Chris Olson's Film Review Blog

OLSONS MOVIE BLOG


Reviewing Films Since 2010





Thursday 31 January 2013

The Apartment (1960)


“It’s brilliant…filmwise”

Flawless comedy starring Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine, about a lowly office worker (Lemmon) who allows his superiors at work to use his apartment for their secret affairs.

Lemmon plays C. C. Baxter, an eager-to-please pencil-pusher, whose private life is being ruined by his bosses, who are constantly taking advantage of him. Pushing Baxter out of his apartment at all hours of the day or night, drinking all his booze, and causing him to have the reputation of a scallywag with his neighbours, Baxter only continues with this horrendous“working relationship” in order to further his own career.

Conflict strikes though, when Baxter falls for a spunky elevator girl called Fran (MacLaine), who is having an affair with one of Baxter’s bosses…in Baxter’s apartment! As Baxter toes the line between flexible employee and friend to Fran, his apartment becomes the battle ground for an all-out drama.

Wonderfully witty and superbly scripted, The Apartment is a true comedy classic. Whilst the jokes are delivered with a sophisticated sharpness, there is a strong undercurrent of tragedy emanating from the two central characters. Baxter’s predicament leaves him dangerously depressed, whilst Fran’s complicated affair becomes the film’s most poignant storyline.

Unforgettably brilliant.

Monday 21 January 2013

Prometheus (2012)




Ridley Scott and Noomi Rapace talk about the sci-fi film of the year.

For anyone who remembers the alien exploding out of John Hurt’s chest, or Harrison Ford terminating replicants, Ridley Scott will need no introduction. The man is a living legend amongst the film world, having directed some of the most influential movies of all time (see Blade Runner, Alien, Robin Hood, Thelma and Louise etc). This year sees the return of Scott to the enduring world of science-fiction, with a new crew, a new leading lady, and a new ship, namely: Prometheus.

“I loved going back to science fiction and I really loved being in the studio too,” says Scott “I hadn’t done a studio film for a while because Robin Hood was almost entirely shot on location and I really loved being in the studio for Prometheus. It all went very well indeed and I’m very happy with the result.” Having been released on June 1st, the wait is very much over, but the excitement continues at cinemas across London, and the world. The film follows the journey of a scientific crew, aboard the aforementioned ship, going in search of answers to the universe, only to come across a terrifying alien threat. The film tackles some weighty scientific notions and themes, as Scott reveals:

“We’re exploring some big ideas here. For us to be sitting here now had to have so many elements occur in the right way over the millennia, three billion years or so, and for that to happen, was some entity…involved? So the question becomes ‘God or not God?’. Or are we simply a Petri dish? And if we’re a Petri dish, we’re a Petri dish of something. If we are a Petri dish of something, who was that? It’s much larger than we are.”

Whilst Scott’s return to science-fiction was heavily desired amongst film fans, there are similarities between Prometheus and some of his earlier films. One of which comes in the form of Swedish actress, Noomi Rapace, playing the Scott-style leading woman. Rapace talks about the influence Scott had on her personally, “I remember when I saw Thelma and Louise and I was so young, I was like, ‘Oh, what is this? I’ve never seen anything like this.’ I was 12 or something. I think it’s incredible how he works.” She continues, “He has a very clear vision but at the same time he’s very open and if I would come up with a better idea, he would say, ‘Well, yeah, let’s try that’. It’s like we were creating something together every day and that was just amazing to be part of.”

This camaraderie forms an important part of the film, and the bonding between the actors is clear to see. “Ridley found a fantastic mix of people for this project and it was pure joy to work with them because they are amazing actors.” Says Rapace, “We did a lot of ad-lib and every scene came to life with this amazing group of people. I certainly don’t see myself as the lead. You know ‘here comes the lead and this is my scene.’ It wasn’t like that. It was very much what we all created together. There was Idris Elba and Michael (Fassbender), who are both fantastic, and I felt very lucky because I was surrounded by people who are just amazing, incredible actors.”

Indeed, the performances in Prometheus rival any of Scott’s previous films, including the notorious portrayal of lead woman Ripley (of the Alien films) by Sigourney Weaver. Rapace takes on the lead role of Elizabeth Shaw, a woman dedicated to faith as much as science, and commented on the differences/similarities between her and Ripley; “I think Shaw is more feminine in a way. She’s a scientist, an archaeologist. I think that Ripley was, in a way, harder from the start and from the beginning and she was a loner. Shaw starts this journey with Holloway [Logan Marshall-Green] and she loves him. They’re a team and they’re doing this thing together. In the middle of the movie, something happens and she becomes harder, more like a warrior. She has to cut off some emotional attachments to be able to survive.”

Aside from the great performances, there is also the great lengths which Ridley Scott is famous for embracing, in order to achieve a brilliant movie.

