‘The Artist’, ‘Tinker Tailor’ lead in Bafta film nominations

Gary Oldman as George Smiley in Tomas Alfredson’s film of John Le Carré’s ‘Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy’

By Ray Bennett

StudioCanal’s “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy” and other UK films joined many of the movies that were celebrated at the Golden Globes in nominations announced today for the British Academy Film Awards.

Presented on Feb. 17 by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, sponsored by Orange, and set to be telecast live on BBC1, the awards pit “Tinker Tailor” against Globes winners “The Artist” (Entertainment) and “The Descendants” (20th Century Fox) plus Icon’s “Drive” and Disney’s “The Help” in the competition for best film.

The espionage tale faces Entertainment’s “My Week With Marilyn”, Universal’s “Senna”, Momentum’s “Shame” and Artificial Eye’s “We Need To Talk About Kevin” in the best British film category.

“Tinker Tailor”, with 11 nominations including Gary Oldman as best actor and Tomas Alfredson as best director, follows “The Artist”, which leads with 12 including Jean Dujardin as best actor, Bérénice Bejo as best actress, and Michel Hazanavicius as best director.

Entertainment’s “Hugo” by Globes-winning director Martin Scorsese won six nominations followed by “My Week With Marilyn” with six, and “The Help” and “War Horse”, both from Disney, with five apiece.

Oldman and Dujardin square off as best actor against George Clooney in “The Descendants”, Jean Dujardin in “The Artist”, Michael Fassbender in Momentum’s “Shame” and Brad Pitt in Sony’s “Moneyball”.

Bejo and Globes winners Meryl Streep, for Fox’s “The Iron Lady” and Michelle Williams, for “My Week With Marilyn”, face Tilda Swinton, for “We Need To Talk About Kevin” and Viola Davis, for “The Help,” as best actress.

Surprising omissions from the nominations include Anna Paquin as best actress in Fox’s long-delayed Kenneth Lonergan film “Margaret”, Olivia Colman as best actress and Peter Mullan as best actor in “Tyrannosaur”, which did get a mention for director Paddy Considine and producer Diarmid Scrimshaw in the best British debut category. Other much-praised contenders missing include Felicity Jones as best actress for Paramount’s “Like Crazy” and Vanessa Redgrave as best supporting actress for “Coriolanus”, which won a best debut nomination for director Ralph Fiennes.

This story appeared in Cue Entertainment

A complete list of nominees for the 2012 Orange British Academy Awards follows: Continue reading

Posted in Film, News | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on ‘The Artist’, ‘Tinker Tailor’ lead in Bafta film nominations

‘The Artist’ top in Golden Globes

Golden Globe winner Jean Dujardin with Bérénice Bejo in best comedy ‘The Artist’

By Ray Bennett

Entertainment’s “The Artist” and 20th Century Fox’s “The Descendants” were the big winners at the Golden Globes last night. “The Artist” took three awards including best comedy or musical, while “The Descendants” won two including best drama.

The awards presented on Sunday in Los Angeles saw “The Artist” star Jean Dujardin pick up the prize for best actor in a comedy and musical, and the film’s composer Ludovic Bource win for best score.

George Clooney was named best actor in a drama for “The Descendants”, which 20th Century Fox will release in UK cinemas on Jan. 27.

Martin Scorsese won as best director for “Hugo”, to be released on DVD and Blu-ray by Entertainment in Video, which also has “My Week With Marilyn”, for which Michelle Williams was honoured as best actress in a comedy or musical for her performance as Marilyn Monroe.

Meryl Streep won as best actress in a drama for her performance as Margaret Thatcher in “The Iron Lady”, which Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment will release.

Woody Allen picked up the screenplay award for his comedy “Midnight In Paris” while Christopher Plummer was named best supporting actor for “Beginners”. Both are on Universal Pictures UK.

Paramount Home Entertainment will release Steven Spielberg’s “The Adventures Of Tintin”, which won the award for best animated feature and Disney has “The Help”, for which Octavia Spencer was named best supporting actress.

StudioCanal will release “W.E.”, for which the film’s director Madonna won for best original song for “Masterpiece” co-written by Julie Frost and Jimmy Harry.

On the TV side, Golden Globe Awards went to three series released for home entertainment by TCFHE: Showtime’s “Homeland” won as drama series while star Claire Danes won as best actress in a TV drama; “Modern Family” won as best TV comedy or musical series; and Jessica Lange was named best supporting actress in a TV series, mini-series or move for “American Horror Story”.

Former “Friends” star Matt LeBlanc won as best actor in a TV comedy or musical for the BBC sitcom “Episodes”, shown in the US on Showtime and released on DVD here by BBC Video, which also handles the BBC crime show “Luther”, for which Idris Elba was named best actor in a TV mini-series or movie.

Kate Winslet won the prize for best actress in a TV mini-series or movie for “Mildred Pierce”, released by Warner Home Video, which also has “Game Of Thrones”, for which Peter Dinklage won as best supporting actor in a TV series, mini-series or movie.

ITV’s “Downton Abbey”, released on home video on the Playback label, won the award for best TV mini-series or movie.

