Showing posts with label ryan gosling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ryan gosling. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 April 2015

Lost River Review


Fair play to Ryan Gosling for beginning (and possibly ending if some critics are to be believed) his directing career with Lost River. His debut behind the camera could have taken the Mel Gibson route and had him playing a Scottish hero riding into battle for freedom or it could have favoured the Joseph Gordon Levitt approach and featured him snogging Scarlet Johansson every few minutes.

However, Gosling has chosen to do neither of these things and does not star in his own film, instead remaining firmly behind the camera on Lost River. His influences however, are all up on the screen for cinephiles to see, and it’s an eclectic mix that ranges from Malick to Lynch to Refn and is bound to alienate a lot of fans of even his most out-there acting work.


Lost River follows a family on the outskirts of recession-hit Detroit who are struggling to make ends meet as the poverty-stricken population desert the place. A single mother (Christina Hendricks) and her two sons have fallen behind on the mortgage payments so she takes a job offered to her by her creepy bank manager (Ben Mendelsohn). The new job is in a terrifyingly Lynchian nightclub where faked stabbings and all manner of weirdness is on the menu for those who seek an escape from the crushing poverty outside.

Meanwhile, the woman’s oldest son (Iain De Caestecker) begins a relationship with a girl (Saoirse Ronan) who has a pet rat and a mute grandmother. Their budding romance is threatened by Matt Smith’s thug Bully who roams the empty streets like a savage beast, looking to hurt anyone in his path.

It is a very brave debut from a star who could coast by on his looks but has chosen a far darker path in both his acting and now his directing. It looks stunning, makes little narrative sense, but is so arresting in its imagery, ideas and atmosphere, that the desire for a story slowly disappears. Lost River could be the pretentious brain fart of a spoiled A-lister with too much money to play with but the beauty, mystery and all round oddness of it make it one that is likely to be studied in years to come. Gosling may have nicked a lot from his idols, but he's done it with style. 

Here is the trailer:


Thursday, 23 October 2014

Radio 1 Rescores Drive, Curated By Zane Lowe... Are they nuts?

Radio 1, led by super-cool Zane Lowe, have decided to rescore the movie Drive with an all new soundtrack. The film will be screened on BBC3 on Thursday 30th October. 

New music will be included from the likes of Banks, Baauer, Jon Hopkins, SBTRKT, The 1975, Bastille, Bring Me The Horizon, CHVRCHES, Eric Prydz, Foals, Laura Mvula, The Neighbourhood and more. I've got to say I haven't heard much of any of these but they will have to be pretty damn good to beat the likes of Cliff Martinez, College and Kavinsky.


I love the idea, the ambition and the boldness of going for a film so loved for its film score but I can't help but suspect that this can't be totally successful. It's got the blessing of director Nicholas Winding Refn but surely he knows they can't beat the original music? If Zane Lowe and Radio 1 had decided to tackle something with a less distinctive and iconic score, that would be more understandable.

I guess the point is that this is an experiment and therefore, whether it's better or worse is irrelevant. I for one am looking forward to seeing the new version. If it sucks, we've always got the original to go back and watch. And if it's awesome, I can't wait to see what they dare to tackle next! Here's the trailer for the re-scored version:



What do you think? Reckon this can work?

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Wednesday, 29 January 2014

Daddy issues: The Place Beyond the Pines and Mud

I'm working my way through the big films of 2013 that I missed and I started with a pair of films about fathers and father figures; The Place Beyond the Pines and Mud.


The Place Beyond the Pines is Derek Cianfrance's follow up to Blue Valentine and his second collaboration with Ryan Gosling. It has a very strange and surprising structure with the film being divided into three very clear acts but with each one following a new character. Firstly there is Ryan Gosling's Luke, a stunt motor cycle rider who turns to robbing banks when he discovers he has a son with an old lover of his played by Eva Mendes. Luke is a fascinatingly flawed character who seems determined to do the right thing by doing the wrong thing. He wants to use his skills to provide for his son but Mendes is coping fine and also has a new man who is clearly perfectly capable of looking after the child.

The scenes where Luke has to ride away from the banks and evade the cops are thrillingly shot, giving a real sense of the speed and the danger. It is only when Bradley Cooper's cop Avery shows up that things get really sticky and the film starts to follow him instead. Shot in an altercation with Luke, Cooper's character is as morally dubious as the bank robber he is chasing. His rise from cop to District Attorney is questionable, even if he does bring down corrupt cops like Ray Liotta's Deluca.


