Monday 31 July 2017

ATOMIC BLONDE : Thursday 27th July 2017

I saw 'ATOMIC BLONDE' at an advance screening at my local multiplex one week ahead of its Australian release on 3rd August. Directed by David Leitch in his first solo Directorial outing having served as the uncredited Co-Director on 'John Wick' with Chad Stahelski and having served his time over the years as Stunt Co-ordinator and Stuntman on more action films than you can poke a stick at, and in the capacity as Second Unit Director on a good many also, and occasional Producer and Actor too. Next up for this new Director is 'Deadpool 2' currently filming and due in 2018. This film is based on the 2012 graphic novel titled 'The Coldest City' by Antony Johnston and Sam Hart, stars a strong cast and a thumping '80's soundtrack and cost US$30M to make. The film has so far garnered generally positive Reviews.

The film opens with the death of MI6 Agent James Gasciogne (Sam Hargrave) at the hands of ruthless KGB Agent Yuri Bakhtin (Johannes Johannesson) who then proceeds to remove his wristwatch - for it contains microfilm detailing a List of covert field operatives working in the USSR, that is a very valuable commodity in this 1989 cold war era action spy thriller set on the eve of the Berlin Wall coming down and with it the shifting of superpower alliances. Fast forward ten days and in an ice cold bath emerges a very bruised, beaten-up and battered Lorraine Broughton (Charlize Theron) - a top level MI6 Agent.

She steps out of her bath, pours herself a neat Stoli over rocks, gulps it down and makes herself presentable. She then appears in an interrogation room with MI6 Executive Eric Gray (Toby Jones) and CIA Agent Emmett Kurzfeld (John Goodman) to discuss the intricacies of her very recent mission to Berlin from which she has just returned, and is wearing the battle scars to prove it. The day following Gasciogne's death she is dispatched to Berlin by her superiors to recover the List, now missing in action, and identify, locate and dispense with a known Double Agent referred to as 'Satchel' who has been selling intelligence to the Ruskies for years, and who is believed to be responsible for betraying Gasciogne.

Upon arriving in Berlin, supposedly undercover and incognito, she is ambushed by KGB Agents working for a a lynchpin of the KGB and a generally unscrupulous kinda guy that you don't wanna cross, Aleksander Bremovych (Roland Moller). After a set piece involving Broughton's red stiletto and close quarter hand to hand combat inside a speeding car that doesn't end so well for the Russian's, she is met with very unceremoniously by her contact in Berlin - Agent David Percival (James McAvoy). Percival has been living and working in Berlin for the last ten years or so and is so deep undercover that there's not much he doesn't know about what's what and who's who in Berlin - on both the east and west sides of the Wall.

Later, having made slow progress with her investigations Broughton has a snoop around Gasciogne's apartment looking for any clues. She discovers a photograph of him and Percival indicating that the two men were close friends - a fact earlier denied by Percival. East German Police Officers arrive on the scene of the apartment and another close quarter hand to hand fist fight ensues with Broughton dispensing with them pesky Police types with her usual aplomb using a length of hose pipe and sundry household implements lying around the abode. She comes to realise that only Percival knew that she was going to Gasciogne's apartment, and suspects him of double crossing her to the authorities, and for potentially being Satchel.

Bakhtin meanwhile intends to sell the List to the highest bidder. Percival, having received word of this, arranges a rendezvous and then sticks a screwdriver in Bakhtin's forehead killing him outright stone dead, and takes the List for himself. Broughton in the meantime has met up with a sultry young undercover French Agent Delphine Lasalle (Sofia Boutella) and the two are instantly drawn to each other. Percival meets with Bremovych to sell the List to him, but unknown to the pair is that Lasalle is covertly photographing their meeting.

Amongst all of this is a Soviet defector known as Spyglass (Eddie Marsan) who stole the List in the first place and is the only person to have sighted the contents of the List and has all its data committed to his memory. Spyglass also is a Stasi Officer. Percival has agreed to escort Spyglass and his family across the border into West Berlin, but during a large protest rally which Broughton, Percival and Spyglass use as cover to effect their escape to the West, Percival shoots Spyglass and sends word to Bremovych's men that the injured Spyglass and Broughton are on the run. More hand to hand combat follows, and all the while Spyglass is bleeding out from his shot to the stomach. The pair end up in  car which gets chased down the streets of East Berlin by Bremovych's henchmen. Eventually the car is shunted into the river - Broughton swims free but is unable to free a pinned down Spyglass who drowns in the passenger seat as the car sinks into the River.

After this fracas, Percival visits Lasalle, and kills her to cover his own tracks but not before the French Agent was able to stab Percival twice. Lorraine arrives just after Percival has left, discovering the dead body of Lasalle and an envelope with her name on it containing the covert photographs taken of Percival meeting with Bremovych, proving in her mind that Percival is Satchel. After Percival patches up his wounds, he sets his safe house alight and attempts to flee the city under cover of darkness. Broughton tracks him down, shoots him dead and removes the wristwatch containing the List.

Back in the present day and still in the interrogation room where Broughton has been dutifully recounting all the facts surrounding her Berlin assignment to Gray and Kurzfeld, she presents the photographs and an audio recording that she spliced together herself that show that Percival was Satchel. She also denies all knowledge of the whereabouts of the List, forcing MI6 to shut down the case.