Laura Dern was named best actress in a TV comedy or musical for HBO’s “Enlightened” and former “Frasier” star Kelsey Grammar won as best actor in a TV drama series for Starz Entertainment’s “Boss”.

This story appeared in Cue Entertainment.

Posted in Film, News | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on ‘The Artist’ top in Golden Globes

FILM REVIEW: Meryl Streep in ‘The Iron Lady’

The Iron Lady Cliff

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Like lawyers for the defence with their clients, actors do not ask if the characters they play are guilty or not, they seek only to give a good account of them.

Meryl Streep cannot be blamed for her wish to find humanity in the character of Margaret Thatcher and it’s not really her fault that it goes missing in “The Iron Lady”.

Streep’s gift for mimicry is equal to the task along with the right makeup, prosthetics and lighting, but it’s not a gripping performance. The film is a dull and undistinguished attempt at iconography that reveals little of a politician who became adored and reviled in equal measure.

Screenwriter Abi Morgan has made a peculiar decision to spend a good third of the film in speculative and quite dubious scenes that show Thatcher as a doddering and delusional old woman.

Given the cut and thrust of political, social and cultural life during her time in politics, not to mention strikes, military conflict and the end of the Cold War, the writer should have found lots more to chew on. Many events are rushed through and the Falklands conflict is employed to depict her as a doughty and resolute heir to Churchill as opposed to just another politico in need of a war.

The roughness around the edges of “Mamma Mia!” was among its pleasures but director Phyllida Lloyd’s latest film is similarly shoddy to no good effect. The main problem is the script, which attempts to present Thatcher in the manner of “Norma Rae” or “Made In Dagenham”, which were about women who fought in a man’s world.

British politics was and remains overwhelming a man’s world but the UK’s first female prime minister carried anything but a banner for feminism. The film establishes her as the daughter of a grocer but makes him an outsider as opposed to the successful owner of two shops, a strict Methodist, and an alderman and town mayor.

It is not mentioned that Thatcher’s degree at Oxford was in chemistry, which helps to explain her detached focus on detail, nor does it note that before she entered politics she earned a law degree.

The film does not mention that the man she married, Denis Thatcher was a millionaire 10 years older than she and that he paid for her law studies and financed her political campaigns. Her late husband is seen in the film in scenes of Thatcher’s hallucinations and Jim Broadbent plays him as the cheery old boy from the lampoons in Private Eye. As his wife pursues her career, the film doesn’t mention that he kept his Rolls Royce in a garage so as not to make voters resentful.

Key moments in Thatcher’s career are sketched in flashbacks and there are many scenes of her with a stout and superior air as she is harangued by political opponents and threatened in her car by protestors. Streep gets her monotonous voice pretty well but while there’s a scene of her being taught not to screech so much, nothing is said about how her pronunciation became so excruciatingly posh.

None of the men who were colleagues, supporters or opponents are given anything memorable to say, and her encounters with Ronald Reagan, of which a great deal was made at the time, are summed up in a brief dance clip.

Naïve and without ambition, “The Iron Lady” will annoy devotees who will hate to see her portrayed in her dotage and irritate those who regard her as an unfeeling snob who caused a great deal of misery and harm. Those who oppose her are made to appear like bullies.

The attempt to burnish her feminist aura simply fails. In “The Social Network”, Mark Zuckerberg’s girlfriend tells him that his lack of success with women is not because he’s a computer genius, it’s because he’s an asshole. The same could be said about Margaret Thatcher. It’s not because she’s a woman.

Opens: UK Jan. 6, Fox/Pathé; Cast: Meryl Streep, Jim Broadbent, Alexandra Roach, Harry Lloyd, Olivia Colman, Roger Allam, Susan Brown, Nick Dunning, Nicholas Farrell, Iain Glen, Richard E. Grant, Anthony Head, Michael Maloney, Pip Torrens, Julian Wadham, Angus Wright; Director: Phyllida Lloyd; Screenwriter: Abi Morgan; Producer: Damian Jones; Executive producers: Francois Ivernel, Cameron McCracken, Tessa Ross, Adam Kulick; Co-producers: Anita Overland, Colleen Woodcock; Director of photography: Elliott Davis; Production designer: Simon Elliott; Music: Thomas Newman; Costume designer: Consolata Boyle; Editor: Justine Wright; Production companies: DJ Films, Pathe, Film 4, UK Film Council; Rated 12A, 105 minutes.

Posted in Film, Reviews | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on FILM REVIEW: Meryl Streep in ‘The Iron Lady’

Best Film in 2011: ‘The Artist’, plus more of the year’s best

Jean Dujardin, Bérénice Bejo in Michael Hazanavicius’ ‘The Artist’

By Ray Bennett

Here are my choices for the best in film in 2011. Some of these films will be released in the UK over the next couple of months but they are all eligible for the major awards.

Best Film 2011

1. The Artist

2. The Descendants

3. War Horse

4. Midnight In Paris

5. Submarine

6. Rango

7. Like Crazy

8. Coriolanus

9. Drive

10. The Guard

Honorable mentions: The Help, The Ides Of March, Like Crazy.

