FILM REVIEW: Sam Taylor-Wood’s ‘Nowhere Boy’

nowhere-boy x650By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Sam Taylor-Wood’s “Nowhere Boy” is a passable look at the early life of John Lennon when he was estranged from his mother and raised by his aunt. Fans who hope to discover more about the source of the prickly Beatle’s creativity will not find it here.

Strong performances by Kristin Scott Thomas as the stern Aunt Mimi, who raised the future Beatle from the age of 5, and Anne-Marie Duff as his troubled mother heighten the dramatic appeal of what otherwise is quite a dull film.

Icon Film Distribution will open “Nowhere,” the closing-night film at the London Film Festival, on Dec. 25 in the U.K. and the Weinstein Co. has U.S. rights. As the filmmakers were denied any Beatles songs because of the timeframe and clearly were unable to clear rights to the big rock tracks of the day, the film lacks a credible sound and boxoffice chances look iffy.

A noted British artist, Taylor-Wood offers a surprisingly cozy look at Lennon’s early life. Matt Greenhalgh’s screenplay covers the ground but opts too easily for harmony where in real life clearly there must have been serious conflict.

Aaron Johnson (“Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging”) makes a decent stab at the young Lennon, though he lacks the original’s insolent sneer and remarkable bite, and Thomas Brodie Sangster (“Nanny McPhee”) offers a very callow 15-year-old Paul McCartney. There’s very little sense that they soon will emerge as the Beatles.

Also, the film lacks any vital sense of Britain in the mid-1950s, particularly the music that was then fueling youthful ambition, and it has no distinct feel for Liverpool. Aunt Mimi raised Lennon in middle-class surroundings, and they did not have the thick Scouse accents of working-class McCartney or George Harrison (Sam Bell), who shows up briefly late in the picture. Their speech should still echo life in Liverpool but Taylor-Wood appears tone-deaf in respect to the sound of the place.

The script is a bit ham-fisted in references to future lyrics that Lennon will write: He bicycles past Strawberry Field; his headmaster tells him he’s going nowhere; and a girl taunts him as a loser. There are references to his talent for poetry and drawing, but little is made of it. While Aunt Mimi shows her intolerance of rock music, there’s no sign of the way she encouraged her ward’s reading.

It’s all a bit conventional, which is something that John Lennon never was.

Venue: London Film Festival, opens UK Dec. 25 (Icon Film Distribution); Cast: Kristin Scott Thomas, Anne-Marie Duff, Aaron Johnson, David Threlfall, Thomas Sangster, David Morrissey; Director: Sam Taylor-Wood; Writer: Matt Greenhalgh; Director of Photography: Seamus McGarvey; Production Designer: Alice Normington; Music: Alison Goldfrap, Will Gregory; Costume Designer: Juliar Day; Editor: Lisa Gunning; Producers: Robert Bernstein; Kevin Loader; Douglas Rae; Not rated; running time, 97 minutes.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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FILM REVIEW: Ray Winstone in ’44-inch Chest’

44-inch chest x650By Ray Bennett

LONDON – When a man’s wife breaks the news that she has met someone else after 21 years of marriage, the husband and four friends kidnap her lover while they decide if they should kill him in Malcolm Venville’s study of misogyny, “44 Inch Chest.”

Written by Louis Mellis and David Scinto, who scripted “Sexy Beast” in 2000, it stars that film’s Ray Winstone, Joanne Whalley and Melvil Poupard (pictured top) and plus Ian McShane, Tom Wilkinson, John Hurt, and Stephen Dillane (below) in another offbeat take on the crime thriller.

The first-rate actors involved and a flow of almost-poetic vulgarity will attract attention. American composer Angelo Badalamenti’s wonderfully insinuating score adds considerably to the film’s IQ, but it’s far from a gangster film – more like a poor man’s Pinter.

