Sublime British comedy ‘Submarine’ now on Blu-ray

Yasmin Paige plays a mischievous flirt with a taste for setting things on fire in ‘Submarine’

By Ray Bennett

My favourite film at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival was Richard Ayoade’s smart and witty film of the Joe Dunthorne novel about teenaged angst titled “Submarine”. Optimum releases it in the UK today on Blu-ray Disc and DVD.

I enjoyed the film so much that I went to see it again on the big screen just before it opened in UK theatres in March, and spoke to one of its young stars, Yasmin Paige, who is destined for big things along with costar Craig Roberts.

My TIFF review of Submarine is elsewhere on The Cliff Edge.

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TIFF announces another great movie selection

Bono and Adam Clayton, seen at a U2 concert in Denver, star in ‘From the Sky Down’

By Ray Bennett

After several years as a regular at the Venice International Film Festival, it was a pleasure last year to review films at the Toronto International Film Festival, and I hope to again this year. There’s a terrific set-up at TIFF with the new purpose-built Lightbox film centre, and once again festival organisers have announced an impressive lineup.

Davis Guggenheim’s U2 documentary “From the Sky Down” will have its world premiere as a gala presentation on opening night, Sept. 8, and there will be 10 galas in all and 43 special presentations with 31 world premieres during the 36th annual event, which runs to Sept. 18.

A wide array of established filmmakers and big stars will be in Toronto for the festival including George Clooney with two films, political thriller “The Ides of March” and family drama “The Descendants”, Brad Pitt as baseball manager Billy Beane in “Moneyball”, and Jane Fonda as a hippy grandmother in “Peace, Love, & Misunderstanding”.

TIFF Director and CEO Piers Handling said, “The international scope and diversity of voices in these programmes are impressive and inspiring. We eagerly anticipate welcoming these filmmakers and their provocative works to Toronto and sharing them with audiences in September.”

Co-Director Cameron Bailey said, “These films showcase powerful performances delivered by actors who are in a class all their own, including Antonio Banderas, Juliette Binoche, Ryan Gosling, Woody Harrelson, Vanessa Redgrave and Tilda Swinton to name a few. We hope our audience will be as impressed as we were.”

Ticket packages for the Festival are now available for purchase by cash, debit or Visa. Purchase online at tiff.net/festival, by phone at 416-599-TIFF or 1-888-599-8433 (Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.), or in person at the TIFF Box Office at 350 King Street West (Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.).

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MUSIC REVIEW: CBSO plays film music by Anthony Hopkins

Anthony Hopkins, composer, at Birmingham Symphony Hall PHOTO: Julie Edwards

By Ray Bennett

In an evening of film scores played impeccably by the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Howard Shore’s theme from “The Silence of the Lambs” caused shivers and every attempt was made to warn that Hannibal Lecter was in the house.

But when the orchestra played an energetic number that reflected his childhood memories, the jolly Welshman on the far right of the stage emanated not a shred of menace. Jiggling delightedly to the music with his fractured right foot still in a cast, he was simply Anthony Hopkins, composer.

The Academy Award-winning film actor and knight of the stage told a packed and loudly enthusiastic audience in Birmingham’s splendid Symphony Hall on July 23 that he has written music since he was a child in Wales. Inspired by Elgar and Beethoven, he took music lessons, but he recalled that when his impatient baker father heard him play Beethoven’s “Pathetique”, he grumbled, “No wonder he went bloody deaf”.

Attracted to dissonant chords, the young Hopkins responded to the sounds in his head and began to improvise pieces. That continued over the years as his acting career grew and when his wife Stella urged him to take it seriously, he began to set down compositions.

When he directed his second film, “August” in 1996, he asked British composer George Fenton, who attended the Birmingham concert, to write the score because he admired greatly the music Fenton had written for Richard Attenborough’s 1993 picture “Shadowlands”, in which the actor had starred. Fenton was tied up with other commitments but he urged Hopkins to play some of the pieces he’d written, and he promised to help.

