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Review- A Punters Prayer
A Punters Prayer 'Gambling's got nothing to do with making money. It's about winning and losing', so begins the London gamblers epic 'A Punters Prayer', from first time writer/director Savvas D. Michael and newly formed Liontari Pictures. It spins multiple plates, and is at once violent, funny, heartbreaking and steeped in reality. It's a fizzy, witty debut that bubbles with heart and grit, and is full of the rare confidence that instantly informs the viewer they're watching something special and the product of a singular vision. While raw, the talent on display is undeniable and the storytelling exceeding the competencies of far more experienced film-makers. While it doesn't break any original ground, it proudly wears its influences on its sleeve. It's never less than enthralling entertainment. Set on a Friday afternoon in a heightened reality version of North London, most of the action takes place in the local bookies âTheta Betâ. Serial gambler Jack, played by the excellent Tommy O'Neill is desperate to break away from 'the wage slave circle of life'. He decides to bet ÂŁ250 on a horse to win treble which, if all three horses win, would score him and his colourfully roguish friends a fortune. His best two pals, the clueless and scrappy Ian (Jamie Crew), and more measured and fatherly 'spread your bets' type Yiannis (Andreas Karras) advise, help and hinder Jack throughout the day. When it looks like a huge windfall may very well be within Jacks grasp, some unsavoury characters descend on Theta Bet ready to take violent advantage of this rare situation. Along the way in this 'day in the life' scenario we meet the regulars who live and die by the whims of Lady Luck, most notable is Paul (an always welcome Dexter Fletcher) who has a streetwise, debonair charisma and âbet big, win bigâ mentality. Another standout is Daniel Caltagirone who plays a soft spoken local gangster/drug dealer (and drives much of the third act). Filming took place at Palmers Green in August 2014, unknown to many of the local residents and shopkeepers, so the various locations and details are completely authentic and realistically capture multicultural London as it is. Stylistically, A Punters Prayer is very eclectic, and this is immediately apparent with a harrowing scene from the denouement opening the film followed by a crudely animated, scene setting intro. Jack reveals much of his life philosophy through his poetic inner monologue narration, and it's his 'Punter's Prayer' the story seeks to answer through its 90 minute running time. In all the best ways 'A Punters Prayer' feels very much a throwback to the 90's era of laddism, with its street poetry, 'who dares wins' philosophy and total focus on masculinity. It owes a sizeable debt to the Miramax era of cinema mostly, with it's snappy, entertaining dialogue driving most of the action. Early Tarantino, Swingers and Clerks are invoked as are the early efforts of Danny Boyle and the Guy Ritchie of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch fame. Motorhead's 'Ace of spades' and George Thorogood and the Destroyers "Bad to the Bone" are highlights from a rock soundtrack with brushes elbows with many instrumental world music cues. It's collage of many wonderful things but 'A Punters Prayer' is ultimately a very, very entertaining and easy watch with enjoyable performances from everybody involved. Funny, violent and true, it manages to avoid the pitfall's of many directors first outings, and finds its odd tone immediately. It's packed full of quotable dialogue and memorable scenes and characters and comes completely recommended. Saavas D. Michael is a fresh UK voice and a great storyteller whose next project I'm very much looking forward to.
Review- Catch Me Daddy
Catch Me Daddy (15) Dir. Daniel Wolfe, 2015, 1hr 47mins Cast: Sameena Jabeen Ahmed, Conor McCarron, Barry Nunney Review by Mark Bartlett Rating: 5 Stars Catch Me Daddy is a special film. Quite possibly this years best. Going in completely blind, everything about 'Catch Me Daddy' informs you that you're about to experience something very different. The evocative, artwork of its cinema quad poster by Brooklyn artist Mu Pan caught my eye immediately during its limited cinema release earlier this year, and the kaleidoscopic and fluorescent cover stands out even more for it's home video release. Written by brothers Daniel and Matthew Wolfe (and then directed by Daniel) and set in dreary towns and muted green hills of Yorkshire, we follow the cross-culture relationship between British Pakistani runaway Laila (Sameena Jabeen Ahmed) and her friend/boyfriend (this is never made explicitly clear) Aaron (Conor McCarron). Her male family members are pursuing her with the help of the two violent local hired goons, with the aim of bringing her back to her ashamed father. Daniel and Matthew Wolfe may be telling a relatively simple and bleak story, but it's 'Catch Me Daddy's' bravura execution and originality that makes it an essential and important footprint in the history of homegrown cinema. It's very much a melting pot of genres comprising elements of crime, western, noir and horror, and it simultaneously manages to transcend the sum of its parts. Though a first time director, Wolfe's background in music videos (The Shoes, Chase and Status, Paolo Nutini) affords him the confidence to inject the proceedings with a giant dose of directorial flare. Almost entirely street cast, the performances are authentic right across the board, Psycho-moron bounty hunter Barry (Barry Nunney) reminds me of far too many people I've had the displeasure of meeting, Laila (it's almost impossible to believe Sameena Jabeen Ahmed has NEVER acted before) is excellent throughout as are all the bit players. There's an awesomely memorable and fleeting moment from a Milkshake salesmen proving just how much care has gone into the details here. Shot on 33mm film Wolfe and Cinematographer Robbie Ryan (Fish Tank) manage to make the mundane North Yorkshire landscape look stunningly cinematic. The use of natural and artificial light is very well contrasted throughout and serves the story's hidden themes of universality, control and nature. The soundtrack is wonderfully eclectic with Nicki Minaj brushing shoulders with Tim Buckley, club music and Patti Smith. It's all very well paced and never forgets to be engaging as a thriller as well as thoughtful cinema. It takes 30 minutes of well balanced set up before we properly meet the main players, and events really kick into gear 45 minutes in as the tension mounts to excruciating levels. 