Showing posts with label Emma Thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emma Thompson. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 April 2026

Movie Review: Dead Of Winter (2025)


Genre: Thriller  
Director: Brian Kirk  
Starring: Emma Thompson, Judy Greer  
Running Time: 98 minutes  

Synopsis: In northern Minnesota, Barb (Emma Thompson) drives into the wilderness towards a secluded lake, where many decades ago she enjoyed an idyllic first date with her late husband Karl. She stumbles upon the isolated cabin of unhinged couple Purple Lady and Camo Jacket (Judy Greer and Marc Menchaca), and finds kidnapped teenager Leah (Laurel Marsden) tied up in their basement. Barb is a resourceful wilderness survival expert and refuses to abandon Leah, despite Purple Lady's grim determination to kill them both.

What Works Well: The frigid expanse of snow-covered forest terrain (filmed in Finland) is a perfect backdrop for a sinister conspiracy, and director Brian Kirk exploits the inhospitable landscape to good effect. Emma Thompson (calm and cerebral) and Judy Greer (dangerously frantic) create a good rivalry, encompassing both physical face-offs and thinking-ahead plotting. The flashbacks to Barb's life with husband Karl add poignancy.

What Does Not Work As Well: Once revealed, Purple Lady's plans for Leah are just too far-fetched, undermining the premise. Barb overcomes some serious injuries Rambo-style, Purple Lady's sniper skills are wayward when most needed, and some side-characters who should know better exhibit foolish behaviour in service of the script.

Key Quote:
Barb (to Leah): Heck, all's I'm sayin' is... . we don't know what's comin'. We never really do, but it don't matter. We don't quit.



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Sunday, 17 September 2023

Movie Review: Last Chance Harvey (2008)


Genre: Romantic Dramedy
Director: Joel Hopkins
Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Emma Thompson, Kathy Baker, James Brolin
Running Time: 92 minutes

Synopsis: Divorced music composer Harvey Shine (Dustin Hoffman) is struggling to save his career. He travels to London to attend his daughter's wedding, but receives another emotional blow when she selects her stepfather (James Brolin) to walk her down the aisle. Meanwhile British government worker Kate Walker (Emma Thompson) is unlucky in love, and exasperated by her over-attentive mother Maggie (Eileen Atkins). Harvey and Kate meet at the airport, and a romance blossoms.

What Works Well: The later-in-life romance benefits from Dustin Hoffman and Emma Thompson in fine form, a laid-back attitude, and crisp London locations. Both lead characters are surrounded by plenty of luggage and regrets, Harvey's sense of exclusion from his ex-family and Kate's overbearing mother providing signposts to past missteps. Director Joel Hopkins seeks touches of mild humour, including Harvey's misadventures in a white suit and Maggie's interactions with a next-door Polish neighbour.

What Does Not Work As Well: This is as vanilla and predictable as a romance can get, complete with a de rigueur third act complication. And although Hoffman hides it well, he is still 22 years older than his co-star.

Conclusion: Familiar and borderline bland content is saved by a good cast and tidy production values.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Wednesday, 7 September 2022

Movie Review: Good Luck To You, Leo Grande (2022)

A seductive two-person drama about sexual fulfillment, Good Luck To You, Leo Grande explores an older woman's sexual curiosity with raw sensitivity and a dash of humour.

In her mid 50s, retired school teacher Nancy Stokes (Emma Thompson) hires sex worker Leo Grande (Daryl McCormack) for a couple of hours at a hotel room in London. A widow, Nancy has only ever had perfunctory sex with her husband, and has never experienced an orgasm. She is now insecure about her age, her body, and her lack of experience, but willing to learn if she can overcome her anxieties.

Leo is from Ireland and helps Nancy relax. Their conversations cover her experience as a teacher and parent, and his fraught relationship with his mother. After their first session they meet again, establishing a rapport as she seeks to experience more sexual variety and pleasure. But Nancy and Leo also test each other's boundaries, threatening their burgeoning relationship.

Good Luck To You, Leo Grande wades into the ticklish subject of sex and desire at an older age, and adds a further layer of delicious intrigue with the always ripe-for-controversy sex-for-money topic. Writer Katy Brand creates a fearlessly awkward portrait of two people from the opposite side of everything - age, gender, class, sexual experience, confidence - and throws them together for 97 minutes of irresistible intimacy.

