Sunday, 22 February 2026

The BAFTAs

Biggest surprise was Robert Aramayo not only winning Rising Star, but sweeping Best Actor from under the noses of Leo, Timothee Chalamet, Ethan Hawke, Michael Jordan and Jesse Plemons.

Sinners won Best Original Screenplay over I Swear, Marty Supreme, The Secret Agent and Sentimental Value. But PTA won for Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Director. He credited his AD Adam Somner who had been his assistant for 20 years and who died during the filming of One Battle After Another.

We were delighted that Jessie Buckley and Wunmi Mosaku won their acting categories.

Pushed into the 'awarded earlier' slot was now Best Cinematography - can you believe that? They'll cover Visual Effects but not Cinematography?? Michael Bauman won for One Battle. Editing went to Andy Jurgensen for the same film.

Sherlock Holmes (2009 Guy Ritchie)

I think Guy Ritchie's incarnation of Sherlock Holmes to be the worst on film; and I think Sir Arthur would agree with me. Over-edited, over-CGIed film is fairly exhausting. Good people though - Downey, Jude Law, Mark Strong, Rachel McAdams, Eddie Marsan, Kelly Reilly, James Fox, Clive Russell. Robert Maillet is the French juggernaut.

Good music from Hans Zimmer and photography by Philippe Rousselot. The dockside blowing up is rather beautifully filmed.





Silent Witness - Season 12 (2008)

Terror.  Michael Crompton. Director Alex Pillai.

Police shooting in 'terrorist' house comes under investigation.

Best bit: Nikki taking part in armed simulation.

Shaun Dooley, Ciaran McMenamin (The Trench), Andrea Lowe, Gary Lewis.



The Fabelmans (2022 Steven Spielberg)

'What sort of film are you in the mood for next?' I asked Q. 'The Fabelmans,' she replied.

Spielberg wrote this autobiographical story - as much about his parents' relationship as anything - with Tony Kushner.

Best bits: tornado causing shopping trollies to cross the street; visit of uncle Judd Hirsch; finding his mother's secret in the edit; meeting John Ford (David Lynch) (and that funny camera move on last frame).

Gabriel LaBelle carries it well. With Michelle Williams, Paul Dano, Seth Rogan, Jeannie Berlin.

Usual team of Kaminski, Williams and Khan (with Sarah Broshar), production design Rick Carter (The Post, The BFG, Munich etc.)


Its 2 hours 25 runs past effortlessly.

Late Autumn / 秋日和 (1960 Yasujiro Ozu & co-scr)

How can you not love Ozu? He's the most lovely of filmmakers, with his small (yet immense) stories of families and relationships, presented in the most polite way in cinema. Aged only 57, this was one of his last films (he died in 1963- he went out as I came in).

And this is Jane Austen by Ozu! It is! Three elderly former college friends try to matchmake the daughter of a passed fourth and make a hash of it. Naturally the women involved are smarter.

The three men: Shin Saburi, Nobuo Nakamura and Ryuji Kita. And their observations about aging are great, and youth vs age, and the fact they keep lying to their wives and obviously all still fancy the widow.


The pipes!

Loved Yoko Tsukasa not being pushed around by her uncle; claiming not to want marriage for her mother's sake; becoming extremely sulky and petty when she thinks her mother is remarrying. Setsuko Hara is the wonderfully upbeat mother. And the way that friend Mariko Okada becomes so important to the story (she's absolutely delightful).


Keiji Sada is the fiance. (Loved his story about his tantrum with his mother who then died and how you shouldn't quarrel.)

All told through Ozu's precision square on set ups and low camera. And with its atypical music dividing up sections of the story it strangely makes you think of Woodv Allen.

The establishing shots showing Japan in 1960 alone are fascinating. I can even get excited by shots like this - no one in frame, just gently moving patterns of light on the walls:


Another humane, funny and acute study of human behaviour.

Photographed by Yuharu Atsuta (several other Ozu's including Tokyo Story).

