FILM REVIEW: Sean Bean, Bob Hoskins in ‘Outlaw’

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By Ray Bennett

Sean Bean (pictured), Bob Hoskins and Lennie James deserve better than to play dimwitted vigilantes in an absurd Nick Love action picture. But, like most people in the film business, they do what’s offered and do it well in “Outlaw,” which opened today in the U.K.

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

Life in Britain has become ugly and lawless, and Sean Bean, as a disillusioned paratrooper just back from service in Iraq, plans to sort it all out the hard way in Nick Love’s brainlessly entertaining action picture “Outlaw.”

Despite knee-jerk motivation and plot holes as big as bomb craters, the film’s grainy depiction of a group of no-hopers being trained as vigilantes by a deluded professional killer moves at a fast enough pace to please fans with a taste for random and noisy violence. It should make a fast profit and thrive on DVD.

 

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An Irish eye for Austen film ‘Becoming Jane’

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By Ray Bennett

Production notes provided by film companies to journalists are often full of bumpf and drivel but the press pack for “Becoming Jane” has lots of good stuff about the movie’s locations.

Julian Jarrold’s film treats Jane Austen as if she were the heroine of one her own stories, telling of her thwarted love for an Irish lawyer named Tom Lefroy. It opened in the U.K. today with a Miramax release set for August in the U.S. It’s great fun with fine performances by Anne Hathaway (“The Devil Wears Prada”) and James McAvoy (“The Last King of Scotland”) as the romantic leads.

It also looks splendid thanks to Eigil Bryld’s cinematography, Eimear Ni Mhaoldhomhnaigh’s costumes and Eve Stewart’s production design. But although the film is set in London and Hampshire where Austen lived with her family in the 18th century, it wasn’t shot in England.

Dublin’s Henrietta Street and King’s Inn provided the Georgian architecture that doubled for Regency London and the gorgeous homes were found in rural Ireland.

For the Austen family home in the village of Steventon, which was a fairly small rectory, production designer Stewart found Higginsbrook House, a private home dating from 1747 near Trim in County Meath. Stewart describes it in the film’s production notes:

“I just wanted something that was of the English style that is quite hard to find in the Irish countryside. That was Higginsbrook. I wanted some place that was suggestive of the Bennet household in ‘Pride and Prejudice.’

“After a lot of research I discovered that the Austens lived in a smaller and shabbier version of the Bennet household. There is a lot of visual evidence, including etchings and paintings of their house that corroborates this.

“The scale of Higginsbrook was ideal because the Austens were crammed into this small house, where Mr. Austen was the lowly rector of a small parish and where they had a small garden to grow all their own food.”

Two buildings were used to create the grand mansion owned by the strict and hectoring Lady Gresham (Maggie Smith) in the film. The exterior is Kilruddery House (below) just outside Bray in County Wicklow, an Elizabethan revival house with handsome gardens and an impressive rear vista.

Kilruddy House

When visitors to the Gresham ball in the film enter the house through the orangerie they emerge in the interiors of a Gothic Revival home, Charleville Forest 70 miles away in Tullamore, County Offaly.

The grand rotunda in Dublin’s City Hall was the setting for the Gresham ballroom with the church at Cloghlee Bridge in the Dublin hills providing the pulpit for Mr. Austen’s cautionary sermon.

The entrance to Gentleman Jackson’s club was a house on Dublin’s North Great George’s Street but the fimmakers had to look elsewhere for room to stage a boxing match that Lefroy takes part in. Stewart continues:

“At first, we were going to do the boxing match in a Gentleman’s Club but Julian became more interested in the slightly seedy side of Tom Lefroy. Just by chance we had looked at Mother Redcaps tavern, a very large and very old building. We figured it would be much better for a sort of Fight Club than a basement. It was quite dark and otherworldly.

“Jane is more usually described as being a rather prim and austere little spinster with no romance in her life. But her writing reveals that she must have known love. What is interesting is that in a courtroom on Henrietta Street in Dublin we came across Tom Lefroy’s name on a stained glass window. It was a kind of spooky discovery.”

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‘The Lives of Others’ in Human Rights film festival

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The 11th annual Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, which runs March 21-30 at several London cinemas, offers the chance to see three of the best foreign-language film nominees at this year’s Oscars including the winner, “The Lives of Others.”

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s drama about intrigue in East Germany before the Berlin Wall came down is set for release in the United Kingtom by Lionsgate UK on April 13. Starring Ulrich Muehe (above), Sebastian Koch and Martina Gedeck, it was also named best film at the European Film Awards.