Director Sophie Hyde crafts a theatre-ready - but not theatrical - drama, allowing the vibe between Nancy and Leo to ebb and flow, with just a few of the exchanges sounding forced. From the initial hello to the information probes and then the headlong dives into painful revelations, the energy never flags. Nancy wants to make up for lost time between the sheets but has no idea how to overcome a life's worth of repression. Leo offers much more than sex-as-a-service: he is a patient listener, and happy to ease into the role of amateur therapist.

From a starting point of sexual exploration, Brand expands into several stimulating topics including the societal benefits of commercial sex, the prevalence of slut shaming, and functionally dysfunctional marriages. The motherhood experience emerges as a powerful theme, Nancy's statements about her kids suggesting a cold core consistent with a teacher harbouring single-minded expectations. Leo only gradually reveals the broken bond with his mother. Their tender scars become flashpoints, Nancy erroneously adopting an educator's condescending stance to understand and fix the real Leo, while he counters with her less than stellar track record within her own family.

Emma Thompson is radiant as a woman hesitantly deciding to cross multiple rubicons: paying for sex, with a stranger, for the sole purpose of discovering the sexual pleasure she has never known. Daryl McCormack matcher her beats with a smooth portrayal of a sex worker comfortably confident in his own skin. Far from needing any luck, Leo Grande excels.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Tuesday, 28 June 2022

Movie Review: The Remains Of The Day (1993)

An elegant drama, The Remains Of The Day unfurls emotional power in a story of quiet service and unrequited love superimposed upon history-shaping events.

In 1958, James Stevens (Anthony Hopkins) is still the butler at the lavish Darlington Hall in England, a position he has held for decades. The mansion is now owned by former US Congressman Jack Lewis (Christopher Reeve). As Stevens heads out to visit former housekeeper Sarah Kenton (Emma Thompson), he recollects the Hall's pre-World World Two glory years.  

In the 1930s, Lord Darlington (James Fox) is a respected member of the upper echelons, frequently hosting global diplomatic dignitaries. Darlington believes Germany was badly treated at the end of the Great War, and is inclined to support the belligerent ambitions of her new rulers. Lewis is among the visitors, and warns against appeasement. Stevens maintains strict dominion on the battalion of servants ensuring all events at Darlington Hall proceed flawlessly, and does not allow the failing health of his father (Peter Vaughan) to distract him. Miss Kenton proves her capabilities and becomes Stevens' confidant. She also believes a romance can develop between them, but Stevens resists the notion, maintaining an unerring focus on his duties.

Director James Ivory, writer Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, and producer Ismail Merchant bring Kazuo Ishiguro's novel to life with breezy delicacy. While period dramas can suffer from slow-paced stuffiness, The Remains Of The Day delivers surprisingly brisk and varied story lines. The twin timelines from the 1950s and the 1930s add a wisdom-of-the-years layer of soulful reflection, the nostalgic past harbouring equal measures of pride and regret. Meanwhile, the mix of estate management, stifled romance, inter-class dynamics, and diplomatic intrigue creates rich cross-currents for multi-faceted drama.

Jhabvala's script is pointed and purposeful, every scene adding character depth or incidents of note, the dialogue exchanges filled with couched sparring. Stevens resides at the centre, setting the heartbeat of the household. He sees and hears everything but carefully chooses what to retain and when to engage, sidelining personal opinions to avoid interfering with loyalty. Anthony Hopkins has rarely been better, never betraying Stevens' emotions but always hinting at the real man hiding within the exceptionally proper butler. Emma Thompson's Miss Kenton is a perfect foil, a capable and independent thinker not afraid to speak her mind and express emotions to the edge of socially acceptable limits.

The aesthetics find plenty of joy within the lavish interiors and exteriors of Darlington Hall (many estates were used during filming). Cinematographer Tony Pierce-Roberts creates energy from sets full of details and animated by the movement of busy servants rushing between wings and hallways to satisfy every household need. Stevens' road trip in 1958 to visit Miss Kenton opens up the visuals to the English countryside with a side-trip to a local village after an automotive mishap.