The final act of the film skips forward to when both Luke and Avery's little boys are now teens. Cooper's son AJ is a bad influence on Gosling's boy Jason and though the pair do not know their father's histories together, their relationship is at first fun but soon turns nastier. Dane DeHaan is superb in these scenes as the sins of the fathers come back to haunt the sons. The Place Beyond the Pines threatens to descend into vigilante style revenge silliness but then pulls back and emerges as something far smarter and ultimately affecting. Powered by a trio of excellent performances, some kinetic cinematography in the early scenes and an odd yet sometimes unforgettable score from Mike Patton, The Place Beyond the Pines is a fascinating film about the way our fathers fuck us up in their own ways.


Mud, on the other hand, follows two young boys from the start to the finish. Ellis and Neckbone encounter a fugitive on an island in the Mississippi River and agree to keep him a secret and help him communicate with the love of his life who he cannot visit on the mainland. Calling himself Mud and played by Matthew McConaughey, this fugitive is evading the law and vigilantes who are out for revenge. He wants to fix a boat on the island but needs the two boys' help in getting parts and also getting his love Juniper (Reese Witherspoon) to come with him.

Newcomers Tye Sheridan and Jacob Lofland as Ellis and Neckbone carry the entire film on their shoulders and are absolutely superb. Ably supported by Sam Shepard, Sarah Paulson and McConaughey; the boys deliver completely convincing performances as they get some harsh lessons about love and life. Tye Sheridan in particular is fantastic in scenes with his stern but fair father and when learning the hard way that love is never easy.


Mud is a simple tale, well told. Its female characters leave a lot to be desired with women appearing to be the cause of so much male strife. Neither Juniper nor Ellis' mother come across very well, while the men appear to be wiser and worn down by their women folk. Unlike The Place Beyond the Pines, Mud does descend into vigilante style revenge silliness. It climaxes with a brilliant little shoot out that is tense and if a little too conveniently plotted, still very convincing. The coming of age stuff works best and perhaps didn't need the extra excitement of snake bites and shoot outs but Mud manages to stay believable in no small part due to a cast full of fine performances.

More reviews at I Love That Film:

The Wolf of Wall Street

Out of the Furnace

Philomena

Dallas Buyers Club

12 Years A Slave

American Hustle

All is Lost

The Railway Man

Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom

Captain Phillips

Tuesday, 3 April 2012

Movies of March: Part 2


Welcome back!  Desperate to know what the best films I watched in March were?  Probably not but thanks for stopping by anyway!  In case you missed the bottom fourteen, here's the list.

And now it's time for the top fourteen of the month of March:
14. The Help (Tate Taylor, 2011)

It’s a white woman’s burden as Emma Stone helps the poor black maids of 1960’s Mississippi find a voice by writing their stories of oppression and discrimination and turning them into a book.  Typically it takes a white character to set the story off and to help the black folk to speak up for themselves but other than that, it’s an engaging enough story that is gifted with great performances from an exceptional mostly female cast.

13. Shifty (Eran Creevy, 2009)

Low budget British film about a crack dealer whose world gets turned upside down when an old friend returns home.  Riz Ahmed and Daniel Mays give solid performances alongside a stand out turn from the villainous Jason Flemyng.  It’s all wrapped up a little predictably and conveniently but the characters are realistically written and the story pace never drags making it a satisfying, if not electrifying package.

12. Cave of Forgotten Dreams (Werner Herzog, 2011)

Herzog’s awe at the discovery of some of the earliest examples of cave drawings is palpable and contagious.  The footage of the drawings, and the drawings themselves, are incredible and this documentary introduces the audience to some of the people that discovered them as well as a range of experts who all have theories and ideas about what the drawings can tell us about the early human race.  Fascinating.



11. X-Men: First Class (Matthew Vaughn, 2011)

Matthew Vaughn’s very entertaining prequel/reboot to the X-Men trilogy actually manages to beat Bryan Singer and Brett Ratner’s takes on the superhero mutant team.  With Fassbender and McAvoy as the main draws playing young Magneto and Professor X, this was a surefire winner from the start.  But the younger ensemble that includes Jennifer Lawrence and Nicholas Hoult and the cool 60s setting also help to make this a comic book movie that sticks in the memory longer than a day.

