Sunday 16 November 2014

Report From The INTERSTELLAR London Press Conference (The Hollywood News)



Christopher Nolan’s latest movie INTERSTELLAR is an experience that truly takes you somewhere else. In the heart of London that can be a hell of an advantage. Following an early morning screening where the sound was ramped up so loud the seats rattled as much as the spaceships, it was relaxing to decamp to Claridges for the press conference attended by the director and cast, including a surprise appearance by Sir Michael Caine.

These events can easily descend into backslapping and while some there seemed determined to tell the director what a genius he was, some genuine insight into the process emerged that was fascinating for a Nolan fan like myself (who probably would have gushed all over him if I’d had the chance). Below are a selection of highlights from Nolan, Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain, young star Mackenzie Foy and producer Emma Thomas.


INTERSTELLAR Review (The Hollywood News)


As I staggered out of the screening room from Christopher Nolan’s INTERSTELLAR, my ears well and truly battered by Hans Zimmer’s celestial choirs, I found myself feeling elated, confused, headachey but overall generally satisfied. This isn’t a quick jaunt into the cosmos punctuated by a few laser dogfights. As you might expect from the director it’s an ambitious and emotionally exhausting epic that comes at you every which way...


Sunday 9 November 2014

Doctor Who - DEATH IN HEAVEN Review


The Doctor faces a rebooted Master and the Cybermen in this jam-packed finale that combines the good, the bad and the downright weird.   The best aspects are the revelations that both his arch enemy and staunch allies want the Time Lord to do the same thing; nourish his ego and take charge.  Steven Moffat cleverly has The Mistress pulling Peter Capaldi's strings over the nature of his relationship with Clara, a source of much griping from fans.  This strand also brings the issue of the new Doctor's dual nature to a reasonably satisfying conclusion.  The Cybermens' water-based plot is rather unfathomable and veers onto the silly side (presumably the 'dark water' of last week is involved but it's never clarified).

Of the supporting cast, it's essentially Michelle Gomez's show.  She makes a terrific Master, creepy and funny by turns.  You can speculate why Moffat gave the character a sex change till the cyber cows come home.  Either way, Gomez's performance is a pleasure, though she's let down by the script rapidly lurching into cartoon villainy so quickly.  Some background as to how the Master ended up in her current form wouldn't have gone amiss.  Jemma Redgrave is back heading up UNIT but she doesn't really add anything to the mix.  Sanjeev Bhaskar is similarly wasted.  Redgrave has apprently been inserted to usher in an odd cameo from her late onscreen father, itself part of Danny Pink's exit storyline, a bizarre tribute to the fallen of World War One.  


As with last week there is a cruel streak to the episode that sits uneasily with the show in general.  After "Cremationgate" we now see a popular supporting character bumped off in a manner arguably more suited to The Dark Knight than Doctor Who.  I'd say overall this two parter has been the weakest story in the run, but there are still encouraging signs of the newfound maturity the series has displayed, seemingly inspired by its leading man.  A hilarious end credit sequence suggests his mettle is going to be tested to breaking point by a rotund and rosy-cheeked polar opposite.  Christmas couldn't come early enough for this reviewer.

Sunday 2 November 2014

Doctor Who - DARK WATER Review




The Doctor goes to the undiscovered country in this curate's egg of an opening instalment.  Pitch black in its humour with very little to recommend for younger viewers, it heralds the start of possibly the most challenging and downright odd finales in the show's history.
Opening with the shock of Danny Pink's death before hotting up quite literally by the side of a volcano (candidate for most impressive scene in the run), it then takes us into the heart of Missy's world - what it represents and indeed who she is.

Having trumpeted the Cybermen as the villains of the piece it comes as no surprise to discover the identity of those skeletons immersed in the nefarious liquid of the title.  It would have worked better if they'd been kept a secret (in fairness the production team
did have them stomping about St.Paul's).  While I was disappointed not to see some Jason & The Argonauts-style action, this is at
least a novel way of introducing the monsters on a Halloween weekend.  Whether "dark water" is going to form a solid part of the plot or if it's just one of Moffat's patented attention-grabbing gimmicks remains to be seen.  


The setting and the script's attitude toward the afterlife could be seen as contentious.  As someone who's experienced a bereavement I have to say I wasn't offended.  The question for me is its suitability as a subject for family viewing, Danny's storyline being a wider case in point.  I'll make a final judgment after the conclusion but I'd say, despite enjoying the episode, Steven Moffat has misjudged things here.

Michelle Gomez is a positive boon to the action.  Showrunner Moffat has described her as treading a fine line between funny and scary.  I agree.  She's certainly dangerous and makes a strong counterpoint to Peter Capaldi.  Chris Addison is also a clever piece of casting, his ingratiating yet cheeky presence adding dimension to the role of Seb.  As for the revelation that Missy is the Master, well it's hardly a surprise if you've done any degree of fannish speculating over the past weeks.  As someone who thinks the Master is a bland character I find it a shame they didn't create a more original enemy for Gomez.  Why not just make her the Rani?  She's going to be an improvement on John Simm's overgrown megalomaniac at any rate.  A rather shoddy cliffhanger paves the way for an intriguing denouement.