Trois Couleurs: Bleu (1993 Krzysztof Kieslowski & co-scr)

Not the debut of La Binoche - she had for example been in Godard's Hail Mary in 1985, then The Unbearable Lightness of Being in 1988, Les Amants du Pont-Neuf in 1991 and funnily enough a version of Wuthering Heights in 1992 before this, but for Kieslowski's film she won the César, and Best Actress at the Venice Film Festival.

And of course she's wonderful as a woman who has lost her husband and seven year old daughter in a car crash, and withdraws from the world. Or at least, she tries to.


From its arresting opening, photographed by Slawomir Idziak and edited by Jacques Witta, this is a most absorbing, quietly gripping piece of work. I like the way we get these big hits of music, then a fade to black, then the scene fades back in and resumes - not sure I'd seen that before.

Her new address is near Rue Mouffetard in the 5eme.

She cameos in Kieslowski's sequels, Blanc and Rouge, which I'm sure are worth watching. I'd seen A Short Film About Killing ages ago but would also like to catch up with A Short Film About Love (1988).

I was slightly underwhelmed by composer Zbigniew Preisner's supposedly great concerto. In fact I would have ended the film with Binoche saying '"I'll be right over". However the ending as is, with its creative montage to music, is interesting enough.

Agnieszka Holland contributed to the screenplay and Julie Delpy has a cameo (didn't spot her).



Saturday, 21 February 2026

A Civil Action (1998 Steve Zaillian & scr)

Robert Duvall died February 15. He's as good as always in this as a world-weary lawyer who's seen it all before and knows how to win. In fact that's the problem with this film - unlike something like Erin Brockovich, the case defeats them and literally leaves all the partners bankrupt. Who are: John Travolta, Tony Shaloub, William H Macy and Zeljko Ivanek.

But it's another seriously staggering piece of work from 'every frame' Conrad Hall, whose pools of light are just mesmerizing. But it's also the way the cinematography enhances the story - the way water and water in glasses is shot. He and Duvall were Oscar nominated.

Also with Bruce Norris ('Cheeseman'), John Lithgow, Kathleen Quinlan, James Gandolfini, Stephen Fry (a non part really - he just disappears) and Dan Hedaya. And Sydney Pollack.








Friday, 20 February 2026

Silent Witness - Season 12 (2008)

Death's Door. Stephen Davis. Director Diarmuid Lawrence.

A body is found with its face removed. An annoying student (Naomi Bentley) has been assigned to the pathology team, clearly with her own agenda. The story takes a sharp turn when she is murdered, and Russians come in to play. And Harry is assigned a particularly useful security officer (played by John Kirk, I believe).

The investigating detective on this one is particularly unpleasant (Midsomer's Neil Dudgeon). And there's a ruthless PR man involved (Phil Davis). Jaye Griffiths is a little bit of love interest for Leo.

Babou Ceesay (We Hunt Together. The Best of Enemies) isn't in it much. Richard Atlee and Philip Quast play Russian.


John Kirk (I think)


The Greengage Summer / Loss of Innocence (1961 Lewis Gilbert)

According to an Amazon reviewer, the DVD is a bootleg and that 'Columbia never officially released it'. I'm not quite sure how thy came by that information but apparently the only way to see it in its original form is from the broadcast that TCM made of it. It's certainly odd that this version is presented in 4x3, although I have to say it doesn't particularly look cropped to me. There are bootleg copies available on dodgy websites which purport to run 99m - the UK release DVD is 95. The BBFC shows that the original, which received cuts (you can see the jump in a couple of places e.g. the conversation about the two women of the hotel being lesbians), was 100m, which equates to 96m on video.

There's a lot going on here, presumably all in Rumer Godden's novel (Howard Koch adapted it with - apparently and uncredited - input from the author). The owner of the Chateau, Claude Mollier, lies to tourists and pretends its some historical relic which it isn't, and is having an affair with mysterious Englishman Kenneth More, supplanting a prior relationship with Danielle Darrieux.

