FILM REVIEW: Juan Carlos Fresnadillo’s ’28 Weeks Later’

28 weeks later Jeremy Renner, Rose Byrne

By Ray Bennett

When a movie costs an estimated $8 million to make and pulls in a reported $82 million at the boxoffice worldwide, a sequel is inevitable. What’s not so predictable is that the sequel will be as good. Continue reading

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In praise of Robert Altman’s ‘McCabe & Mrs. Miller’

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By Ray Bennett

Watching the splendid new print of Robert Altman’s elegiac northwestern “McCabe & Mrs. Miller” at London’s bfi southbank, where it is playing through May 17, reminded me of why I fell in love with the film when I saw it on its release in 1971.

I went to see it 11 times then, captivated by its cinematic beauty, sly and rigorous wit, and haunting resonance as a lament for lost love and ideals. Warren Beatty and Julie Christie have never been better than in this story of a romantic gambler and naïve businessman who falls for a smart opportunist who has no illusions. When a powerful mining company wants to buy out their frontier casino and bordello, he blusters optimistically while she knows their fate is sealed. The movie has one of the shortest and saddest gunfights of all time plus a final shoot-out that also ranks with the most imaginative and suspenseful. And it all plays out to the plangent sound of Leonard Cohen’s songs on the soundtrack.

McCabe & Mrs Miller 5 “McCabe & Mrs. Miller” ranks at the top of the list of Altman’s truly great pictures including “MASH” (1970), “The Long Goodbye” (1973) and “Nashville” (1975), with “California Split” (1974), “Short Cuts” (1993), and “Gosford Park” (2001) not far behind. The work of cast and crew is exemplary with Vilmos Zsigmond’s cinematography in heavy snow simply breathtaking. Zsigmond, who also shot “Brewster McCloud” (1970), “The Long Goodbye” and “Images” (1972) for Altman, won the Academy Award for “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” (1977). He’s been nominated three other times, for “The Black Dahlia” (2006), “The River” (1984), and “The Deer Hunter” (1978), and did outstanding work on many other films including “Deliverance” (1972) and “Heaven’s Gate” (1980). He also shot Woody Allen’s upcoming “Cassandra’s Dream.”

Production designer Leon Erickson, who created the incredibly atmospheric half-built mining town of Presbyterian Church for “McCabe”, worked in various capacities including art director and associate producer on several Altman pictures. Editor Louis Lombardo, who also did the second unit direction on the picture, did many Altman pictures and also edited Sam Peckinpah’s “The Wild Bunch” (1969) and “The Ballad of Cable Hogue” (1970).

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Joan Tewkesbury, who wrote the screenplay for “Nashville” and went on to direct the film “Old Boyfriends” (1979) and lots of television, was continuity and uncredited script supervisor on “McCabe.” She also appeared onscreen as one of the townswomen. Many of the cast were Altman regulars including Michael Murphy, Rene Auberjonois, John Schuck, Shelley Duvall and Bert Remsen.

Altman said that he’d wanted to cast Elliott Gould as McCabe but the actor turned him down because they’d fallen out while making “MASH.” Gould finally apologized to the director in time to make “The Long Goodbye.” But their disagreement was very good news for Beatty.

I’m not alone in my praise of “McCabe & Mrs. Miller,” witness Roger Ebert, writing in 1999: It is not often given to a director to make a perfect film. Some spend their lives trying, but always fall short. Robert Altman has made a dozen films that can be called great in one way or another, but one of them is perfect, and that one is “McCabe & Mrs. Miller” (1971). This is one of the saddest films I have ever seen, filled with a yearning for love and home that will not ever come — not for McCabe, not with Mrs. Miller, not in the town of Presbyterian Church, which cowers under a gray sky always heavy with rain or snow. The film is a poem — an elegy for the dead.”

 

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FILM REVIEW: Juan Carlos Fresnadillo’s ’28 Weeks Later’

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Spanish director Juan Carlos Fresnadillo’s “28 Weeks Later”, a sequel to Danny Boyle’s admired zombie chiller “28 Days Later”, is a ferociously entertaining thriller with sympathetic characters, stunning set pieces and pulsating excitement. Continue reading

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TV REVIEW: Lee Evans in ‘The History of Mr. Polly’

Lee Evans 'History of Mr Polly' x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON — The fanciful style that H.G. Wells employed for his 1910 comic novel “The History of Mr. Polly” is difficult to transfer to the screen but ITV has done a good job with its new version thanks to some gorgeous settings and the extraordinarily expressive talents of Lee Evans. Continue reading

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FILM REVIEW: Christophe Honore’s ‘Inside Paris’

By Ray Bennett

LONDON — Christophe Honore’s “Inside Paris,” which opened in the United Kingdom May 4, is a pretentious, talkative and mercifully short discourse on self-absorption.