Screened at the London Film Festival, the film will be released Jan. 22 in the U.K. through Momentum Pictures and is due for U.S. release by Image Entertainment. Boxoffice at home and away could be tricky.

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Although threatened constantly, there is not a great deal of onscreen violence. What there is is a torrent of swearing as the men give vent to every four-letter word and combination of same in the book, including the one that British men seem to love saying most.

If a man is to be judged by the company he keeps, it’s a wonder it has taken the beautiful, poised Liz (Whalley) so long to leave Colin (Winstone), her overbearing, possessive husband. The film begins with him flat on his back in a lovely but now-destroyed home while his mate Archie (Wilkinson) gets on the phone to gather the troops.

With ruthless efficiency, they take the wife’s handsome young lover (Melvil Poupaud) right out of the French restaurant where he is a waiter and cart him hooded to a deserted building and stuff him into a wardrobe. While Colin alternately sobs and rages, flashbacks reveal what transpired.

The film’s action takes place mainly in one room as the five characters posture like angry macho men but slowly reveal their arrested development and juvenile ignorance of life in general and women in particular.

There are surreal sequences as the men’s true colors come out. As a smooth gay gambler, McShane takes delight in naming the male celebrities his character fancies. Hurt is hilarious as an old lag telling the story of “Samson and Delilah”, complete with clips of Victor Mature from that film. As the horribly mistreated and maligned wife, Whalley shows that any intelligent woman could wipe the floor with the lot of them.

Venue: London Film Festival, opens Jan. 15 (UK Momentum Pictures / US Image Entertainment; Cast: Ray Winstone, Tom Wilkinson, Ian McShane, John Hurt, Stephen Dillane, Joanne Whalley; Director: Malcolm Venville; Screenwriters: Louis Mellis & David Scinto; Director of photography: Dan Landin; Production designer: John Stevenson; Music: Angelo Badalamenti; Costume designer: Caroline Harris; Editor: Rick Russell; Producers: Richard Brown, Steve Golin; Executive producers: Paul Green, Dave Morrison, Tim Smith; Rating: UK 18 / US R; running time, 95 minutes.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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FILM REVIEW: Hilary Swank in ‘Amelia’

???????????By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Freckle-faced, prairie-voiced and fiercely independent, Hilary Swank’s depiction of aviator Amelia Earhart in Mira Nair’s biographical film “Amelia” is of a high order. It ranks with recent real-life portrayals of Ray Charles by Jamie Foxx and Truman Capote by Philip Seymour Hoffman and could be similarly awards-bound.

The classically structured bio will appeal to grown-ups, history buffs and lovers of aeronautics, but in showing how the flier was one of the most lauded celebrities of her time, it also might appeal to youngsters. Smart marketing will expose the film to students and educators, and Swank’s sparkling portrayal could help attract younger women.

Stephanie Carroll’s handsome production design re-creates the 1920s and ’30s vividly, and Stuart Dryburgh’s cinematography captures the wild sensation of being alone high in the sky. Composer Gabriel Yared’s orchestral score – muscular in the aerial scenes, jovial where it needs to be and foreboding in its evocation of Earhart’s fate – ranks with his Academy Award-winning music for “The English Patient.”

The screenplay by Ron Bass and Anna Hamilton Phelan is based on two books about Earhart – Susan Butler’s “East to the Dawn” and Elgin Long’s “Amelia Earhart: The Mystery Solved” – and it is almost old-fashioned in its linear path. It provides as much information as is needed for those not familiar with the character without expositional clutter while taking time to show the woman’s no-nonsense approach to intimacy as well as the business of flying.

The script has input from Gore Vidal, who is portrayed as a child in the film by William Cuddy. He became close to Earhart when she had an affair with his father, noted aviation pioneer Gene Vidal (Ewan McGregor), and there is a charming scene in which she explains to the frightened boy why her bedroom has walls covered in images from the jungle.