The arrival of the kids - Susannah York, Jane Asher, Elizabeth Dear and Richard Williams - stirs everything up, including malevolent servant David Saire, who is vile - he attacks young Asher for slapping him, later tries to rape York twice. Thankfully More is around to prevent things from going truly sour - he's great with the younger kids. But he's not above having a flirtatious relationship with York himself, which leads to a tragic outcome.

Filmed on location in France by Freddie Young, edited by Peter Hunt (his greengage montage is a bit overdone), good music by Richard Addinsell.




I was trying to wok out if one (or an amalgam) of the kids is Godden - was the Jane Asher character her alter ego? Whilst researching this I found her quote "Everyone is a house with four rooms, a physical, a mental, an emotional and a spiritual. Most of us tend to live in one room most of the time but unless we go into every room every day, even if only to keep it aired, we are not a complete person.” Which even though it doesn't help is interesting. Though there is an intriguing BBC article here which tells us that the story was substantially true.

Thursday, 19 February 2026

Silent Witness - Season 12 opener (2008)

Safe, which opens season12, is one of the strongest so far, sitting firmly in the realist tradition of The Wire and Top Boy and arguably darker and more pessimistic than either, It was written by Timothy Prager, his first for the series (also Two Thousand Acres of Sky) and directed by Sue Tully.

A girl is killed at a funfair. Two brothers experience gang culture. Leo is on community service - after (slightly) drunk driving - on a South London estate. And a tough tale of gang violence (with a slight Romeo and Juliet undertone) and public silence follows. (Good rap material: 'gang violence... public silence".)

Thought we recognised the elder brother - it's Daniel Kaluuya. Younger is Kedar Williams-Stirling (Sex Ed). Aml Ameen is the dedicated community worker. Paul Higgins investigates. Jamie Sives is a paramedic that Nikki dalliances with. Charles Mnene is the chief gang bastard, Malachi Kirby (A Thousand Blows) a cohort. Acting all good.

Gang rape initiation for 13 year old girls, Brixton being in 'the heart of Somalia', death by tar and feathering, and by dog attack, all vivid details of a lawless side of London. And the ending - bringing kids in with lures of trainers - is a neat way of saying it will all go on.





Betrayal (2026 David Eldridge, director Julian Jarrold)

We were warned off this by several (general public) reviewers who found it crap. Didn't seem particularly good or bad to us.

Shaun Evans is something of a burned out MI5 operative who stumbles upon a terror plot involving Iran. Zahra Ahmadi (who we're used to seeing in Beyond Paradise) is assigned to look after him as he faces disciplinary action. 

Meantime his marriage is in trouble following years of not telling his wife Romola Garai what his job involves; and having had an affair, she doesn't trust him (although it was seven years ago?) and they're now in counselling.

With Nikki Amuka-Bird, Matthew Tennyson (gay MI5), Gamba Cole, Omid Djalili.

4 x 45 for ITV.

It had one or two points of difference I quite enjoyed: a long tailing scene with the suspects' dialogue running throughout, and a climax involving Sarin gas and a community centre largely told from security cameras and drone footage. Seemed to have some quite daft moments but no more than anything else in this genre. The Betrayal / marriage counselling thing is a bit clumsy.

Yes, I'm sure we've come across this Rumi fellow before. 'The truth was a mirror in the hand of God, It fell and broke into pieces'. Not quite sure where that leaves us, but there you go!

Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Silent Witness - Season 11 conclusion (2007)

Peripheral Vision. Christian Spurrier. Director Bruce Goodison.

Bones are found near a travellers' camp. Are they the missing teenage daughter of ex DCS Jim Carter? Active DI Ian Puleston-Davies thinks it's paedo suspect crusty Ben Smith but Nikki finds evidence to the contrary.  (Also anyone who's seen this sort of thing before will know he's too obvious a suspect.)  Nick Brimble and Adrian Rawlings are also involved. Nikki stupidly finds herself in near-death situation.

