Monday, 5 January 2026

Lynley (2025 Steve Thompson)

A reboot of characters based on novels by Elizabeth George, previously dramatised in a series running 20001-2008 with Nathaniel Parker and Sharon Small.

Leo Suter is the posh, Jenssen Interceptor driving DI and Sofia Barclay his somewhat strange-accented DS. And DCI Daniel Mays has something over the new DI.

A Place of Hiding. An art collector on a remote island, who styles himself Augustus Caesar, is found murdered. Funnily enough when I saw a terminally ill woman in bed, I thought 'She did it' as a joke - turns out it was her.




Say Nothing (2024 Creator Joshua Zetumer)

Epic nine part series for FX, based on Patrick Radden Keefe's non-fiction investigation into true events starting in the times of the 1960s Troubles.

Lola Petticrew (who was also the star of the Northern Ireland drama Trespasses) becomes indoctrinated into the IRA, whilst an older version of herself (Maxine Peake) recounts her story to a journalist.

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.

Sunday, 4 January 2026

Changeling (2008 Clint Eastwood)

 Background info here.

"Did you kill my son?"

The way Clint directs the kids is absolutely brilliant.

Random Harvest (1942 Mervyn LeRoy)

This was released after Mrs Miniver. Based on James Hilton's novel, and screenwritten by Claudine West, George Froeschel and Arthur Wimperis, it's something of a romantic tall tale, in which amnesiac Ronald Coleman (particularly good) falls for helpful Greer Garson (also good). They marry, but then he is injured and regains his memory - but also loses the last few years. The massive plot twist - that when his secretary is revealed it's Garson, and he has no idea who she is - is fabulous, but it's exceedingly unlikely... though of huge delight to the audience. It was of course a massive hit for MGM. we loved it - hadn't see it in years.

We were enjoying the way Harold Kress dissolves from one scene to another. (He's the Man Who Made Margaret Booth cry. See here.)It's very splendidly photographed by Joseph Ruttenberg. Also thought the cottage set very sweet, designed by Cedric Gibbons:


You can almost hear the gasps of the 1940s audience

With Philip Dorn (doctor), Susan Peters, Henry Travers, Reginald Owen (boxer publican), Bramwell Fletcher, Rhys Williams, Una O'Connor, Aubrey Mather.

Here's what she looks like in colour:

She was of Scottish descent which I guess explains her Scottish number in music hall scene.

Loved the use of sound when he revisits the village from the opening and we hear the music that was playing then.

The Salt Path (2024 Marianne Elliott)

Written by Rebecca Lenkiewicz from Raynor Winn's memoir. Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs play the unhomed couple who walk around the Cornish coast, whilst his terminal illness seems to recede. This article in The Observer reports that the wife was a scammer, the house was lost because they had stolen money, they actually owned a house in France at the time, and that it is highly questionable that the husband had the 'terminal' illness CBD. So whilst they did do the walking, or at least some of it, the rest of their story is highly questionable.

If you look at it purely as a film, it's only OK.

Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs are the couple. With Hermione Norris.

It was filmed by Hélène Louvart and edited by Gareth Scales and Lucia Zucchetti. Chris Roe was the composer.

But. The couple are in their tent one morning and a dog walker passes and whacks their tent with a stick and says very rudely "You can't camp here" and I wanted to kill him. If it's on someone's land then fair enough you need permission, but surely much of that walk is common land?

I didn't notice that for some odd reason the film starts out in 1.85:1 then switches to widescreen 2.4:1.





Saturday, 3 January 2026

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989 Steven Spielberg)

I was mainly drawn to it by Douglas Slocombe's cinematography - it was his last film - he was 76 (lived till 103!) He is still capable of giving it a lovely tone.




The special effects for the time were award-worthy but they look quite dated now. The set inside the cavern when the floor starts breaking up looks really fake.

It was filmed all over the place, must have cost an absolute fortune - even just Venice establishing shot must have been so difficult to organise in every way (period background, permission from authorities, etc.)

Great to see so much not-CGI stunt work, e.g. opening fight on speeding train with River Phoenix playing the young Indie. Horse work, stunt driving, explosions, tanks, an airship.. amazing.

Harrison Ford is joined by Sean Connery enjoying playing his dad. With Denholm Elliott, Alison Doody, John Rhys-Davies. Alex Hyde-White as 'young Henry' whoever he is is Wilfred's son. Q noticed a blink-and-you'll-miss-him Alexei Sayle.

The screenplay is by Jeffrey Boam from a story by George Lucas and Menno Mayjes. It has quite a jokey tone with little nods to previous films in the series. Michael Kahn edited, John Williams composed, Elliot Scott is the production designer.

The Ballad of Wallis Island (2025 James Griffiths)

Written by stars Tim Key (the host) and Tom Basden (the singer) first as a short film, with Carey Mulligan added in to the extended version. It took me a while to click what was going on, which is a quite unlikely but sweet premise. Key's endless schtick is a bit of an acquired taste.

It apparently took only 18 days to film, Carey being there for only eleven of them. Filmed by G Magni Agustsson.






Ruby in Paradise (1993 Victor Nunez & scr, ed)

Drawn here from Ulee's Gold. This is a now very rare film to find and only available in a crop of its original 16:9 ratio.

Ashley Judd is delightful as the lost young woman who takes a job in a gift shop in Northern Florida and recounts her reactions with various people. (Loved the way she follows her neighbour - who she has never spoken to - out on the pier where he's fishing, but still never manages to connect with him. And the warmth of the two women she meets in the laundry.)