The others are Rachid Bouchareb’s “Days of Glory” (set for a March 30 U.K. release by Metrodome), about Algerian soldiers fighting for France in World War II, which won the best actor prize for the film’s entire cast at the Festival de Cannes, and Deepa Mehta’s “Water,” about a group of widows fighting poverty in a holy city, which won several Genie Awards in Canada, where Mehta is based.

The festival, which features feature films and documentaries dealing with important social and political issues, kicks off at the Curzon Mayfair Cinema with a benefit gala on March 21. The evening includes a screening of Lauren Herbiet’s “Mon Colonel,” based on a story by Costa-Gavras (“Missing,” “Z”) about the Algerian troubles in France during the 1960s. It features Bruno Solo and Robinson Stevenin.

Other films in the festival include Spike Lee’s epic documentary about the New Orleans hurricane tragedy “When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts” and “The Camden 28,” about civil disobedience in protest against the Vietnam War in New Jersey in 1971.

“Ghosts of Abu Ghraib” looks at the abuses that took place at the infamous prison in Iraq while “The Railroad All Stars” is about a group of Guatemalan prostitutes who form a five-a-side football team to draw attention to their plight.

“El Violin” is a poetic drama about peasants resisting a police state in rural Mexico; “Enemies of Happiness” deals with a woman who runs in Afghanistan’s first attempt at democratic elections despite repeated assassination attempts; and “Total Denial” tells of a group of Burmese villagers who sue a pair of giant oil companies in the U.S. court.

Other London cinemas involved in the festival include the ICA, the Clapham Picturehouse, the Renoir, the Gate and the Ritzy.

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John Inman, who died today, an unlikely hit in Memphis

Among the more curious things I discovered living in Tennessee in the mid-1980s was that one of the most popular entertainment figures in Memphis was the English comedy actor John Inman, who died this morning aged 71.

JohnInmanIt was very odd to be in Dillard’s department store in the city of Graceland and to hear someone in a mid-South accent call out “I’m free!”

Inman’s series “Are You Being Served?” was hugely popular in syndication in middle America and he attracted large crowds doing personal appearances.

The show ran on the BBC from 1972 to 1985 and is available in several DVDs, mostly on BBC Warner.

Inman’s character on the show, Mr. Humphries, became one of TV’s best-known characters, and in 1976 he was voted funniest man on television by TV Times readers and personality of the year on the BBC.

BBC News has more and DVD details are available on imdb.

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David Hare honours playwright John Osborne

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With the 50th anniversary production of John Osborne’s “The Entertainer” opening at London’s The Old Vic tonight, I am reminded of the passionate and illuminating address that fellow playwright David Hare made in Osborne’s defence at the Hay Literary Festival in 2002.

Although he had spoken movingly at Osborne’s memorial in June 1995, Hare (“Plenty,” “The Blue Room,” “Stuff Happens”) felt moved to redeem his late friend from the prevailing view that he was a misogynist and Little Englander.

In a most heartfelt and eloquent speech, Hare said he couldn’t imagine any greater honor for a British playwright than to be asked to write in memory of Osborne: “John’s plays are what you feel when you wake prickling in the dark: half-truth experienced as whole truth, intuition experienced as fact. John’s characters, vibrating with life, have no clue how to put the nightmare away.”

The full address is at Guardian Unlimited’s Hay site.

 

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Abbey Road studios: a logical idea for a TV show

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By Ray Bennett

LONDON (Hollywood Reporter) – Setting a television music series in the most famous recording studio in the world is such a logical idea that it’s a wonder no one’s done it before. But better late than never.

“Live From Abbey Road”, a 12-part series of hourlong sessions each featuring three major acts, airs here on Channel 4 and More 4 and is headed for the Sundance Channel in June. (It debuted in Britain in January.)

The show is independently produced under license from the studio’s owner, EMI, by Londoner Peter Van Hooke, a longtime drummer with Van Morrison’s band and an accomplished record producer, and London-based Texan Michael Gleason, a former director of MGM Studios who runs Farm Street Music.

Van Hooke says TV producers have never understood the culture of music and that the long list of poor music shows led artists to be leery of this one: “All the acts, when they came in, were in damage-control mode. The mind-set was, ‘This is a TV music show, so therefore the sound is going to be rubbish, the visuals are going to be rubbish, and they don’t understand our culture.’ The first part of every day has been to get them to understand that this is a very familiar environment and they’re dealing with musicians who understand their credo.”