Not every element works perfectly. Hugh Grant as Lord Darlington's godson flounders in an underwritten role, while Christopher Reeve as Congressman Lewis is supposed to represent emerging American global influence but struggles for traction. A French diplomat (Michael Lonsdale) is consigned to a buffoonish role complaining about his footwear.

But these are minor quibbles. The Remains Of The Day is a poignant time-and-place character study, where resisting all temptations is a prerequisite for excellence, and the reward for a job well done is to do it all over again the next day.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Tuesday, 7 June 2022

Movie Review: The Children Act (2017)

A legal drama, The Children Act probes fragile human psyches navigating surprising vulnerabilities.

In London, the Honourable Mrs. Justice Fiona Maye (Emma Thompson) is a distinguished judge entrusted with the most controversial cases. But at home, her childless marriage has gone so stale that husband Jack (Stanley Tucci), a college professor, announces he is off to have an affair.

Fiona's latest case involves 17-year-old leukemia patient Adam (Fionn Whitehead). He is refusing a life-saving blood transfusion because his Jehovah's Witness beliefs consider human blood sacred. Fiona visits Adam in hospital before making her judgment, establishing a connection with the young man. But he then develops an obsession, leading to unexpected consequences.

Written by Ian McEwan (based on his novel) and directed by Richard Eyre, The Children Act packs quiet drama into a twisty, two-part story. Drawing strength from grey England locations and a supreme Emma Thompson central performance, the film first creates then challenges human bonds, deftly avoiding cliches by steering in unpredictable directions.

The first half is an attractive legal conundrum, but Fiona has the law to lean on. Adam is under 18, and therefore public health authorities have the final say about his treatment. The courtroom arguments and counter-arguments are predictable but nevertheless sharp, and given the public scrutiny, Fiona's decision to visit Adam at his hospital bed is compassionate and justified.

Just when it appears the narrative is settling down to provide educated commentary on religious rights versus established science, McEwan and Eyre swing into a different mode entirely. Now less sick but more confused, Adam forms a challenging one-sided attachment to the person who may have saved his life. He starts appearing at inopportune times around Fiona as she moves on to other cases and ponders a reconciliation with husband Jack. 

The dramatic tension evolves into a suddenly broader topic, health now encompassing mental well-being. Having played the role of physical saviour, Fiona has to confront her downstream responsibilities and the implications of severing a young man from the support network he grew up with. Beset by doubt and insecurity, their two lives are intertwined into a gripping, unpredictable knot.

The Children Act dares to step down from the judge's vantage point and ventures into the messy world, where difficult judgments reverberate among imperfect people.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Monday, 9 May 2022

Movie Review: Late Night (2019)

A workplace comedy, Late Night tackles a few serious issues with a light touch.

In New York, celebrated British personality Katherine Newbury (Emma Thompson) hosts a long-running late night television talk show. But like Katherine, the show is aging, losing ratings, and threatened with cancellation by network head Caroline Morton (Amy Ryan). Seeking a refresh, inexperienced but bubbly Molly Patel (Mindy Kaling) is hired as the only woman writer on the otherwise all-male, all-white writing team.

Despite her profile, Katherine does not enjoy publicity, and prefers the quiet company of her husband Walter (John Lithgow), who is suffering from Parkinson's disease. Molly has to overcome criticisms that she is just a diversity hire, while her fresh ideas inject new life into the show. But then a scandal hits, threatening Katherine's reputation and jeopardizing Molly's career prospects.

Written and co-produced by Kaling, Late Night seeks chuckles in the maze of office politics. Director Nisha Ganatra delivers undemanding entertainment in a compact 102 minute package mercifully devoid of bathroom-level humour and stock romances, but never threatens to transcend the mostly predictable material.

The narrative suffers from focus uncertainty. Both Katherine and Molly can claim to be the main character, but yet neither of them quite occupy the centre. And for most of the time, the relationship between the two women is terse and distant, so this is not a dynamic duo story either. Rather, two seperate arcs interact in relatively docile patterns, leaving a sense of diffused energy.