“Some months later,” Hopkins wrote in the CBSO Film Music Festival programme, “in George’s studio, 2:30 one wet, drizzling Friday morning, I completed the final piece of music for my film.”

He gave it the same title as his film, but in concert he changed it to “Margam”, named for the place where he grew up. It was, he wrote in his programme notes, “ … like an Eden of fields, farms and meadows of wild flowers, trees and woods in the Brombil valley, the Ranalt stream rippling down from the hill near Wern farm and onwards across the moors to the beach at Morfa Mawr and the sea”.

The piano of Stephen Barton, who prepared all of Hopkins’ music for the concert, and the trumpet of Jonathan Holland were featured in the evocative selection as Michael Seal conducted the orchestra in one of the evening’s highlights.

There were many highlights, however, with presenter Tommy Pearson, who was adviser on the film music festival with the CBSO, as an informative and witty guide. Fenton’s elegiac “Shadowlands” score was among them and composer Alex Heffes also was on hand to hear some of his spooky music from “The Rite”.

Elliot Goldenthal contributed a specially prepared suite from his imperious “Titus” score, and Patrick Doyle did the same with some typically melodic and rousing excerpts from his score for “Thor”. Richard Robbins’ atmospheric score for “Remains of the Day” also was included.

Hopkins’ own music proved to be a revelation, both wide-ranging and accomplished. The concert began with the discordant and percussive “Orpheus”, which Hopkins said he was inspired to write after seeing a play about Orpheus’ descent into the underworld. His wife inspired the elegant and romantic “Stella”, he said, and the pastoral “Evesham Fair” recalled the first carnival he visited as a boy.

A vibrant and colourful selection titled “Amerika” reflected the vivid and impressive images of the composer’s adoptive country that he saw as a child. To close the concert, three selections banded together with the title “1947” also reflected that time with “Circus” his impression of his first time under the Big Top and “Bracken Road” about a fleeting memory of hearing orchestral music from an open kitchen window on his way to the fields.

Finally, and as the encore, came the Latin-flavoured “Plaza”, named for the cinema where he used to “go to the pictures” and first saw the great MGM musicals. The piece was called “Schizoid Salsa” when it appeared on the soundtrack of “Slipstream”, which Hopkins directed in 2007.

That’s what had an obviously very happy Hopkins almost dancing at the end of the show. To tumultuous applause, he praised and thanked Seal and the orchestra. “I can’t say enough, it’s like a dream,” he said. “A dream that’s finally come true.”

CBSO Film Music Festival

The annual festival, with Tommy Pearson as adviser, kicked off on July 19 with a concert of 21st century soundtracks with the excellent Belgian conductor Dirk Brossé, music director of the Filmfestival, Ghent. The National Jazz Youth Orchestra presented an evening of Jazz in Film on July 21 and Michael Seal conducted the CBSO in a programme of John Williams Blockbusters on July 22.

Read more about the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. More about Filmfestival Ghent. Photo of Anthony Hopkins in Birmingham’s Symphony Hall by Julie Edwards.

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A good man down: Brian Vallée dies

From left, Ron Base, Brian Vallée and Ray Bennett in Toronto September 2010

By Ray Bennett

My good mate Brian Vallée died Saturday in a Toronto hospital after a fight with cancer. He was 70. That’s him in the centre of the photo with me and another great chum Ron Base on the left in a Toronto restaurant last September.

Brian and I became fast friends when he walked into the newsroom at the Windsor Star in the early 1970s. We stayed pals for nearly 40 years. He and Ron and I always got together on my many trips back to Canada over the years and it was always illuminating, boisterous and rude, and great fun.

He was a hell of a reporter and had great success on CBC-TV’s current affairs show “the fifth estate”. He wrote several well-received books about real life crime and social problems.

In the peripatetic newspaper trade you tend to lose folk along the way so our longtime friendship along with Windsor Star colleagues and pals such as Ron, Jim Bruce and Gord Henderson was something to be treasured. It is still.

