LOCARNO FILM REVIEW: ‘I Always Wanted to Be a Gangster’

By Ray Bennett

LOCARNO, Switzerland – Wry, nostalgic and wonderfully nutty, Samuel Benchetrit’s comedy “I Always Wanted to Be a Gangster” is a warm if cockeyed homage to old-time crime movies. Shot masterfully in the Academy aspect ratio and vivid black-and-white of Bogie and Cagney pictures, it relates the earnest but ham-fisted attempts by a group of unrelated characters to turn their hands to crime. It might be a hard sell, but lovers of old movies and those who relish screen comedy that is written, staged and performed smartly will love this.

The only link between each of the stories is a functional cafeteria on the outskirts of Paris where conurbation is cementing over both greenery and the illusory recollection of better times. Bencherit weaves his yarns together so cleverly that the film does not appear episodic. He switches from goofball slapstick to screwball banter to the driest observational wit and back again without missing a beat.

The film begins and ends with two would-be villains who seem made for each other. Franck (Edouard Baer) is a witless hoodlum whose stab at robbing the cafeteria at gunpoint is hampered by the absence of a gun and the fact that he’s locked his keys inside his getaway car.

Susie (Anna Mouglalis, pictured above) is a sassy waitress who laughs at his feeble hold-up technique largely because she has his gun. The backstory to this, and to the other chapters, is told in silent-movie style complete with title cards.

Meanwhile, a pair of bumbling and notably decent kidnappers (Bouli Lanners and Serge Lariviere) have broken into a rich man’s home and grabbed his daughter (Selma El Mousi) for ransom. They couldn’t know that, though she is spoiled and nubile, she also is suicidal and her father is happy to be rid of her.

Still, they leave a message on Dad’s phone to arrange an exchange meeting at the cafeteria where, by chance, two groups of touring musicians arrive with vocalists Alain Bashing and the single-named Arno playing versions of themselves. One is successful,the other not so much, and when temptation is offered, it’s too hard to resist.

Then there’s the gang of retired criminals who have come together at what used to be their hideout because one of them is mortally ill and they want to fulfil youthful pledges to one another. These old reprobates are played by a wonderful array of characters – Jean Rochefort, Laurent Terzieff, Jean-Pierre Kalfon, Valentino Venantini and Roger Dumas (pictured above). Being together again makes them long for one more heist but the bank they robbed in their last job 25 years ago isn’t what it used to be.

The finest compliment to the filmmakers and splendid cast is that you wish the movie wouldn’t end. These are characters rendered marvellously and it would be great to spend more time in their misguided and endearing company.

Also, Kris Kristofferson’s beautiful songs are always welcome on film soundtracks but it’s usually “Me and Bobby McGee,” “For the Good Times” or “Help Me Make It Through the Night.” How pleasing in this film to hear his growling voice on the opening lyric to “Casey’s Last Ride”: “Casey joins the hollow sound of silent people walking down the stairway to the subway in the shadows down below.”

It’s perfect for a wonderfully droll little picture that is not even due for release in France until next January and who knows if it will ever get a U.K. release in theatres or on DVD. It would be such a shame if not.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter

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LOCARNO FILM REVIEW: Fumihiko Sori’s ‘Vexille’

Vexille x650

By Ray Bennett

LOCARNO, Switzerland – Robots are threatening the world in Fumihiko Sori’s enjoyable Japanese anime romp “Vexille,” and they’re even more dangerous when they become useless piles of junk mashed up in swirling twisters of scything metal teeth called Jags.

The jet-propelled android anime “Vexille” powered the Locarno International Film Festival into action in the Piazza Grande Wednesday night. It’s the 60th anniversary edition of the festival in the tranquil lakeside setting of Switzerland’s Ticino region and the animated film was one of 17 to be screened in high definition this year through the festival’s partnership with XDC Cinema.

Digital Domain veteran Sori, whose first directing job was “Ping Pong,” and Haruka Handa (“Appleseed”) have scripted a CG animation film full of furious action as a team of uncommonly well-equipped soldiers goes to war with the androids. Anime is an acquired taste but fans will surely respond to the picture’s dynamite energy. Those not already in the fold will find this one very easy to take.