Best Director 2011

Michael Hazanavicius, The Artist; Alexander Payne, The Descendants; Steven Spielberg, War Horse; George Clooney, The Ides Of March; Woody Allen, Midnight In Paris

Honorable mentions: Richard Ayoade, Submarine; Drake Doremus, Like Crazy; John Michael McDonagh, The Guard

Best Actor 2011

George Clooney, The Descendants; Jean Dujardin, The Artist; Ryan Gosling, Drive; Brad Pitt, Moneyball; Brendan Gleeson, The Guard

Honorable mentions: Ralph Fiennes, Coriolanus; Peter Mullan, Tyrannorsaur; Owen Wilson, Midnight In Paris,

Best Actress 2011

Anna Paquin, Margaret; Bérénice Bejo, The Artist; Rooney Mara, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo; Elizabeth Olsen, Martha Marcy Mae Marlene; Charlize Theron, Young Adult

Honorable mentions: Olivia Colman, Tyrannosaur; Viola Davis, The Help; Felicity Jones, Like Crazy.

Best Supporting Actor 2011

Christopher Plummer, The Beginners; Jonah Hill, Moneyball; Mark Ruffalo, Margaret; Kevin Spacey, Margin Call; Nick Krause, The Descendants

Best Supporting Actress 2011

Vanessa Redgrave, Coriolanus; Shailene Woodley, The Descendants; J. Smith-Cameron, Margaret; Jessica Chastain, The Help; Sally Hawkins, Submarine

Best Newcomers 2011

Yasmin Paige, Submarine; Craig Roberts, Submarine; Jeremy Irvine, War Horse

Best Animated Picture 2011: Rango

Best Foreign Language Film 2011Honey

Key dates:

Golden Globes: Jan. 15; Orange British Academy Film Awards nominations: Jan. 17; London Film Critics’ Circle Awards: Jan. 19; Oscar nominations: Jan. 24; BAFTA awards: Feb. 12; Film Independent’s Spirit Awards: Feb. 25; Oscars: Feb. 26.

Posted in Comment, Film | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Best Film in 2011: ‘The Artist’, plus more of the year’s best

‘Drive’, ‘Tinker Tailor’ top London critics’ nominations

By Ray Bennett

US crime thriller “Drive” and UK espionage mystery “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy’ claimed six spots to top the nominations for the 32nd London Film Critics’ Circle Awards.

Nominations for “Drive”, released in the UK by Icon, included best film and best director for Denmark’s Nicolas Winding Refn plus best actor for star Ryan Gosling (pictured), best supporting actor for Albert Brooks, technical achievement for composer Cliff Martinez, and best British actress for Carey Mulligan, who also was cited for “Shame”.

Nominations for “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”, released here by StudioCanal, were for film, British film, actor and British actor for Gary Oldman, screenwriter for Peter Staughan and the late Bridget O’Connor, and technical achievement for production designer Maria Djurkovic.

Artificial Eye had two films with five nominations apiece. Iran drama “A Separation” picked up five nominations: film, foreign-language film, director and screenwriter for Asghar Farhadi, and supporting actress for Sareh Bayat.

Domestic drama “We Need To Talk About Kevin” received nods for British film, director for Lynn Ramsay, actress and British actress for Tilda Swinton, and technical achievement for sound designer Paul Davies.

Entertainment’s silent black-and-white comedy “The Artist” earned four nominations: film, director and screenwriter for Michael Hazanavicius, and actor for Jean Dujardin.

Momentum’s story of sex addiction in New York, “Shame”, also picked up four: British film, actor and British actor for Michael Fassbender, plus Mulligan.

George Clooney rounded out the best actor category for “The Descendants” while Kirsten Dunst (“Melancholia”), Anna Paquin (“Margaret”), Meryl Streep (“The Iron Lady”) and Michelle Williams (“My Week With Marilyn’) also were nominated for best actress.

London Film Critics’ Circle Chairman Jason Solomons praised what he termed “the breadth, intelligence and style” of the choices: “This is the surely classiest set of nominations around this year with truly superb work reflected in the directing and foreign language categories.”

The winners will be named at a ceremony at BFI Southbank on Jan. 19. A complete list of nominees follows:

FILM OF THE YEAR

The Artist (Entertainment)

Drive (Icon)

A Separation (Artificial Eye)

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

The Tree of Life (Fox)

The Attenborough Award: BRITISH FILM OF THE YEAR

The Guard (StudioCanal)

Kill List (StudioCanal)

Shame (Momentum)

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM OF THE YEAR

Mysteries of Lisbon (New Wave)

Poetry (Arrow)

Le Quattro Volte (New Wave)

A Separation (Artificial Eye)

The Skin I Live In (Fox/Pathé)

DOCUMENTARY OF THE YEAR

Cave of Forgotten Dreams (Picturehouse)

Dreams of a Life (Dogwoof)

Pina (Artificial Eye)

Project Nim (Icon)

Senna (Universal)

DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR

Asghar Farhadi – A Separation (Artificial Eye)

Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist (Entertainment)

Terrence Malick – The Tree of Life (Fox)

Lynne Ramsay – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

Nicolas Winding Refn – Drive (Icon)

SCREENWRITER OF THE YEAR

Asghar Farhadi – A Separation (Artificial Eye)

Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist (Entertainment)

Kenneth Lonergan – Margaret (Fox)

Bridget O’Connor & Peter Straughan – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon & Jim Rash – The Descendants (Fox)

The Virgin Atlantic Award: BREAKTHROUGH BRITISH FILM-MAKER

Richard Ayoade – Submarine (StudioCanal)

Paddy Considine – Tyrannosaur (StudioCanal)

Joe Cornish – Attack the Block (StudioCanal)

Andrew Haigh – Weekend (Peccadillo)

John Michael McDonagh – The Guard (StudioCanal)

ACTOR OF THE YEAR

George Clooney – The Descendants (Fox)

Jean Dujardin – The Artist (Entertainment)

Michael Fassbender – Shame (Momentum)

Ryan Gosling – Drive (Icon)

Gary Oldman – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

ACTRESS OF THE YEAR

Kirsten Dunst – Melancholia (Artificial Eye)

Anna Paquin – Margaret (Fox)

Meryl Streep – The Iron Lady (Fox/Pathé)

Tilda Swinton – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

Michelle Williams – My Week With Marilyn (Entertainment)

SUPPORTING ACTOR OF THE YEAR

Simon Russell Beale – The Deep Blue Sea (Artificial Eye)

Kenneth Branagh – My Week With Marilyn (Entertainment)

Albert Brooks – Drive (Icon)

Christopher Plummer – Beginners (Universal)

Michael Smiley – Kill List (StudioCanal)

SUPPORTING ACTRESS OF THE YEAR

Sareh Bayat – A Separation (Artificial Eye)

Jessica Chastain – The Help (Disney)

Vanessa Redgrave – Coriolanus (Lionsgate)

Octavia Spencer – The Help (Disney)

Jacki Weaver – Animal Kingdom (StudioCanal)

BRITISH ACTOR OF THE YEAR

Tom Cullen – Weekend (Peccadillo)

Michael Fassbender – A Dangerous Method (Lionsgate), Shame (Momentum)

Brendan Gleeson – The Guard (StudioCanal)

Peter Mullan – Tyrannosaur (StudioCanal), War Horse (Disney)

Gary Oldman – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

The Moët & Chandon Award: BRITISH ACTRESS OF THE YEAR

Olivia Colman – The Iron Lady (Fox/Pathé), Tyrannosaur (StudioCanal)

Carey Mulligan – Drive (Icon), Shame (Momentum)

Vanessa Redgrave – Anonymous (Sony), Coriolanus (Lionsgate)

Tilda Swinton – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

Rachel Weisz – The Deep Blue Sea (Artificial Eye)

YOUNG BRITISH PERFORMER OF THE YEAR

John Boyega – Attack the Block (StudioCanal)

Jeremy Irvine – War Horse (Disney)

Yasmin Paige – Submarine (StudioCanal)

Craig Roberts – Submarine (StudioCanal)

Saoirse Ronan – Hanna (Universal)

The Sky 3D Award: TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT

Manuel Alberto Claro, cinematography – Melancholia (Artificial Eye)

Paul Davies, sound design – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

Maria Djurkovic, production design – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

Dante Ferretti, production design – Hugo (Entertainment)

Alberto Iglesias, original score – The Skin I Live In (Fox/Pathé)

Chris King & Gregers Sall, editing – Senna (Universal)

Joe Letteri, visual effects – Rise of the Planet of the Apes (Fox)

Cliff Martinez, original score – Drive (Icon)

Robert Richardson, cinematography – Hugo (Entertainment)

Robbie Ryan, cinematography – Wuthering Heights (Artificial Eye)

The Dilys Powell Award: EXCELLENCE IN FILM

Nicolas Roeg

NB. The British categories refer to the British Isles, and therefore films, filmmakers, actors and actresses from both the UK and Ireland are eligible.

This story appeared in Cue Entertainment.

Posted in Film, News | Tagged | Comments Off on ‘Drive’, ‘Tinker Tailor’ top London critics’ nominations

PREVIEW: George Clooney in ‘The Descendants’

George Clooney and Shailene Woodley as his daughter in Alexander Payne's 'The Descendants'

By Ray Bennett

When Kaui Hart Hemmings’ novel “The Descendants”, about a family in Hawaii troubled by modern anguish and ancient concerns, was published in the UK, the Daily Mail’s response was typical. Her assured touch and fine grasp of the absurd “ensures that this novel steers a deliciously scenic route between heartbreak and hilarity,” the paper said. Continue reading

Posted in Film, Previews | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on PREVIEW: George Clooney in ‘The Descendants’

The Toronto International Film Festival shows the way for Q1

TIFF Bell Lightbox custom built film centre in Toronto with Canteen restaurant at street level

By Ray Bennett

As the cost of publicity and promotion has become ever more expensive, big studios and indies know that the hoopla that surrounds major events such as the Toronto International Film Festival can have a huge payoff. 

The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) has become the biggest movie carnival in the world with a direct and major impact on the movies released in theatres and home entertainment.

It’s a showcase for Hollywood blockbusters, independent sleepers and art-house gems alike. Each September, it kicks off the autumn release schedule not only in North America but also around the world, and it heralds the start of the all-important awards season.