Kaling demonstrates courage in tackling, albeit sofly, a range of relevant issues. Aging, tokenism, double-standards, health declines, mistreatment of employees, and the dissipation of intellectual discourse all make their way into engaging dialogue exchanges. The workplace landmines are acknowledged with disarming frankness as obstacles to be navigated and overcome, rather than triggers for whining. Less successful is the portrayal of Katherine's team by a gaggle of uncharismatic male actors. They may be purposefully indistinguishable as a humour device, but nevertheless too much time is spent in a room full of too many men who don't register.

After a barely sketched-in scandal causes artificial ripples, the final act refuses to veer away from the safest middle course towards sappy endings for all. The emotional final speeches - Molly and Katherine take their turns, still unsure who is the lead - barely resonate. Late Night is good for a few easy smiles, but is well forgotten by morning.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Thursday, 17 December 2020

Movie Review: An Education (2009)

A coming of age romance, An Education enjoys a bright central performance and an excellent sense of time and place, but suffers from internal inconsistency and abrupt shifts in focus.

The setting is suburban London in 1961. Jenny Mellor (Carey Mulligan) is almost 17 years old and in her final school year, striving to secure a coveted admission to Oxford. She meets the much older and exceptionally charismatic David Goldman (Peter Sarsgaard), who introduces her to his glamorous friends Danny (Dominic Cooper) and Helen (Rosamund Pike). David sweet talks Jenny's parents (Alfred Molina and Cara Seymour) into allowing their daughter to join him on trips, first to Oxford then to Paris.

Jenny is dazzled by the good life of swanky restaurants, classical music concerts, luxury hotels and cool jazz clubs, although she is also exposed to David and Danny's questionable morals. Her increasingly serious romance with David starts to impact her school performance, much to the disappointment of teacher Miss Stubbs (Olivia Williams) and headmistress Miss Walters (Emma Thompson).

Based on Lynn Barber's memoirs and directed by Lone Scherfig from an eloquent Nick Hornby script, An Education sparkles with wit and charm. Capturing a society on the cusp of revolutionary change as the war generation of Jenny's parents hands the baton to their more adventurous offspring, the story of first love is mostly familiar but enlivened by the cultural buzz of a new decade's gateway.

But Hornby and Scherfig also adopt a passive and rather bewildering non-judgemental stance on what is also a troublesome story of grooming. Although Jenny at 16 has reached Britain's age of consent, David's actions are the definition of creepy manipulation of an impressionable young woman as he toys with her emotions and plays her parents for fools, lies and embellishments the fake currency he freely hands out. That David transparently exposes Jenny to some of his shady business practices and may actually fall in love with her is flimsy justification. 

At 24 but passing for 17, Carey Mulligan is a revelation, expressing with understated and patient elegance the frustrations, joys and responsibilities of emerging adulthood. But she does fall foul of an internal lack of consistency: Jenny is portrayed as smart, articulate and possessing phenomenal self-awareness and the ability to calmly debate with adults. In short, exactly the type of young woman who should have seen right through David's sleazy antics. Peter Sarsgaard does his part, shielding a predator behind a seducer's easy smile and jet-set lifestyle.

The final chapter grinds the gears with a jerky shift away from romance and the school-of-life towards the value of a traditional education, Miss Stubbs and Miss Waters suddenly gaining prominence. An Education is full of lessons learned, some more smoothly delivered than others.



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Saturday, 11 April 2020

Movie Review: Howards End (1992)


A romantic drama, Howard End is a sly story of love, scheming, charity and social chasms colliding in savory mayhem.

The setting is England in the early 1900s. Romantic Helen Schlegel (Helena Bonham-Cater) has a short-lived fling with Paul Wilcox (Joseph Bennett) while staying at the Wilcox's Howards End country home. Back in London, Paul's dying mother Ruth (Vanessa Redgrave) forges a strong emotional bond with Helen's older sister Meg (Emma Thompson), and on her deathbed Ruth wills the Howards End estate to Meg, having learned the Schlegels will soon be forced to move from their family home.

Meanwhile, a chance encounter introduces the Schlegel sisters to Leonard and Jacky Bast (Samuel West and Nicola Duffett), a poor couple from the wrong side of the tracks. Leonard is a lowly clerk but avid reader, while Jacky is an unrefined ex-tart.

