Dishing with former US Vice-President Al Gore

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By Ray Bennett

Fresh from his triumphant appearance at the Oscars, Al Gore (left) was in London Monday for the U.K. launch of the interactive youth TV channel Current, of which he’s chairman.

The new service launched the same day via Sky and Virgin to bring its global reach to around 50 million subscribers. The former vice-president looked slimmer than reports from the Academy Awards red carpet suggested and he appeared dapper in a sharp suit and shiny black Lucchese cowboy boots.

He was on good form too. In the press conference, he assured a correspondent from the Economist that Current’s election coverage would not show a left-leaning bias and nor would it endorse candidates. “We do,” said the man from the Economist. “Yes, and you picked the wrong ones,” quipped Gore. “I am still waiting for a formal apology.”

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Away from the media hubbub, I reminded him of his days as U.S. senator from Tennessee when he was much concerned with the television industry’s neglect of rural American viewers who owned big satellite dishes.

I was the editor of a national U.S. magazine called Satellite Orbit in 1986 and 1987 and we covered a lot of what Sen. Gore and Sen. Dale Bumpers from Arkansas were up to in regard to satellite TV legislation.

Gore seemed pleased to be reminded of those relatively innocent days and recalled Satellite Orbit, which at the time had a monthly circulation of more than half-a-million. He asked to be remembered to the gang but I’ve long since lost touch with my former colleagues.

Orbit was published out of Boise, Idaho, in those days and then it moved operations to D.C. It continues to be in operation with addresses in Seattle WA and Edmonton, Canada, and they still use the logo that we introduced 20 years ago (pictured). Looks good, too.

 

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TV REVIEW: Michael Sheen in ‘Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa!’

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Kenneth Williams, whose sucked-in cheeks, rolled eyes and stretched vowels were known best internationally from the cheerfully vulgar “Carry On” comedies, was born a princess who longed for a Prince Charming but was far too fastidious to act out his dreams.

That is according to a poignant new BBC biopic, “Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa!”, which airs on BBC4 on Monday. Screenwriter Martyn Hesford has drawn from the late comic actor’s diaries to depict a tortured soul who could never escape his own fussiness long enough to get close to anyone other than his indulgent mother. Continue reading

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FILM REVIEW: Anne Hathaway in ‘Becoming Jane’

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By Ray Bennett

The new Austen biography, “Becoming Jane,” provided the lone oasis of moderate pleasures in the Top 5 U.K. box office at the weekend.

Eddie Murphy’s latest embarrassment, “Norbit,” claimed the top spot with $3.8 million with noisy cop comedy “Hot Fuzz” still a cash magnet in second place while “Ghost Rider” plummeted 53% in third.

Julian Jarrold’s period romance starring Anne Hathaway and James McAvoy (above) claimed $1.3 million, however, just beating Nick Love’s absurd vigilante shoot-’em-up “Outlaw.”

Here’s how my review of “Becoming Jane’ begins in The Hollywood Reporter:

It’s a beguiling fancy to portray Jane Austen as the heroine of one her own stories, but Julian Jarrold’s “Becoming Jane” does just that.

The result is a charming romantic drama that draws on the author’s observant prose and elegant wit and boasts winning performances by Anne Hathaway as Austen and James McAvoy as the love of her life.

The film will please its natural audience of fans of English costume dramas and should also draw moviegoers seeking respite from violent epics and rowdy comedies.

With its handsome look and polished contributions from reliable performers including Julie Walters, Maggie Smith and James Cromwell, “Jane” will take its place alongside the best screen versions of Austen classics.

Buena Vista International releases it in the U.K., and Miramax Films aims for an Aug. 3 U.S. release.

 

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FILM REVIEW: Zack Snyder’s ‘300’

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By Ray Bennett

Federico Fellini famously made his glorious films with no sound and added voices and Foley in post-production. In his new comic-book film “300,” director Zack Snyder apparently has shot only the actors and added everything else in post.

The result is a cold and sterile piece of work that resembles a series of those glossy painted plates that are sold on TV as keepsakes except these show people with spears and arrows sticking out of them and bits missing, such as heads.