Three days later and Broughton meets with Bremovych in a Paris hotel suite, and she reveals herself to be Satchel, and in possession of the List, which she hands over to the Russian mobster. Bremovych knows however, that he has been set up and has his three henchmen and a 'cleaner' enter the room to dispense with Broughton and dispose of her body. Using a pistol concealed in an ice bucket, Broughton instead dispenses with the three henchmen and the cleaner, and then puts a bullet in Bremovych's head, but not before revealing first that she has been playing all sides along from the get go. Broughton then boards a private jet, where she meets Kurzfeld revealing herself to be a mole planted by the CIA, and hands over to him the wristwatch containing the List, before the pair depart for Langley . . . job done!

There a lot to like about this film - the pounding soundtrack featuring many late '80's greats including Depeche Mode, New Order, Public Enemy, Echo and the Bunnymen, The Cure, Blondie, Duran Duran, David Bowie, George Michael and Nena; the well choreographed action fight sequences; the performances by McAvoy who chews up the screen and the dialogue, and Theron too proving herself to be a bona fide kick ass female action star; and the attention to detail in capturing the mood, the fashion, the sounds of the era. But for all of that I swear that Lorraine Broughton must be John Wick's Mum and she taught him everything she knows, because in the intense gun play and the close quarter fight scenes there are plenty of similarities with John Wick's previous two instalments. The plot we have seen before too (1996's 'Mission : Impossible') and as such it's pretty standard fare, that is saved from its predictability by the stylish and fast paced action. The film has so far grossed US$25M and I guess if it gets enough bums on seats, there is scope for a follow-on instalment.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Saturday 29 July 2017

Birthday's to share this week : 30th July - 5th August 2017

Do you celebrate your Birthday this week?

Sam Worthington does on 2nd August - check out my tribute to this Birthday Lad turning 41, at the end of this feature.

Do you also share your birthday with a well known, highly regarded & famous Actor or Actress; share your special day with a Director, Producer, Writer, Cinematographer, Singer/Songwriter or Composer of repute; or share an interest in whoever might notch up another year in the coming seven days? Then, look no further! Whilst there will be too many to mention in this small but not insignificant and beautifully written and presented Blog, here are the more notable and noteworthy icons of the big screen, and the small screen, that you will recognise, and that you might just share your birthday with in the week ahead. If so, Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online!

Sunday 30th July
  • Lisa Kudrow - Born 1963, turns 54 - Actress | Writer | Producer | Singer
  • Vivica A. Fox - Born 1964, turns 53 - Actress | Producer
  • Hilary Swank - Born 1974, turns 43 - Actress | Producer
  • Gina Rodriguez - Born 1984, turns 33 - Actress | Singer | Producer
  • Peter Bogdanovich - Born 1939, turns 78 - Director | Producer | Writer | Actor
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger - Born 1947, turns 70 - Actor | Producer
  • Jean Reno - Born 1948, turns 69 - Actor
  • Frank Stallone - Born 1950, turns 67 - Actor | Producer | Singer | Songwriter
  • Richard Linklater - Born 1960, turns 57 - Director | Producer | Writer | Actor
  • Laurence Fishburn - Born 1961, turns 56 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer
  • Terry Crews - Born 1968, turns 49 - Actor | Producer
  • Simon Baker - Born 1969, turns 48 - Actor | Producer | Director
  • Christopher Nolan - Born 1970, turns 47 - Director | Producer | Writer  
Monday 31st July
  • Michael Biehn - Born 1956, turns 61 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer
  • Wesley Snipes - Born 1962, turns 55 - Actor | Producer
  • Dean Cain - Born 1966, turns 51 - Actor | Producer | Writer
  • Geraldine Chaplin - Born 1944, turns 73 - Actress
  • J.K. Rowling - Born 1965, turns 52 - Writer | Producer 
Tuesday 1st August
  • Demian Bichir - Born 1963, turns 54 - Actor | Producer | Writer
  • Sam Mendes - Born 1965, turns 52 - Director | Producer
  • Jason Momoa - Born 1979, turns 38 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer
  • Jack O'Connell - Born 1990, turns 27 - Actor  
Wednesday 2nd August
  • Kevin Smith - Born 1970, turns 47 - Producer | Writer | Director | Actor | Editor
  • Simon Kinberg - Born 1973, turns 44 - Producer | Writer | Director
  • Sam Worthington - Born 1976, turns 41 - Actor | Producer
  • Edward Furlong - Born 1977, turns 40 - Actor | Producer  
Thursday 3rd August
  • Steven Berkoff - Born 1937, turns 80 - Actor | Writer | Director
  • Martin Sheen - Born 1940, turns 77 - Actor | Producer 
  • John Landis - Born 1950, turns 67 - Producer | Director | Actor | Writer 
  • John C. McGinley - Born 1959, turns 58 - Actor | Producer 
  • Max Landis - Born 1985, turns 32 - Writer | Producer | Director | Actor
  • Evangeline Lilly - Born 1979, turns 38 - Actress  
Friday 4th August
  • Greta Gerwig - Born 1983, turns 34 - Actress | Writer | Producer | Director
  • Billy Bob Thornton - Born 1955, turns 62 - Actor | Writer | Director
  • Daniel Dae Kim - Born 1968, turns 49 - Actor    
Saturday 5th August
  • John Jarratt - Born 1951, turns 66 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer
  • Mark Strong - Born 1963, turns 54 - Actor 
  • James Gunn - Born 1966, turns 51 - Writer | Director | Producer | Actor | Songwriter
Samuel Henry John Worthington was born in Godalming, Surrey, in south-east England to mother Jeanne Martyn, a housewife, and father Ronald Worthington who worked in a power plant. When he was six months old the family relocated to Perth, in Western Australia where he was brought up with his sister Lucinda almost single handedly by their mother. He attended the John Curtin College of the Arts in Fremantle, south of Perth, specialising in dramatic arts, but he did not graduate. Upon leaving college, his father presented him with $400 and sent him off on a one way trip to Cairns in Far North Queensland, and told him to work his way back home. He worked odd jobs, mostly in construction, and ended up in Sydney working as a bricklayer. While doing that and at the age of nineteen he auditioned for Sydney's National Institute of Dramatic Art and won a scholarship. 