Ruth's husband Henry (Anthony Hopkins) along with materialistic daughter Evie (Jemma Redgrave) and spineless son Charles (James Wilby) decide to ignore Ruth's final wish. But Henry is lonely and perhaps suffering tinges of guilt. He is gradually attracted to Meg, finally proposing marriage. Meanwhile Helen adopts the cause of the Basts, doing her best to help them steer towards a better life, causing unpredictable outcomes.

Far from a stodgy costume period piece, Howards End is a conspiracy-rich, irony-filled and brisk drama. The E.M. Forster book is breezily adapted by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, and director James Ivory fills the 142 minutes of running time with plenty of character details, lavish sets and outdoor cinematography, bringing to life the people and places of England in the early 20th century across the social spectrum.

The film tackles remarkably current topics. The gap between rich and poor is an overarching theme, in particular the rub points where their disparate worlds interact. The Basts live in a cramped apartment a few feet from rumbling trains, and yet an innocuous umbrella incident brings Leonard into the orbit of the Schlegels, forever changing his world. Another and potentially more calamitous connection between the Basts and the world of wealth is revealed later on.

The pragmatic Meg is caught in the middle between her future husband and loving sister. Henry represents the dismissive rich-are-rich, poor-are-poor and isn't-that-too-bad mainstream thinking, while Helen is a passionate social justice warrior of her era. She simply refuses to let the Basts drift off into their life of misery, and advocates with increasing fervor for the haves to help the have-nots. As with all the story arcs in Howards End, good intentions can have unintended consequences, and individual quests are laced with the irony of fate's playful hands charting an invisible long-term course.

Despite the long length Howards End suffers from some annoying loose threads in content and tone, the gaps materializing somewhere between Jhabvala's script and the film's final edit. Helen's fiery dedication to the cause of the Basts almost sideswipes the film in its decontextualized vigor. One previously pivotal character just disappears in the final 20 minutes, while the Schlegel's Aunt Juley (Prunella Scales) and Henry's son Paul (Joseph Bennett) oscillate from essential to immaterial.

But the quality performances ride out the rough patches, Emma Thompson and Anthony Hopkins particular standouts portraying two strong and adept but different characters orbiting each other. And as the pensive matriarch Vanessa Redgrave is unforgettable setting events in motion by creating a deserved moral conundrum for her family.

Howards End is picturesque and idyllic, but also churns with absorbing domestic turmoil.






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Saturday, 11 January 2020

Movie Review: Primary Colors (1998)


A political drama laced with humour, Primary Colors is an inside look at the raging turmoil within a fledgling election campaign.

Political activist Adrian Lester (Henry Burton) is drawn to the campaign of charismatic candidate Jack Stanton (John Travolta), a governor from an unfancied southern state making an unlikely run for the Democratic presidential nomination. Stanton is a seemingly genuine and idealistic people-person with a love for education reform. He is also a hopeless womanizer with a chequered past.

His wife Susan (Emma Thompson) is involved in the campaign, and Lester joins slobby strategic advisor Richard Jemmons (Billy Bob Thornton) and organizer Daisy Green (Maura Tierney) to bring some operational discipline. When allegations of Stanton's past infidelities are made public, the team turns to researcher Libby Holden (Kathy Bates) to investigate and preempt other skeletons in the closet. Meanwhile Governor Fred Picker (Larry Hagman) emerges as an unexpected dark horse opponent in the nomination race.

Inspired by Bill Clinton's campaign that culminated in his winning the United States Presidency in 1992, Primary Colors is half of a good movie. Director Mike Nichols and writer Elaine May adapt the 1996 book by Joe Klein (initially published anonymously), with Lester the fly-on-the-wall not quite aware how he is being sucked into his first presidential campaign. What he finds on the inside is disorganized chaos barely held together by a ramshackle team, but also a candidate radiating winning charm. Nichols excels in setting the context, introducing the characters and conveying the exhausting nature of a nascent campaign, clueless but enthusiastic workers always on the go, fighting fires and snatching sleep in cars, planes and nondescript motel rooms.