Read more about Brian Vallée

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Rita’s ‘Gilda’ gets digital polish for UK cinemas

By Ray Bennett

Distributor Park Circus said that the 1946 Rita Hayworth film “Gilda”, in which she performed the hit song “Put The Blame On Mame”, will screen at the BFI as an all-new Digital Cinema Presentation that showcases Rudolph Maté’s fabled black-and-white cinematography.

Directed by Charles Vidor and co-starring Glenn Ford, the gangster picture was Hayworth’s signature role and a poster of the actress from that period was a key artefact in the popular 1994 Stephen King prison drama “The Shawshank Redemption”.

“Gilda” will open at BFI Southbank in London, Filmhouse Edinburgh, and the Irish Film Institute and in key cities on July 22.

This story appeared in Cue Entertainment.

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MEMORY LANE: The day I turned down Rupert Murdoch

By Ray Bennett

Pardon me if I sound smug, but I’ve always felt good that I turned down an offer to work for Rupert Murdoch, and now I feel even better about it.

I especially like the fact that I said no directly to Les Hinton, Murdoch’s long-time executive, who demanded angrily to know why I didn’t want to be the west coast bureau chief of The Star tabloid, which Murdoch owned at the time.

The memory is vivid of that call, made secretly at a phone booth in Van Nuys near the office where I worked as arts and entertainment editor of the Los Angeles Daily News. Continue reading

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Glitz returns to the Festival de Cannes

the-artist-movie-poster

By Ray Bennett

CANNES – The champagne flowed like the old days at the 64th annual Festival de Cannes as the venerable film extravaganza drew filmmakers and stars, and lots of buyers and sellers doing business.

Harvey Weinstein said it was the best Festival de Cannes in 25 years and the trade papers reported a very busy Marché du Film. The Weinstein Co. got into the buying and selling fray along with a raft of indies such as Artificial Eye, Eureka, Kaleidoscope, Metrodome, Pathe, Soda Pictures and Windmill Lane.

The Daily Telegraph’s David Gritten declared: “No matter by what criteria you choose to judge it, this has been a good Cannes — a festival with confidence, glamour, conspicuous wealth and a spring in its step. In the market … the dealing was frantic. Films have been bought and sold with a zest not seen on the Croisette in three years or more. If we’re still in the midst of a global recession, clearly a lot of people in Cannes failed to receive that memo.”

Critics were mixed on the 2011 films available. The Hollywood Reporter’s Todd McCarthy wrote: “Even if there were a number of very fine films, the 2011 festival arguably did not yield any absolute knockouts. The more elaborate works from the heavyweights in the competition — Terrence Malick, Lars von Trier, Pedro Almodovar, Paolo Sorrentino, Nuri Bilge Ceylan — were among the more contentiously debated, provoking reactions across the full spectrum of critical opinion.”

But The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw was inclined to agree with Weinstein. “He could be right. I can’t quite remember a festival in which there was a film that I loved, simply loved, as much as Michel Hazanavicius’s ‘The Artist’: that sounds gushing, I know, but it’s the truth. I admired ‘Tree Of Life’ very much and believe it to be a thoroughly deserving winner, but in my heart I wanted ‘The Artist’ to win.”

Little surprise that the Weinstein Co. snapped up UK and US rights to “The Artist”. Frenchman Jean Dujardin won the festival award as best actor for the black-and-white film as a silent-era Hollywood movie star faced suddenly with talking pictures. John Goodman, Malcolm McDowell and Penelope Ann Miller co-star in the film, directed by French filmmaker Michel Hazanavicius, who directed Dujardin in the spoofs “OSS 117: Cairo, Nest Of Spies” and “OSS 117: Lost In Rio”. There is no word yet on a UK release for the film, which The Telegraph critic said has “pure effervescence that gives crowd pleasing a good name”.

A UK release of Summit International’s “The Tree Of Life”, which won the Palme d’Or, also is unclear. It had a limited release via Fox Searchlight in the US but Icon Films, which had been set to handle distribution, said in April that it had no plans to release the film here. The latest from American cult film director Terrence Malick, the allegorical epic stars Brad Pitt and Jessica Chastain with Sean Penn. Meanwhile, film companies were very active doing business. Voltage CEO told The Hollywood Reporter: “It’s a great market because the buyers are happy and the sellers are happy.”