Worthington secured his first big screen role in the Australian comedy drama film 'Bootmen' in 2000, Directed by Dein Perry and also starring Adam Garcia and Sophie Lee. That same year he scored his US break through role on the 100th episode of 'JAG' in the aptly titled 'Boomerang : Part 1'. He followed this up with single episodes on Aussie television drama series 'Water Rats' and 'Blue Heelers'. This was followed by WWII POW drama thriller 'Hart's War' with Bruce Willis, Colin Farrell and Terence Howard; then local Aussie '60's crime drama film 'Dirty Deeds' with Bryan Brown, Toni Collette, Sam Neill and John Goodman; then another Aussie crime caper offering 'Gettin' Square' with David Wenham, Timothy Spall and Gary Sweet; Aussie independent drama 'Somersault' with Abbie Cornish; and then Aussie AC/DC fandom inspired film 'Thunderstruck'

2005 saw WWII film 'The Great Raid' about the Raid at Cabanatuan on the island of Luzon in the Philippines also starring James Franco, Benjamin Bratt, Marton Csokas, Joseph Fiennes and Connie Nielsen. This was followed up in 2006 by an Australian modern day gangster themed adaptation of 'Macbeth' set in Melbourne in which Worthington plays the title character. 'Rogue' followed - the Aussie horror thriller about a giant man eating crocodile running amok in the Kakadu National Park in Australia's Northern Territory. The film also starred Radha Mitchell and John Jarratt. Perhaps Worthington's breakout role came in 2009 with a reboot of the post-apocalyptic Sci-Fi action offering 'Terminator : Salvation' Directed by McG and also starring Christian Bale, Anton Yelchin, Common, Michael Ironside, Helena Bonham Carter and Bryce Dallas Howard. The film received mixed Reviews but grossed US$372M from its US$200M budget costs.  

Also in 2009 came another very wise casting decision for Worthington, with James Cameron's Written, Directed, Produced and Edited record breaking Sci-Fi epic 'Avatar' in which the Actor takes top billing as Jake Sully - a disabled former Marine who becomes part of the Avatar Programme. Also starring Stephen Lang, Sigourney Weaver, Zoe Saldana, Michelle Rodriguez and Giovanni Ribisi, the film cost US$237M to make and grossed US$2.8B making it the highest grossing film in cinema history - a record that still stands eight years after its release. The film bagged three Academy Awards and was nominated for another six, won two Golden Globes and two other nominations, won two BAFTA's and received another six nods and all up took a total awards haul of 88 wins and 128 other nominations. Four sequels are currently in the works with James Cameron helming his blockbuster franchise filming all these instalments concurrently, with release dates set for December 2020, December 2021, December 2024, and December 2025. Worthington, Saldana and Weaver all signed on for sequels.

The new decade saw a remake of the 1981 film of the same name 'Clash of the Titans' based loosely on the Greek myth of Perseus as played by Worthington in this updated Louis Leterrier Directed version, and also starring Ralph Fiennes, Liam Neeson, Mads Mikkelsen, Liam Cunningham, Nicholas Hoult, Danny Huston, Luke Evans, Pete Postlethwaite and Gemma Arterton. The film received lacklustre Reviews although it recovered US$494M from its US$125M budget investment, spawning a sequel in 2012 with 'Wrath of the Titans' with Worthington, Fiennes, Neeson and Huston all reprising their roles joined this time around by Bill Nighy, Edgar Ramirez, Toby Kebbell and Rosamund Pike. This film was negatively received by Critics and returned US$305M from its US$150M budget. On the strength of this performance 'Revenge of the Titans' planned for a 2013 release, was canned.

Also released in 2010 was romantic drama 'Last Night' with Keira Knightley and Eva Mendes; straight to video offering 'Love & Distrust' with Robert Pattinson, James Franco, Robert Downey Jnr. and Amy Adams; and then 'The Debt' Directed by John Madden and starring also Helen Mirren, Jessica Chastain, Ciaran Hinds, Tom Wilkinson and Marton Csokas. The inspired by true events 'Texas Killing Fields' followed in 2011 with Jessica Chastain and Chloe Grace Moretz, and in 2012 'Man on a Ledge' with Jamie Bell, Edward Burns, Anthony Mackie, Ed Harris and Elizabeth Banks.  