The film is framed by Earhart’s ill-fated attempt to fly around the world in 1937 with flashbacks to her introduction to flying and her burst into worldwide fame. Richard Gere plays publisher George Putnam — who promoted her flights and became her very understanding husband — with much charm and is matched by McGregor as Vidal.

Very much her own woman, Earhart not only paved the way for female aviators but helped drive the development of aviation at large. In the process, she became one of the first celebrities to create a major marketing bandwagon with her name slapped on any number of household products.

The business of flying in those days was fraught with peril, however, and the film does a good job of creating suspense during Earhart’s last flight. Christopher Eccleston makes a fine contribution as her navigator.

Most of all, Earhart wanted to be able to fly free as a bird above the clouds, and director Nair and star Swank make her quest not only understandable but truly impressive.

Opens: UK: Nov. 13 (20th Century Fox) / US: Oct. 23 ( Fox Searchlight Pictures); Cast: Hilary Swank, Richard Gere, Ewan McGregor, Christopher Eccleston, Joe Anderson, Cherry Jones, Mia Wasikowska; Director: Mira Nair; Writers: Ron Bass, Anna Hamilton from the books “East to the Dawn” by Susan Butler and “The Sound of Wings by Mary S. Lovell; Director of photography: Stuart Dryburgh; Production designer: Stephanie Carroll; Music: Gabriel Yared; Costume designer: Kasi Walicka Maimone; Editors: Allyson C. Johnson, Lee Percy; Producers: Lydia Dean Pilcher, Kevin Hyman, Tedd Waitt; Executive producers: Ron Bass, Hilary Swank; Production: AE Electra Productions; Not rated; running time, 111 minutes.

Read more about the film in The New York Times

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World Soundtrack Awards: Wins for Desplat, Rahman, Hamlisch

world-soundtrack-award-winners-ar-rahman-marvin-hamlisch-and-alexandre-desplat

By Ray Bennett

GHENT, Belgium – French Golden Globes Award-winner Alexandre Desplat (above right) was a double honouree at the 9th World Soundtrack Awards on Saturday as he was named film composer of the year and picked up the prize for score of the year for “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.”

Three-time Academy Award-winning U.S. composer and songwriter Marvin Hamlisch (above centre) received a lifetime achievement award and was on hand at the awards gala where the Brussels Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Dirk Brosse performed a suite of his scores and songs including “The Way We Were” and “The Sting.”

Oscar-winner A.R. Rahman (above left) accepted the award for best original song written for film for “Jai Ho”, with lyrics by Guizar and Tanvi Shah, and U.S. composer Carter Burwell, who could not attend, won the public choice award for “Twilight.

U.S. composer Nico Muhly was named discovery of the year for his music for “The Reader” and U.K. composer Christopher Slaski (“La verguenza,” “Pulsiones”) won the Sabam award for best young European Composer.

Desplat conducted a suite of his music from several of his movies including “Benjamin Button,” “The Girl With the Pearl Earring,” “The Painted Veil,” and Birth” and last year’s discovery award winner Marc Streitenfeld joined in an orchestral performance of his music from Ridley Scott films such as “American Gangster” and “Body of Lies.”

Hamlisch had a long break in scoring feature films from “The Mirror Has Two Faces” in 1996 to Steven Soderbergh’s “The Informat.” He told reporters earlier that he got the job because the director had seen a DVD of Woody Allen’s “Bananas,” which dealt with a South American revolution and which Hamlisch had scored, while on location making his epic “Che.”

The World Soundtrack Awards are held annually at the end of the Ghent Film Festival, which honors Belgian and international films, with a focus on film music. During the film festival, actor Andy Garcia, who was a presenter at the WSA, received a lifetime achievement award. Earlier concerts featured Kevin Costner with his Modern West band and Japanese composer Shigeru Umebayashi (“House of Flying Daggers”).

