failed to appreciate that cameras record to their own memory cards and that image couldn't be deep faked.)

He turns out to be an operative for 'The Increment' (I know, where do they get these names?) a secret paramilitary operation responsible only to MI5. Which is run by 'Simon', an AI-driven computer!

Holliday is helped by her mates on the inside Ginny Holder and Nigel Lindsay, and by former colleagues Ben Miles and Lia Williams. She realises her own team has many moles.

In the end all the bad guys get away with it and Holliday seems to be compliant and take no further action. We'll see about that if Season 4 comes along.

With Indira Varma (tough broadcaster), Hugh Quarshie, Andrew Buchan, Ron Perlman (CIA), Daisy Waterson (sister), Kenneth Collard ('Wizard').

But why is it shot so darkly? It may be that someone's trying for a Gordon Willis 70s paranoid thriller approach, but it just looks awful and is distracting.

Look - their version of a BBC broadcast -


Compared to an actual news broadcast -


Here's the Happy Couple -


Well that's another six hours gone.

Sunday, 14 June 2026

South of France Triple Bill: Bonjour Tristesse (1958 Otto Preminger) / Two For the Road (1967 Stanley Donen) / To Catch a Thief (1954 Alfred Hitchcock)

Francoise Sagan was only 18 when 'Bonjour Tristesse' was first published in 1954. It's a short novel (132 pages in original English translation). The adaptation was by Arthur Laurents. 

Saul Bass credits. CinemaScope. On location Paris / Côte D'Azure. Seberg's short hair (just before A Bout de Souffle). David Niven (and Roland Culver, briefly). Georges Périnal reunited with Georges Auric 27 years after Cocteau's Sang d'un Poete. Auric writes like a mischievous elf - like Seberg. Deborah Kerr. Maids who are all interchangeable sisters. Colour coded costumes. Amazing hats. Mylène Demongeot (23). A trick cyclist.



I would say that Niven and Seberg's relationship is just a bit too close for good.

The haunting theme song is sung by Juliette Greco, lyrics Arthur Laurents and music by Georges Auric. Classy Saul Bass credits too.

Mylène Demongeot is the 'brilliant' young girlfriend of David Niven, Geoffrey Horne the studious boy across the bay.

In a very international production, it's interesting to see that Brit Denys Coop is Georges Perinal's operator.

It was apparently filmed at La Fossette, the villa owned at the time by the founder of newspaper France-Soir, Pierre Lazareff. You can hire the villa - it's only £31,927 a week!

Note sneaky drinking maid:





We decided to stay in France with Two For the Road, a most brilliantly presented study of marriage in jumbled up time - all the work of screenwriter Frederic Raphael. Chris Challis had adventures with the car in making the photography as real as possible. Henry Mancini underscores the bittersweet series of events perfectly.

Some of the fashions are hilarious.


Partly based on the real travels of Raphael and his wife Sylvia along Route Nationale 6, or as far as Rome, where this was written. He took all the plot elements and wrote them on the back of cards, shuffled them, then wrote the film in the random order of the cards. (But it can't have been just that simple - some of the match cuts are so well worked out.) This even includes the trick of seeing the different time periods overlap within the same scene, viz. where the newer versions of themselves pass the old ones by on the road. It's very clever, and manages an insightful, trenchant look at a relationship along the way.

Also very funny, not just in Hepburn's ghastly wardrobe, but in lines like "The girls were absolutely potty about you and so - heaven knows - were you" and the shot of lobsters followed by the sunburned couple.

They were certainly happier in the old days.



Claude Dauphin is the client and Nadia Gray his wife, William Daniels and Elenor Bron the offensive Manchesters ("Howie, you're the biggest untapped pocket of natural gas known to man"), Georges Descrières the smooth lover and it's not in fact Jacqueline Bisset's debut (she had already been in The Knack, Casino Royale, Drop Dead Darling  and Cul-de-Sac).

Far too easily dismissed as a star vehicle travelogue romcom, film fully embraces the nouvelle vague and is dazzling, sardonic, tender, loudly funny and unbeatable. Donen approached Raphael on the back of Nothing But the Best. It lost money.

First saw it on TV on 25 July 1977 and grew increasingly to love it over many viewings, including a memorable cinema screening in Paris on 24 October, 1992.

