Showing posts with label british. Show all posts
Showing posts with label british. Show all posts
Thursday, September 5, 2013
The World's End (2013) Review
No, not the Seth Rogen/James Franco vehicle This is the End but the long-awaited finale of Edgar Wright's Cornetto trilogy. Is it a worthy conclusion after Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz?
Monday, April 22, 2013
Deep Water (2006) Review
Sometimes you need to see a really decent documentary and not a work of fiction on screen to be reminded of the power that movies can evoke. Deep Water is a film that will grip you and won't let you go for a long time after the credits have rolled.
Friday, May 11, 2012
Exam (2009) Review
Discovering hidden gems, I love it, you know it. The first time I heard about "Exam" was in Empire and Total Film but since it didn't get a theatrical release in the US basically no one here had heard about it. But luckily I got my fingers on a copy of this smart minimalist thriller and it surely didn't disappoint.
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Nowhere Boy (2009) Review
What's it with all those music biopics in the last years? First we got the Ray Charles movie Ray, then Johnny Cash flick Walk the Line, they even made one about Notorious B.I.G., simply called Notorious. Hell, there was even a spoof of the whole craze, Walk Hard - The Dewey Cox Story with John C. Reilly. So it was only a matter of time until there was one about legendary John Lennon (and if you don't know who that is, then go, feel embarrassed and google it), Nowhere Boy!
First off a warning: This film is not about the Beatles, it's not about Lennon's whole life, in a way it's not even really about the music behind the genius. It rather focuses on the family and especially mother issues Lennon had to deal with when he grew up. By taking this refreshingly different approach to the whole idea of biopics director Sam Taylor-Wood brings in a new perspective and tries to be different from other rather generic film biographies. But Lennon and Beatles fans might be a little disappointed as Nowhere Boy is not really delivering what one might expect. We have a pretty short time frame that's being covered and are essentially given a classical coming-of-age story, as it shows how Lennon discovered his passion for music, struggles with school and his family and ends with him starting his professional career.
It's an enjoyable movie nonetheless, the acting by Aaron Johnson who plays Lennon and especially Kristin Scott Thomas who plays his aunt is top-notch, the atmosphere of 50s Great Britain is captured really well and we get a nice soundtrack that's heavy on rock'n roll. Unfortunately the story itself is nothing too special. If you'd replace the main character's name with anything but John Lennon you'd only have another Sunday afternoon tea movie, there just doesn't seem to be much at stake here.
It's a nice watch but never really gets you to care very much about the whole subject, even the big emotional moments barely raise your heartbeat (besides one scene that comes out of nowhere and leaves you asking WTF?). An influential musician like John Lennon deserves better than that. So if you're a hardcore Lennon fan there's probably no way around Nowhere Boy, but everybody else can just skip this one without missing anything extraordinary.
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