Because it’s so completely artificial, the violence is not repulsive as it is in Martin Scorcese’s grubby little gangster picture “The Departed,” nor is it visceral as in Mel Gibson’s thrilling chase film “Apocalypto.” And it’s not scary at all. It’s just silly.

Teenaged boys obviously flocked en masse to see “300” when it opened in the U.S. on the weekend but watching it on London’s vast IMAX screen tonight suggested it’s not something for grownups.

There’s nothing a computer graphics person can do to fill a frame the way nature does and the clumsy swathes of sea, mountains and battlefields look crude and lifeless compared to even oil paintings.

It’s all of a piece, however. The acting is as bad as the music. Gerard Butler (below left with Rodrigo Santoro as Xerxes) keeps screaming about being a Spartan but the angrier his King Leonidas gets, the more he sounds like a Glaswegian on a rowdy Saturday night. And when his soldiers chant their war cry in unison, they sound just like soccer hooligans on a tear. There are some truly ugly characters including one scarred, grunting giant (Robert Maillet as Uber Immortal, left) whose breath looks as blood curdling as his swirling blades.

It might be fun, perhaps, if it weren’t so boring. I was very pleased that I didn’t have to write a formal review of “300,” which Warner Bros. releases in the U.K. on March 23. The seats in the rafters at IMAX are very comfortable and perfect for a snooze.

One thing that’s not come up much in the film’s publicity is that with all those near-naked male bodies bonding in battle and death, “300” is also quite camp, as The Hollywood Reporter’s Gregg Kilday points out in THR’s Risky Biz blog:

“It probably passed over the heads of many of the fan boys, but before you could say “Don’t ask, don’t tell the Spartans,” a debate began percolating up all over the web over just how gay “300” is … now that the movie’s open, a lot of gay reaction has been positively ecstatic.”

 

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In praise of the UK’s hottest rocks

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By Ray Bennett

I love London for its astonishing array of arts and entertainment and for the sheer zest of living in the capital, but when I get away I go in search of old stone.

I am enthralled by castles from Tintagel (my photo in the website header) in Cornwall to Corfe (my photo above) in Dorset to Lindisfarne in Northumberland, abbeys from Battle in Sussex to Tintern in south Wales to Dryburgh in the Scottish Borders.

Quoits, dolmens, neolithic burial chambers, earthworks, hill forts, and stone circles appeal to me from Stonehenge and Avebury in Wiltshire to Maiden Castle in Somerset to Wayland’s Smithy in Berkshire to Callanish on Lewis in the Western Isles of Scotland and the Ring of Brodgar on Orkney (pictured below).

Thankfully, many of these are protected and preserved by charitable organizations such as English Heritage and the National Trust. Membership of both is invaluable.

Neglect is always a concern however, so it’s good news that the British government has introduced a white paper that culture minister Tessa Jowell says will ensure the protection of these priceless treasures for generations to come.

The performing and visual arts require tax support too, but few things are as precious as the old stones of these beautiful islands. Here are the Top 24 sites the government plans to put on a new register of places to protect.

Osborne House, Queen Victoria’s favourite retreat on Isle of Wight

Carlisle Castle, Medieval fortress

Stonehenge, Britain’s most visited historical monument

Castle Howard, made famous by novel ‘Brideshead Revisited’

Kenilworth Castle, among the largest castle ruins in England

HMS Colossus, part of Nelson’s fleet

Holland No.5, first British-built prototype submarine launched in 1902 and sunk in 1912 off Beachy Head

London Wall, remains of Roman wall

Winchester Palace, remains of great hall of 13th century palace

Mary Rose, Henry VIII’s flagship

Old Sarum, great earthwork site near Salisbury raised around 500BC

Whitby Abbey, ruined North Yorkshire monastery

Eltham Palace, inspired by Hampton Court, set in 19 acres of impressive gardens in southeast London, completed in 1936

Battle Abbey, site of 1066 battle of Hastings

Chesters Roman fort, one of a series of prominent military bases built along Hadrian’s Wall