The line that we keep misquoting is in fact "No Ruthie, I didn't. I did not. No. No, I didn't. No."

A jewel of a screenplay, nominated for both BAFTA and Oscar (A Man For All Seasons and Guess Who's Coming to Dinner won) - Fred's 95, birthday on August 14, and was married to Sylvia since 1955 (she dies a coup,e of years ago. By a remarkable coincidence I wrote to William Boyd the next day who said he'd had 'lunch today with Freddie Raphael and his son Stephen. Fred is amazing – a little lame but all mental marbles intact. Sadly his wife Beetle died a couple of years ago – she was actually two years older than Fred. We first met them in 1976 – so, our lunch today was a kind of 50th anniversary.' You hope they got on better than Mark (Albert Finney) who's very selfish and chauvinistic and Joanna (Audrey Hepburn) who's materialistic - a nicely shaded couple of characters, in fact. Plus the marvellously shallow Manchesters (Eleanor Bron and William Daniels). Apparently Finney and Hepburn had a close and happy relationship during the filming and maybe even were lovers.

Finally tracked down Audrey's poem as the reasonably obscure  'The Bumble Bee' by Laura Elizabeth Richards - the line 'He never got home for early tea' is used quite effectively also in relation to her affair with George Descrières - and the hotel was the Domain St Just, which is now the Chateau St Just and looks like some kind of meetings venue (unfortunately)...

This was Donen's own Mercedes

"We've invested $60 in anti-snake equipment."
"Well let's hope someone gets bitten by a snake."

It's marvellously put together too though by Donen and editors Madelèine Gug and Richard Marden.


Maurice's place sure looks like the same villa in La Piscine which was at L'Oumède, Var, St Tropez. According to Wikipedia, it was!

Finally, to wrap up our sojourn in the south of France, it had to be To Catch A Thief, which is just such a well made film.

Begins as a model of silent story-telling, and concludes with the greenest nights on film. In fact those roof sets and the green on Blu-Ray makes it quite trippy.

Grant is at his most lithe and Bond-y, but you have to relish all the performances, especially that of Jessie Royce Landis. With Grace Kelly, John Williams (who I'd watch in anything), Charles Vanel. Brigitte Auber.

Keeps getting better the more you look at it (and colourful south of France locations look brilliant on Blu-Ray). For example, near the beginning is a most interesting car chase shot mainly from a helicopter. The reason for this is that we don't know that Cary Grant's car is being driven by his housekeeper, but Hitch doesn't want us to know that until the moment of pay-off.

More evidence that the James Bond series came from Hitchcock: another fast car driven by woman sequence (it comes from Notorious and ends up in Thunderball) and all the stuff about speedboats and the beach could also be in Thunderball; plus the very way Grant moves and looks is like a Connery blueprint.

The famous shot of Jessie Royce Landis stubbing out her cigarette in an egg is a sign of the director's disgust of this particular food item (interesting then that insurance agent John Williams is treated to a delicious Quiche Lorraine ("Ah yes, I've heard of these")).



Another entertaining collaboration with John Michael Hayes, with some of A team in evidence - Burks, Tomasini - but the music here is by Lyn Murray (real name Lionel Breeze!) and interestingly sounds in arrangement like Herrmann (bassoons, oboes) though the latter's collaboration with Hitch didn't begin until the same year's Trouble with Harry.

One of the most amusing directors' appearances with Grant looking directly at Hitchcock (a moment that used to be lost altogether on cropped TV prints).


Grace Kelly  did not die on the mountain roads because of her lack of ability behind the wheel but because she suffered a stroke which caused her to lose control. She was Princess Grace for 26 years, at least. I love the shot in the fireworks sequence, when her face is in shadow but her diamond necklace is lit. And the moment where Grant - who's so suntanned he's almost turned black by this point - tosses his chicken into the picnic basket and he pulls Kelly down to kiss her and her head's in the basket, lying, presumably, on top of the chicken.

John Michael Hayes' script is actually quite risqué. It's a fabulous entertainment, looks great and Hitch is thoroughly in command. You can say what you like about Tomasini's editing, but all Hitch's films are brilliantly edited and the array of interesting shots and set ups is all part of the Master's Art. People don't make films like this any more.