TIFF Co-director Cameron Bailey

TIFF, which began in 1976 as a “festival of festivals”, treasures its role as simply a place where people can go to the movies. Co-director Cameron Bailey says: “We strive to be the leading public film festival in the world. I think that’s what makes us unique. We’re not a film festival primarily for the film industry or for the film media, although there are thousands of them here every year, but we really are a festival for an audience.”

Toronto’s moviegoing public rivals that of New York and Los Angeles in North America in attendance, sophistication and passion. The Canadian city has the best claim to be the No. 1 influence on what audiences everywhere will see in cinemas and in home entertainment over the coming months.

“The buyers who come to buy films here come because they want to see how they play in front of the Toronto audience. Journalists want to see how films perform in front of the Toronto audience and that often drives their coverage. Our most important prize is the Cadillac People’s Choice Award so it really is for film fans, for filmgoers,” Bailey says.

As a result, producers and distributors of all shapes and sizes flock to TIFF and the event’s 10 days are chock-a-block with big-name filmmakers and movie stars. This year’s headliners included George Clooney, Ryan Gosling, Brad Pitt, Madonna, Robert DeNiro, Clive Owen, Seth Rogan and, Fernando Meirelles, Francis Ford Coppola.

Clooney was there with two films, a political drama titled “The Ides Of March” that eOne will release in the UK on Oct. 28 (see Cue August 2011), and the family comedy drama “The Descendants”, which 20th Century Fox will release here theatrically on Jan. 27 (See spotlight).

Both films are set to be hugely popular with “Ides of March” also set to confirm Ryan Gosling as a major star following his well-received noir picture “Drive”, which Icon has currently in theatres. The title “The Ides of March” gives away what Clooney thinks about politics: it’s a place where people will stab you in the front. As director, star and one of the writers, Clooney delivers an engrossing drama set during a US presidential campaign but his real story is about one man’s disillusionment.

Corruption in politics no longer shocks anyone so it’s thanks to a clever script and an intelligent performance by Gosling as an idealistic campaign press secretary who has his integrity compromised that the film works so well.

Pitt was in town for his baseball picture “Moneyball”, which Sony Pictures will release in the UK on Nov. 25. “Moneyball” is very much about baseball, a traditional sports yarn about trying to beat the odds, but it is much more about family, breaking with tradition and economics, and it allows Brad Pitt to show again that he is not only a movie star but also an actor of substance.

Fans of America’s favourite pastime will like the film but you don’t need to know much about baseball to enjoy it with Pitt’s confident and engaging presence at the heart of the tale of the Oakland A’s most extraordinary season.

There were many from the British Isles in Toronto too including Michael Fassbender and Carey Mulligan with director Steve McQueen and their film “Shame” (Momentum, Jan. 13); Keira Knightley with Viggo Mortenson and Canadian director David Cronenberg with “A Dangerous Method” (Lionsgate UK, Feb. 10); Ralph Fiennes, Brian Cox Gerard Butler for “Coriolanus” (Lionsgate UK, Jan. 20), which Fiennes directed (See spotlight); Felicity Jones with Anton Yelchin and American director Drake Doremus for “Like Crazy” (Paramount, Feb. 3); and Andrea Riseborough with Abbie Cornish and Madonna for the singer’s film “W.E.” (StudioCanal, Jan. 20).

“Shame” had opened at the Venice International Film Festival where Ireland’s Fassbender (“Inglourious Basterds”, “X-Men: First Class” was named Best Actor. He plays a New York executive who is a compulsive sex addict with Carey Mulligan as his vulnerable sister, a would-be singer.

Much was made in the TIFF press coverage of the extended opening sequence of “Shame” in which Fassbender is fully naked. At the film’s festival press conference, he said, “You know, it’s pretty uncomfortable. It’s kind of embarrassing to be naked or whatnot in front of a group of people. But you’ve got to get over it, really, and just get on with it. I knew what I was getting into.”

Fassbender also stars as psychoanalyst Carl Jung in Cronenberg’s “A Dangerous Method” with Mortensen as Sigmund Freud and Knightley as a sick young Russian woman. Knightley said at the film’s TIFF press conference: “It was a very challenging role and I think that was one of the reasons why I really wanted to play her because I really didn’t know who she was. It really was a question of trying to find logic within what was perceived from the outside to be madness. As much as she knew that she was ill, there were logical reasons for the way in which she behaved.”

“Coriolanus” had debuted at the Berlin International Film Festival, where it won attention for its modern take on the Shakespeare play. Cox made it a point to praise Fiennes for his skill as a director. “I’ve worked with many directors, and he’s up there in the Top 5. His rigour and sense of discipline – the whole package is remarkable, Cox told the press.

Riseborough received acclaim for her performance as Mrs. Simpson on Madonna’s take on the Edward VIII affair but her film “W.E.” did not get great reviews. The entertainer turned film director, however, took the high view: “I welcome criticism of my film when it’s viewed as an artistic form and not when people are mentioning things about my personal life or my achievements in any other field.”