It’s 2077 and Japan has become a renegade nation closed to the rest of the world. Shielded from penetration by air, was and space for 10 years, the islands have become a dangerous mystery to the United Nations. The country’s isolation resulted whine fell out with other countries over the development of robotics and its determination to continue creating them even when they were banned everywhere else.

The fear is that Daiwa Heavy Industries in Tokyo has taken its creation of human androids to extremes so the only answer is to send in a crack team of fighters to hook up withJapanese underground rebels and find out what’s going on. Enter Vixille, a G.I. Jane and then some whose squad uses ultra-high-tech uniforms, weapons and vehicles to rocket into battle.

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It’s silly fun, simplistic in its heroes and villains and sentimental in its message. British mixer Paul Oakenfold’s pounding original music and tracks from artists such as Basement Jaxx, MIA and the Prodigy help muster the proceedings and it blends well with Koji Kasamatsu’s industrial sound design.

Using Japanese voices for the American characters is a bit disorienting for non-Japanese, especially as the subtitles fairly zip along, and sometimes it’s hard to tell which bits of death-dealing weaponry are working for the good guys and the bad guys.

But the weapons are terrific and the CGI action, which is almost constantly, is inventive and thought through cleverly. In close-up, the characters are bland and washed out, but once the bullets start to whiz the frame is filled with live-wire entertainment. And those vicious tornadoes of crunching jagged edges (pictured above) are something to see.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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Cannes hit ‘El Violin’ deserves another bow

By Ray Bennett

Francisco Vargas’s finely crafted story of peasant rebellion, “El Violin,” which screened in London Sunday as part of BAFTA Goes to Mexico, warrants a full U.K and U.S. release for its rich texture and powerful filmmaking.

The film has won many accolades including the Skyy Prize and the audience award for best narrative feature at the 50th annual San Francisco International Film Festival in May.

El_Violin_1 x325Angel Tavira (left), who plays the lead role of a grandfather who plays a dangerous cat-and-mouse game with a brutal army commandant, was named best actor in the Un Certain Regard sidebar at the 2006 Festival de Cannes.

Tavira was the subject of a 2004 Vargas documentary (titled “Tierra caliente … se mueren los que la mueven”) about his efforts to preserve the musical heritage of his community, Tierra Caliente, Guerrero.

The 81-year-old, who made his acting debut in “El Violin,” lost his right hand in an accident aged 13 but he has played the violin all his life. Music is a key element of the film with an atmospheric score by Armando Rosas and Cuauhtemoc Tavira.

Vargas won two prizes at the 49th edition of Mexico’s Ariel Awards in March, for best first work and best screenplay, while Gerardo Taracena was named best supporting actor for his performance as the old man’s son, a guerilla fighter.

“El Violin,” distributed by France’s Memento Films, also screened at the Toronto and Portland festivals and other fests in France, Taiwan, Serbia, Poland, Argentina, Colombia, and Spain.

In the U.K. it played at London’s Human Rights Watch Film Festival in March and the Cambridge Film Festival in July.

Read my review from The Hollywood Reporter

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Alfonso Cuaron was shaken by Bond, but not stirred

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Mexican filmmaker Alfonso Cuaron (pictured) says he was going to make a James Bond picture until Joel Coen talked him out of it. Speaking in a Q&A at BAFTA in London on Friday, the director of “Y Tu Mama Tambien,” “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban” and “Children of Men” said:

Alfonso Cuaron x300“I was offered a Bond movie, and I thought ‘Great!’ Then I had dinner in New York with Joel Coen. He doesn’t say much. He says ‘Cool,’ or ‘Not cool.’ I told him about the Bond film and he said, ‘Cool.’ But I pressed him and he said that for him a Bond film fell into the category of a film he wanted to see but not one he wanted to make. I realized that I felt the same way.”

The fully packed event was part of opening night festivities for a three-day program called BAFTA Goes to Mexico. It features screenings of films from that country and sessions with Mexican filmmakers including Cuaron’s first feature film “Love In the Time of Hysteria” (1991).

In his Q&A, Cuaron spoke of his influences, including Ernst Lubitstch, Woody Allen and Pedro Almodovar: “I was ripping off all of them.” He called his 1998 film “Great Expectations” a failure:

“It was a painful experience for me. Pieces of it work, but not the whole film. I can’t blame the studio. I ruined my film. The script was not there but I had the arrogance to believe I could fix it. But you should see ‘Great Expectations’ because even though the film is bad it has great paintings and it has Patrick Doyle’s music.”