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An ‘Ishtar’ treat from Paul Williams at the ASCAP awards

paul williams x325By Ray Bennett

I know quite a few songwriters and one of their guilty secret favorite movies, and mine too, is the colossal flop 1987 movie “Ishtar” in which Warren Beatty and Dustin Hoffman play inanely bad songwriters caught up in Middle East intrigue.

It is hilarious if overblown and well worth watching, not least for the wonderfully wretched songs the two of them come up with. Most of them were written by Paul Williams, who also wrote some seriously good songs.

To my delight, at the ASCAP London Awards gala Wednesday night, when I told him of my affection for the film and its songs, he gave me a quick rendition of the one I like most.
It goes:

“Telling the truth can be dangerous business.
Honest and popular don’t go hand in hand.
If you admit that you can play the accordion,
No one’ll hire you in a rock ‘n’ roll band.”

Elected this year as Chairman and CEO of ASCAP, Williams performed more of his songs at the event and brought on Madeleine Bell to show how they sound in the hands of a truly great singer.

 

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McCartney, Coldplay winners at ASCAP London awards

ascap 2009 x325By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Paul McCartney was named songwriter of the year at the 29th annual ASCAP Awards in London on Wednesday night, as Coldplay’s “Viva La Vida” won song of the year and Universal Music collected the publisher of the year prize.

Scottish recording artist Calvin Harris received the Vanguard Award for his gold-selling debut album “I Created Disco” and indie pop duo the Ting Tings picked up the College Award for their multiplatinum first album, “We Started Nothing.”

Film awards went to Craig Armstrong for “The Incredible Hulk,” Patrick Doyle for “Igor” and “Nim’s Island,” Joby Talbot for “Penelope” and “Son of Rambow,” Adrian Johnston for “Brideshead Revisited,” Jocelyn Pook for “Brick Lane” and Paul Englishby for “Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day.”

TV theme awards went to “American Idol,” written by Cathy Dennis, Julian Gingell and Barry Stone and published by EMI Music and Imagem London, and “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire,” written by Keith Strachan and Matthew Strachan, and published by 2waytraffic U.K. Rights Ltd.

The awards reflect airplay and performances in the U.S. of work by composers, songwriters and publishers who are members of the U.K.’s Performing Right society and represented in the US by ASCAP.

They were presented during a banquet held at the Grosvenor House Hotel that featured a performance by Oscar-, Grammy- and Golden Globe-winning songwriter Paul Williams, who was elected ASCAP’s president and chairman of the board in April.

This story appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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THEATRE REVIEW: David Hare’s ‘The Power of Yes’

Power of Yes_11 x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Not so much a play as a staged documentary, David Hare’s insightful “The Power of Yes” at the National Theatre is the result of the playwright acting as a journalist in search of the reasons for the world’s financial crisis.

Presented on a bare stage with a vivid city skyline backdrop, it features Anthony Calf as Hare interviewing a wide range of men and women from economists to bankers to top executives to reporters as he tries to make sense of the economic meltdown.

Power of Yes_3 x325Calf, as the author (left), appears alone at the start to state his premise. “This isn’t a play. It’s a story,” he says. “It doesn’t pretend to be a play. It pretends only to be a story.”

That is the case and it could be said that Hare might have been expected to transform his research into a genuine drama. He has, however, made what is really a parade of talking heads into something that is arresting with help from director Angus Jackson’s dynamic choreography and intriguing video displays that include snappy quotes, algebraic equations and headlines. Stephen Warbeck’s music helps considerably.

The stage is often filled with well-dressed people representing the institutions and businesses that stood to profit and lose from the greed and gambling that led to the international crash of capitalism in September 2008.

Banks and bankers mostly take it in the neck for placing their profit margins above the needs and responsibilities of society. A private equity pioneer quotes the head of Citibank comparing the action of banks to musical chairs, saying, “As long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance.”