“Like Crazy” by US filmmaker Drake Doremus went to Toronto following success at the Sundance Film Festival where it won the Grand Jury Prize. Felicity Jones also won plaudits for her role as a young Englishwoman whose perfect romance with a young American played by Anton Yelchin (Chekov in the new “Star Trek”) is hampered by immigration rules.

Jones, who has fared better on stage in plays such as “Luis Miller” and “The Chalk Garden” than in her movies, “Chalet Girl”, “Cemetery Junction”, said that she enjoyed the method Drake used for the film. The cast worked from a 50-page script by the director and co-writer Ben Jones. “Actors like to play with dialogue, we like to have the freedom, and it’s wonderful to have someone who is prepared to trust their actors in that way.”

Several other performers were at TIFF to show off their films, including Glenn Close with her film “Albert Nobb”, a Roadside Productions picture. No UK distributor or release date had been confirmed at press time but the film has been tipped already for awards contention and will almost certainly reach UK screens by Q1.

It is a labour of love for the five-time Academy Award nominee who played the central role of a woman who lived and worked as a man in Victorian Ireland in an off-Broadway  stage production in 1982.

Close has tried to get a film version made ever since, and she told reporters at TIFF: “It’s a unique character and what I experienced doing it on stage … was the power of this strange story. Whoever Albert is really elicits a lot of emotion. I just decided this is one thing that I am not going to give up on, I’m not willing to go to the end of my career and say I gave up on ‘Albert Nobbs.’”

Fernando Meirelles’ “360” is another TIFF headliner without a firm Q! UK release date even though it was the opening film at the BFI London Film Festival last month. It’s a “La Ronde” style story by Peter Morgan (“The Queen”) in which unrelated characters overlap in incidents that happen in cities around the world. Rachel Weisz, Anthony Hopkins and Jude Law are the headliners although they were not on hand in Toronto for the film’s launch.

Morgan said at TIFF: “I really wanted to make something that reflects the way the world is now. Even now what I’m saying is probably being seen in another country simultaneously.” And Meirelles added: “People are connected in the whole world, but our internal feelings are the same. Nothing is new in the past 10,000 years, I think, in feelings and thinking.”

French filmmaker Michel Hazanavicius earned acclaim from critics and audiences in Toronto for his black-and-white silent picture “The Artist”, which Entertainment will release for Q1 on Dec. 30. Jean Dujardin stars as a Douglas Fairbanks-style silent movie action hero whose career fades when talking pictures are introduced in 1927. Bérénice Bejo plays a beautiful young singer and dancer who becomes a star at the same time and John Goodman plays a top movie mogul.

The film has a 92% positive rating on Rotten Tomatoes. The Miami Herald critic said: “Sends you home with your head in the clouds, intoxicated by the magic movies pull off better than any other art form.” Box Office Magazine’s Pete Hammond said: “Although a seemingly risky bet for box office success outside of small arthouse niches, the film’s charm and delight of discovery, plus its sterling international performances, could make it a breakout hit in theatres.”

Other titles set for theatres in Q1 2012 include Fox’s “The Darkest Hour” (Jan. 13) with Emile Hirsch (“Into The Wild”) in a tale of an alien invasion in Russia; Liam Neeson and Dermot Mulroney in “The Grey” (Entertainment, Jan 27) as oil workers whose plane crashes in Alaska and turns them into prey for wolves; and “Intruders” (Universal, Jan 27) with Clive Owen, Daniel Bruhl and Carice Van Houten in a horror yarn about the monsters that can lurk in a family’s bloodline.

February will see Roman Polanski’s screen adaptation of Yasmina Reza’s hit West End and Broadway play “Carnage” (StudioCanal, Feb. 3). Jodie Foster, Kate Winslet, Christoph Waltz and John C. Reilly play two couples that meet to resolve conflict between their children but entire into a hell of their own.

Warner has “Extremely Loud And Incredibly Close” (Feb. 3) with Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock in a thriller about the search for a key left by a man killed in the 9/11 attacks. Adam Sandler plays a family guy and his twin sister in the comedy “Jack And Jill” (Sony, Feb. 3). Elisabeth Olsen plays a woman who must readjust to family life after she has fled from a cult community in “Martha Marcy May Marlene” (Fox, Feb. 3). Josh Hutcherson, Dwayne Johnson and Vanessa Hudgens star in “Journey 2: The Mysterious Island” (Warner, Feb. 10) in a search for a missing grandfather (Michael Caine). Daniel Radcliffe stars in a film version of Susan Hill’s bestselling thriller “The Woman In Black” (Momentum, Feb. 10). Paramount has Charlize Theron as a divorced writer who seeks to rekindle a romance with a former love in “Young Adult” (Feb. 10). Rachel Adams plays a woman with severe memory loss whose husband (Channing Tatum) must woo all over again in “The Vow” (Sony, Feb. 10) and “Premium Rush” has Joseph Gordon-Levitt as a bicycle courier chased by a cop (Michael Shannon) throughout Manhattan, also from Sony (Feb. 17).

Reese Witherspoon, Chris Pine and Tom Hardy star in “This Means War” (Fox, Feb, 17) about top CIA agents who discover they both date the same woman.