Cuaron said he cherished working with Doyle on that film and also “The Little Princess,” and believed that composer John Taverner’s contribution to “Children of Men” enhanced the spiritual journey of Clive Owen’s character. But he admitted that he doesn’t use a lot of music in his films, saying: “I love music in film but I get anxious when I hear music that is trying to tell me too much.”

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FILM REVIEW: Laurent Tirard’s ‘Moliere’

moliere Romain Duris x650

By Ray Bennett

Laurent Tirard’s splendid “Moliere” starring Romain Duris (pictured), just released by Pathe in the U.K., is for everyone who loved “Shakespeare in Love,” but those who found that Oscar-winning picture smarmy, smug and overrated will enjoy it even more. Continue reading

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MUSIC REVIEW: Live Earth Concert at Wembley Stadium

LiveEarthWembleyStadium x650By Ray Bennett

LONDON — A lack of focus and constant lectures on the dire state of the world meant that the 70,000-plus crowd at Wembley Stadium for the nine-hour London Live Earth concert had to cherry-pick its pleasures. There were many as the Black Eyed Peas, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Metallica and the Foo Fighters, all in top form, were not going to let the day get away without a party.

Artists such as Duran Duran, James Blunt, the Beastie Boys, Genesis, who opened the show, and Madonna, who closed it, played to their constituencies. U.K. bands Razorlight, Snow Patrol, Bloc Party and Keane contributed solid sets while another British group, Kasabian, Scottish singer Paolo Nutini, Ireland’s Damien Rice, and jazzy Corinne Bailey Rae made dazzling impressions. And Spinal Tap provided a few laughs.

The weather was kind but the event’s obvious contradictions and fuzzy focus were not helped by the stream of celebrities including Chris Rock, Eddie Izzard, Gerard Butler, Kyle McLachlan and Thandie Newton delivering homilies on the importance of turning off the lights at home.

Late in the show, poor Terence Stamp had to oversee a symbolic switching off of Wembley’s lights, which prompted a light show of camera flashes. Only when hot British comic Russell Brand came on in the evening with his bright and challenging observations between acts did the production achieve much cohesion.

There were no seats on the pitch as there had been at last week’s Concert for Diana, so the field was packed with standing fans obviously eager for a good time. Genesis took to the stage following a thunderous percussion introduction but singer Phil Collins appeared to be performing by rote. Razorlight and Snow Patrol picked up the pace but it was Damien Rice’s “The Blower’s Daughter” that caught the imagination and his delivery, with David Gray, of the fatalistic “Que Sera Sera” had the crowd singing.

Kasabian did a very lively set followed by Nutini, who seems awkward on stage but has a rich and impressive voice and a dynamite band. The Black Eyed Peas bounded out in obvious high spirits and while an attempt to mark the solemnity of the day’s cause dampened things for a bit, the band recovered in a soaring delivery of “Where Is the Love?”

Bailey Rae did her hit “Put Your Records On” and, in keeping with the day’s theme, performed Marvin Gaye’s “Mercy, Mercy Me” with John Legend, who had done a single number earlier. New York’s U.K.-based Terra Naomi did her hit “Say It’s Possible.” Duran Duran, enjoying a second bite at the big time, received a warm reception from their fans, but nothing like the noise made when the Red Hot Chili Peppers came on.

The stadium was filled to capacity by then and the band’s barnstorming enthusiasm had everyone rocking. Metallica also got a very loud greeting and while the accompanying clips of old elephants with long tusks seemed fitting, they haven’t forgotten how to kick up a ruckus.

Rob Reiner was on hand to introduce Harry Shearer, Michael McKean and Christopher Guest in the roles from their 1984 movie “This Is Spinal Tap.” They did “Stonehenge,” complete with fake rocks and Druids, “Warmer Than Hell” and “Big Bottom,” and if it wasn’t terribly funny, the lingering goodwill towards the film got them through.