Windmill Lane Entertainment signed major post-production finance deals with international directors and producers including Luc Besson’s EuropaCorp and Edward R. Pressman Film Corporation. The firm, a new division of Dublin facilities company Windmill Lane Pictures, will manage the Irish tax break for filmmakers that do postproduction there.

EuropaCorp’s sci-fi thriller “Lock Out”, starring Guy Pearce, and Pressman’s “The Moth Diaries”, produced in partnership with Samson Films, Mediabiz and Strada Films, are among the titles involved.

The British Film Institute announced that Chairman Greg Dyke has appointed Tom Hooper — Oscar-winning best director for “The King’s Speech” — to the body’s board of governors. The BFI board, which includes Film4 Head Tessa Ross and Warner Bros. Entertainment UK President and Managing Director Josh Berger, will develop a new strategy as it takes on most of the funding duties handled previously by the UK Film Council.

Kaleidoscope Entertainment acquired UK distribution rights to a British pursuit thriller set in the Scottish mountains titled “A Lonely Place To Die” from Genesis Film Sales and Carnaby International. Co-written and directed by Julian Gilbey (“Rise Of The Foot Soldier”), the tale of five mountaineers who discover a young kidnapped girl hidden in a small chamber in the wilderness stars Melissa George (“Triangle”), Ed Speelers (“Eragon”), Sean Harris (“Harry Brown”) and Karel Roden (“The Bourne Supremacy”).

Artificial Eye acquired rights to two films now in production by filmmakers who have won the Festival de Cannes’ Palme d’Or — “Amour” by Michael Haneke (“The White Ribbon”) and “Foxfire” by Laurent Cantet (“The Class”). “Amour” tells of two retired classical music teachers (Jean-Louis Trintignant and Emmanuelle Riva) whose lives change when the woman suffers a stroke. Isabelle Huppert and William Shimell co-star. Based on the Joyce Carol Oates novel of the same title, “Foxfire” deals with a group of five rebellious female teenagers determined to break away from their male-dominated culture in upstate New York in 1953.

The Weinstein Co. and Yucaiba Co. won a Cannes bidding war for Pathe’s film biography “The Iron Lady” starring Meryl Streep as former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Lionsgate International will handle worldwide rights to another Streep picture, “Great Hope Springs” co-starring Steve Carell and Jeff Bridges from Mandate Pictures.

Soda Pictures picked up from sales company the Match Factory UK rights to Danish director Joachim Trier’s Norwegian film “Oslo, 31 August”, which screened in the Un Certain Regard sidebar at this year’s Festival de Cannes. The film, Trier’s first since “Reprise” in 2007, tells of a man who must confront his past as well as his future when he emerges from a stint in rehab. Soda Pictures Managing Director Edward Fletcher said: “It’s particularly satisfying to acquire one’s favourite film from Cannes. Trier’s second feature confirms his status as a major new talent.”

Soda said it also acquired from the Match Factory during Cannes rights to Andres Veiel’s “If Not Us, Who?” plus Sundance documentary “The Black Power Mix Tape” from WIDE and Baran bo Odar’s crime thriller “The Silence” from Bavaria Film International.

Metrodome acquired three Fox International films screened at the Festival de Cannes for release in the UK and Eire including “Everybody Has A Plan” starring Viggo Mortensen from the producing team that made best foreign language Oscar winner “The Secret In Their Eyes”. Mortensen plays a man who assumes his dead brother’s identity with dangerous consequences in the film that marks the feature debut of writer and director Ana Piterbarg.

The other films are Mexican action drama “Miss Bala”, which screened in the Un Certain Regard sidebar, and a thriller set in Bogota titled “Bunker”.

Metrodome also picked up from Trustnordisk UK and Ireland rights to Petter Naess’ “Comrade”, a wartime drama set in Norway starring Rupert Grint and David Kross (“The Reader”), and Nicolaj Arcel’s “A Royal Affair”, about a young queen’s illicit relationship with the doctor who treats her mad king starring Mads Mikkelsen. Eureka acquired the Japanese film “Guilty Of Romance” for UK theatres in September and DVD in October plus “Harakiri”, “Sword Of Doom”, and the documentary “A Man Vanishes” also from Japan and “The Yellow Sea” from South Korea.

