Between 1998 & 2001, Takashi Miike’s prolific nature gained him worldwide notoriety with his V-cinema run. Audition, Ichi the Killer, Dead or Alive, and the Happiness of the Katakuri’s earned him legions of fans worldwide. Even if he isn’t quite as productive as he used to be, he still manages […]
Rob Simpson
Only Angels Have Wings (1939) Towering achievement from one of the Greatest Ever Directors (Review)
For many film fans in the UK, the Criterion Collection has been locked behind region codes, therefore, the highest-profile of all boutique labels choosing 2016 to migrate to these shores is the best news in years. Their opening salvo of titles represents the eclectic mix that saw the New York-based […]
Three Days of the Condor (1975) Conspiracy Thriller that ages like a Fine Wine (Review)
Even with them being the source of consternation for critics and audiences alike, tropes are an invaluable resource for the film writer – either as a framework to subscribe to or one to rebel against. A film responsible for the installation of many tropes is Sydney Pollack’s Three Days of […]
Farewell my Concubine (1993) The Chinese Epic as a performance piece (Review)
In the West, Chinese or Peking Opera is known more for graduates Yuen Biao, Jackie Chan, Corey Yuen and Sammo Hung than any cultural footprint – despite dating back to the 18th century. This makes the BFI release of Chen Kaige’s epic Farewell my Concubine one of the more interesting […]
Pink String and Sealing Wax (1945) The Darkest Soap Opera you’ve never seen (Review)
Ealing Studios are regarded as the bastion of post-war Cinema, the home of the finest comedies Britain has ever produced, but what is often overlooked is their innate Gothicism. With the artifice of its sets and the embers of Victorian London architecture, there is a Gothic grandeur running through the […]
Ken Russell: Great Composers (1965-7)(Review)
The music documentary is enjoying a boom period with the likes of 20,000 Days on Earth & Searching for Sugar Man receiving both critical and commercial acclaim, there’s also the channel defining content from the award-winning BBC Four. Staying with the British Broadcasting Corporation, it is easy to forget what […]
James White (2015) Christopher Abbott staggers in indie paint-by-number trauma drama (Review)
Independent film used to mean something, but with the rise of the internet, this has shifted 180 to the point where young filmmakers need to carve out their own niche in order to stand out from the staggering mass of people acting under the indie film umbrella. Joshua Mond along […]
Uzumasa Limelight (2014) A Wistful, one-of-a-kind Samurai Movie (Review)
Few genres associated closely with a nation have lasted as long as the samurai has for Japan, most follow the path of the Western in that they had a golden era with occasional post-boom pockets. The latest film to be released on Third Window Films, Uzumasa Limelight, concerns itself with […]
Rams (2015) Grímur Hákonarson emerges onto the front page of world cinema (Review)
Winner of the 2015 ‘Un Certain regard’ strand at Cannes and a film of intriguing realism is Rams. Grímur Hákonarson’s critically acclaimed film is the story of a rural Icelandic sheep farming community ravaged by the fatal, degenerative disease Scrapie. The film opens with Brothers Gummi (Sigurður Sigurjónsson) and Kiddi […]
The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973) One of the Ultimate Anti-Gangster Movies (Review)
Cinema has long been entrenched in mythologising the career criminal. Far from reality, these archetypes have evolved into marketable heroes. Perhaps the grim reality of these lives has become more prominent in the last decade or so, but back in the 1970s, such sombre realism was a scarce commodity. Enter […]