2013 saw an Australian film about the birth of the modern Australian surfing industry back in the '70's with 'Drift' and also starred Xavier Samuel and this was followed up in 2014 with the David Ayer Written, Directed and Co-Produced actioner 'Sabotage' with Arnold Schwarzenegger. Later that year came 'Cake' with Jennifer Aniston, American Civil War action thriller 'The Keeping Room' with Hailee Stansfield and then locally Produced Australian children's drama offering 'Paper Planes' with David Wenham.

Next in 2015 came the historical drama 'Kidnapping Mr. Heineken' about the 1983 kidnapping of the Chairman and CEO of the brewing company Heineken International and one of the wealthiest individuals in Holland, Freddy Heineken. Anthony Hopkins plays the lead role here with Worthington playing Willem Holleeder - one of five friends who hit upon a get rich quick scheme by kidnapping the said business tycoon and demanding a ransom of almost sixteen million pounds sterling. That same year also saw biographical drama film 'Everest' about the ill fated 1996 Mount Everest disaster in which eight people died when caught in a blizzard trying to either ascend of descend the summit. With an all star cast that included Jake Gyllenhaal, Josh Brolin, Jason Clarke, Robin Wright, Emily Watson and Keira Knightley the film returned US$204M from its US$55M budget, and was well received by Critics.

2016 saw Mel Gibson's highly acclaimed WWII biographical wartime drama film 'Hacksaw Ridge' about the experiences of Desmond Doss (Andrew Garfield) during the Battle of Okinawa, as an American pacifist combat medic and Seventh Day Adventist who refused to carry a weapon or firearm of any kind. He saved the lives of some seventy soldiers during that bloody conflict against heavily dug in Japanese forces. The film made US$176M from its US$40M budget outlay. Earlier this year saw the Christian drama film 'The Shack' with Octavia Spencer and Radha Mitchell and has so far grossed US$96M from its US$20M budget.

This brings us up to date. In between time there were other television series appearances on the likes of 'Love My Way' in which Worthington appeared in ten of the thirty episodes televised between 2004 and 2005, then 'The Surgeon' appearing in all eight episodes of this short-lived 2005 series, and then television mini-series 'Deadline Gallipoli' in which Worthington portrays one of three reporters sent out to Gallipoli to report on the conflict there that ultimately saw extensive Australian and New Zealand casualties in 1915 together with those of British and other allied forces.

Next up for Worthington is the Jonathan Moscow Directed 'The Hunter's Prayer' then Sci-Fi thriller 'The Titan' of how a military serving family take part in a ground breaking experiment of genetic evolution and space exploration. This has wrapped filming and will be released in 2018. Currently in production is anthology television series 'Manhunt : Unabomber' for the Discovery Channel taking an in depth look at how an FBI Profiler, Jim Fitzgerald (Worthington) helped track down Ted Kaczynski (Paul Bettany) and the terror he inflicted through a bombing campaign that lasted close to twenty years between 1978 and 1995. Also in Pre-Production are the aforementioned 'Avatar' sequels.

All up Worthington has 48 Acting credits to his name, five as Producer, and one each as Writer and Director on the 2004 seven minute short film 'Enzo'. He has six award wins under his belt so far and a further seventeen nominations including two wins by the Australian Film Institute as Best Actor in 2004's 'Somersault' and 2009's 'Avatar'.

Worthington is married to Australian advertising model and media personality Lara Bingle, with whom he has two sons - Rocket (born in 2015) and Racer (born in 2016). In 2014 Worthington attracted the attention of the world's press for all the wrong reasons when he was arrested in New York City for assault on a paparazzo in retaliation for allegedly kicking Bingle in the shin. The case went back and forth with both sides claiming no wrongdoing. Ultimately a US$3.7M lawsuit against Worthington was raised which was settled out of court before going to trial in September 2015.

Sam Worthington - has been voted as Australia's Most Stylish Male Celebrity, Man of the Year, and one of Australia's Most Likeable Young Leading Men in his time. Before being cast in 'Avatar' he had AU$2K to his name, had sold almost all his worldly possessions and was living in his car - what a turn around! Has played across just about all genres from romance, to horror, to comedy, to wartime, to biographical, Sci-Fi, fantasy and is equally at home in playing small local Aussie independent fare to big budget epic Hollywood blockbusters and in the process has worked with some of the biggest names in the business. Good luck to you Sam, and good on ya for keeping us entertained and for keeping us guessing as to what's next. Happy Birthday to you, from Odeon Online.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Thursday 27 July 2017

DUNKIRK : Monday 24th July 2017.