Kenwood House, the 18th century house with grand gardens on London’s Hampstead Heath that was featured in ‘Notting Hill’

Lindisfarne Priory, important centre of early Christianity in Anglo-Saxon England founded in AD 635 on Holy Island

Iron Bridge Gorge, world’s first iron bridge now a world heritage site

Thornborough Henge, prehistoric ritual complex in North Yorkshire

The Jewel Tower, one of only two buildings of the original Palace of Westminster to survive 1834 fire

Whitely Court, Worcestershire country house surrounded by magnificent landscaped gardens

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FILM REVIEW: Steven Soderbergh’s ‘The Good German’

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By Ray Bennett

If ever there was an example of false advertising it is to place on current paperback editions of Joseph Kanon’s terrific novel “The Good German” the key art for Steven Soderbergh’s wretched vanity film version.

Why Soderbergh bought the book for his film is a mystery as his squalid picture does complete disservice to Kanon’s masterful evocation of time and place, wrapped up in a complex mystery filled with moral uncertainties. Continue reading

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FILM REVIEW: Sean Bean, Bob Hoskins in ‘Outlaw’

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By Ray Bennett

Sean Bean (pictured), Bob Hoskins and Lennie James deserve better than to play dimwitted vigilantes in an absurd Nick Love action picture. But, like most people in the film business, they do what’s offered and do it well in “Outlaw,” which opened today in the U.K.

Here’s how my review begins in The Hollywood Reporter:

Life in Britain has become ugly and lawless, and Sean Bean, as a disillusioned paratrooper just back from service in Iraq, plans to sort it all out the hard way in Nick Love’s brainlessly entertaining action picture “Outlaw.”

Despite knee-jerk motivation and plot holes as big as bomb craters, the film’s grainy depiction of a group of no-hopers being trained as vigilantes by a deluded professional killer moves at a fast enough pace to please fans with a taste for random and noisy violence. It should make a fast profit and thrive on DVD.

 

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An Irish eye for Austen film ‘Becoming Jane’

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By Ray Bennett

Production notes provided by film companies to journalists are often full of bumpf and drivel but the press pack for “Becoming Jane” has lots of good stuff about the movie’s locations.

Julian Jarrold’s film treats Jane Austen as if she were the heroine of one her own stories, telling of her thwarted love for an Irish lawyer named Tom Lefroy. It opened in the U.K. today with a Miramax release set for August in the U.S. It’s great fun with fine performances by Anne Hathaway (“The Devil Wears Prada”) and James McAvoy (“The Last King of Scotland”) as the romantic leads.

It also looks splendid thanks to Eigil Bryld’s cinematography, Eimear Ni Mhaoldhomhnaigh’s costumes and Eve Stewart’s production design. But although the film is set in London and Hampshire where Austen lived with her family in the 18th century, it wasn’t shot in England.

Dublin’s Henrietta Street and King’s Inn provided the Georgian architecture that doubled for Regency London and the gorgeous homes were found in rural Ireland.

For the Austen family home in the village of Steventon, which was a fairly small rectory, production designer Stewart found Higginsbrook House, a private home dating from 1747 near Trim in County Meath. Stewart describes it in the film’s production notes:

“I just wanted something that was of the English style that is quite hard to find in the Irish countryside. That was Higginsbrook. I wanted some place that was suggestive of the Bennet household in ‘Pride and Prejudice.’

“After a lot of research I discovered that the Austens lived in a smaller and shabbier version of the Bennet household. There is a lot of visual evidence, including etchings and paintings of their house that corroborates this.

“The scale of Higginsbrook was ideal because the Austens were crammed into this small house, where Mr. Austen was the lowly rector of a small parish and where they had a small garden to grow all their own food.”

Two buildings were used to create the grand mansion owned by the strict and hectoring Lady Gresham (Maggie Smith) in the film. The exterior is Kilruddery House (below) just outside Bray in County Wicklow, an Elizabethan revival house with handsome gardens and an impressive rear vista.