Todd Field is the slightly weird boyfriend, Bentley Mitchum the abusive one (he's Chris Mitchum's son). Allison Dean her colleague / friend, Dorothy Lyman her employer, Betsy Douds.

The book he lends her opening on Catherine Morland is 'Northanger Abbey' and the film is allegedly loosely based on Jane Austen's novel. (Bit if a stretch I would have thought.) Out of season desolate Florida well caught.

Won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance.

Charles Engstrom wrote the music. Alex Vlacos photographed. 



Friday, 2 January 2026

Deconstructing Harry (1997 Woody Allen & scr)

Some useful insight here, but this is actually quite a complex work, with flashbacks and fictional versions of flashbacks intertwining. Is the conversation between Allen and Billy Crystal in hell a sort of homage to Heaven Can Wait? But very funny - Crystal telling him 'You couldn't kidnap anyone' cut to Demi Moore 'Kidnapper! He's kidnapped my son!'

It's one of his most distinct, different, experimental and funny films. I was amazed to find it's quite highly rated on IMDB as 7.3, but as usual, many audiences get it wrong - they think this is Woody Allen, when it couldn't be further from his actual personality.




Crossing Delancey (1988 Joan Micklin Silver)

Where is Delancey, first of all? It's an important cross route cutting between the East Village in the north and Chinatown in the south. It was something of a centre to the Jewish and Italian populations, though it's now more upmarket and diverse. It connects to the Williamsburgh Bridge at the eastern end, which is probably what we're seeing here:

Susan Sandler wrote a great screenplay - based on her play - about a slightly lost woman, her relationships with men and her old school Jewish grandmother. That's it, but it's a very realistic-feeling and pleasing concoction with much local flavour.

The actors are Amy Irving, Peter Riegert, Reizl Bozyk, Jeroen Krabbé, George Martin and David Hyde Pierce.

Kosher wine? It's been prepared according to strict Kosher tradition making it usable for religious services. (Jews can drink non-Kosher wine too.)

And the poem quoted about the ripe plums, which may or may not be Confucious, is 'Anxiety of a Young Lady To Get Married' (apparently).

Memorable scene: singer comes in to diner and starts performing song about holding on to love 'Some Enchanted Evening'


Silver's first success was the very low budget Hester Street in 1975. She cites Shadow of a Doubt, Presenting Lily Mars (1943 Judy Garland musical comedy) and Song of the Islands (1942 Betty Grable musical comedy) as early influences, and has an affinity with Truffaut and Satyajit Ray. I think I've also seen Between the Lines (1977) about an independent newspaper and its staff, with a young Jeff Goldblum.

The Man I Love (1946 Raoul Walsh)

Well, there's a fairly complicated scenario at work here, courtesy of Catherine Turney, she and Jo Pagano having adapted Maritta Woolff's novel. A New York singer (Ida Lupino) travels to LA to visit relatives. Her sister Andrea King is being pursued by dodgy nightclub owner Alan Alda, but she in fact has an ex-service husband who's in an institution following a mental breakdown. Another sister Martha Vickers seems to have lost confidence (she is really one character too many who we don't really need)  and brother Warren Douglas is getting in with Alda in a not good way. Over the hallway lives couple Dolores Moran and Don McGuire, he a night shift worker and she bored with her role as wife and mother.

Lupino starts singing at Alda's club and develops an at-arm's-length relationship with him, but gets interested when she helps a melancholic pianist, Bruce Bennett (the original husband in Mildred Pierce), thus taking us into an interesting story we weren't expecting. All through you get this great music from jazz bands, Ida singing (not actually her) and whoever's playing the piano stuff. It's a kind of film noir jazz musical.

Best bit: McGuire comes to kill Alda; Lupino slaps him around and sends him home. Best line: 'She wouldn't give you the time of day if she had two watches.'

With Alan Hale in the nightclub, William Edmunds (from It's a Wonderful Life).

Photographed by Sid Hickox and edited by Owen Marks. From that great year, 1946. According to the Warner Bros Story, audiences 'gave it the thumbs down'.




Thursday, 1 January 2026

We Bought a Zoo (2011 Cameron Crowe & co-scr)

Cameron gave Matt Damon the script, an hour's worth of music and the film Local Hero, saying it was that happy-sad feeling he was trying to invoke.

Otherwise, see the previous seventeen jottings. 

Wasn't expecting to see Peter Sellars


Sully (2016 Clint Eastwood)

A staggering piece of work, brilliantly constructed. If you think about Clint's first film, Play Misty For Me, you can see just how far he has progressed. Writer Todd Komarnicki, also wrote the well rated The Professor and the Madman (2019).

Great sound design (Robert Alan Murray, mixers José Antonio Garcia, John Reitz, Tom Ozanich), editing (Blu Murray), special effects.

Clint with Jane Gabbert, Molly Hagan and Anne Cusack (I think)

Also very well acted in all the less important parts, a real ensemble.

Endeavour: Terminus (2021 Kate Saxon)

 Woo. Woo!



The Full Monty (1997 Peter Cattaneo)

Written by Simon Beaufoy. Needing money, an unemployed steelworker Robert Carlyle and his best mate Mark Addy decide to get together a male striptease act. The only thing this, they forget one dance routine and strip is not enough to entertain a packed room of women, and they tear them to pieces. Morse investigates...

Um. Very entertaining. Hadn't seen it in decades. With Ton Wilkinson, Paul Barber, Hugo Speer, Lesley Sharp.


Economical (an hour and a half). DP John de Borman, editors Nick Moore and David Freeman. The producer is Uberto Pasolini, who went on to make those great films Still Life and Nowhere Special. Music by Anne Dudley.