I saw 'DUNKIRK' in its 70mm format in one of only 159 cinemas worldwide showcasing this film in this way, and I'd have to say, that this is the only way to see this film! Back in the early '90's Christopher Nolan and his future wife, movie Producer and film collaborator Emma Thomas, were sailing across the English Channel to Dunkirk, when the young Writer and Director hit upon an idea for a film, about the evacuation of British armed forces from the war torn beaches of Dunkirk in mid-1940. He committed his idea to a 76 page Screenplay, and then put the whole idea on hold until such time as he had gained sufficient experience in making big epic blockbusting action film fare - the like of which he has more than proven he can do over the subsequent years. However, rather than making a film about the war time politics involving Churchill and his Generals; or showing the Germans on the beach head taking out allied forces with their strategically located gun placements; or paint this as a victory; or bring in Uncle Sam to save the day, he chose to make a film with an all English cast and from three perspectives - the air (involving Spitfire and Luftwaffe dog fights), the land (on the beaches of Dunkirk), and the sea (the evacuation of 400,000 troops by the Navy and any able bodied sea man who could steer a dinghy across the Channel to aid the rescue attempt).

And so armed with an ensemble cast of fine and lesser known English acting talent, Nolan has created a WWII action drama film where the dialogue is thin on the ground and there is no character backstory, instead allowing the suspense to come through the details and the authentic fact based story contained within the scenes. Nolan also made extensive use of practical effects - employing some six thousand extras, amassing a flotilla of boats that had participated in the real Dunkirk evacuation, and using genuine era-appropriate planes for aerial sequences. The film centres around the evacuation of British, French, Belgian and Canadian troops who are pinned down by German forces on the beaches and harbour of Dunkirk, and their evacuation between 26th May and 4th June 1940 in what was known as 'Operation Dynamo'. The film Premiered in London on 13th July and was released worldwide last week, having cost US$100M to make it has so far grossed US$122M and has met largely with widespread acclaim.

The film is a triptych, with each separate clearly defined story overlapping through their engagement with the enemy while recounting the heroics, the ever present danger, the chaos and the gritty determination of everyday airmen, sea men, soldiers on the ground and the British general public in their concerted rescue attempts as they come under a constant barrage of attack by land, sea and air from the German forces. Told in a non-linear narrative style covering three different time periods - one on land covering a week and staged at one of two Moles protecting the outer harbour at Dunkirk from which ships were able to dock to evacuate the troops; one from the sea covering one day as the Royal Navy commandeer private boats to aid the rescue attempt across the English Channel; and one from the air covering one hour as a small squadron of three Spitfires fly across the Channel to provide air support to the men on the ground in Dunkirk. As the film opens up, an introductory text tells us that in 1940, after the invasion of France by Nazi Germany, thousands of Allied soldiers retreated to the French seaside town of Dunkirk. As the surrounding British perimeter shrinks, the soldiers await evacuation, a seemingly hopeless situation.

And so to the Mole, on land, where we meet young British Private Tommy (Fionn Whitehaed) who after a close encounter with German snipers survives and makes it behind Allied lines to the relative safety of Dunkirk beach and the amassed hordes of British and allied troops eagerly anticipating their imminent evacuation. There he meets Gibson (Aneurin Bernard) and the two stretcher an injured soldier across the beach to a waiting ship evacuating the wounded. The two lads are denied entry to the outgoing ship, but the injured man is carried aboard. Tommy and Gibson stow themselves away under the infrastructure of the Mole hoping to sneak abroad the next ship. German attack planes descend on the Mole, sinking the outgoing ship as it is about to leave the dock. In the chaos, the boys are thrown into the sea and save young Alex (Harry Styles) from being crushed as the ship sinks. They get on another boat later that night, but that is torpedoed by a German U-Boat and this time Gibson saves Tommy and Alex. The next day the three lads join a small group of Scottish soldiers who have spied a grounded fishing trawler further up the beach outside of the Allied perimeter. Hiding inside the vessel waiting for the tide to rise to refloat the boat, they are set upon by German soldiers who use the trawler for target practice shooting many holes in the boats hull, to the extent that when the boat does finally rise it lets in so much water that the men have to abandon it soon afterwards. As the vessel sinks, Gibson becomes entangled in some rigging and drowns. Alex and Tommy swim for a nearby minesweeper, but it is bombed and sinks. They are eventually picked up by Mr. Dawson's (Mark Rylance) boat in the vicinity of the sunken minesweeper that has been leaking oil heavily into the sea. They narrowly escape being engulfed in flames as a German plane is shot down and crashes into the sea in a ball of flame so igniting the oil slick. Mr. Dawson picks up a boat load of oil caked survivors and heads back for the white cliffs of England, and home.

Meanwhile on the Mole, Commander Bolton (Kenneth Branagh) has taken charge of the proceedings as the pier-master to coordinate the rescue and evacuation efforts. Together with Colonel Winnant (James D'Arcy) they discuss Churchill's rejection of Germany's offer for Britain to surrender and his commitment to see to it that 30,000 servicemen are evacuated, and that smaller civilian vessels had been ordered to aid the evacuation attempt to save the larger fleet for the defence of Britain. As the last vestiges of the British soldiers had been evacuated by a flotilla of smaller English boats of every size and description, so Winnant departs expecting Bolton to go with him. But stoically, Bolton stays behind stating that 300,000 British troops had been evacuated, and he would see to it that the French were next to be rescued.