The film's second half shifts to the grind of gathering ammunition for the mudslinging wars. The focus moves away from the Stantons and towards Libby Holden, and the film loses most of its momentum. The narrative works its way to an almost quaint dilemma: the Stanton's outward idealism clashing with the ready appeal of dirty politics when Jack is being subjected to an intense smear campaign. His opponent Governor Picker is the convenient test case, and May chooses a too-easy target to aim at. A high price is incurred as Stanton searches for his moral compass, Primary Colors trying hard to have it both ways by leaving victims on the sidelines.

John Travolta imitates Clinton's mannerisms and excels in walking the fine line where it's always perfectly unclear whether the candidate genuinely cares or is just brilliant at pretending. Emma Thompson as his wife Susan is not given enough to do, her juggling act to keep both tolerance and ambition in the air frequently unconvincing. Billy Bob Thornton and Kathy Bates are colourfully dramatic but also almost cartoonish. Burton suffers in the role of a supposed protagonist who does little other than experience what others are instigating.

Primary Colors is never less than vivid. While the packaging sparkles, the inside machinations are not always as pretty.






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Friday, 27 December 2019

Movie Review: Sense And Sensibility (1995)


A romantic drama with hints of humour, Sense And Sensibility adapts Jane Austen's novel with a breezy attitude and polished aesthetic.

It's late in the 18th century in England, and the death of Mr. Dashwood (Tom Wilkinson) leaves his second wife Mrs. Dashwood (Gemma Jones) and her daughters Elinor (Emma Thompson), Marianne (Kate Winslet) and young Margaret on a much reduced income. The two older sisters are close friends but opposites in personality. Elinor is thoughtful, circumspect and getting dangerously close to being designated a spinster. Marianne is passionate, extroverted and believes in true love.

The Dashwoods have to give up their lavish home and most of their servants, and they relocate to the snug cottage of the kindly Mr. and Mrs. Middleton. In the process Elinor meets and starts to fall in "like" with the potentially wealthy but profession-less Edward Ferrars (Hugh Grant). However, events conspire against their budding relationship.

Marianne's fortunes start to look up when she meets Colonel Brandon (Alan Rickman), who may be interested in her, but before he can act she is literally swept off her feet by the dashing John Willoughby (Greg Wise). But with money, class, long-held promises and family expectations at least as important as love, the path to marital happiness for the Dashwood sisters is nothing if not complicated.

First-time script writer Emma Thompson and producer Lindsay Doran wrestled with Austen's prose and simplified the book into cinematic cohesion. With foreign director Ang Lee providing an agile perspective, the trio produced a surprisingly accessible package. While the story remains largely obsessed with women finding husbands and not a single character appears to have a vocation worth mentioning, Sense And Sensibility creates a thriller out of mysteries of the heart.

The multiple and often overlapping possible love matches for Elinor and Marianne Dashwood are surprisingly engaging, and of course not a single relationship comes without layers of complexity. The affable Edward appears to be prevented from fully pursuing Elinor because she is penniless and his mother won't allow it, but a much deeper secret will be revealed to Elinor, shaking the very premise of their bond.

Marianne suffers deeper cuts. Her two suitors could not be more different. Colonel Brandon is calm, collected and almost too easy to overlook as unsuitably serene for her disposition. Willoughby by comparison is a romantic wild heart, and once he enters her life she can see no one else. However, both men have stunning backstories to be revealed at the appropriate time, and only after Marianne's young heart is exposed to the dangers of intense love and her health compromised.

And the warm core of the story is a tender relationship between Elinor and Marianne built on sisterly love, support and respect. With the men frequently absent to build up the mystery around their motivations, Elinor and Marianne harbour the one genuine, constant and palpable bond.

Thompson and Winslet bring the two sisters to life with superlative performances. Thompson internalizes the fortitude expected of an older sister but still shines in the few scenes where Elinor's emotional defences finally break. At just 19 years old and in one of her earliest roles, Winslet finds the unabashed expression of an arts-loving young woman willing to challenge the social conventions of her day.

