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Friday 11 June for 1 week
UZAK (Distant) (15)
(Turkey 2002) dir.Nuri Bilge Ceylan 110m. Subtitles.
Muzafer Ozdemir, Mehmet Emin Toprak, Zuhal Gencer Erkaya, Nazan
Kirilmis.
“Ceylan’s third feature is a marvellous account of
a friendship disintegrating under pressure from time, place and
social difference. It thoroughly deserved the Best Director and
Best Actor prizes it won in Cannes last year. Mahmut (Muzaffer Ozdemir),
a photographer once full of lofty artistic ambitions but now resigned
to cynical pragmatism, lives in Istanbul. Barely concealing his
reluctance, he agrees to put up Yusuf (Mehmet Emin Toprak who tragically
died shortly after the film was completed), a cousin from the Anatolian
village he used to call home, while he looks for work on the ships
that might enable him to live abroad. Unfortunately for both, Yusuf,
unsuccessful in his rather half-hearted search, begins to outstay
his welcome. With its laconic, faintly elliptical narrative, strikingly
eloquent compositions (shot by Ceylan himself), and superb performances,
UZAK speaks volumes both about masculinity and the wintry realities
of modern life in the Western(-ised) world. Not that it’s
all doom and gloom; a droll wit ensures the none-too-rosey look
at friendship, fulfilment and frustration never feels forced or
oppressive. A delicious sightgag involving Tarkovsky’s STALKER
typifies the blend of warm affection and wry scepticism that distinguishes
the film. The gentle pace and sense of how individual lives relate
to larger forces echoes Edward Yang; the precise evocation of time
and place and discreet formal confidence, Kiarostami; and the deadpan
visual comedy, Keaton or Jarmusch. Finally, however, Ceylan’s
quiet intelligence and rich imagination mean he’s his own
man, and one of the most promising film-makers in the world today.”
(Geoff Andrew, Time Out)
+ showing daily with UZAK @ 8.40
TOMATO
DELIVERY (15)
(Br 2004) dir.Xiaosong Que 15m. Subtitles.
Supported by Hackney Film Fund.
An illegal Chinese immigrant dreams of a better life for himself
and his family. In the wake of the recent tragedy at Morecambe Bay,
this film becomes all the more pertinent – allowing us a glimpse
of the humanity usually hidden behind the headlines.
TOMATO DELIVERY is being shown in conjunction with Refugee Week
14-20 June 2004 (www.refugeeweek.org.uk) |
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Friday 18 June for 2 weeks
CONFIDENCES TROP INTIMES (15)
(France 2004) dir.Patrice Leconte 103m. Subtitles.
Fabrice Luchini, Sandrine Bonnaire, Michel Duchaussoy, Anne Brochet,
Gilbert Melki, Laurent Gamelon, Hélène Surgère,
Urbain Cancelier.
“An erotically charged drama from director Patrice Leconte,
Confidences Trop Intimes stars Sandrine Bonnaire as Anna, a woman
trapped in an abusive relationship who mistakes tax lawyer William
(Fabrice Luchini) for a psychoanalyst. Before he can correct her,
she's started pouring out her heart to him and he's smitten by her
fragile beauty and heart-wrenching story. Described by Leconte as
a "sentimental thriller", this urbanely sophisticated
French drama delivers more sentiment than thrills but has a hook
that'll keep you guessing. They say opposites attract, but it's
hard to imagine two more unlikely actors than Bonnaire and Luchini
sharing the screen together. Much like Leconte's delightfully witty
last outing L'Homme Du Train, which threw Johnny Hallyday and Jean
Rochefort together, the chief pleasure of Confidences Trop Intimes
is in watching these two thesps play off each other. By the time
Anna discovers that William's happier balancing spreadsheets than
reading Freud, it's too late – the unlikely pair are hooked
on their platonic talking cure sessions. As the vaguely neurotic
woman with a mean-spirited husband and a complicated sex life, Bonnaire
is in sultry mode, languorously smoking cigarettes as she spills
intimate details to her taxman therapist. Luchini, meanwhile, is
a prim and proper anal retentive, vaguely effeminate yet full of
the sly confidence of someone hiding uncharted depths (what else
are we to make of his impromptu dance routine to Wilson Pickett's
In The Midnight Hour?!). Even by Leconte's airy standards, it's
slight filmmaking. Fortunately, it's buoyed by a simmering erotic
undertow that recalls the director's earlier film about obsession,
The Hairdresser's Husband. Plus there's a fantastic supporting cast,
including William's disapproving old battleaxe of a secretary (Hélène
Surgère) and a 'real' psychoanalyst (Michel Duchaussoy),
who offers him an enigmatic crash course in head shrinking –
"Once ajar the door to female mystery is hard to shut again"
– while charging him through the nose for the privilege.”