To the sea, and Mr. Dawson does his duty to King and country without hesitation and sets of his motor cruiser (the 'Moonstone') with his son Peter (Tom Glynn-Carney) and teenage deck hand George (Barry Keoghan). Soon after departing into the English Channel they spot three Spitfire planes over head. The vessel shortly afterwards comes across a semi-sunken ship with a lone survivor sitting on the hull of the upturned vessel. They rescue him and welcome the bitterly cold soldier aboard (Cillian Murphy) who is clearly shell shocked. The soldier becomes very agitated when he learns that Dawson is heading to Dunkirk and not to England and demands that the boat be turned around immediately, saying that he cannot go back there for fear of certain death. A scuffle ensues, George is knocked below deck injuring himself badly and the soldier is ordered to sleep it off below deck. Dawson continues heading toward France. En route they witness a Spitfire ditch in the sea, and going to its rescue they haul out RAF Pilot Collins (Jack Lowden) who was about to drown in the cockpit of his rapidly sinking Spitfire. They then come across a stricken minesweeper under attack by a German bomber, and manoeuvre the vessel to take on soldiers fleeing the listing ship and spilling oil heavily into the sea - among them Tommy and Alex.

In the air, RAF Pilot Farrier (Tom Hardy) and two others - Collins and their Squadron Leader fly low over the English Channel to provide air support to the troops on the ground in Dunkirk. Along the way they encounter a Luftwaffe plane which shoots down the Squadron Leader. Farrier and Collins continue towards France monitoring their dwindling fuel supply regularly. In another mid-air skirmish the pair take out another German plane, but Collins has sustained damage to his Spitfire and is forced to ditch at sea. Farrier continues on regardless unaware of what the outcome was for his flying mate. Getting closer to France Farrier must switch to reserve fuel now. He then witnesses the bombing of the minesweeper and the sinking of the trawler on which Tommy and Alex managed to swim free. Reaching Dunkirk he takes out the German bomber aircraft that was hampering the evacuation attempts, so saving ships and lives in the process. He runs out of fuel and glides along the beach to the rapturous applause of the soldiers below, seeking a landing spot on the sand. He brings his aircraft down gently on the sand but outside of the Allied perimeter. He torches his plane and as it erupts in a ball of flame with him looking on, so he is taken prisoner by German soldiers.

'Dunkirk' adds another dimension to the history of war films in cinema just as 'Saving Private Ryan' did in 1998. Without getting bogged down in the political agenda of the WWII era, or the labouring back story of the principle cast, or the rights and wrongs as seen by either side, here Christopher Nolan has crafted a war film that is very much of a moment in time from the perspective not of heroes, but of everyday men responding to extraordinary circumstances in differing situations. We have young foot soldiers doing what they can to survive - run, hide, duck and weave; we have an ageing father doing his bit for his country to help bring his boys back home in their hour of need; we have a fighter pilot with a do or die attitude; and we have a naval commander who simply gets the job done with the minimal amount of fuss and then hangs back to do it all over again. Knowing the truth behind the Dunkirk evacuation makes this all the more a grounded story, backed up by strong performances, a stirring score by Hans Zimmer, and masterful Direction and Cinematography courtesy of Hoyte van Hoytema (who also worked with Nolan on 'Interstellar'). If I had any criticism it would be that the characters are emotionally bereft. They are all stoic, stiff upper lip, never say die middle class Englishmen with their focus squarely on the job at hand, and a such it's a little tough investing in them, and, in addition what of the role of women here - women in this film are banished to handing out cups of tea and jam sandwiches to evacuating troops below decks, but history tells us that they had more important roles to play! All that said, the film is rousing, stirring, uniquely realised, and totally immersive, and a must see on the biggest screen you can possibly find, and ideally in 70mm.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday 26 July 2017

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 27th July 2017.

'Planet of the Apes' which sees another film released under this banner this week (see Preview below) started out life way back in 1963 as a novel by French Author Pierre Boulle titled 'La Planete des Singes' (translated as 'Planet of the Apes' or 'Monkey Planet') and since then has gone on to spawn it's original 1968 film adaptation with Charlton Heston in the iconic role as Astronaut George Taylor who crash lands on a seemingly alien planet inhabited by intelligent apes who rule over humans, only to discover in the closing scene that he is in fact on Earth sometime in the distant future (if ever there was a twist at the end of a movie this ranks up there amongst the best of them!). In turn 'Planet of the Apes' in 1968 saw four sequels - 'Beneath the Planet of the Apes' in 1970; 'Escape from the Planet of the Apes' in 1971; 'Conquest of the Planet of the Apes' in 1972; and 'Battle for the Planet of the Apes' in 1973. These first five films cost a combined US$16M to bring to the big screen, and collectively they grossed a total worldwide Box Office stash of US$160M.

Then of course came Tim Burton's reimagining with 2001 'Planet of the Apes' which cost US$100M to make and raked in US$362M, but which met with a luke warm critical response. In the meantime, there had been a fourteen episode televisions series in 1974 that was based on the earlier film franchise that saw Roddy McDowall return as chimpanzee Galen, whereas McDowall played the ape Cornelius in two of the original films and Caesar, the son of Cornelius in the latter two. The series was canned after its first season due to lacklustre ratings, and in 1975 an animated series hit the TV screens for thirteen episodes, but once again due to average ratings only at best, a second season was never commissioned. However, the storyline continued in various novels by noted Sci-Fi authors of the day, as did comic books, toys and merchandise, video games and apparently a theme park ride is under construction in Malaysia too. Which brings us up to the present day, and a successful reboot of the franchise that is so far three films in, going strong and has seen solid Box Office returns and largely critical acclaim.