This story appeared in Cue Entertainment.

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FILM REVIEW: ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides’

Johnny Depp and Penelope Cruz in ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides’

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Johnny Depp as Captain Jack Sparrow is back in excellent form for his fourth adventure in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, which is more serious in the hands of a new director, Rob Marshall, and thanks to Penelope Cruz it’s also a good deal sexier.

Best known for musicals such as Nine and the Academy Award-winning Chicago, Marshall shows terrific flair with all the usual chases and sword fights, and he handles the 3D well. He also adds a dash of pepper with lively sexual tension between Sparrow and a Spanish firecracker named Angelica (Cruz).

Angelica is Jack’s match for swordplay and sexy banter, and while the tone of the film, which deals with a search for the fountain of youth, is darker than the three directed by Gore Verbinski, its action, adventure and comedy will see it find a similar pot of theatrical gold.

More of the story takes place on dry land than the other films with inventive and exciting set pieces in London and the hills and jungles of an exotic place where lies the secret of perpetual youth.

It begins with Jack in the British capital to find a way to release from prison his stalwart sailmate Gibbs (Kevin McNally). With inspiration from a novel by Tim Powers titled On Stranger Tides, about another captain named Jack, screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio show typical ingenuity in devising hair-raising obstacles for Jack to overcome. In the opening, this involves changing the course of justice in an English court, an encounter with the king in his palace and a riotous chase through the streets of London.

The series’ regular cinematographer, Dariusz Wolski, captures the cityscapes wittily and makes the most of real locations from the city center to the venerable naval museum at Greenwich. Marshall has brought in his usual production designer, John Myhre, who won an Oscar for Chicago, and he makes the palaces, pubs and, later, jungle temple breathtakingly shipshape. Hans Zimmer demonstrates again his keen grasp of how a musical score can inform action and elevate mood and tension.

The plot is again driven by a search for something virtually unobtainable as Jack finds himself in a chase to find the fountain of youth in competition with not only the returning Captain Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush, having fun once more) but also the Spanish navy and the most deadly pirate of them all, Blackbeard (Ian McShane).

Cruz makes a splendid entrance in disguise but once revealed she brings her Oscar-winning vivacity to an irrepressible woman who claims to be Blackbeard’s daughter. McShane, too, grabs his first appearance on the bridge of a pirate ship with great panache.

No less would be expected of Rolling Stone Keith Richards, who has a killer line as Jack’s indomitable pirate father when his son asks him whether he’s ever seen the fountain of youth. It feeds cleverly on the Richards legend and will become one of the most-quoted lines from the series.

The film makes an adventurous departure from the traditionally benign view about mermaids. A mermaid’s tear is a vital ingredient of the potion required for the secret of youth and so Blackbeard schemes to ensnare a school of them in nets on an island beach. They turn out to have more in common with one of Davy Jones’ underwater beasts, save one played by sweet-looking Astrid Berges-Frisbey, who falls for an idealistic cleric played by Sam Claflin. The missionary gives Jack fodder for an amusing line, but also puts religious faith in a good light compared to the Spanish Catholics, whose inquisitional devotion makes them the bad guys.

Marshall and his team make good use of 3D in the exterior sequences so that London landmarks and rocky islands look magnificent. It is less successful when CGI is involved, however, as characters sometimes appear to be cut out figures.

At 136 minutes, the film is marginally the shortest in the series and it profits from that. Cruz is a wonderful addition and a teaser following the credits augers well for more so long as Depp continues to get as much enjoyment from playing the role as he gives to his audience.