The evening proceeded with Blunt followed by the Beastie Boys and then the Pussycat Dolls, trying desperately to appear sexy but not succeeding. Dave Grohl and the Foo Fighters could have gone on all night with their fiery rock ‘n’ roll and probably would have but for the need for another lecture about climate change and Madonna’s finale.

The incredibly fit but coldly mechanical star performed a song she’d written for the night titled “Hey You,” in which she personally ordered everyone to save the world. “Ray of Light” led to “La Isla” and “Hung Up,” with the lyric “Time goes by so slowly,” which suddenly appeared to be true.

Here are some notes I made during the Live Earth concert:

LONDON 3:15 — Wembley Stadium is jammed for the second weekend in a row for the U.K. leg of the worldwide phenomenon called Live Earth. It’s standing room only on the pitch compared to the all-seater for last week’s Concert for Diana and once again the British weather is cooperating with bright sunshine. Genesis, Razorlight and Snow Patrol have each done effective sets but the mood remains sober due to the frequent live and filmed reminders of earth’s dire straits. So far, an audience that is obviously ready to party has generated what atmosphere there is. “Are you looking forward to Spinal Tap? We are!” says Snow Patrol frontman Gary Lightbody, speaking for everyone.

LONDON 4:45: Damien Rice and David Gray perform together, with just guitars, on a platform that stretches into the audience. Rice’s lilting but deceptively rich voice fills the stadium with a pleasing rendition of his song “The Blower’s Daughter” and the pair of them have everyone joining in loudly on the fatalistic anthem that sums up English football hopes in the new Wembley more than saving the planet: “Que Sera Sera.” After some more lecturing, this time from “300” star Gerard Butler, cheery U.K. rockers Kasabian start on time and quickly re-engage the crowd. Thandie Newton comes on to talk about conserving power and using it responsibly, urging people to turn appliances off rather than leaving them on stand-by. She’s supposed to cross over live to Giants Stadium, New Jersey, for Al Gore but he’s not ready so the British “Crash” star has to vamp, which she does with good humor. Gore comes on the screens to start the American leg and recite the Live Earth pledge. The former veep paraphrases Lincoln: “We must disenthrall ourselves to save the planet.” He introduces Trisha Yearwood and Garth Brooks on the New Jersey stage, but the country stars are immediately cut off in London in favor of Paolo Nutini. The fourth-generation Scotsman cuts a shy, withdrawn image but he has a strong voice and a thumping band. Soon afterwards, the Black Eyed Peas bound out onto the extended platform and the house is jumping until they pause for an earnest but unfortunately rhymed rap plea on behalf of our poisoned planet. The Peas save the day, though, with a dynamic delivery of their song “Where is the Love?”

LONDON 8:15: “Desperate Housewives” star Kyle MacLachlan introduces Corinne Bailey Rae who does “I’d Like To” followed by Marvin Gaye’s “Mercy, Mercy Me” with John Legend and her own hit “Put Your Records On.” Terra Naomi and Keane are next before hot British comic Russell Brand brings some welcome levity to the event with his savvy patter. He’s also there to introduce heavy-metal rockers Metallica, who are greeted with a huge roar. Their set, which includes “Nothing Else Matters,” is accompanied by film of some ageing elephants with long tusks, which seems appropriate, but they haven’t forgotten how to kick up a ruckus. Ricky Gervais comes on to say the show is running late and he will be off the stage in 30 seconds, which is good news. He brings out Rob Reiner in the guise of Marty DiBergi, manager of Spinal Tap. DiBergi says the band thought their 1984 film was a pile of crap so he is pleased to be reunited with them. They have two prime attributes, he says, “Volume and punctuality.” The boys — Michael McKean as David St. Hubbins, Christopher Guest as Nigel Tufnel, and Harry Shearer as Derek Smalls — come out looking typically dazed and confused and launch into “Stonehenge” complete with fake rocks and Druids. “Whatever you do, don’t exhale, we’ve had quite enough of that,” says McKean in his bright yellow hair. They do “Warmer Than Hell” with familiar English places being indicted for Satanism and then bring on “every known bass player in the known universe,” or at least a dozen, to play “Big Bottom.” The set is not hilarious but “This is Spinal Tap” is so fondly recalled that they get a bye.