The concept of the show is that each episode features an iconic act, an established singer-songwriter and a breakthrough act. They are seen in the studio as if they are making a record, and the cameras catch conversations in the setup and between takes. Paul Simon, Dr. John, David Gilmour (pictured), Corinne Bailey Rae, Damien Rice, the Kooks, Razorlight, Snow Patrol and Kasabian are among the acts who have signed up.

Van Hooke says, “I feel we have something completely different. I’ve actually thought about why it works in so many ways, and it is very simple. It’s because we have no studio audience, so it’s very, very personal and intimate. Records are not made with audiences.”

Director Annabel Jankel (“Max Headroom”) uses an average of five high-definition cameras to capture the action, and she says, “Once the artists are in Abbey Road, Studio One or Studio Two where we’re shooting, it’s treated as an environment that is being recorded, off-camera, supposedly behind the scenes, down time, interviews, interaction between band members, responses after various takes, the good stuff, the bad stuff and all the stuff in between.”

Van Hooke says record labels have supported the project and he’s delighted with the response from major artists. The only big name who turned him down? His old boss, Van Morrison.

This story appeared in The Hollywood Reporter and Reuters

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French cinema rendezvous with Piaf, Binoche

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By Ray Bennett

“La Vie En Rose”, Olivier Dahan’s biography of Edith Piaf – well received at the Berlin International Film Festival – kicks off “A Rendezvous with French Cinema” at London’s Curzon Mayfair this month.

The showcase of Gallic movies runs March 29-April 1 and features several titles due for release in the U.K. in the coming months including Santiago Amigorena’s atmospheric post-Cold War thriller “A Few Days in September”.

The Hollywood Reporter’s chief film critic Kirk Honeycutt reviewed “La Vie En Rose” out of Berlin and admired Marion Cotillard’s title performance very much. Here’s an excerpt:

“Thanks to an extraordinarily brave performance by Marion Cotillard (above), whose every gesture and singing performance channels not only Piaf but perhaps a bit of Judy Garland, the film should have wide adult appeal.

“Critics will be divided about the filmmaking, especially its more self-conscious aspects, but Cotillard’s performance and the film’s fervent, romantic belief that misery can be turned into art will connect with many age groups, especially among women.”

I reviewed “A Few Days in September”, a thriller starring Juliette Binoche as one tough cookie, for The Hollywood Reporter at the Venice International Film Festival last fall. See here.

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Road less travelled for Kate Dickie

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By Ray Bennett

No argument with Helen Mirren’s Oscar win for “The Queen”: she’s brilliant and deserves every accolade that comes her way. But the best performance by an actress in a British film last year was not by England’s top dame but by Glaswegian newcomer Dickie in Andrea Arnold’s Cannes jury prizewinner “Red Road,” which has just been released in the U.K. by Verve.

With Oscar winner Juliette Binoche and this year’s Oscar favourite Helen Mirren among the competition, Kate Dickie was content just to be nominated as best actress at the 2006 British Independent Film Awards. Then they called her name.

She said later, “I didn’t say anything. I kept looking at the people at the table to make sure I’d heard right. Then I thought I’d better get up and I laughed all the way to the podium. It was hysterical just to be there, never mind winning.”

The slim, intense Scottish actress had tasted acclaim at the Cannes International Film Festival when her first feature, “Red Road,” a complex thriller directed by Andrea Arnold, won the Jury Prize. It was named best film at the BAFTA Scotland Awards as Dickie and co-star Tony Curran copped the acting prizes and Arnold won for directing and screenwriting.

 

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THEATRE REVIEW: Daniel Radcliffe in ‘Equus’

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By Ray Bennett

LONDON – A nod is as good as a wink to a blind horse, so they say, and since there are six sightless steeds in the West End revival of Peter Shaffer’s overwrought 1973 drama “Equus”, you can just imagine how much winking and nodding goes on.

There’s some nudge-nudge, wink-wink too as Daniel Radcliffe, Harry Potter himself, prances about onstage in his birthday suit quite a bit.

The play is an anguished affair about a troubled boy who maims six horses by stabbing them in the eyes with a hoof pick and the psychiatrist who comes to see the boy’s actions as a ritualistic act of worship. Twaddle, clearly, but with Radcliffe butt-naked, “The History Boys” star Richard Griffiths employing his noble sadness as the shrink, and some very dynamic staging, the production will no doubt be a hit.