Nicholas Cage stars with Idris Elba and Ciaran Hinds in “Ghost Rider: Spirit Of Vengeance 3D” (eOne Films, Feb. 24); Jeremy Renner, Gemma Arterton and Famke Janssen star in “Hansel And Gretel: Witch Hunters” (Paramount, March 2); Mark Strong and Willem Dafoe are in Disney’s version of the Rider Haggard tale “John Carter” (March 9); Ewan McGregor and Emily Blunt take the leads in Lasse Hallstrom’s film of the successful book “Salmon Fishing In The Yemen” (LionsgateUK, March 9); Jonah Hill and Julianne Hough are in the highschool police yarn “21 Jump Street” (Sony, March 16); Julia Roberts and Lily Collins are in “Snow White” (StudioCanal, March 16); Fox has postponed to March 23 its birdwatching comedy, “The Big Year”, starring Jack Black, Owen Wilson and Steve Martin; and Liam Neeson and Sam Worthington are in “Wrath Of The Titans” (Warner, March 30).

This story appears in Cue Entertainment.

Posted in Film, News | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on The Toronto International Film Festival shows the way for Q1

THEATRE REVIEW: Raymond Chandler’s ‘The Big Sleep’

Simon Merrells as Philip Marlowe with Anna Doolan at the Mill at Sonning

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – As Alvin Rakoff’s production of Adam Rolston’s “A Sentimental Journey”, about the life of Doris Day, opens in Los Angeles, the British-based filmmaker and stage director takes on another Hollywood icon with the World Premiere in England of a play based on Raymond Chandler’s noir classic “The Big Sleep”.

“A Sentimental Journey”, which stars British musical star Sally Hughes and opens at the El Portal Theatre in North Hollywood on Nov. 2, began life at the well-regarded dining and theatre venue The Mill at Sonning, just outside London.

“The Big Sleep”, which Rakoff adapted with his son John D. Rakoff, has just opened at the same theatre and it is a creditable take on Chandler’s notoriously dense private eye caper about a rich man’s two daughters and the dangerous company they keep.

The venue’s small stage means that set designer Eileen Diss must make use of simple furniture and a backdrop with several doors to create the illusion that characters move between a large mansion, a seedy hotel room and a gloomy bar.

Silhouetted black-and-white images are projected onto the art deco backdrop to suggest some of the shadier goings on that involve Chandler’s regular community of rich men, tough guys and easy women.

Simon Merrells looks and sounds the part of a no-nonsense ex-cop who walks the mean streets with dignity although he’s not averse to meting out a slap when a dame gets hysterical. The adaptation uses the first person as in the novel and the Rakoffs give Marlowe some wry lines that play off the restrictions of the set.

Samantha Coughlan plays the older daughter with the right mix of cool disdain and vulnerability while Anna Doolan conveys the reckless younger sibling’s tentative grip on full mental health and her freewheeling sexuality.

The other men in the cast have multiple roles with Michael Percival best as a frail but disciplined rich father and Martyn Stanbridge colourful as an overworked detective.

Running for two hours including an interval, the play has enough of the novel’s punch and intrigue to please audiences and with a bigger budget for sets and sound, it might well go places.

Venue: The Mill at Sonning, UK (runs through Nov. 26); Cast: Simon Merrells, Samantha Coughlan, Anna Doolan, Martun Stanbridge, Michael Percival, Elliot Harper; Playwrights: Alvin Rakoff & John D. Rakoff, adapted from the novel by Raymond Chandler; Director: Alvin Rakoff; Set designer: Eileen Diss; Lighting designer: Matthew Biss; Costume designer: Jane Kidd; Fight director: Alison de Burgh.

Read my review of “A Sentimental Journey” for The Hollywood Reporter here)

Posted in Reviews, Theatre | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on THEATRE REVIEW: Raymond Chandler’s ‘The Big Sleep’

Norman Jewison on the music in ‘The Thomas Crown Affair’

By Ray Bennett

GHENT, BELGIUM: Canadian filmmaker Norman Jewison has had an outstanding career as director and producer of major Hollywood films but it’s sometimes overlooked how much great music played in his success and how many wonderful composers he worked with.

The list includes ‘The Cincinnati Kid’ (1965) with Lalo Schifrin, ‘The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming’ (1966) Johnny Mandel, ‘In the Heat of the Night’ (1967) Quincy Jones , ‘Gaily, Gaily’ (1969) Henry Mancini,  ‘F.I.S.T’ (1978) Bill Conti, ‘…and justice for all’ (1978) Dave Grusin,  ‘Best Friends’ (1982) Michel Legrand, ‘Moonstruck’ (1987) Dick Hyman, and ‘Agnes of God’ (1985) Georges Delarue.

In 1962, he produced ‘The Broadway of Lerner and Loewe’ for NBC starring Julie Andrews, Richard Burton, Maurice Chevalier, Robert Goulet and Stanley Holloway. In 1963, he produced ‘The Judy Garland Show’ for CBS and he directed the musicals ‘Fiddler On The Roof’ (1971) and ‘Jesus Christ Superstar’ (1973).