He said, “I like to build sets and reproduce as much as I can because it’s there; it’s something real for the actors to work with. And ironically, it turns out to be more economic. Everything I did was more economic. I’ve watched these other films that are clocking up around the sky, which is ridiculous and I don‘t know how that happens. I think it happens through indecision and it also happens when you don‘t know what your story is, and you shoot before you have a script and you are making it up on the spot and the you digitally try and fix it afterwards and then you realize you haven’t got it, and you come back and you have to re-shoot again. We knew exactly what we wanted. Absolutely, I had it locked down.”

This definitive view of how the film would ultimately look is what separates an artistic director like Scott from others. The precision in his techniques and the confidence in his choices keep the film from being sloppy, and instead, a vivid and compelling action/horror. One choice he made was a constant source of trepidation for fans, shooting Prometheus in 3D.

“3D is absolutely right for Prometheus. It’s straight-forward and simple and it enhances the spectacle, there’s no doubt about that. And it was simple partly because of the cameraman that we used, Dariusz Wolski who was just great. I had the best time with Dariusz. He had done one 3D movie before, the last Pirates of the Caribbean film (On Stranger Tides) and I said to him ‘I think we should shoot it in 3D because this film lends itself to it.’ and he said ‘yes I agree.’ Everyone was very wary about how much extra we would throw at it because of 3D but it didn’t happen.”

The result is phenomenal, bringing together some of the most loved aspects of Scott’s previous films and presenting them in an enduringly contemporary way.

Sunday 20 January 2013

Killer Joe (2011)


“Finger-Licking Good”


Based on the play by Tracy Letts, Killer Joe is a wonderful exploration of greed, loyalty and violence.

Matthew McConaughey plays the title role of Joe Cooper, a detective who moonlights as a contract killer. Joe is hired by Chris Smith (Emile Hirsch) to kill his alcoholic, abandoning mother, after Chris learns that his mum has a fifty-thousand dollar life insurance policy, which, in the event of her death, will go to her seemingly frail daughter Dottie (Juno temple).

Chris and his amazingly useless dad Ansel (Thomas Haden Church) are unable to stump up Joe’s twenty-five-thousand dollar fee up front, so they allow Joe to keep Dottie as a retainer, until after the money is collected and Joe is paid. Joe’s interest in Dottie seems lascivious, as he robs her of her virginity, and makes himself perfectly at home in the Smith’s trailer, although becomes somewhat of the lover/father-figure she desperately needs. Dottie’s reaction is not one of pure hatred, she soon falls for “Killer” Joe’s charms, and finds herself pulled away from her family.

As Joe’s effect on the whole family, including Ansel’s new wife Sharla (Gina Gershon) becomes increasingly entrenched, we see the Smith’s pull each other apart whilst heralding Joe as some kind of superior being.

A fantastically scripted film, the story’s foundation as a play is obvious, letting these character engage so frantically as the central device of the movie. Characters are given their separate motivations, which all seem to conflict with one another, creating the havoc which escalates towards a final, brutal encounter.

Brilliant performances, in particular McConaughey who provides such a compellingly seedy character, stealing most of the scenes whilst engaging in some of the more disturbing ones (in particular a sequence between Joe and Sharla with a piece of fried chicken!).

Dark, humorous, and audaciously plotted, Killer Joe is a spectacular feat of character-driven drama.

Friday 18 January 2013

The Hunger Games (2012)




Shooting Straight

Popular books seem to be increasingly ending up as movie franchises. In recent years the likes of The Twilight Saga, the Millennium series (that’s The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo for those out of the loop), and Jason Bourne have all graced our screens, with varying degrees of success. Now, The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins looks set for a three-film deal, and if the first instalment is anything to go by, it should be fantastic.

Jennifer Lawrence plays the film’s central character, Katniss Everdeen - a talented survivor-type, whose life amongst an impoverished district has taught her to be self-reliant, and deadly with a bow-and-arrow.

Katniss lives in District 12, in a world controlled by a centralised governing body, known as the Capitol. The Capitol controls all 12 of the districts with a harsh hand, in order to prevent any kind of uprising. One of the Capitol’s methods is to hold the annual Hunger Games - an event whereby two “tributes” from every district, one boy and one girl, must fight to the death in an arena filled with weapons, booby-traps and limited resources.

During the annual “reaping”, the process in which the tributes names are drawn for the games, Katniss’ younger sister Prim is chosen. Seeing her helpless sibling struggle to the stage, Katniss offers herself as tribute, in place of her sister.

What ensues is a violent, desperate attempt by Katniss to stay alive in the arena, whilst trying to figure out if her fellow district-12 tribute Peeta, is a enemy or ally.

An excellent story done justice by director Gary Ross - who stays fundamentally true to the plot. Minimal changes have been made, and the only substantial criticism, one that seems to follow any book-into-film adaptation, is that not enough time is given to certain events.

That being said, The Hunger Games movie is a genuinely thrilling and exciting film. Lawrence’s performance is excellent, coping with plenty of solo screen time whilst adding levels of pathos to her troubles character. The fighting is daringly violent, it could so easily have taken the path less gory, which gives the film a far more adult atmosphere.

A spectacular sci-fi/thriller, introducing audiences to what should be a spectacular show.