This week then there are just two new release films coming to your local independent theatre or multiplex. First up we have the second sequel in a successful rebooted Sci-Fi franchise that sees mankind face of head to head, hand to hand and toe to toe against simian kind to determine the rulers of our planet, and then we have a children's tale of a young lad learning a few life lessons from a giant walking, talking tree.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the two new releases as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release and as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are cordially invited to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and meanwhile, enjoy your cinematic experience in the coming week.

'WAR FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES' (Rated M) - the 'Planet of the Apes' saga has a long history on both the big and small screen, but this last reboot of which this marks the third and supposedly final instalment has received widespread critical acclaim and commercial success. The original reintroduction to the franchise came in 2011 with 'Rise of the Planet of the Apes' and was Directed by Rupert Wyatt for US$93M and grossed US$482M and starred James Franco, John Lithgow, Brian Cox, David Oyelowo and Andy Serkis as Caesar, the first intelligent ape. In 2014 its sequel 'Dawn of the Planet of the Apes' was Directed by Matt Reeves for US$209M and grossed US$711M worldwide and starred Jason Clarke, Gary Oldman, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Keri Russell, and Andy Serkis as Caesar again and Toby Kebbell as Koba, a lieutenant to Caesar. Now in 2017 we have 'War for the Planet of the Apes' Directed once again by Matt Reeves for US$150M and so far since its US release on 14th July has taken US$178M and stars Woody Harrelson as the main human protagonist and Andy Serkis again as Caesar. There are several likenesses with the fifth film in the original franchise series 'Battle for the Planet of the Apes' but this is not intended as a remake of that earlier 1973 film. 'War for the Planet of the Apes' has met with widespread critical acclaim with strong praise for the acting (Andy Serkis for his Mo-Cap performance especially), the storyline, the action scenes, the music score and the overall Direction.

And so to this gripping instalment. We join Caesar (Andy Serkis) and his apes who are forced into a deadly conflict with a military faction of humans known as Alpha-Omega led by the ruthless paramilitary Colonel McCullough (Woody Harrelson) who is obsessed with wiping out Caesar's tribe and any humans infected with the Simian Flu to preserve mankind's place as the dominant species. After the apes suffer huge losses at the hands of the Colonel's army, Caesar needs to come to terms with his own inner darker instincts and so embarks on his own journey to avenge his kind. As that journey counts down to the final face to face conflict, Caesar and the Colonel are pitched against one another in an epic battle that will determine the fate of both of them as individuals, their species and the planet. Talk of a fourth film in this rebooted franchise has already been mooted.

'A MONSTER CALLS' (Rated PG) - Directed by Spaniard Juan Antonio Garcia Boyega whose previous credits include 2012's 'The Impossible', 'A Monster Calls' is based on the low fantasy children's book by Patrick Ness published in 2011 of the same name. The film Premiered back last September at TIFF, was released in Spain in early October, then the US last Christmas and in the UK on New Years Day, and only now does its reach Australian cinemas having recovered US$46M from its US$43M budget outlay. Telling the story of young lad Conor O'Malley (Lewis McDougall) who is having to deal with far more challenges in his young life than other boys of his age. His beloved and devoted mother Elizabeth 'Lizzie' Clayton (Felicity Jones) is terminally ill. He has little in common and wants little to do with his strict and ruling grandmother Mrs. Clayton (Sigourney Weaver), and his father, Mr. O'Malley (Toby Kebbell) who has divorced his mother Lizzie has resettled thousands of miles away in the US. But Conor finds a most unlikely friend when one night at 12:07am a tree-like Monster (Liam Neeson) appears at his bedroom window, and proceeds to tell Conor that he has come to tell him three true stories, after which Conor must tell the Monster his own story - that of the truth behind his own nightmare. Ancient, wild, and relentless, the Monster takes Conor on a journey of courage, faith, and truth that powerfully fuses imagination and reality.

With just two new releases this week to tempt you out on a cold mid-Winter evening, remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephiles afterwards here at Odeon Online. In the meantime, I'll see you sometime somewhere in the week ahead at your local Odeon.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Monday 24 July 2017

IT COMES AT NIGHT : Tuesday 18th July 2017

'IT COMES AT NIGHT' is a post-apocalyptic psychological horror film made by Director, Producer, Writer and Actor Trey Edward Shults and was made for about US$5M and has so far grossed US$17M, was released in the US in early June and has received generally positive Reviews from critics and audiences alike.

The film opens with a death. That of an older gent, Bud (David Pendleton) who has clearly contracted some contagious disease with open seeping black welts on his body, dark sunken eyes, dramatic weight loss and barely alive when we are first introduced to him. His daughter Sarah (Carmen Ejogo), breathing through an oxygen mask, wearing rubber gloves tends to the frail man, with another masked man Paul (Joel Edgerton), Sarah's husband, looking on. He is loaded into a wheelbarrow, wrapped in a blanket and carted outside to a shallow grave, wherein he is placed face up. Paul, places a cushion over the mans head, unloads his pistol into it, and then douses the now dead body with an accelerant and throws in a lighted match. The body catches alight instantly and sends a plume of blackened smoke up through the trees of the forest where they live.