(Jamie Russell, BBCi) |
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Friday 25 June for 1 week
THE COOLER (15)
(US 2003) dir.Wayne Kramer 102m.
William H Macy, Maria Bello, Alec Baldwin, Ron Livingston.
"The phenomenally unlucky Bernie Lootz (Macy) works for gangster
Shelly Kaplow (Baldwin), 'cooling' in a Vegas casino, spreading
his bad luck to potential winners. When Bernie hooks up with waitress
Natalie (Bello), his luck changes - a problem for Shelly, who makes
it a problem for Bernie and Natalie. This first feature from director/
co-writer Wayne Kramer would make a great double-bill partner for
last year's Spanish hit, INTACTO. That dealt with good luck as a
supernatural power, revealing how smiling fortune could also be
a curse; this mirror image shows that a lifelong losing streak can
be a career - but a turn for the better can jump-start catastrophe.
Allegedly based on a Las Vegas legend, the 'cooler' concept is wittily
demonstrated by early scenes that parody De Niro's glide through
CASINO or 007's baccarat triumphs in DR. NO. William H. Macy's sand-suited
sad sack Bernie creeps unnoticed through a gaming room, spreading
misery and loss among the clientele while the staff smugly rake
in the suckers' cash. Macy hasn't had a role this good since FARGO,
and demonstrates again his mastery of the droopy-eyed, apologetically
desperate, borderline bitter shrug. THE COOLER takes a typical Macy
character in new directions, playing him off against equally offbeat
supporting turns. Maria Bello's waitress-hooker, whose affair with
Bernie keeps tripping over new revelations, is sexy and sad, especially
in a couple of very funny bedroom scenes. A revelation is Alec Baldwin
as an old-style gangster, sentimental and brutal by turns, resisting
the transformation of his dingy casino into a glitzy tourist trap,
all the more monstrous in that he commits his worst crimes out of
genuine friendship. Most Vegas movies, from CASINO to SHOWGIRLS,
revel in the neon glamour they purport to find disgusting, but THE
COOLER goes for rottenness all the way. The ghosts of the Rat Pack
have long departed, leaving only disillusioned, late-night sleaze.
The bittersweet comedy allows moments of violence which underline
the threat that comes with trying to outrun doom. You need to buy
into the fable-like premise to click with the story, but it's a
good, simple idea, well executed. And you even get an acting masterclass
from the three leads thrown in." (Kim Newman, Empire)
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Thursday 2 July for 2 weeks
SHREK 2 (U)
(US 2004) dirs.Kelly Asbury, Conrad Vernon. 105m. Animation.
Voices of Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Cleese, Julie
Andrews, Antonio Banderas, Rupert Everett.
“It is not often that an animated film gains a Competition
berth at Cannes, and unprecedented that its sequel should be invited
back to challenge for the Palme d’Or two years later. But
SHREK was no ordinary animated film, and SHREK 2 is, rarer still,
proving every bit as cute, clever and funny as the original. SHREK
2 finds the title character (voiced again by Mike Myers) and his
new bride, Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz), returning from their honeymoon
to find an invitation from her parents, King Harold and Queen Lillian
(John Cleese and Julie Andrews respectively), who want to meet their
new son-in-law. Fiona is excited; Shrek is apprehensive, aware that
a giant green ogre is not what most parents envisage for their daughter.
