The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with the following pieces by me:
- review of Day Watch (d. Timur Bekmambetov, Russia, 2006);
- review of My Nikifor (d. Krzysztof Krauze, Poland, 2004);
- introduction to the films of Robert Bresson;
- short DVD review of Edvard Munch (d. Peter Watkins, Norway/Sweden, 1974);
- short DVD review of Peter Whitehead in the Sixties (BFI);
- short DVD review of The Ballad of Narayama (d. Keisuke Kinoshita, Japan, 1958);
- short DVD review of Sergei Eisenstein Volume 1 (Tartan)
The latest Sight & Sound is out, with the following contributions from yours truly:
The next Sight & Sound is out, with my name adorning the following pieces:
The latest Sight & Sound is out, and I just about scrape the achievement of having a piece in an entire year’s worth of issues for the first time – though the only piece bearing my name this time round is a short review of Second Run’s DVD of Avenge But One of My Two Eyes (d. Avi Mograbi, Israel/France, 2005).
The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with the following pieces by me:
The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with my reviews of two very different British films: Richard Laxton’s intermittently engaging but ultimately frustrating south London youth movie Life & Lyrics, and Stephen Frears’ surprisingly engrossing The Queen. The latter has the shortest synopsis I’ve written for a S&S fiction film review, given that very little of the historical background needed to be filled in.
The latest Sight & Sound is out, in which I tackle two highly distinctive films from Hungary and France (via Czechoslovakia). The Hungarian one is Kornél Mundruczó’s Johanna, an ambitious transposition of the Joan of Arc legend onto a scenario set in a murkily-lit present-day hospital – oh, and it’s a full-length opera written directly for the screen, courtesy of composer Zsofia Taller. The French/Czechoslovak one is René Laloux’s legendary Fantastic Planet, one of the most effective attempts at bringing the artist Roland Topor’s vision to the screen – my favourite is still Henri Xhonneux’s Marquis (1989), but it’s a close-run thing.
The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with my news item on the re-emergence of Michelangelo Antonioni’s The Passenger and the bizarre chain of circumstances that kept it out of circulation for so long, plus the mildly enjoyable but disappointingly unambitious British comedy-thriller Out on a Limb.
The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with my review of The Jealous God, a quixotic attempt by writer-director Steven Woodcock at reviving the spirit of the British New Wave – although, as I argue in the piece, the highly televisual result closer to watered-down heritage cinema than the socially and culturally groundbreaking work being produced by Karel Reisz, Lindsay Anderson, Tony Richardson et al in the late 1950s/early 1960s, and it’s the palest shadow of John Braine’s original novel. Still, the commission gave me an excuse to read it, so at least I got something worthwhile out of the experience.
My second full-length Sight & Sound review has just appeared in print, of György Pálfi’s almost dialogue-free debut Hukkle (2004). Or, “I’ve got this weird Hungarian film that no-one else has taken on – do you fancy doing it?”, which is roughly how the commission went.