In parallel, and not intersecting, Harry investigates death of Archie Punjabi's father, and finds himself up against a big insurance company in the guise of Pip Torrens.

Torrens (born 1960) a familiar and dependable face, has been in everything from Bond to Star Wars. Lately we've seen him in Down Cemetery Road, Mr Bates and the Post Office, The Hack, Sherwood and Succession.

Tuesday, 17 February 2026

Silent Witness - Season 11 (2007)

Hippocratic Oath, Tony McHale. Director Diarmuid Lawrence.

In a stunning beginning, a lorry ploughs into a hearse - the coffin is ejected and two bodies fall out. And it's not long before we're in the company of innovative child surgeon Natasha Little, and the strange machinations at her hospital. It's a crafty and sinewy tale which puts Nikki in danger of being clonked.

One thing that pissed us off is Leo leaves Harry by Nikki's hospital bedside saying 'look after her' (a hospital whose staff are offended at being investigated), and the next thing Harry's over at Little's place having spaghetti bolognese! What the fuck?? (Something was edited out of the script?)

Another good one: Double Dare. Two ghosts from Nikki's past. One is a child murderer she defended four years ago is killed, horribly, by knife wound and a burning car. And her shiftless, lying father comes back on the scene and puts her through the wringer. She begins to doubt her first summation was correct. Then some long dead bodies are discovered. Nice twists here.

Hugo Speer, Nick Court, Cara Horgan, Danny Midwinter (the unpleasant DS).



A Tale of Two Cities (1935 Jack Conway)

Dickens given the MGM Hollywood treatment doesn't compare to the two David Lean classic adaptations of the forties; the adaptation is by W.R. Lipscomb and S.N. Berhman. To be fair it doesn't quite have the same emotions and complications as the other two, and Selznick himself, when comparing it to his earlier adaptation of David Copperfield, felt it didn't have anywhere near the same number of great, rounded characters. Still, it's definitely given the big Selznick touch and the end result is exciting and tragic enough, without somehow quite hitting the nail on the head. For example, the storming of the Bastille scene, researched and written by Val Lewton, is probably historically accurate without being the most exciting moment. And on the eve of the prisoner's execution, there's somewhat too much weeping and wailing before Colman leaps into action - to paraphrase John Madden, the film is dawdling where it needs to motor.

Interesting for the way in which it's presented that the revolutionaries would then murder anyone who had anything to do with the aristocrats, even servants.

Good cast: Ronald Colman, Elizabeth Allan (I know - who? But she is in Went the Day Well?), Edna May Oliver, Reginald Owen, Basil Rathbone, Blanche Yurka (I thought she was good - had something of the intensity of Pamela Brown - but perhaps a shade too theatrical in the court scene), Henry Walthall (long imprisoned father), Donald Woods (Rathbone's son), Walter Catlett (the fraudster), Fritz Leiber, H.B. Warner, Mitchell Lewis, Billy Bevan.

The wine shop gave Oliver T Marsh photographic problems with the action both in the interior and outside in the street. He used ten varying shades of amber glass on the windows for the time of day. The Paris scenes were an ingenious mixture of sets, matte painting and miniatures.

The music oddly uses bits of Chopin, O Come All Ye Faithful and La Marseillaise!

On right, annoying woman who cackles at everything






Monday, 16 February 2026

The Best Silent Witnesses

Divided Loyalties. Niall Leonard. Dead woman and baby. Drugs. 'Stukie'.

The World Cruise. Tony McHale. Auschwitz resurfaces.

The Fall Out. Tony McHale. Multiple vehicle pile up. And a spare arm.

Closed Ranks. Tony McHale, Season 6. Leo's wife and daughter are visiting when a case similar to one of his old ones appears.

Answering Fire. Dusty Hughes. Fire in hotel. Dodgy politician.