10. The Inbetweeners (Ben Palmer, 2011)

The antics of British televisions cheeky quartet transfer surprisingly well to the big screen with the lads going to Malia for a holiday with the potential for sun, sea, drinks, and sex.  It has moments of laugh out loud hilarity and a decent story that lacks surprises but will keep fans of the show happy.  Everyone else might want to stay clear as I can’t see this gaining them more fans.

9. Swingers (Doug Liman, 1997)

Favreau and Vaughn shine as a sweet double act, the former dealing with a break up and the latter determined to consistently score with plenty of women.  Vaughn’s charisma is clear but Favreau carries the heart of the movie.  The central relationship between the boys is sweet and convincing and though the women characters are short-changed, this is a story about men being men filled with great dialogue and amusing movie references.

8. The Ides of March (George Clooney, 2011)

Gosling gives a great performance as an idealist on the political campaign trail who slowly realizes the kind of person he must become to survive and thrive in the dog eat dog world of politics.  Clooney directs himself and creates a cautionary tale of what seems to be the cruel and sad harsh reality of a life in modern politics.

7. The Interrupters (Steve James, 2011)

Inspiring documentary that follows a brave group of people that spend their time ‘interrupting’ gang violence in dangerous neighbourhoods.  Sometimes the subject of the documentary makes it a winner, never mind the style, the storytelling, the skills of the director.  This inspirational group of people deserves to have their story told and heard by the world and thankfully they make for an interesting group of characters and their stories and interactions make for emotional viewing.


6. Elite Squad: The Enemy Within (Jose Padilha, 2011)

Complex characters and action packed drama in this sequel to a film I barely remember.  The favelas are still just as dangerous, the cops still as corrupt and the system itself is challenged in this Brazilian blockbuster with added brains. A conflicted cop sees the corruption at the top and must decide between his traditional methods of law enforcement and a more modern approach to the violence and drug problems in the favela.

5. Warrior (Gavin O’Connor, 2011)

Macho MMA melodrama with a trio of great performances at its heart.  Despite the impressive physicality of Tom Hardy and Joel Edgerton (rapidly becoming two of my favourite actors), the film belongs to Nolte who can just deliver a look of longing that can set the hardiest of macho men’s eyes watering.  When the characters are this well drawn and the performances are this strong, it matters not that the final punch up is predictable from the very start.

4. Snowtown (Justin Kurzel, 2011)

Another true life serial killer film but shot with stunning artistry and filled with wholly believable performances from a cast of unknowns and non-professionals.  It may be bad taste making a film about these despicable slayings but when the film is this mesmerising and memorable, it’s hard not to forgive the filmmakers.


3. The Hunger Games (Gary Ross, 2012)

A solid adaptation of a brilliant book.  The story is still as thrilling and the performances are all great with the casting spot on.  My only gripe is that the violence was not as shocking as it was in the book.  The need for a low rating squashed some of the intense threat and more violent moments of the book.  That said the handheld camera and production and costume design are not as bad as some reviewers would have you believe with District 12 being particularly well realised.  Lawrence is great with some moments actually beating the book for emotional resonance.

2. Drive (Nicolas Winding Refn, 2011)

Finally got to see what all the fuss is about.  The film is gifted with great music, great performances, spare dialogue and a gripping story.  There is beautiful use of lighting and colour and an extremely cool hero played by man of the moment Ryan Gosling.  The kind of film that will undoubtedly reward repeat viewings with its irresistible mix of sweet sensitivity and vicious violence.


1.       1. We Need to Talk About Kevin (Lynne Ramsay, 2011)

My top film of the month and quite possibly my favourite film of 2011.  Kevin is a psychopath.  Not sure why, let’s just say he just is.  His long-suffering  mother (heart-breakingly performed by Tilda Swinton) is ostracised from the community due to Kevin’s actions and the non-linear narrative switches back and forth between the present and the past as Swinton deals with her odd son.  Kevin is a brilliant movie monster.  Uncaring, obnoxious, arrogant and hideous.  He even looks straight into the camera at one point and seems to chastise the audience of the film in a scene that nearly made me choke with laughter and shock.  It’s got a bloody gut punch of an ending too.  I can’t recommend it enough.

So that's it.  I'm still debating whether it's time to make my 'best of 2011' list or to wait until I've seen other possible contenders such as Take Shelter and The Skin I Live In.   Decisions, decisions.  Either way I need to slow down on the film watching in April and concentrate on other things.  Nameley Breaking Bad series 2 and 3!

What do you think of this list?  Anything controversial?