Lots of sound dubbing evident - people saying lines of dialogue when their mouths aren't moving.

Alma came up with the car chase shot by helicopter sequence. They both loved the riviera. She could remember the turns of the road to map it out so accurately.

Q loves this dress

There are many reports from on set that Hitch was barely paying attention during the shooting of several scenes - it was all in his head already. Though if you look at the note he's written to the second unit, published by Truffaut, you can see he's very much focusing on details.

To dismiss it as lightly entertaining fluff would ignore the great skill that has gone into it - there's for example all those great changes of shot set up in even the simplest scenes.




Toy Story (1995 John Lasseter)

Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Don Rickles, Wallace Shawn, Annie Potts.

Highlight: Woody coming to 'life' and scaring the hell out of toy torturing neighbour.

Depicts the casual violence with which children play with toys.


Bosch, according to Q


Saturday, 13 June 2026

The Choral (2025 Nicholas Hytner)

Alan Bennett screenplay about a Yorkshire town in WW1, and the amateur choir's attempt to stage Elgar's 'The Dream of Gerontius'.

Ralph Fiennes, Roger Allum, Jacob Dudman, Amara Okereke, Emily Fairn, Mark Addy, Robert Emms, Alun Armstrong, Lyndsey Marshal, Reuben Bainbridge, Shaun Thomas, Ron Cook, Simon Russell Beale (as Elgar).

Mike Eley photographed it in Bradford. I did question a couple of Tariq Anwar's editing choices.


But enjoyed it overall.

Jaws (1975 Steven Spielberg)

There's a 007 on the licence plate that Dreyfuss pulls out of Shark #1 - Q tells me this is a reference to Spielberg's desire to make a Bond film, but Broccoli turned him down... twice.

I was surprised when I saw it first how gory it was for an 'A' certificate - how did they get away with it? Maybe the censor thought the fake shark was funny.

Carl Gottlieb, who was one of the writers


Friday, 12 June 2026

Falling (2026 Jack Thorne)

I think that Jack Thorne did have some religion in his life - the singing on the bus thing - so he's not coming at at it from the total outside, useful when it comes to writing sermons, the last rites or confronting wife abusers in prison. But no - that isn't the main question. The main question is - how do you pronounce Paapa? It's apparently PAH-pa. And then Es-ee-AY-doo.

There's some meaty stuff in here - Paapa's revelations about being in foster care, for example. But this is a love story, or, as I prefer to think of it - a story about love. In particular between a nun and a Catholic priest.

Good stuff from deaf sister Sophie Stone and fellow priest Adrian Scarborough. Holly Rhys is the troubled teenager, Jason Watkins the Backwards Bishop.

It hasn't had the best response from audiences or critics. I thought it was different, and the two leads were good - Keeley Hawes is the nun, by the way - we watched all six 45 minute episodes in a run, and were enjoying the fact that the sound mixer had absolute freedom to drop that peacock call in to any scene whenever he or she wanted.

Niamh Cusack is the head nun, Tina Brown the battered wife. You can bet that Jack Thorne is writing something right now.

And I know it's in the wrong shape but I like this:

- because it reminds me of this:


It's Fritz Eichenberg's 1943 Jane Eyre cover, that we discovered from Definitely Maybe.


Thursday, 11 June 2026

Tip Toe (2026 Russell T. Davies)

Yes, I think I know where Davies is going with this - it's an angry cry out at anti-LGBT feeling, but I'm not sure I buy it. I would have thought that attitudes - particularly in young people - would have softened towards these issues. Instead he chooses to paint a portrait of two innocuous Manchester neighbours, Alan Cumming and David Morrissey, and how one ends up murdering the other - something I find shocking but scarcely credible. Otherwise it's well written and acted, though I hated the ending, all these titles 'such and such got a life sentence' - I always feel that these aren't proper endings.

The references to all the shocking stuff online are quite disturbing. Overall it left an unpleasant taste in the mouth.

So - the always brilliant Emily Berrington is joined by: Pooky Quesnel, Paul Rhys (who tells us the world is doomed because of croissants), Jackson Connor and Joseph Evans (younger and older brother), Iz Hesketh (trans).