With Donkey (the inimitable Eddie Murphy) joining them, the newlyweds
journey 700 miles to the aptly-named Kingdom of Far, Far Away. It
turns out that Shrek’s fears are well founded. While the queen
accepts her new son-in-law, the king does not. He turns to the powerful
Fairy Godmother (Jennifer Saunders) for help. She is only too happy
to comply, since her own future is predicated upon the marriage
of her son, the narcissistic Prince Charming (Rupert Everett), to
the Princess. Fairy Godmother enlists the services of Puss in Boots
(a delightful Antonio Banderas), legendary slayer of ogres. The
jokes and sight gags, some wonderfully subtle, keep the laughter
level high throughout the movie. As before, the humour is rooted
in character, story and clever tweaking of everything from fairy
tales to Hollywood. Once again, Myers, Diaz and Murphy give flawless
vocal performances. And while all the new characters (and actors)
slide nicely into place, the clear stand-out is Puss in Boots, who
elicits the film’s two biggest laughs, not with a line of
dialogue but by his facial expression. In what can only be described
as an extraordinary collaboration between voice talent and animators,
Donkey and Puss all but steal the show. As impressive as the first
film’s state-of-the-art 3D computer animation was (a complex
process developed at PDI/DreamWorks several years ago enabled animators
to convey more emotion in human faces), the sequel benefits from
even newer advances. The most important has to do with something
called a ’bounce shader’, which affects how both the
characters and the set are lit. It is evident not only in the appearance
of the human characters but also in the extraordinary reproduction
of wet fur when Donkey and Puss get caught in the rain. One thing
is already clear: SHREK 2 will be delighting audiences all summer.”
(Jean Oppenheimer, Screen International) |
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Friday 16 July for 2 weeks
SPIDER-MAN 2 (* tbc)
(US 2004) dir.Sam Raimi 130m. (approx)
Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, Mary Jane Watson, Alfred Molina, James
Franco, Elizabeth Banks.
In Spider-Man 2, the latest installment in the blockbuster Spider-Man
series based on the classic Marvel Comics hero, Tobey Maguire returns
as the mild-mannered Peter Parker, who is juggling the delicate
balance of his dual life as a college student and a web-slinging
super hero. Tormented by his secrets, Peter finds that his relationships
with all those he holds dear are in danger of unraveling. His life-long
yearning for M.J. (Kirsten Dunst) becomes even stronger as he fights
the impulse to reveal his secret life and declare his love. His
friendship with Harry Osborn (James Franco) is complicated by the
young Osborn's bitterness over his father's death and his growing
vendetta against Spider-Man. Even Peter's beloved Aunt May (Rosemary
Harris), who has fallen on hard times after the death of Uncle Ben,
begins to have doubts about her nephew. The adventure escalates
and Spider-Man’s life becomes even more complicated as he
encounters a formidable new foe – Dr. Otto Octavius (Alfred
Molina) who has been reincarnated as the maniacal and multi-tentacled
“Doc Ock”. Spider-Man must use all the powers at his
disposal to try to stop this diabolical madman in his octagonal
tracks. |
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Friday 30 July for 1 week
FAHRENHEIT 9/11 (*)
(US 2004) dir.Michael Moore 112m. Documentary
“Michael Moore’s blistering documentary offers such
a comprehensive assault on the failings, lies and deceptions of
the Bush administration that it is certain to play a part in the
2004 Presidential election. Inevitably, it is becoming a focus for
anti-Bush sentiment and those US voters disillusioned by the war
in Iraq. FAHRENHEIT 9/11 presents Moore’s wide-ranging reflections
on the past four years of US history, from the Presidential election
of 2000 through the events of September 2001 to the search for weapons
of mass destruction and the ongoing war in Iraq. Told with passion
and cutting sarcasm, the film has a good deal of the Moore trademarks,
from a deft use of various television and pop culture clips to embarrassing
encounters with the great and the good. The irony and childish iconoclasm
are still there but this is a film in which an adult sense of anger
and frustration also dominate. The four years of the Bush Presidency
provide a structure to the film as Moore traces the mutually beneficial
connections between the Bush family and the ruling elite of Saudi
Arabia who are said to own 7% of America. Bush Jr is depicted as
a lazy, empty-headed buffoon who was on holiday 42% of the time
during the first eight months in office. Moore also reveals how
24 Bin Laden family members, who were in the US on 9/11, were allowed
to leave for home two days after the attacks – with the approval
of the White House. Filled with probing questions and disturbing
footage, FAHRENHEIT 9/11 covers territory and puts accusations that
many will recognise. But Moore stitches them together in such a
fascinating way that he succeeds in exposing the profound failure
of US democracy. The Democrats are seen to be irrelevant as a force
of opposition. The media is widely partisan. The public is ill-informed
and gullible. The politicians are cynical and sly. And there are
moments that take the breath away. The causes and consequences of
the Iraq war also revisit some familiar arguments but they are illustrated
with unfamiliar footage of interviews with the troops, grieving
relatives in the US and the military’s recruitment drives
among the poorest citizens of the land. This is a provocative, manipulative,
funny, shocking and completely unmissable letter from America in
which Moore is as deadly as any Weapon of Mass Destruction.”
(Allan Hunter, Screen International) |
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