Film
Glee: The 3D Concert Movie
Posted 11:16pm Monday 22nd August 2011 by Phoebe Harrop
Directed by Kevin Tancharoen, (5/5). Glee: The 3D Concert Movie was possibly the best 90 minutes of my life. As its somewhat unimaginative title suggests, the movie was not actually a feature-length Glee episode (glepisode?), but was in fact a 3D film version of the Glee stage show which Read more...
Larry Crowne
Posted 11:14pm Monday 22nd August 2011 by Julia Sandston
Directed by Tom Hanks, (3.5/5). Larry Crowne is Tom Hank’s sophomore attempt at writing and directing a film. Sitting a little uncomfortably between drama and comedy, it isn’t entirely sure of itself, but it is otherwise enjoyable and relatively easy viewing. Larry Read more...
Gantz
Posted 11:12pm Monday 22nd August 2011 by Sam McChesney
Directed by Shinsuke Sato, (1.5/5). Allegedly, you will either love Gantz or hate it. My experience of the film was certainly consistent with this principle. And hint: I didn’t love it. Let me make one thing clear: I am not opposed to films based on comic books. Scott Read more...
Miss Representation
Posted 11:10pm Monday 22nd August 2011 by Sarah Baillie
Directed by Jennifer Siebel Newsom, (5/5). Before you stop reading because you think this film looks like it’s only for crazy feminists, wait! It’s not. Miss Representation is a film that every person in the world should watch. An exploration of the impact of the negative portrayal Read more...
Biutiful
Posted 3:57am Monday 15th August 2011 by Loulou Callister-Baker
Directed by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, (3.5/5). In Biutiful, Innarritu presents a dark story set amongst the labyrinth-like streets of Barcelona. The film is cyclic, both beginning and ending with death. We watch Uxbal (Javier Bardem), who is the father of two young children and the husband Read more...
Page One: inside the New York Times (Film Fest)
Posted 3:55am Monday 15th August 2011 by Sam McChesney
Directed by Andrew Rossi, (4/5). Page One is the story of an institution in decline, hurt by plummeting advertising revenue and enforced layoffs. It is also shamelessly biased, towards both the New York Times and traditional print media in general. Its protagonists are portrayed as heroic Read more...
Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey (Film Fest)
Posted 3:54am Monday 15th August 2011 by Loulou Callister-Baker
Directed by James Miller and Constance Marks, (4/5). Stitch by stitch, the crafting of our most beloved Sesame Street companion is revealed in Being Elmo. Through this documentary we learn about Kevin Clash, a man whose arm and voice has brought him international fame. You may not recognise Read more...
Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Posted 3:52am Monday 15th August 2011 by Tom Ainge-Roy
Directed by Rupert Wyatt, (4.5/5). How to make a successful prequel to a disastrous first film: 1. Ignore original movie in its entirety. 2. Replace bad actors with good actors. 3. Ditch terrible ape costumes and go digital, employing Weta motion-capture. 4. Reboot. Rise of the Read more...
Captain America: The First Avengers
Posted 12:45am Tuesday 9th August 2011 by Nick Hornstein
Directed by Joe Johnston, (3/5). As its title hints at, this movie is the final appetizer for much-anticipated blockbuster The Avengers coming to a screen near you in 2012. Captain America is an unashamedly old-fashioned film. The year is 1942, the look is sepia and the Read more...
Oranges and Sunshine
Posted 12:43am Tuesday 9th August 2011 by Cameron Roling
Directed by Jim Loach, (4/5). Oranges and Sunshine is the debut feature film from Jim Loach, son of iconic director Ken Loach (The Wind That Shakes the Barley). It deals with the story of the 'home children', who as orphans were relocated without choice from Britain to other parts of the Read more...