Director Lee ensures the men do more by staying within themselves, both Alan Rickman and Hugh Grant conveying polite but complex characters with more going on in their lives than first meets the eye. Although most of the drama occurs indoors and through scenes of dialogue, Lee does include plenty of beautiful English scenery, and a few pivotal scenes are staged on stormy moors with Marianne's impulsive passions landing her in physical predicaments and in need of rescue.

Thompson's script measures out the reveals at appropriate intervals to keep the drama simmering, and enough secondary characters populate the margins to provide a base level of caustic humour and social commentary. The labyrinthian love entanglements provide avenues to expose gender, class and economic divides buffeting the pursuit of happiness.

For the Dashwood girls finding a suitable man is almost the easy part. Not immune from being victimized, the sisters will build their true character by deftly navigating around societal expectations, using Sense And Sensibility to expose true intentions.






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Saturday, 2 November 2019

Movie Review: A Walk In The Woods (2015)


A semi-biographical drama and buddy comedy, A Walk In The Woods uses a long hike late in life to explore past decisions with a soft touch.

Elderly travel author Bill Bryson (Robert Redford) has reached a creative dead end. With his career reduced to reissuing old books and attending the funerals of dead friends, he decides on a whim to hike the 3,500 kilometre Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Main, an arduous months-long commitment. Bill's wife Catherine (Emma Thompson) is horrified at the idea, but cannot talk him out of it. She does, however, convince him to find a hiking partner.

None of the friends and colleagues that Bill approaches are interested, but his buddy from the old days Stephen Katz (Nick Nolte) hears about the hiking plan and eagerly volunteers. Katz is a grizzled free-spirited hell-raising adventurer who has done little with his life, and is now overweight and in poor health but at least has quit drinking. The two men travel to Georgia and start the hike, which turns into an opportunity to get reacquainted and for Bill to reassess his life.

A Walk In The Woods is sharply written and funnier than it needs to be. Directed by Ken Kwapis, the adaptation of the novel by Bill Bryson adopts a low key attitude towards the sense of malaise permeating the author's life. Dramatic revelations, hug-outs and big reveals are mercifully left out of the backpacks. Instead, Bill reflects upon his life tangentially and almost apologetically, as the hike and conversations help lift the fog about his achievements as he regains the perspective easily lost within daily minutiae.

As they huff and puff across the terrain Bill and Katz trade barbs and chip away at the jumble of life's compromises. Their friendship may have melted away under the strain of decidedly different attitudes, but neither claims the higher ground. Katz remained loyal to the young and fearless version of himself, gathering memories, legendary exploits, poor health and arrest warrants along the way. Bill settled to a life of domesticity with one woman, writing popular travel books and maintaining a healthy curiosity for learning. Passing a rock formation along the trail, Bill explains the various types of rocks and how, when and why they were created. "They're just rocks", growls Katz.

Along the way Bill and Katz encounter other hikers, mostly younger, some helpful, a few irritatingly smug, others just tired. Mostly these meetings serve to remind Bill and Katz they are slow, old and unlikely to complete the trail. While Katz is happy to call it a day anytime, Bill insists he is no quitter and doggedly proclaims he will carry on, with or without companionship. And when they face potentially lethal hazards in the form of hungry wildlife, bad weather and slippery ledges, maturity jumps in front of panic to handle the risk.

The film's primary joy is derived from the buzz between Robert Redford and Nick Nolte, two veterans finding a crackling dynamic built on character contrasts. Redford allows the cragginess of his 79 years to rest easily on the surface, wisdom, patience, honesty and stubbornness now the only things that matter for Bill. Nolte at 74 gives Katz a memorably gravelly and lumbering presence, a man who can dominate any environment just as easily as he can outstay his welcome.

In addition to Emma Thompson as Bill's wife, the supporting cast also features Mary Steenburgen as lodge owner the men meet along the trail.

A Walk In The Woods brings fresh air, edgy discourse, brushes with danger, moments of spectacular scenery, and a much needed emotional reset, useful at any age.






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Monday, 1 October 2018

Movie review: The Love Punch (2013)


A wacky heist comedy romance, The Love Punch is a lightweight travelogue with just a modicum of quality.