Calf is persuasive as a writer who is sometimes baffled and other times angry at the frequently self-righteous and disdainful views of the rich folk he talks to. There are many fine contributions among the cast including Clair Price as a surprisingly candid financial journalist and Bruce Myers as billionaire George Soros.

Hare finds no real answers but he suggests that what the financial crisis represented was the failure of the notion that markets are by definition wise and will sort themselves out. Soros quotes former chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve Board as insisting that the benefits of the market are so great that we have to live with the price. To which Soros replied: “Yes, but the people who end up paying the price are never the people who get the benefits.”

Venue: National Theatre, runs through Jan. 10: Cast: Anthony Calf, Jemima Rooper, Malcolm Sinclair, Claire Price, Bruce Myers; Playwright: David Hare; Director: Angus Jackson; Designer: Bob Crowley; Lighting designer: Paule Constable; Music: Stephen Warbeck; Sound designer: John Leonard; Video & projection designers: Jon Driscoll, Gemma Carrington.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter. Photos by Catherine Ashmore.

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Donovan, Natasha Bedingfield win BMI London Awards

Donovan BMI 2009 x650By Ray Bennett

LONDON – “Pocketful of Sunshine” performed by Natasha Bedingfield, written by Bedingfield and Danielle Brisebois and published by EMI Music, won the Robert S. Musel Award for song of year at the annual BMI London Awards Tuesday night.

The track also won the college song of the year award while “Cry For You,” performed by September, written by Anoo Bhagavan and Niclas von der Burg and also published by EMI Music, won the dance award.

British singer-songwriter Donovan was on hand to receive a BMI Icon award for having “a unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers.” Previous winners include Ray Davies, Van Morrison, Willie Nelson and Dolly Parton.

BMI film music awards went to A. R. Rahman, who won two Oscars for “Slumdog Millionaire,” and to David Arnold for the James Bond film “Quantum of Solace.” The Who’s Pete Townshend (“CSI”) won three BMI TV music awards and Rolfe Kent (“Dexter”) won the BMI cable music award.

The awards were presented by BMI president & CEO Del Bryant; BMI senior vice president, writer/publisher relations Phil Graham; and executive director, writer/publisher relations, Europe & Asia Brandon Bakshi during a banquet at London’s Dorchester Hotel.

Broadcast Music Inc. (BMI) is a U.S. performing rights organization representing more than 400,000 songwriters, composers and music publishers in collecting royalties from radio, television, the Internet, and live shows. BMI reported $905 million in performing rights collections in its 2009 fiscal year.

This story appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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THEATRE REVIEW: Kevin Spacey in ‘Inherit the Wind’

Inherit the Wind 1 x650By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Director Trevor Nunn brings vividly to life a famous courtroom clash between two idealistic heavyweights in the Old Vic production of “Inherit the Wind,” with unforgettable performances by Kevin Spacey and David Troughton as the legal titans.

Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee based their play on the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial in which a Tennessee schoolteacher was charged with violating state law by teaching students about Charles Darwin’s theory of creation in the book “On the Origins of Species.”

The trial pitted legendary U.S. trial lawyer Clarence Darrow, a noted agnostic, against former congressman, secretary of state and three-time presidential nominee William Jennings Bryan, a noted evangelical orator, and was covered by famous journalist H.L. Mencken, a noted cynic.

Their names were changed for the 1955 play and 1960 Stanley Kramer movie, which had Spencer Tracy as lawyer Henry Drummond, Fredric March as preacher Matthew Harrison Brady, Gene Kelly as newspaperman E. K. Hornbeck and Dick York as teacher Bertram T. Cates.

inherit the wind 2 x650

In secular Britain, the dice are stacked against a man who argues for blind belief in creationism, and Nunn does a terrific job of establishing the context. The Tony-winning English director famously has filled the stage for such productions as “Nicholas Nickleby” and “Les Miserables”; he does the same here to show how fundamentalist religious beliefs are part of the fabric of the community with parades and revivalist songs.