Production: Jerry Bruckheimer Films, Walt Disney Films; Cast: Johnny Depp, Penelope Cruz, Geoffrey Rush, Ian McShane; Director: Rob Marshall; Screenwriters: Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio; Producer: Jerry Bruckheimer; Executive producers: John DeLuca, Ted Elliott, Chad Oman. Terry Rossio, Mike Stenson, Barry H. Waldman; Director of photography: Dariusz Wolski; Production designer: John Myhre; Music: Hans Zimmer; Costume designer: Penny Rose; Editors: David Brenner, Michael Kahn, Wyatt Smith; Rated PG-13, 136 minutes.

This review appears in The Hollywood Reporter

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FILM REVIEW: Paul Bettany, Maggie Q in ‘Priest’

Maggie Q i Priest x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON — “Priest”, directed by Scott Stewart, is a short, dour and stodgy creature feature with average 3D effects that draws on so many film influences from westerns, action adventures and sci-fi tales that what fun there is comes from spotting the many sources.

Set in some nameless apocalyptic past or future it’s a vicars-versus-vampires yarn that aside from a short animated scene setter at the start and the long credits crawl at the end lasts for about 80 minutes. Lacking marquee names and much in the way of thrills, it’s unlikely to linger very long at the local multiplex and the blatant set up for a sequel after the climactic battle appears almost pitiable.

The animated sequence establishes that mankind has retreated within the giant walls of vile, polluted cities after innumerable battles with their vampire enemies, who are now confined to hideous underground camps a long way away.

All that corporal mortification in “The Da Vinci Code” was apparently not enough for Paul Bettany (pictured below). He has the title role of another venomous cleric known only as Priest, who this time has been put out to pasture by the church that rules with an iron fist over what’s left of humankind.

priest

Two sequences set up what will follow in a rag-tag script by Cory Goodman. One has elements of Indiana Jones as a band of soldier-preachers run into a trap set by vampires in an underground maze and Priest fails to save his best mate (Karl Urban), who falls into the clutches of thirsty beasts.

The other has a Western touch as crazed attackers invade a solitary home far out in the wasteland, leave the Priest’s brother and his wife for dead and kidnap their daughter Lucy (Lily Collins). Back in the “Blade Runner” city on a very bad day, Priest tells the church elders that he wants his badge back to he can go rescue Lucy. As a droll but insistent Monsignor, Christopher Plummer orders him not go anywhere as Christopher Young’s choral score starts to soar.

The Priest promptly leaves on a souped up motorcycle and teams with a local lawman, Hicks (Cam Gigandet) to seek the girl. Now it’s “The Searchers” as the embittered older man learns that Hicks is in love with Lucy but has to make it clear that if she has been bitten by the vampires then he will have to kill her.

Monsignor sends a team of priests led by Priestess (Maggie Q, pictured top) to hunt down Priest, but she’s really on the renegade’s side, so now the three of them track the vampires to some kind of mountain that’s shaped like a bee-hive and is in fact called a hive. Inside there’s a large bouncy creature with nasty habits and no face but teeth like the creature from “Aliens”.

Inevitably, Priest’s lost friend shows up, the world’s first human vampire known as Black Hat and looking for all the world like a man with no name except that his eye teeth come to exceptional points. Turns out he likes railway trains and he plans to transport a new army of vampires on a vast train to attack the city and he kidnapped Lucy just to lure Priest out so he could kill him.

Priest, Priestess and Hick must stop the train before the villains can do any harm and now the references come thick and fast. “Once Upon a Time In the West” competes with Mad Max’s “Road Warrior” as Priest and Black Hat fight it out on top of the train while Hicks stumbles along in carriages filled with pods like the ones in “Invasion of the Body Snatchers”.

If that sounds like fun, it’s really not.