Thea Sharrock’s precise direction, John Napier’s vivid set design, David Hersey’s dramatic lighting, and Gregory Clarke’s incisive sound design make the best of Shaffer’s symbolism with the animals depicted by six very tall men on high-stepping wire shoes and metallic horse-head masks. It is a triumph of style over substance.

The play feels terribly dated. Perhaps in the early 1970s it was shocking to be told that passion, however misguided, must be swamped by conformity. Maybe the thought of a young man being so nasty to animals was horrifying then while now we know about teenaged suicide bombers and child soldiers toting machetes and AK47s in Africa.

In order to make his case for the young man’s idealistic innocence, Shaffer turns the psychiatrist into a self-hating figure who has set aside his love of Greek myths and gods, history and travel, in order to sustain an empty marriage.

When the young Alan Strang (Radcliffe) is sent to his mental health clinic by a sympathetic magistrate (Jenny Agutter), the analyst uses every trick of his trade to draw out the boy’s secrets. At first inarticulate, Alan gradually tells of his emotional alienation from strict parents and the lasting impression of a childhood incident when a rider swept him up onto a horse’s neck and they galloped by the sea.

The boy’s parents are stereotypes, however. The father (Jonathan Cullen) is a dour English socialist with a secret taste for pornography. The mother (Gabrielle Reidy) is a wizened Scottish Christian who hasn’t really been happy with her son since Satan took him over as a lad.

As Dysart draws the truth from the boy, the events of the fateful night are enacted with Alan seduced by the pretty stable girl (Joanna Christie). The actress is also nude in the scene but her nubile charms are not enough to distract young Potter, sorry, Radcliffe, from his equine passions.

All the actors do what is required of them and Radcliffe looks confident on stage even in the buff while Griffiths does his best to make sense of the nonsense he’s called upon to utter. At one point, the psychiatrist and student of the gods tries to speak for the iconic Equus, to get into the mind of the horse itself, and concludes that his ramblings are meaningless but unsettling. Much like the play, which given all the trappings is unsettling but meaningless.

Gielgud Theatre, London (Feb. 27, 2007, runs through June 7); Cast: Martin Dysart: Richard Griffiths; Alan Strang: Daniel Radcliffe; Frank Strang: Jonathan Cullen; Dora Strang: Gabrielle Reidy; Hester Saloman: Jenny Agutter; Jill Mason: Joanna Christie; Harry Dalton: Colin Haigh; Young horseman & Nugget: Will Kemp; Nurse: Karen Meagher; Playwright: Peter Shaffer; Director: Thea Sharrock; Designer: John Napier; Lighting: David Hersey; Movement: Fin Walker; Sound: Gregory Clarke. Horses: Joel Corpuz, Jami Reid-Quarrell, Greig Cooke, Temujin Gill, Jonathan Readwin; Presented by David Pugh and Dafydd Rogers.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter

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Whistle stop at the Palace of Westminster

Houses of Parliament seen from atop the London Eye

By Ray Bennett

I can’t recall the last time someone holding a semi-automatic rifle smiled at me and said, “How’s it going?” It happened this morning at the Palace of Westminster, where I was covering my first parliamentary committee hearing for some time.

It was a reminder of how calmly efficient the security forces are at the House of Commons. Polite too, allowing me my Swiss army pocketknife but confiscating an Acme Thunderer whistle from my bag.

Acme ThundererCarving initials in one of the old wooden benches is evidently no crime, but a blast from a ref’s whistle while a member of parliament is pontificating probably means a march to the Tower.

U.K. indie producers trade body PACT was at the culture ministry select committee hearing to talk about public service broadcasting, especially children’s programming.

Among other things, PACT revealed results of a YouGov poll that said parents in Great Britain place a high value on originally produced children’s programming and like to watch their favorite children’s programs with their own children.

Other key findings of the survey include the following:
66% of parents believe original children’s programming provides families with shared cultural experiences;
70% believe original U.K. children’s programs contribute to the UK’s cultural identity;
73% agree that original U.K. produced children’s programs encourage children to read and play imaginatively;
73% agreed that original U.K. children’s programming is even more important in the age of multi-channel television;
Just 21% agree that programs from countries like Japan and the U.S. are just as high quality and family friendly as children’s programs produced in the U.K.

PACT wants the government to set up a £23 million production fund for children’s programming. There’s more on the PACT Web site.

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