Sight & Sound: November 2007

Cover of Sight & Sound November 2007The 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)

Sight & Sound: October 2007

Cover of Sight & Sound October 2007The latest Sight & Sound is out, with the following contributions from yours truly:

  • Testosterone (p.74) – the first in what promises (or threatens) to be a whole series of contemporary Polish films turns out to be an ensemble piece about various fronts in the sex war, shot in a style that’s none too subtly indebted to Reservoir Dogs;
  • Tough Enough (p. 76) – I’d almost forgotten I’d written this, as it was commissioned months ago but the film’s UK release kept getting postponed. Anyway, it’s a German slice of Loachian social realism about a Berlin teenager forced to move to and cope with a very different environment after his mother is thrown out by her rich boyfriend;
  • 12:08 East of Bucharest (p.77) – I’d first seen this a year ago in a massive open-air cinema at the Sarajevo Film Festival (where it was the opening night attraction), but this slyly satirical look at unreliable memories (of the intentional and unintentional kind) proved just as funny when seen in a Soho screening room;
  • Harold Lloyd: The Definitive Collection (p.84) – a real labour of love, this: I watched all nine discs in Optimum’s new box set avidly and was hungry for more by the end;
  • Bellissima (p. 85) – review of Masters of Cinema’s edition of Visconti’s neorealist comedy with Anna Magnani as the pushy mother of a deeply reluctant child;
  • Blue (p. 85) – review of Artificial Eye’s edition of Derek Jarman’s swansong. They could have cheated and just delivered a continuous digital blue, but this was clearly sourced from a film print, and the specks and scratches work well with Jarman’s hand-tooled aesthetic;
  • Distant Voices Still Lives (p. 85) – review of the BFI’s definitive edition of one of the old BFI Production Board’s greatest artistic triumphs: it hasn’t dated at all;
  • Irezumi (p. 86) – review of Yume’s DVD of Yasuzo Masumura’s startlingly vicious quasi-feminist melodrama, which appears to be getting its first UK release: it’s hard to imagine the BBFC of 1966 passing it uncut);
  • Silence (p. 87) – review of Masters of Cinema’s edition of Masahiro Shinoda’s Shusaku Endo adaptation, about the persecution of Japanese Christians and Portuguese missionaries in the early 17th century.
  • Sight & Sound: February 2007

    Cover of Sight & Sound February 2007The next Sight & Sound is out, with my name adorning the following pieces:

    Cinema reviews of:

    • Esma’s Secret (d. Jasmila Žbanić, Bosnia/Austria/Croatia/Germany)
    • Lives of the Saints (d. Rankin/Chris Cottam, UK) – also available online

    Short DVD reviews of:

    • Blind Husbands (d. Erich von Stroheim, US, 1919)
    • The Cranes Are Flying (d. Mikhail Kalatozov, USSR, 1957)
    • Ballad of a Soldier (d. Grigori Chukhrai, USSR, 1959)
    • The Star (d. Nikolai Lebedev, Russia, 2002)

    But the real labour of love was a full-page survey of virtually all the DVD releases currently available of Sergo Paradjanov’s films. Not that the job wasn’t frustrating at times – despite three separate editions of The Colour of Pomegranates, none manages to be entirely satisfactory (the Japanese one has the best picture by far, but no subtitles and is of the Soviet cut, while the others have significant visual and aural flaws). But the new French edition of Shadows of our Forgotten Ancestors is the best I’ve seen it since my enraptured discovery of the film nearly twenty years ago (coincidentally, in a French cinema).

    Sight & Sound: January 2007

    Cover of Sight & Sound January 2007The 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).

    But next month should more than compensate, as I’m currently knee-deep in Sergo Paradjanov DVDs from France, Japan, Russia and the US, which I’m comparing for an upcoming feature.

    Sight & Sound: December 2006

    Cover of Sight & Sound December 2006The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with the following pieces by me:

    • report from the 2006 Sarajevo Film festival, with mini-reviews of All for Free, Chicken Elections, Das Fräulein, Kythera, The Melon Route, Mum’n’Dad, My Neighbour Tanja, Nafaka, The Paper Will Be Blue, Seven and a Half, 1208: East of Bucharest and Vukovar: Final Cut;
    • London to Brighton – review of Paul Andrew Williams’ pulverisingly effective thriller about an underage girl on the run (also available online);
    • Passenger – review of Second Run’s well-contextualised but unfortunately cropped edition of Andrzej Munk’s daringly original Holocaust swansong.

    Sight & Sound: November 2006

    Cover of Sight & Sound November 2006The 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.

    Sight & Sound: October 2006

    Cover of Sight & Sound October 2006The 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.

    Sight & Sound: October 2005

    Cover of Sight & Sound October 2005The 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.

    Sight & Sound: January 2005

    Cover of Sight & Sound January 2005My 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.

    Unsurprisingly, I did fancy doing it, and I loved it. To some extent it suffers from the usual calling-card syndrome (there are a couple of CGI effects that, while undoubtedly show-stoppers, are a misjudgement for that reason), but the premise is so strong that it could survive a lot more than that. Essentially, it’s a study of village life, the twist being that Pálfi draws no real distinction between its human, animal and insect inhabitants: they’re all stared at with the same quizzical, quasi-anthropological eye. And then it gradually becomes clear that the female humans are treating their menfolk with the same ruthlessness as certain insect species…