Inside Paris poster x325An attempt at a throwback to the New Wave, the film follows two brothers as they deal with the women in their lives in very different ways.

It begins with one of them, Jonathan (Louis Garrel), speaking directly to the camera and he acknowledges the “intolerably embarrassing odor” of doing so. But saying it does not change it, and Honore’s self-conscious script continues to sound pleased with itself throughout.

A pleasing cast and an appealing jazz score will not be enough to raise the film, which screened at last year’s Cannes sidebar Directors’ Fortnight, beyond the festival circuit.

My full review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter

 

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TV REVIEW: David Suchet in ‘Maxwell’

Suchet as Maxwell

By Ray Bennett

David Suchet (left), who is very good in the title role of the drama “Maxwell” tonight on BBC2 , says that he researched the life of Robert Maxwell for other characters he’s played.

He used the flamboyant businessman as the basis for playing Augustus Melmotte in Trollope’s “The Way We Live Now” in 2002. He told the BBC: “It was almost a carbon copy of Maxwell’s background, although obviously he was a different person.”

He said he used him for Gregor Antonescu in the West End production of Terence Rattigan’s play “Man and Boy.” He was a business man from Eastern Europe who also had a financial meltdown: “He had the same sort of background and he had the same sort of bullish attitude and ways.

The actor says there’s no doubt that Maxwell was smart and tough but his colorful ways were missed when he was gone: “I think what’s great about the script, and why I was drawn to it, is that it doesn’t just present him as the big bully and evil thieving man that he’s probably made out to be now because he stole the pension funds for himself and such like. This drama doesn’t do that. That’s there and one judges it according to how you feel about that, but then his other life is there as well. I think there’s a very good mix of sensitivity and bullishness and what was later found out to be criminal activity.”

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

LONDON — Conrad Black, now on trial in Chicago, was not the first newspaper mogul to run afoul of the law. Robert Maxwell, owner of the big-selling U.K. tabloid the Daily Mirror, siphoned off £350 million from his company’s pension fund in 1991.

Thousands of employees lost their life savings. He was never tried because he fell off his yacht and drowned in mysterious circumstances aged 68 shortly afterwards.

Writer Craig Warner’s BBC film “Maxwell” tells of those last days although a line at the beginning points out that some characters are changed, dates are shifted and some scenes are informed fiction. Still, producer and director Colin Barr has delivered a penetrating drama observing the power-hungry CEO scheme and connive to keep the reins on his debt-ridden empire.

David Suchet (“Poirot”) creates a vivid impression of the uncouth and ruthless tycoon who got out of Czechoslovakia in World War II and fought bravely enough for the British to win the Military Cross.

His family perished at Auschwitz and he was penniless when he landed in Britain but he had a shrewd eye for business. At his peak, despite his nickname the Bouncing Czech, he competed with Rupert Murdoch as the most rapacious and successful media baron in the U.K.

 

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THEATRE REVIEW: ‘On the Town’ at the London Coliseum

on the town x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON — Thoughts of “On the Town” are influenced by recollections of the 1949 film version starring Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra, which landed at No. 19 on the American Film Institute’s list of all-time great film musicals. Approaching a stage version, that is not altogether a good thing.

Even though Leonard Bernstein composed the show’s music with lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolf Green (“Singin’ in the Rain”), the film’s directors Kelly and Stanley Donen threw out a lot of the original songs in favor of numbers by in-house MGM songsmith Roger Edens.

The English National Opera’s revival of the 1944 stage production suggests that Donen and Kelly were right. It was Bernstein’s first attempt at a major musical at age 25, and while the rousing “New York, New York” has endured, the songlist lacks the richness he would achieve later in “West Side Story.”

That ebullient song, with richly evocative words by Comden and Green, almost sustains the show but while all the songs boast clever lyrics, the remainder of the music is heavy going. The cast’s accomplished performances and sheer energy, however, make a crowd-pleasing impression.

Simon Lee conducts the full ENO orchestra with great flair and while designer Robert Jones opts for sparsely effective sets, Stephen Mear’s choreography ensures the pace never flags. This is in spite of a 90-minute first act that seems quite a bit longer. Director Jude Kelly evidently wishes to strike a topical note about fighting men missing home and uses World War Two images to make her point when a trio of sailors, Gabey (Joshua Dallas), Chip (Sean Palmer) and Ozzie (Ryan Molloy) land in Manhattan on a 24-hour leave.