In England, divorced couple Kate and Richard Jones (Emma Thompson and Pierce Brosnan) are approaching retirement age, living separate lives but still on speaking terms. Richard's retirement plans are thrown into disarray when the company he works for is foreclosed by a hedge fund and the pension plan gutted. Vincent Kruger (Laurent Lafitte) is the Paris-based heartless corporate raider, and he is about to get married to the glamorous Manon Fontane (Louise Bourgoin).

Kate and Richard concoct a plan to gate-crash the wedding and steal the $10 million diamond necklace that Vincent is gifting Manon. They call upon their friends Jerry and Penelope (Timothy Spall and Celia Imrie) for help, and the foursome plot a raid on the wedding reception being held at a lavish south of France estate. Meanwhile, Richard is doing all he can to win back Kate's heart.

Written and directed by Joel Hopkins, The Love Punch is utterly inconsequential but also occasionally harmlessly entertaining. Clearly conceived as a pretext to invest some French production dollars into promoting tourism on the big screen, the plot is a sorry excuse for some lush French scenery. On the slightly positive side, Pierce Brosnan and Emma Thompson inject just enough class to avoid a total loss, and the script throws up a few good quips, many courtesy of a pleasantly gruff Timothy Spall.

And within the absurd proposition of four retirees turning to high stakes crime, Hopkins manages to take a few shots at Brosnan's Bond history and offers some smart commentary about love as advancing age replaces giddiness with pragmatism. In pursuit of keeping it real, Kate and Richard find an unlikely ally in Manon, a modern woman who quickly snaps out of her white knight fantasy.

But despite the decent moments, The Love Punch is frivolous and ultimately just too silly, a scenic coffee table book converted to moving pictures with actors going through the motions but mostly getting in the way of the glossy imagery.






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Sunday, 25 February 2018

Movie Review: Junior (1994)


A routine comedy, Junior carries a single joke but surrounds it with decent production values.

In San Francisco, Dr. Alex Hesse and Dr. Larry Arbogast (Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito) are fertility research partners. When the Federal Drug Administration turns down their request to start human trials on Expectane, a promising fertility drug, their funding dries up. Head of research Dr. Noah Banes (Frank Langella) shuts down Alex's university lab, and replaces him with accident-prone Dr. Diana Reddin (Emma Thompson), an expert in cryogenics.

Larry decides to push on with one human trial anyway, and convinces Alex to be the subject. Larry steals one egg from Diana's lab, Alex fertilizes it, the embryo is planted in Alex's stomach cavity and he starts taking regular doses of Expectane. Meanwhile, Larry's ex-wife Angela (Pamela Reed) reappears in his life, and she is pregnant and wants Larry to be her doctor. Alex starts to enjoy the  pregnancy experience and unexpectedly falls in love with Diana.

Directed by Ivan Reitman, Junior reteams Schwarzenegger and DeVito after the success of 1988's Twins. The big-and-small, scrappy-and-cool contrasts still play well, but Junior has limited ambition. "Schwarzenegger is pregnant" pretty much starts and ends the summary of the film, and while Reitman milks the premise for all its worth, the film clearly struggles to maintain momentum.

So Alex, injected full of large doses of estrogen, goes through morning sickness, wonders about his sensitive nipples, experience the glow of pregnancy, enjoys the feel of his skin, starts eating for two, and becomes overly emotional. By the end of his pregnancy term Alex is dressed up as a woman and is going through prenatal classes. Funny, yes, but in a most predictable way.

Despite all of these emotional transformations Alex still finds the capacity to fall in love with a clumsy woman, but the romance between Alex and Diana is anyway wedged in to the script, and never convinces. Also unexceptional and unnecessary is Dr. Banes as the limp villain of the piece.

Schwarzenegger fully buys into the role and clearly has fun exploring the extreme opposite end of his tough screen persona. DeVito gets all the one liners and expressed exasperation as his research partner goes well past the initial limits of their experiment. A few clever role reversal lines make their way into the dialogue.

As for the science, Reitman does not even go there. Apart from planting an embryo in Alex's stomach and having him gulp down drugs, how that baby grows and develops in the body of a man is left up to the unexplained weird logic of simpleton comedies.

Junior delivers harmless laughs in a glossy package, but remains as superficial as a bad wig.






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