5 x 45 for Channel 4.

The Best Film Composers

Ennio Morricone.

John Barry.

Bernard Herrmann.

Thomas Newman.

Georges Auric.

Your Friends and Neighbors - Season 2 (2026 Jonathan Tropper)

Everyone's got so much money - "That house looks like a hotel" sort of thing, "This is my Tuesday Porsche". And the satirical edge is that everyone has so much stuff that if something's nicked they won't even notice it. Then a charismatic billionaire moves in - James Marsden. Improves Olivia Munn's fortunes by giving her a house sale and restoring relations with neighbours, who are clubbed against her for framing Coop (John Hamm). But despite an amiable meeting, Coop gets into deep trouble being filmed nicking the billionaire's book - and then is blackmailed into helping him in a giant money hiding scam.

Coop's ex Amanda Peet is dealing with peri-menopause, and her daughter Isabel Gravitt rebels by not wanting to go to Princeton. The son Donovan Colan is having affair with billionaire's daughter Erin Robinson.

Coop's oldest friend Hoon Lee (Ming the Merciless) recklessly decides to go into the burglary game much to the annoyance of Coop's partner Aimee Carrero.

10 episodes for Apple, ending somewhat loosely. Marsden has been disappeared after a humorous meltdown but you feel the ramifications aren't yet felt. It's fun trying to identify the classic films Coop is watching. It's well written - every time Coop goes into a voiceover you know it's worth paying attention.



Wednesday, 10 June 2026

Bollocks of 2026

It's sadly early to start this list (5 January) but unfortunately we have a contender already, Hunting Wives, some crap about a woman who finds herself in the gun packing heart of Texas Republicanism. The title indicates how crap it will be.

Can You Keep a Secret? Dawn French, Mark Heap 'comedy'.

The Lady. True story of Fergie's dresser-turned-murderer. Just wasn't engaging.

The Fortune. Terribly written crap with Eleanor Tomlinson, set in Hartlepool. She inherits from someone she doesn't know and behaves implausibly from the off. Channel 5 bollocks.

Monday, 8 June 2026

The Lion in Winter (1968 Anthony Harvey)

James Goldman adapted his own play, but a mix of location shooting and artful staging makes this quite cinematic; editor John Bloom knows what he's doing. It's basically a family power play as aging king Henry II, Peter O'Toole, manoeuvres around his now imprisoned wife Katharine Hepburn and three competing sons: Anthony Hopkins, John Castle and foolish John Terry, also involving the king of France, Timothy Dalton. Jane Merrow is the king's mistress who's being optioned out as a marriage bait for different parties. All the acting's great.

The funniest moment is when various parties visit the king of France and all get variously hidden behind curtains as more people come to visit. And Hepburn's line 'All families have their problems'.

I wasn't going to watch it, I was just editing the ads out, but I saw the name Chic Waterson and I just sort of fell into it. He does his usual great smooth job camera operating and his guvnor Douglas Slocombe is lighting the castles artfully (back then, it had to be lit). (Robin Vidgeon is camera assistant.) The zoom is used judiciously.

Also benefits for an unusual and mature score from John Barry. Gerry Humphreys is the sound mixer. Barry and Hepburn won Oscars and BAFTAs, Goldman won an Oscar, O'Toole was nominated for both

It goes on a bit, though (2 hours 10).




You would have guessed that some of the cast were also in the stage version but that wasn't the case.

It's apparently a favourite of Aaron Sorkin, but I can't actually substantiate that.

I guess it's also the unlikeliest Christmas film!


Sunday, 7 June 2026

Taxi Driver (1976 Martin Scorsese)

Marty and Paul Schrader's best films. For all Travis's madness and disgust, he somewhat surprisingly becomes the saviour (the Knight) of Jodie Foster's teenaged prostitute (the Princess in the Castle). (Considering she's second billed, she's not in it much.)

A process called Chemtone was used to saturate those opening shots.







Clueless (1995 Amy Heckerling)

“Anything happens to my daughter, I’ve got a .45 and a shovel."

Alicia Silverstone's character Cher is quite sweet really - she doesn't have a bad bone in her body and is trying to look after her father (Dan Hedaya) as best as she can. He's very gruff but good ("I couldn't be more proud of you if you'd really achieved these grades") and when he sees Paul Rudd's interested in her he's secretly pleased.