LONDON 11:00: James Blunt, you’re beautiful for not singing that song. Blunt has a certain portion of the female part of the audience in the palm of his hand and gets everyone joining in on Cat Stevens’ “Wide World.” The Beastie Boys ramp up the energy level if you like that kind of thing. A Shakira number is beamed in from Hamburg but not many pay attention. The absurdly posturing and tuneless Pussycat Dolls strain every fiber attempting to be sexy to no avail but then the Foo Fighters burst onto the stage with their fiery rock ‘n’ roll and the evening is back on track. “All My Life” leads into “My Hero” with the entire audience chanting along. Frontman Dave Grohl dives into “Times Like These” and “The Best of You,” taking the whole stadium right along with him. Actor Terence Stamp is lumbered with the job of the final lecture of the evening and to oversee the symbolic gesture of dimming Wembley’s electricity. Who else to bring back the light and close the show than Madonna, empress of self-satisfaction? In her fiercest Evita pose, legs set firm in a Trilby hat and Rosie the Riveter dress and backed by a choir of schoolchildren, she sings “Hey You,” personally ordering each and everyone of us to go out and save the world, or at least jump up and down. Right, then. Displaying extraordinary fitness but a mechanical coldness, Madonna doffs the dress and does a gypsy number with a pair of very happy musicians who favor hopping on one leg, segues into “Hung Up” with the repeated line “Time goes by so slowly,” which the crowd enjoys but sounds suddenly apt.

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MUSIC REVIEW: Thumbs up for the Concert for Diana

Concert for Diana 2007 x650

By Ray Bennett

By some strange alchemy the disparate elements of the Concert for Diana, ranging from P Diddy to Andrew Lloyd-Webber, Tom Jones to the English National Ballet, and Kanye West to Take That, meshed into a memorable six-hour party in London’s new Wembley Stadium Sunday.

The event was organized by British princes William and Harry to celebrate the life of their mother Princess Diana on what would have been her 46th birthday but is the 10th anniversary of her death. Even Simon Cowell, one of several celebrities on hand to introduce the 24 acts, gave thumbs up to the future king of England and his brother for a well-produced show. The two appeared onstage twice to speak of their mother and thank everyone, and remained visibly entertained in the posh seats throughout the concert.

Perhaps it was the sentimental recollection of a beautiful lost woman who gave meaning to her empty existence by acts of grace and charity. Maybe it was the curious and anachronistic but spellbinding phenomenon of a community projecting its collective hopes onto a pair of favoured and in a way orphaned boys it chooses to call royalty.

Or it was just the determination of 63,000 people of all ages to have a good time in unexpected Sunday sunshine after days of drenching weather in a city on critical alert for acts of terrorism. Whatever it was, it worked.

The eclectic range of artists was said to represent both Diana’s favorites and the taste of her sons. They took full advantage of the audience’s good mood with Rod Stewart, Tom Jones and Roger Hodgson from Supertramp performing popular hits to loud applause. The crowd yelled for more when ageing rockers Status Quo performed just one song but they were mollified when re-formed boy band Take That did three.

Duran Duran, Bryan Ferry and Elton John also proved to be crowd pleasers and a parade of young stars including James Morrison, Joss Stone, Fergie (from Black-Eyed Peas), Lily Allen, Nelly Furtado and Natasha Bedingfield earned their spurs.

Young British rockers the Feeling had the joint rocking and more energy was added by the band Orson, Pharrell Williams and Kanye West who did an athletic medley racing back and forth across the stage wearing peculiar white sunglasses.

P Diddy oozed his particular brand of sophistication in a white suit and shirt with black tie accompanied by a string section of beautiful young women playing over heavy percussion. He devoted “Missing You,” derived from Sting’s “Every Breath You Take,” to Princess Diana.

The English National Ballet’s performance of “Swan Lake Act. 4” earned noisy appreciation and the medley of Lloyd-Webber show tunes featuring Sarah Brightman, Andrea Bocelli and others, while hit and miss, also went over well.

Dennis Hopper, Gillian Anderson, Jamie Oliver, Sienna Miller and tennis champions Boris Becker and John McEnroe, in town for the Wimbledon tournament, were among star presenters. London-born “24” star Kiefer Sutherland was given a huge welcome although the longest standing ovation of the day was reserved for Los Angeles-bound English soccer superstar David Beckham, who appeared overwhelmed by the acclaim.