This sets the scene, where there has clearly been some devastating viral outbreak of seemingly global proportions whereby a deadly contagion is transferable from human to human by both airborne means and by touch - hence the gas mask and the gloves. To save themselves from the inevitable, Sarah and Paul, with their teenage son Travis (Kelvin Harrison Jnr.) and trusted dog Stanley, have sought refuge deep within a forest lodge dwelling in the middle of nowhere, cut off from the rest of the world and living a solitary life fending for themselves. It's a meagre existence, but they are alive and relatively safe, albeit constantly on edge and on the look out for fear of attack from the now menacingly outside world.

The next night, while sleeping they are awakened by someone attempting to break into their house. They capture a lone man, Will (Christopher Abbott), and determine that he is not infected, but tie him to a tree, hooded, overnight. The next day Paul questions Will while still secured, and Will advises that he thought the house was abandoned and he was just searching for food and water to sustain his family some fifty miles away. Will offers to trade some of his supplies - chickens, goats etc. in exchange for essential foods and clean water.

Sarah suggests that Will should bring back his family to the safety of their home on the basis of safety in numbers. Paul agrees, reluctantly, and the pair head off in a pick-up truck to collect Will's wife Kim (Riley Keough) and young son Andrew (Griffin Robert Faulkner) and their supplies and livestock. En route they are ambushed by two men, which Paul manages to dispense with but accuses Will of setting him up. Will convinces Paul that this was not so, on the basis that he too tried to fend them off. A couple of days later Paul and Will return with Kim, Andrew and a trailer loaded with supplies and belongings, ready to move into their new shared home.

Later that evening over dinner, Paul establishes the ground rules about living in the house, and that no one must go out at night, that they always venture outdoors in pairs, and that the only way in and out of the house is via the red door, to which he has the only key and it is kept locked and bolted every night without question. The red door leads to another room, a sort of plastic sheeted quarantine room, which leads outside. Over time the two families begin to bond, an element of trust is forged and a degree of normalcy sets in. They eat together, play games by candlelight in the evening, and co-exist in relative harmony.

One day, Stanley the dog begins barking uncontrollably at some unseen presence in the woods. Travis follows Stanley deeper into the woods, but looses sight of him but still hears his barking . . . until it stops abruptly. Paul arrives bringing up the rear, and Travis insisted that he heard something in the woods, but saw nothing. Paul derides Travis for being careless, and they decide to return home, saying that Stanley knows the woods and will return home safe by the next morning.





Later that night Travis is awakened by a nightmare he has about his grandfather Bud. He walks through the house to discover Andrew lying asleep on the floor in Bud's old bedroom, apparently also suffering a nightmare. He leads the young lad back into his parents room where Will and Kim are sleeping. Shortly afterwards he hears a sound coming from downstairs. Creeping down to investigate he discovers the red door to be ajar and a sound coming from the room beyond. He quickly wakens Paul and Will who panicked, investigate to find a sick and bloodied Stanley lying on the floor.


They shoot and burn the dog. Sarah suggests that a sleepwalking Andrew may have opened the door, but given that Paul has the only key, how is that possible? At this point tensions between the two families start to rise, and Paul suggests that the two families should isolate themselves from each other in separate parts of the house to cool off for a few days, and to ensure that they are all free from infection.

The next morning Travis overhears a conversation between Will and Kim, that they should leave and straight away. Travis lets his parents know what he has heard and how Andrew may in fact be infected, and therefore by default, so would he be too. Paul and Sarah confront Will and Kim about their potentially infected son, but they staunchly deny this, but refuse to let the others see Andrew. A power struggle breaks out resulting in Will taking Paul captive and demanding food and water provisions and that they be allowed to leave immediately with their 'healthy' son. Paul and Sarah manage to overwhelm Will and lead the family out of the house, where the two men get into a brutal fight. Sarah shoots and kills Will in the back while he is beating Paul with a rock. Kim tries to flee with her son but stumbles to the ground. Paul shoots and kills Andrew leaving a distraught mother wailing uncontrollably. Paul shoots her dead too. The film ends with Paul, Sarah and Travis's worst nightmare coming true as they learn of their fate bestowed upon them by the family they tried to help, and an unseen force.

Critics have been generally positive in their Reviews of 'It Comes At Night', but for me the film just didn't click. Sure, this is atmospheric, moody and creepy at times, but there are none of the usual horror tropes we have come to expect from end of the world post-apocalyptic virus infected fare, and this is a welcome redeeming feature it must said. But equally there are no jump scares in this film, little by way of suspense and the premise is a little too predictable, if remotely plausible. The horror here does not come from flesh eating rampaging zombies, or from some other outwardly force, but from some unseen viral infection that is never really explained except that it is airborne or transmitted by touch, and takes hold of its victims within a day. I also struggled to determine exactly what comes at night - other than fear, anxiety, distrust and paranoia under the cloak of night-time darkness with the real enemy coming from within! But, I guess that's what the Director intended, thinking that somethings gotta give when you throw two desperate fighting for survival families together unexpectedly under one roof. There are also several plot holes and unanswered questions which just leave you guessing. You can save yourself the price of a cinema ticket and catch this on BluRay, DVD or digital download soon and watch it from the comfort of your own lounge room.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-