Opened UK: May 6 (Sony Pictures) Opens US: May 13 (Screen Gems); Cast: Paul Bettany, Karl Urban, Lily Collins, Christopher Plummer, Maggie Q, Cam Gigandet; Director: Scott Stewart; Screenwriter: Cory Goodman; Based on the graphic novels by: Min-Wood Hyung; Producers: Michael De Luca, Joshua Donen, Mitchell Peck, Sam Raimi, Nicolas Stern; Executive producers: Josh Bratman, Glenn S. Gainor, Steve Galloway, Stuart J. Levy; Director of photography: Don Burgess; Production designer: Richard Bridgland; Music: Christopher Young; Costume designer: Ha Nguyen; Editors: Lisa Zeno Churgin, Rebecca Weigold; Production: Buckeroo Entertainment, Michael De Luca Productions, Screen Gems, Stars Road Entertainment, Tokyopop; Rated PG-13; running time, 87 minutes.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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THEATRE REVIEW: ‘London Road’ at the National

london road x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – “London Road” is a documentary musical about the impact of a serial killer on one community with words spoken and sung to match the original phrasing and cadence of people who lived where the murders took place. It sounds horrible but in the National Theatre’s production it is insightful, funny and moving.

Writer Alecky Blythe recorded conversations with scores of people who lived on London Road in the town of Ipswich on the English east coast following the conviction of a man who admitted to slaying five female prostitutes. She then worked with composer Adam Cork to edit them, find rhythms and patterns, and devise clever repetitions to set their words to music.

Cork’s music for woodwinds, guitar, keyboards and percussion ranges from sprightly to elegiac and adds greatly to the resonance of the production.

The performers never saw a written word but heard the edited individual recordings through earphones and were then required to duplicate them in speech and song with all the stops, starts, elisions and expletives that litter everyday remarks. The stage is often filled with all 11 performers, who play several roles, singing their own words, and then abruptly and melodically in unison.

London Road x325Director Rufus Norris and set designer Katrina Lindsay use simple props to show a community hall, people’s living rooms, the street itself where people lived in fear as the killings escalated, and outside the court where the convicted murderer was finally tried. A balcony provides the height from which the media – photographers, cameramen, reporters – can look down on the community, which is pretty much what they did, usually down their noses. A riveting scene shows police tape drawn to zigzag across the stage in all directions with the locals on their sofas suffocated by the fear of not knowing if the killer lives among them and the stress of the police investigation and all the press attention.

The action cuts back and forth from a meeting of folks who live on the street a year after the killer’s conviction to the first news of a murder in the community. Married couples, oldsters, single men and young women sing and speak of their increased terror as the number of dead bodies found grows to five with no suspect in sight.

“It Could Be Him” the girls sing, as their fear verges on hysteria and every man presents as a potential suspect: “You automatically think it could be him … that’s the scary thing, you know he could be amongst us …” In a pub, a man who gives every impression of being slightly weird, runs down the main characteristics of a serial killer: I, um … I, I, I have studied serial killers since my mid-teens. It doesn’t mean I am one but, er …”

When the suspect is arrested, the residents wake up to discover hundreds of police have taken over the street. “That’s When It All Kicked Off,” they sing. As the process of law takes its time, the media glare continues and those who live on London Road take offense at the way their home is always described as a red light district. The media types just comment that the locals still like to watch TV and read the papers: “They Like a Good Moan,” they sing.

Blythe has captured almost every side of the situation and the views expressed range from sympathy for the dead prostitutes to hatred of the killer to resentment over the fear and stress and even to one woman who says she’d like to shake the killer’s hand because he got rid of the sleaze.

Some in the audience will take a colorful show of flower baskets at the end to signify the street’s never-say-die spirit and powers of recovery while others might view it as denial. The cumulative power of Blythe’s work is non-judgmental and there are many genuine laughs along the way. One breathtaking sequence conveys the depth of the show. A trio of prostitutes sing mournfully about their trade and break off suddenly for a minute of perfect silence to remember the slain women.

Venue: National Theatre, London (running through Aug. 27); Cast: Nick Holder, Nicola Sloane, Kate Fleetwood, Rosalie Craig, Duncan Wisbey, Clare Burt, Hal Fowler, Paul Thornley, Howard Ward, Claire Moore, Michael Shaeffer; Book, lyrics: Alecky Blythe; Music, lyrics: Adam Cork; Director: Rufus Norris; Set designer: Katrina Lindsay; Lighting designer: Bruno Poet; Sound designer: Paul Arditti; Movement director: Jabie de Frutos; Music director: David Shrubsole

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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