Bill Clinton and Tony Blair sent video messages and the show was studded with filmed tributes from people involved in the many charities and organizations that benefited from Diana’s involvement.

Elton John opened the show with his earliest ballad “Your Song” instead of what many people hoped would be a repeat of the version of “Candle in the Wind” that he sang at Diana’s funeral. The singer also was due to provide a blowout finale but his set was truncated by a local noise curfew and a promised closer of “Crocodile Rock” never materialized. Instead, the show ended with a solemn video greeting from Nelson Mandela before the crowd slipped away.

Here are some notes I made as the show ran its course:

LONDON 5:30: Elton John kicks off the Concert for Diana on time with his first ballad, “Your Song,” followed by the princes William, who says “This evening is about all our mother loved in life: her music, her dance, her charities and her friends,” and Harry, who sent a message to British troops in the Middle East: “Be safe. I wish I could be there with you.” Duran Duran have the crowd on their feet followed by James Morrison, Lily Allen, Fergie, the Feeling, Pharrell Williams and Nelly Furtado. Sienna Miller, Dennis Hopper and, getting huge applause, Kiefer Sutherland, pops up to introduce performers and Bill Clinton has sent a video message. Amazingly, on a weekend in which Britain has been drenched with rain, there are only puffy white clouds and blue skies above the brand new Wembley Stadium.

LONDON 7:00: The English National Ballet gets a very warm reception as they perform “Swan Lake Act 4″ followed by a 10-minute break in which the crowd does a faultless Mexican Wave. Ageing rockers Status Quo lead into Joss Stone, barefoot in a loose green dress, and then Roger Hodgson shows up to sing some songs from Supertramp’s bestselling “Breakfast in America” album. His “Give a Little Bit,” with just guitar and backup singers, has the crowd filling the stadium with its enthusiastic singing.

LONDON 8:30: Tom Jones knocks everyone’s socks off with a jamming set with Aerosmith’s Joe Perry sitting in. “Kiss” leads to a rocking version of the Arctic Monkeys’ “I Bet You Look Good on the Dance Floor.” Joss Stone joins him for “Ain’t That a Lot of Love.” Local favorites Will Young and Natasha Bedingfield perform and then Boris Becker and John McEnroe (in town for Wimbledon) introduce Bryan Ferry for three songs. Former Prime Minister Tony Blair’s face on the video screens draws boos from the crowd but when he speaks in praise of William, Harry and Diana it turns to cheers. Cat Deeley introduces a segment featuring showtunes by Andrew Lloyd Webber. Anastacia breaks eardrums with “Superstar.” “The Sound of Music” stage star Connie Fisher contributes an ordinary reading of “Memory” from “Cats.” Andrea Bocelli moves everyone with “Music of the Night” from “Phantom of the Opera” before Josh Grabon and Sarah Brightman put people to sleep with “All I Ask of You” from the same show. But then Donny Osmond, Jason Donovan and the winner of Lloyd-Webber’s latest TV casting show Lee Mead wake them up with a crowd-pleasing rendition of “Any Dream Will Do” from “Joseph and the Technicolor Dreamcoat.” In the break someone named Beckham shows up to chat backstage. There’s not a cloud in the sky.

LONDON 9:30: Kiefer Sutherland introduces Rod Stewart who demonstrates he can still pull out all the stops on “Maggie May,” “Baby Jane” and “Sailing.” Kanye West does a positively athletic couple of songs mostly spent dashing from one end of the stage to the other wearing peculiar white sunglasses. P Diddy arrives looking typically suave in a white suit, white shirt and black tie. With a string section of beautiful young women over heavy percussion, he wins a huge reception for “Missing You.” David Beckham strolls onto the stage for the biggest applause and loudest cheers of the evening. England’s soccer superstar appears overwhelmed by the welcome. He introduces the re-formed Take That with a droll delivery: “Ten years ago, they had millions of girls … in tears.” The boys do “Shine,” “Patience” and “Back for Good,” obviously retaining the affection of their fans. Ricky Gervais does a comedy bit to fill while Elton John gets ready for the show’s finale kicking off with “Saturday Night’s All Right.”