Written in 1955 during the McCarthy era of communist witch hunts, the play makes a direct appeal for freedom of thought and includes a rather weak romantic subplot clearly tailored for Broadway, but Nunn and his sublime players make any weaknesses irrelevant.

British veteran Troughton makes Brady big and blustery but sensitive to people around him and vulnerable only in his blinkered devotion to his religious teachings. Spacey, bulked up and round-shouldered in the role of the white-haired Drummond, uses his sly smile and intelligent eyes to great effect.

Their passionate exchanges over strict interpretations of words in the Bible show craftsmen at the highest level of acting skill so that knowing the outcome diminishes not at all their breathtaking encounter.

Mark Dexter makes a droll and slick newspaperman, and Sam Phillips as the teacher, Ken Bones as a local reverend and Nicholas Jones as the judge make fine impressions. Sonya Cassidy has the most difficult task as the love interest for the man on trial, but she handles the character’s earnest but clumsy speeches well.

Venue: The Old Vic, runs through Dec. 20; Cast: Kevin Spacey, David Troughton, Sam Phillips, Sonya Cassidy, Mark Dexter, Ken Bones, Nicholas Jones; Playwrights: Jerome Lawrence & Robert E. Lee; Director: Trevor Nunn; Set designer: Rob Howell; Costume designers: Rob Howell, Irene Bohan; Lighting designer: Howard Harrison; Sound designer: Fergus O’Hare; Music supervisor: Steven Edis.

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There’s always a Ray in the movies, now there’s Blu-ray

By Ray Bennett

There’s always a Ray in the movies. Scriptwriters really like the name. Michael Keaton, Dan Aykroyd and Gregory Hines each played a guy named Ray three times, Harvey Keitel twice. Kevin Costner was Ray in “Field Of Dreams”. Bob Hoskins, Michael Caine and Bill Nighy have all been a Ray. Ray Winstone, Ray Bolger and Ray Liotta have all been Ray. Penelope Cruz was Raimunda in “Volver”.

Tom Cruise was Ray in “War Of The Worlds”, he has a brother named Ray in “Rain Man” and “The Firm” and in “Collateral” the cop who’s after him is called Ray and the first man he kills is Ramon. In “Jerry McGuire”, the woman he falls in love with has a son named Ray.

In “The Bucket List”, Jack Nicholson turns to Morgan Freeman, playing a man named Carter, and says, “Mind if I call you Ray? My main man Ray!” I asked Rob Reiner, who directed the picture, why he used that line and he said, “I don’t know. Jack just came out with it.”

The name Ray just goes with the movies but now there’s the biggest Ray of all: Blu-ray. Put me down as a convert. I’m a latecomer, no doubt, but better late than never, as it turns out to be the best home entertainment show of them all.

Movies have been my lifelong passion but the home screen also has played a major role since childhood. My dad worked on the railway but when I was a kid he won a little on the football pools and suddenly we had a television set. Just the BBC and black-and-white, of course, but we were mesmerised. In the 1960s, at the Ideal Home Exhibition I saw the first colour TV prototypes and agreed with many that it was a fad that would not last.

In the 1970s, I was in Canada writing about TV and my editor provided me with a Betamax video player to watch programmes sent out in advance by broadcasters. It was brilliant, and I watched on in horror as the inferior VHS system broke through with a huge movie selection while Betamax dwindled.

By the 1980s, I was in the United States editing a national magazine about satellite television with correspondents returning from Japan with amazing stories about tiny dishes and dazzling high-definition reception. In Los Angeles in the 1990s it was all about DVD and the chance to own a complete movie archive of your own.

Now, back in the UK, there is the best of all: Blu-ray. Despite being exposed to many variations of technology over the decades, I remain all thumbs when it comes to putting together home entertainment systems. The kind folks at Sony Pictures Home Entertainment generously put on a demonstration for me in their splendid lounge in the basement of their Golden Square headquarters in London with giant screens, a PlayStation3 setup and a Blu-ray player.