With Stacey Dash, Brittany Murphy, Donald Faison, Wallace Shawn, Breckin Meyer, Jeremy Sisto, Twink Caplan (also associate producer).

Snaps to the costumer designer Mona May!

Vice (2018 Adam McKay)

I had the day planned well: Strangers When We Meet, Petulia and Taxi Driver, but Q decided she wanted to watch Vice. The only problem with Adam McKay’s films is that they’re a bit like documentaries with lots of characters and lots of complicated information which combined with Hank Corwin hurling lots of images at you is quite exhausting and changes the shape of the day. (And somehow couldn't then be followed by Petulia.)

For me the problem with this film is Christian Bale / Cheney - uninteresting. But what he did was shocking and appalling (and laid the way for Trump's 'executive' behaviour now).

‘Did Americans watch it?’ Q asked. They did - it grossed $47m domestically.

Good cast otherwise: Amy Adams, Sam Rockwell, Steve Carrell, Eddie Marsan, Alison Pill, Jesse Plemons.

Won Oscar for Make Up and Hair - Greg Cannom, Kate Biscoe and Patricia Dehaney. Adams, Bale and Rockwell were nominated, as were film, director, screenplay and editing.




Little Man What Now? (1934 Frank Borzage)

Margaret Sullavan and Douglass Montgomery share a bed - this is just before the Hays Code really clamped down. They are a couple who are struggling, she is going to have a baby. His employer is a right bastard, DeWitt Jennings, who only has him employed hoping he will marry his daughter; that game's soon up. His step mum offers them a room in Berlin and a job; she's a right cow - Catherine Doucet, wants to be paid for the room, there is no job, and regularly has 'parties' i.e. runs a brothel. There the couple meet charming rogue, Alan Hale, a winning performance. Then he gets a job with a total cunt Etienne Girardot, and following a disastrous encounter with actor Alan Mowbray he's fired. Luckily Sullavan has at least found lodgings with nice furniture dealer Christian Rub. Though basic, their little flat above the furniture shop at least has a Borzage Balcony.

So yes, another in Borzage's stable of lovers who triumph through love.

We're in Germany -  there are signs of social unrest and near the end our hero is assaulted by the police. It's the first in Borzage's 'Weimar trilogy' which continued with Three Comrades and The Mortal Storm.

Photographed by Norbert Brodine, art director Charles Hall, editor Milton Carruth, score by Arthur Kay. A Universal picture produced by Carl Laemmle Jr.




Saturday, 6 June 2026

Vertigo (1958 Alfred Hitchcock)

 I like all the profile shots: https://nicksfilmjottings.blogspot.com/2019/08/vertigo-1958-ah.html

This is definitely one of Hitch's most complex pictures, in which he effectively makes James Stewart the bad guy. Think about what happens after it's over: there's a good case that having found out what happens, Stewart drives her to the point of the first murder and then murders her. It's not hard to make that stick because he is obsessed (and has been ever since he first started following 'Madeleine'). (And the fact that he has implicitly stripped her naked after the 'fall' into the bay is another unspoken element.) When he struggles then succeeds to make Judy into Madeleine and she's 'Will you love me now?' it's one of the saddest and most haunting things in any Hitchcock picture - it's almost a case of domestic abuse. It's that that makes the film so chilling.


And here. it's not just the red / green, but that overly ornate ironwork that we've seen before:

Also that animated / dream scene is totally out there and once again puts Hitch way ahead of his time.

That isn't Novak though in the opening credits scene is it?

Oh, by the way, what's Hitch up to with his wall art in this one?

No idea about the tall one on the right. The bottom left could be a Klee or a Miro, same applies to the one above it. 0 / 4.

Good supporting cast as always, particularly Barbara De Geddes, but also Tom Helmore, Henry Jones (coroner), Ellen Corby, Konstantin Shayne, Lee Patrick (now owns Madeleine's car). Car? Did someone say car? Hers is a 1957 Jaguar Mk VII (Morse's was a Mk II 2.4) -

- his a 1955 Desoto Firedown Sportsman:

A good condition one will cost you about twenty grand, the Jaguar rather more.