Bowled over by his first view of the Big Apple, Gabey immediately falls in love with subway poster girl Ivy Smith (Helen Anker) and sets off to find her. His two shipmates determine to help him and get help from resourceful cabbie Hildy Eserhazy (Caroline O’Connor) and randy museum curator Claire de Loone (Lucy Schaufer). Complicating their daylong romantic plans are Ivy’s boozy singing teacher Madame Maude P. Dilly (British TV star June Whitfield) and Claire’s wealthy fiance Judge Pitkin W. Bridgework (Andrew Shore).

They all meet cute and find ways to become entangled with do-gooders and the police before love finds its way. Dallas is a fine leading man and O’Connor and Schauffer make convincing New Yawk broads. Whitfield gets plenty of laughs with her expert clowning.

Opera purists object to the ENO putting on such popular fare but when they can pump such class and energy into a fairly dated show, it’s hard to complain.

Venue: London Coliseum, English National Opera, runs through May 25; Cast: Joshua Dallas, Sean Palmer, Ryan Molloy, Helen Anker, Caroline O’Connor, Lucy Schaufer, June Whitfield, Andrew Shore, Janine Duvitsky; Music: Leonard Bernstein; Book and lyrics: Betty Comden and Adolph Green, based on an idea by Jerome Robbins; Director: Jude Kelly; Choreographer: Stephen Mear; Designer: Robert Jones; Lighting designer: Mark Henderson; Sound designer: Nick Lidster; Conductor: Simon Lee.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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Frank Langella is the right man for film of ‘Frost/Nixon’

Langella, Sheen 'Frost Nixon

By Ray Bennett

Anthony Quayle created onstage the role that Laurence Olivier took in the film version of the mystery drama “Sleuth” and when I asked him if it was any consolation that the great knight of English drama had displaced him, Quayle said: “No, it was my fucking role!”

So it’s excellent news from Hollywood that Universal has seen the light and signed Frank Langella to star with Michael Sheen (pictured above) in Ron Howard’s film version of Peter Morgan’s terrific play “Frost/Nixon,” which he does in the Donmar Warehouse production currently on Broadway. Continue reading

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Time for national treasure Kate Moss to help the workers

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By Ray Bennett

When Kate Moss was pilloried by the tabloids and began to lose contracts because of alleged drug use, CNN asked me on to talk about what she should do about it.

There was a guy from People Magazine on, too, and CNN clearly wanted me to agree with him that the supermodel should rush to confess her sins on TV or in one of the celebrity magazines or red tops. My advice was the opposite.

I said she should disappear, say nothing and keep working; things would come around. She did just that, and today she is back on top as she opens a new clothing line at Topshop. I say good luck to her.

Kate Moss doesn’t make awful pop records, shabby television shows or lousy movies. She doesn’t rabbit on to radio or TV interviewers. She  just does her job, which is to look dazzlingly beautiful in advertisements, and she does it exceedingly well.

To spot her versatile and eye-catching features on posters and in commercials when traveling abroad is a sweet reminder of home. She is a national treasure.

Which is all the more reason she should follow the advice of Mary Riddell in the Observer Sunday and help improve the lives of the people who work so hard to make the clothes she hawks.

To add 10p to the cost of each item of clothing could double a ragtrade worker’s income, Riddell cries: “Come on Kate, lead the way.”

International Workers’ Day tomorrow, would be a fine time to do it. Come on, Kate!

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Recalling … a bumpy ride with Linda Gray

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By Ray Bennett

There’s a scene in an early episode of “Dallas” in which Linda Gray as Sue Ellen Ewing in a long gown bumps downstairs on her backside. She wore jeans beneath the gown and in her back pocket was a picture of me!

My mugshot accompanied a review of “Dallas” that I’d written for TV Guide Canada, where I worked at the time. Someone at Lorimar Television, the company that made the show on what was then the MGM lot in Culver City, had shown Gray my review and she told me later that she folded it up and put it in her ass pocket when the director called action.

My review prompted Gray to write me a note:

Dear Ray, I wanted to thank you for the beautiful Valentine’s Day card you sent! Confused? I’ll explain. Last Wednesday (Valentine’s Day) our production secretary for “Dallas” came on the set with Xerox copies of your review of our show. Finally someone really understands what we are trying to do. We are working hard and having fun at the same time. I have become your number one fan and I hope we have an opportunity to meet sometime. Much love and thanks for a special Valentine – the lady you love to hate … Linda Gray

British TV network UK Gold will televise “Dallas,” the biggest American hit from the 1980s, in its entirety starting Monday with “Diggers Daughter,” which debuted on CBS on Sunday April 2, 1978.

I shall look out for Episode 28 of the show’s first full season, titled “John Ewing III, Part 1,” which should air around May 10.

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