It all looked magnificent but the real test would be what happened at home. Sony sent over a player and some disks and, at my request, left me to it. I once assembled a Macintosh Apple computer system out of the box but Apple know I’m an idiot and they made it very simple.

I have become, however, adept at overseeing my Sky Plus box and the high-definition service from Sky on my small Sony Bravia TV set is topnotch. I easily set aside my old DVD player and now all I had to do was add Blu-ray to the mix. The player itself is sleek and elegant, matching the curves of the Sky Plus unit. The connection, however, posed a problem. There must be an HDMI socket on the TV set, but I couldn’t find it. I had a shiny golden HDMI cable, but no place to put it.

Ah, there’s a cable with three colour-coded plugs that match both the back of the Blu-ray machine and my TV set. Bingo! An “easy set-up” button in the onscreen menu allowed me to get things started and I was all set.

No, no, said my editor, when I checked in with him. There must be an HDMI socket on the TV set and you need it for the best HD picture. Hmmn. Well, the Sky Plus box must connect somehow and there was no Scart plug in use. Ahha! There’s the HDMI socket with Sky plugged into it. I quickly made the change. I slipped the first disc of the 2-disc Deluxe Edition of “Casino Royale” into the tray and sat back to enjoy it. Rats! The picture is in black-and-white!

I must have hooked something up wrong. I checked the plugs and the cable. I took the disc out of the tray, cleaned it, and put it back again. I hit play. It was still in black-and-white. Then it hit me. The film really is in black-and-white through the studio logo and the first sequence, only blooming into full colour for the opening credits.

And what colour it is, too. The Bond films have always been noted for their glorious production designs and they look wonderful in full high definition on Blu-ray. Hungry for more, I checked out Vilmos Zsigmond’s Oscar-winning cinematography in the 30th Anniversary Ultimate Edition of Steven Spielberg’s “Close Encounters Of The Third Kind”.

The detail is fabulous and major sequences such as the gathering at Dharmsala look stunning. Laszlo Kovacs’ terrific cinematography on “Ghost Busters” when Bill Murray and Dan Aykroyd first come across a full-torso vaporous apparition looks as bright and inventive on Blu-ray as when I first saw the film in New York.

One of the really good things about Blu-ray is that it is, in that marvellous term, backwards compatible. My DVD of “Lawrence Of Arabia” looked better than I’d ever seen it with director of photography Freddie Young’s lavish desert images something to marvel at. Vilmos Zsigmond achieved wonders filming in heavy snow for Robert Altman’s Western masterpiece “McCabe & Mrs. Miller” and on Blu-ray the wintry sequences simply gleamed.

Impressed with the black-and-white images at the beginning of the Bond film, I wanted to see what a full black-and-white film looked like on the system. Joseph LaShelle’s evocative Manhattan images in Billy Wilder’s Oscarwinning “The Apartment” were luminous and Sam Leavitt’s capture of the courtroom drama in Otto Preminger’s “Anatomy of a Murder” appeared more vivid and intense.

I still have a lot to learn about all that Bluray offers including the benefits of BD Live, the internet service that provides loads of information constantly updated. The Blu-ray disc packages have a grat many extras to do with music and storing photographs that remain to be explored, and I cannot wait.

The industry talks a lot about downloading and 3D, but for me — and I’m sorry if I sound a bit breathless about this — after a lifetime of hoping one day to have cinema quality in the home, Blu-ray is going to do just fine. Knowing I can keep my DVDs is a good thing but I also know that I’m going to replace my favourites with Blu-ray Disc versions.

The only downside to all this is that now that I have Blu-ray and Sky Plus HD, standard television suddenly looks quite dull. Oh, and I’m definitely going to have to get a bigger screen.

This story appeared in Cue Entertainment.

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