And, of course, he worked with Michel Legrand on ‘The Thomas Crown Affair’ (1968) for which the composer was nominated for an Academy Award for best original score. With lyricists Alan and Marilyn Bergman he won the Oscar for best original song  for ‘The Windmills of Your Mind’ (performed in the film by Noel Harrison).

“God, it’s a beautiful score,” Jewison told me. “What a score that is. You can just play the score with a snatch of dialogue.”

We met at the 38th Ghent International Film Festival in Belgium where he received the annual Joseph Plateau Award for lifetime achievement. In the spacious lobby of festival headquarters at the Ghent Marriott Hotel, we chatted about the inspiration for the score over some Jameson and soda.

The director said he brought Legrand onto ‘The Thomas Crown Affair’ after he had edited the chess match played in the film by Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway. “We showed him the scene and I said, ‘Do you want to take the clip home?’ He took it home and when he came back we could just cut his music right to the moves of the actors’ hands. God, it was just mind-blowing. He wrote the cue ‘His Eyes, Her Eyes’ because he became fascinated with the way they look at each other. He made it so romantic all of a sudden, this chess game, which you looked at in silence, because it’s a game played with no talk.”

People had told Jewison that it was just like a card game: “I said, ‘What are you talking about?’ I know what I’m doing. It’s not about chess: it’s about sex. Don’t you realise? Every move of her hand; she’s trying to get an advantage … and Michel just scored the shit out of that. ‘His Eyes, Her Eyes’ is just wonderful, but ‘Windmills Of Your Mind’ overshadowed it.”

That song comes later in the film when McQueen is in a glider: “I had put ‘Strawberry Fields’ by the Beatles behind the glider as a temp track, and I said, ‘There’s something repetitious about the song and I said ‘I need something like this.’ That’s when Michel wrote this strange piece and the Bergmans came up with ‘Round, like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel’ and it was all inspired by ‘Strawberry Fields’.”

Posted in Film, Interviews, Music | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Norman Jewison on the music in ‘The Thomas Crown Affair’

THEATRE REVIEW: Mark Rylance in ‘Jerusalem’

Alan David, left, with Mark Rylance in ‘Jerusalem’ at the Apollo Theatre thru Jan. 14 2012

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – “We are an unruly people,” Queen Elizabeth I warned the King of Spain, by which she meant the likes of Johnny “Rooster” Byron the Romany outlaw who cries freedom from his little patch of English forest in Jez Butterworth’s indecently exhilarating play “Jerusalem”.

Mark Rylance won the Olivier and Tony Award for his performance as a cantankerous thorn in the side of the complaisant suburban middle class that wishes to see him thrown out of his tiny piece of rural England, and he’s back in the West End for another run through Jan. 14.

He gives a marvellous performance as a former stuntman and full-time rascal with a rampaging lust for life in a splendid play that captivates from the start and right away makes the three-hour running time seem like it will be way too short.

Critics have made the point that Rooster is quintessentially English in his determination to be independent and lack of interest in pleasing anyone. There’s truth to that, but Butterworth has crafted the role and Rylance plays him just as much as the man described in Ed and Patsy Bruce’s classic American country song, “Mamas, Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys” – “Them that don’t know him won’t like him, and them that do sometimes won’t know how to take him. He ain’t wrong, he’s just different but his pride won’t let him do things to make you think he’s right.”

Johnny lives not far from new suburban housing in a disreputable caravan by some trees on a spot that he has made his own small Camelot where he dispenses wisdom, fanciful tales, liquor, drugs and kindness to a motley assortment of visitors. Some are young and wild, others are old and weary and some are just plain scared, but the Rooster provides safe haven except to the bullies, busybodies and bureaucrats who wish he would just go away.

The language is ferociously and hilariously vulgar as Johnny regales his acolytes with stories of sexual conquests, battles with officialdom and encounters with giants. His speech is relentlessly entertaining and just maybe some of his yarns have an element of truth, but that doesn’t matter. Rylance’s command of his character’s outlandish manner is unforgettable.

Among the colourful individuals who show up to enjoy Johnny’s company and supply of various kinds of nourishment are Mackenzie Crook, outstanding as a philosophical would-be disc jockey who would like to be a closer friend than the Rooster will allow. Alan David makes his befuddled professor quite moving and Danny Kirrane is pitch perfect as a pub landlord torn between his affection for Johnny’s largesse and duties as a publican and Morris dancer.

Director Ian Rickson draws matching contributions from the rest of the cast and Oscar-winning composer Stephen Warbeck provides evocative music that echoes the Rooster’s cantankerous moods. Rylance’s performance, the play and the production will be spoken of for a very, very long time.

Venue: Apollo Theatre, London (runs through Jan. 14). Cast: Mark Rylance, Mackenzie Crook, Alan David, Johnny Flynn, Danny Kirrane, Aime-Ffion Edwards. Playwright: Jez Butterworth; Director: Ian Rickson; Set designer: Ultz; Lighting designer: Mimi Jordan Sherin; Sound designer: Ian Dickinson for Autograph; Music: Stephen Warbeck.

Here is the extraordinary speech that Mark Rylance gave in New York when he won the Tony Award for ‘Jerusalem’.

Posted in Reviews, Theatre | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on THEATRE REVIEW: Mark Rylance in ‘Jerusalem’