Kilruddy House

When visitors to the Gresham ball in the film enter the house through the orangerie they emerge in the interiors of a Gothic Revival home, Charleville Forest 70 miles away in Tullamore, County Offaly.

The grand rotunda in Dublin’s City Hall was the setting for the Gresham ballroom with the church at Cloghlee Bridge in the Dublin hills providing the pulpit for Mr. Austen’s cautionary sermon.

The entrance to Gentleman Jackson’s club was a house on Dublin’s North Great George’s Street but the fimmakers had to look elsewhere for room to stage a boxing match that Lefroy takes part in. Stewart continues:

“At first, we were going to do the boxing match in a Gentleman’s Club but Julian became more interested in the slightly seedy side of Tom Lefroy. Just by chance we had looked at Mother Redcaps tavern, a very large and very old building. We figured it would be much better for a sort of Fight Club than a basement. It was quite dark and otherworldly.

“Jane is more usually described as being a rather prim and austere little spinster with no romance in her life. But her writing reveals that she must have known love. What is interesting is that in a courtroom on Henrietta Street in Dublin we came across Tom Lefroy’s name on a stained glass window. It was a kind of spooky discovery.”

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‘The Lives of Others’ in Human Rights film festival

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The 11th annual Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, which runs March 21-30 at several London cinemas, offers the chance to see three of the best foreign-language film nominees at this year’s Oscars including the winner, “The Lives of Others.”

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s drama about intrigue in East Germany before the Berlin Wall came down is set for release in the United Kingtom by Lionsgate UK on April 13. Starring Ulrich Muehe (above), Sebastian Koch and Martina Gedeck, it was also named best film at the European Film Awards.

The others are Rachid Bouchareb’s “Days of Glory” (set for a March 30 U.K. release by Metrodome), about Algerian soldiers fighting for France in World War II, which won the best actor prize for the film’s entire cast at the Festival de Cannes, and Deepa Mehta’s “Water,” about a group of widows fighting poverty in a holy city, which won several Genie Awards in Canada, where Mehta is based.

The festival, which features feature films and documentaries dealing with important social and political issues, kicks off at the Curzon Mayfair Cinema with a benefit gala on March 21. The evening includes a screening of Lauren Herbiet’s “Mon Colonel,” based on a story by Costa-Gavras (“Missing,” “Z”) about the Algerian troubles in France during the 1960s. It features Bruno Solo and Robinson Stevenin.

Other films in the festival include Spike Lee’s epic documentary about the New Orleans hurricane tragedy “When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts” and “The Camden 28,” about civil disobedience in protest against the Vietnam War in New Jersey in 1971.

“Ghosts of Abu Ghraib” looks at the abuses that took place at the infamous prison in Iraq while “The Railroad All Stars” is about a group of Guatemalan prostitutes who form a five-a-side football team to draw attention to their plight.

“El Violin” is a poetic drama about peasants resisting a police state in rural Mexico; “Enemies of Happiness” deals with a woman who runs in Afghanistan’s first attempt at democratic elections despite repeated assassination attempts; and “Total Denial” tells of a group of Burmese villagers who sue a pair of giant oil companies in the U.S. court.

Other London cinemas involved in the festival include the ICA, the Clapham Picturehouse, the Renoir, the Gate and the Ritzy.

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John Inman, who died today, an unlikely hit in Memphis

Among the more curious things I discovered living in Tennessee in the mid-1980s was that one of the most popular entertainment figures in Memphis was the English comedy actor John Inman, who died this morning aged 71.

JohnInmanIt was very odd to be in Dillard’s department store in the city of Graceland and to hear someone in a mid-South accent call out “I’m free!”

Inman’s series “Are You Being Served?” was hugely popular in syndication in middle America and he attracted large crowds doing personal appearances.

The show ran on the BBC from 1972 to 1985 and is available in several DVDs, mostly on BBC Warner.

Inman’s character on the show, Mr. Humphries, became one of TV’s best-known characters, and in 1976 he was voted funniest man on television by TV Times readers and personality of the year on the BBC.

BBC News has more and DVD details are available on imdb.

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