LONDON 11:45: Those hoping for a repeat performance by Elton John of the version of “Candle in the Wind” he sang at the funeral of Princess Diana were disappointed Sunday night as the performer’s finale of the Concert for Diana was cut short due to the local council’s noise curfew. Princes William and Harry walked onto the stage after John had sung his second number, “Tiny Dancer” and gave him the bad news. He had been expected to close with “Crocodile Rock” but it was also rumoured that he might perform “Candle in the Wind.” In the event, after William thanked everyone concerned, John made his farewell leaving the audience with a sober video message from Nelson Mandela extolling Diana’s virtues. And then the princes are heading to the Wembley Arena next door for the after-show party with the artists who performed and 500 of their personal friends. The crowd slipped quietly away and it was to the credit of stadium management and the police that getting home from the new Wembley Stadium, even with 63,000 people there, was made so easy.

 

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THEATRE REVIEW: ‘The Lord of the Rings’

'Lord of the Rings' stage 1 x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON — A transatlantic trip appears to have done wonders for the epic stage version of “The Lord of the Rings” that has just opened in the West End following a dire opening run in Toronto.

What was slammed as long and tedious in Canada has had 40 minutes trimmed and become a genuine theatrical spectacle that should please fans of the books and movies, and intrigue the uninitiated. Continue reading

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THEATRE REVIEW: Orson Welles’s ‘Around the World’

around the world in 80 days

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – The concert presentation of the musical “Around the World,” created in 1946 by Orson Welles and Cole Porter (below left) from the Jules Verne novel about Phileas Fogg traversing the globe in 80 days, has two more shows to go, on Sunday July 1 and 8, at the Lilian Baylis Theatre at London’s Sadler’s Wells.

With no sets or costumes, it still offers an intriguing glimpse at what the great showman set out to achieve. The 1946 production was fraught with typically Wellesian problems, as actor and writer Simon Callow relates in the second edition of his splendid biography, “Orson Welles: Hello Americans.”

The Guardian reviewer Alan Warner praises Callow highly for the detail and texture of his research and writing. Warner says his description of the hugely ambitious but chaotic production, which featured 34 scene changes and the services of 55 stage hands, is especially exhilarating:

orson-welles-cole-porter“The scene immediately following was supposed to be a backdrop obviously depicting London, and as an actress entered saying, ‘Is this London?’ practically all the drops for the entire show were lowered and raised alternately at lightning speed — all, that is, except the London one. The audience was, of course, enchanted. The final backdrop to fall showed a minor train-stop somewhere in the snow-clad Rocky Mountains. At this, an actor sticking doggedly to his script and looking up at the scene replied, ‘Yes, this is London all right!’

“Things got tighter. The show was an extravaganza, different every night — a threnody to the theatre of Welles’s childhood, or what he believed that theatre was. Backstage, Bertolt Brecht declared: ‘This is the greatest thing I have seen in the American theatre. This is wonderful. This is what theatre should be.’

“Even in the 1980s Stanley Kauffmann wrote: ‘Sometimes I meet someone who saw it. Immediately we bore everyone in the room by reminiscing about it.’ But with the show’s tragic, premature closing, its brief New York run was, ‘as maliciously predicted by Irving Kahn, quite a few days less than Phileas Fogg’s little trip.'”

Four songs from the show are on an album titled “The Ultimate Cole Porter Vol. 4″ available from Amazon. The songs – ” Look What I Found,” “If You Smile at Me,” “Pipe Dreaming” and “Should I Tell You I Love You?” – are performed by Larry Laurence, who played Passepartout in the 1946 production. There’s a DVD titled “Around the World with Orson Welles” available from Image Entertainment but it contains episodes of a traveling arts show that Welles made for Associated Rediffusion in the U.K. in 1955.

Welles also narrates a 50-minute documentary titled “Around the World of Mike Todd” that was made for ABC-TV in the U.S. in 1968. It’s available on a two-disc DVD edition of Todd’s 1956 film of “Around the World in 80 Days” from Warner Home Video.

Here’s my review of the Lost Musicals presentation of “Around the World” from The Hollywood Reporter:

LONDON – Orson Welles conceived his musical version of Jules Verne’s “Around the World in 80 Days” as a theatrical spectacular. With songs by Cole Porter and a stage filled with magicians, tumblers and fireworks, it debuted at the Adelphi Theatre in New York on May 31, 1946, but ran for just 75 performances.