Choices. Doug Milburn. Harry befriends kid who's involved in night club drive by shooting.

Cargo. Doug Milburn. Boat of illegals capsize. Infectious disease on board, and little missing girl who Nikki just will not give up on.

Body of Work. Rhidian Brook, Season 10. Harry and Nikki are starting to get it on when an old flame of Harry's turns up dead.

Schism. Christian Spurrier. A bit far-fetched, but Nikki is kidnapped.

Hippocratic Oath. Tony McHale. Two bodies in one coffin...









Silent Witness - Season 11 (2007)

Harry and Nicki witness a helicopter crash on to a detainment centre for illegal immigrants, leading to a terse and sombre episode - the good that they (try and) do makes matters worse.

Apocalypse was written by Stephen Davis and directed by Maurice Phillips.

Then Suffer the Children looks at child sacrifices for tribal African folk cures. This runs in parallel to the suspected suicide of a priest in a boys' school (couldn't track it down. Yes I could. It's Royal Connaught Park, formerly the Royal Masonic School for Boys, Bushey, which closed in 1970. It's apparently been used in Lucky Jim, The Meaning of Life, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade and the Harry Potter films.)

And Leo keeps 'seeing' his dead daughter Cassie.

Michael Byrne is the grizzled headmaster / priest

99 River Street (1953 Phil Karson)

Efficient, independent noir thriller, featuring washed up boxer John Payne (Miracle on 34th Street, and the previous year's Kansas City Confidential, also directed by Karlson) whose marriage to Peggie Castle is also washed up - she's having a thing with a murdering robber Brad Dexter.

He's also mixed up (in a platonic way) with Broadway wannabe Evelyn Keyes (Hell's Half Acre), who suckers him into a fake murder scene at the theatre (this is a lovely twist scene); he loses it, violently, but is even more upset when his wife is murdered and he looks like the suspect. The film is typified by violent fights and violent characters.

From producer Ed Small, who'd given us T-Men and Raw Deal. Walk a Crooked Mile is (according to Eddie Muller) worth checking out also. 

Photographed by Franz Planer, edited by Ed's son Buddy Small. With Frank Faylen (buddy at taxi co), Jay Adler, and Jack Lambert (heavy, The Killers, The Enforcer) who kept annoying Q by hitting Payne on the neck.




Sunday, 15 February 2026

Silent Witness - Season 10 finale (2006)

Christian Spurrier wrote Schism about animal rights activists. I thought the torturing dentist bit was way unbelievable, but putting Nikki in danger a good idea, with Harry thinking about leaving for a professorship in the US. Nicholas Renton directed. Didn't quite understand the end - who was undercover (if anyone)?

Leo is defending an old friend in court in a less interesting storyline.

Joseph Mawle, Antonia Campbell-Hughes (Lead Balloon, Jack Dee thing).



The Best Things in 2026

I Swear

Say Nothing.

The Inspector Lynley Mysteries.

One Battle After Another. Far fuckin' out, brother!

Bird (Andrea Arnold)

Le Notti de Cabiria

Circle of Two aka Obsession (1980 Jules Dassin)

Fifteen year old schoolgirl Tatum O'Neal falls in love with sixty year old artist Richard Burton. I mean, it's a must, isn't it? I rather enjoyed it. And it's got one of those sad, sort of 'European' themes that I'm a sucker for (by Bernard Hoffer). Filmed in Toronto. Based on the novel 'A Lesson in Love' by Marie-Terese Baird.

The despicable parents are Patricia Collins and Robin Gammell, who are way more concerned over this May-December relationship than the fact her boyfriend tried to rape her, and keep her prisoner in her room! Michael Wincott is the horrible ex.

It's apparently 106 minutes and in 1.85:1 - our copy was 98 minutes and in 4x3 (though didn't look badly cropped).

Count Dracula and the Vampire Bride is not a real film.





Was vaguely wondering how many bottles of vodka a day Burton was on at the time.