The Lost Musicals concert presentation of the show staged wittily at London’s Sadler’s Wells lacks the pyrotechnics and razzmatazz but it provides a tantalizing impression of what the prodigiously talented Welles had in mind.

Director Ian Marshall Fisher, who founded Lost Musicals in 1989 with the aim of presenting to British audiences the lesser-known works of major American writers, provides the background to “Around the World” before introducing eight singers and a pianist who perform the songs and act out cleverly contrived scenes to tell the story.

Welles shot a series of silent movies to provide exposition for some of the more exotic spots on Phileas Fogg’s fabled journey around the globe, and in their absence Jack Klaff, as Welles, describes each one from a script provided by the late Dick Vosburgh.

In his own production, Welles played Inspector Fix, the dogged Scotland Yard policeman who trails Fogg on his trek in the mistaken belief that the fastidious gentleman has obtained the large quantity of cash he carries from a bank robbery. Klaff plays Fix, too, as well as several shady ethnic characters that the inspector ineffectually impersonates.

The eight cast members — six men and two women — sit onstage, standing up to perform the musical numbers and act out the story to the accompaniment of Steven Edis on piano. Bryan Torfeh makes a believable Passepartout, who, unlike the Mexican Cantinflas in the 1956 film version, is an American sailor who has missed his boat and signs on as Fogg’s manservant.

He is matched by Valda Aviks, as Passepartout’s faithful squeeze Molly Muggins, and Valerie Cutko, as the Indian widow Missus Aouda, who falls for Fogg. Michael Roberts, Richard Stemp and Peter Kenworthy play the rest of the roles, male and female, to splendidly amusing effect.

“Around the World” has not been performed since its 1946 run, and that’s really no mystery. Welles’ star power sold the show originally along with his hugely ambitious onstage stunts that frequently didn’t work. Porter’s songs are not his greatest, though the ballads “Should I Tell You I Love You” and “Look What I Have Found” certainly are hummable.

There’s a couple of novelty songs, “Snag Tooth Gertie” and “Whenever They Fly the Flag of Old England.” And the songwriter’s lyrical skill extends to finding a rhyme for Fogg’s first name: “That smart Mr. Phileas, so Piccadilly-dillyous.” But Porter wrote “Kiss Me Kate” the next year, and the songs from “Around the World” were soon forgotten. It’s great fun that Lost Musicals has brought them back for a revival, however brief.

Presented by Lost Musicals at Lilian Bayliss Theatre, Sadler’s Wells, London; runs through July 8; Credits: Music-lyrics: Cole Porter; Book: Orson Welles; Silent Screen movie dialogue: Dick Vosburgh; Director: Ian Marshall Fisher; Music director: Steven Edis. Cast: Orson Welles/Inspector Fix: Jack Klaff; Phileas Fogg: Peter Gale; Pat Passepartout: Bryan Torfeh; Missus Aouda: Valerie Cutko; Molly Muggins: Valda Aviks; Jevity/Lola/others: Michael Roberts; Runcible/Madame Liang/others: Richard Stemp; Cruett-Spew/Arab Spy/others: Peter Kenworthy.

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Werner Herzog’s ‘The Wild Blue Yonder’ opens in the UK

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By Ray Bennett

Werner Herzog’s rhapsodic documentary “The Wild Blue Yonder,” which just opened at London’s ICA and in other key U.K. cities, is a hugely entertaining exploration of inner and outer space.

A breathtaking musical score by Dutch composer and cellist Ernst Reijseger enhances the picture’s remarkable images from NASA and deep-sea exploration. In my review from Venice in 2005, where it won the Fipresci (International Federation of Film Critics) Prize, I said “the soundtrack is destined for greater things.”

But the score from a documentary was never going to break through to the major awards. The soundtrack, which features the voice of Senegalese soloist Mola Sylla and a five-man Sardinian shepherd choir, the Tenore e Cuncordu de Orosei, is available on an album titled “Requiem for a Dying Planet” from Allegro Music.

The disc also features Reijseger’s score to Herzog’s 2004 rainforest documentary “The White Diamond.”

Read my review of “Wild Blue Yonder” and here’s a link to more about Werner Herzog and this film and the album.

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