'Catch Me Daddy' is an extremely violent film, and at times difficult to watch. Various news stories of real world âhonourâ killings (though the phrase is never used in the film) inspired the screenplay. The hunters at the centre of the story, while fully developed are never less than disgustingly idiotic human beings caught in a cycle of behaviour that they themselves don't understand. We meet a philosophical cabbie that laments "My life is about everybody else. I don't know what I do. I just do what I do" which sums up much of the overall sentiment here. There's something very elemental about it all. The secret connections, and strange private rituals people have when they think nobody's looking, be that pissing on your hand in a urinal stall, staring intently at a wall or saying an unspoken prayer to a house. Birds, meat, laser 3d sculptors, chemical medications, fish, lizards, fruit and vending machines, halogen bulbs and fluorescent lights all ask for the attention of the viewer as if to say that humans create things to feel like they're in control of their fate, but all of these man made constructs are just another part of the natural order. Laila's father doesn't quest for her to return for any purpose born of love, only to exact total control and thus mastery of his own life. And so, the title finally makes sense in the very final frame, where you can almost hear Laila psychically screaming it at her father, perhaps ready to let an inevitable fate finally run its course. Intelligent, beautiful, bleakly comical at points and profoundly disturbing 'Catch Me Daddy' is excellence that demands multiple viewings and stays with you long after its upsetting and sobering finale. I can't recommend it enough and eagerly await a follow-up from the brothers Wolfe.
Review- House of Halloween
The Houses of Halloween (18) Dir. Bobby Roel, 2015, 1hr 31mins Cast: Brandy Schaefer, Zack Andrews, Bobby Roe, Mikey Roe, Jeff Larson Review by Mark Bartlett Rating: 2 Stars After years of being annually demoralised by Paranormal Activity sequels, I've become quite prejudiced against found footage as a format. Houses of Halloween (Known stateside as The Houses October Built) makes me want to reevaluate that stance a little bit, while still being guilty of several unforgivable flaws. The setting is fantastic, you've got your basic Scooby-Doo gang archetypes filming a documentary. In this case they're traversing across Middle America looking for the most extreme 'Halloween Haunts', annually staged houses of Horror for those seeking a good scare. This allows for some really fun use of the found footage format, as the camera gets to track along POV inside these spooky attractions. It makes for a really fun ride with various acting maniacs and ghouls fighting for attention to terrify you the most. As the gang continue to find increasingly extreme attractions with equally crazier actors and staff, they hear of a traveling haunt that promises the ultimate night of terror. Things that are good; the actual documentary footage where we meet the various kooky costumed curators of these events, all with interesting personalities and off-kilter world views, I love the costumes and carnival aspect to the haunts. Visually it owes a huge debt to Rob Zombie's cult favourite House of a Thousand Corpses with a lurid green glow and many a 'Captain Spaulding' like clown populating the screen. Ultimately, much of the success or failure of these films depend solely on wether or not I can stand to be in the stars company for an hour and a half, and whether or not they have credible reasons to shoot footage no matter what. Luckily, the gang are a fun and varied bunch who bring a good percentage of levity to proceedings and their reasons for shooting are fully justified throughout. The overall threat-factor, antagonist and story are all very weak. There is zero meat on the bones of The Houses of Halloween with the thinnest of concepts carved from both The Blair Witch Project and Paranormal Activity. In-between travelling to locations, the gang meet an admittedly creepy looking porcelain doll-faced girl who keeps turning up at the strangest times, leading to an un-earned, fright less conclusion. The best version of this movie is a full-on documentary about Halloween Haunts, it's clearly the most engaging element of the footage and I would have loved to have seen this explored in greater depth and detail. It's a shame, because the rollercoaster is pretty fun while it lasts. What a pity that it breaks down just before its final, thrilling descent.
Paul Hyett Interview- HOWL
Close-upfilm's Mark Bartlett caught up with practical effects guru turned director PAUL HYETT (The Seasoning House) ahead of the release of his second feature Howl, which sees a disparate group of stranded train passengers besieged by Werewolves! It's enormously entertaining, gory fun and Paul was kind enough to share some info to whet our appetites. Howl stars Ed Speelers, Sean Pertwee, Rosie Day, Shauna MacDonald and Duncan Preston and is released via Metrodome on DVD and BLURAY on October 26th. Mild spoilers below. Close-upfilm- Howl was an absolute blast, and couldn't be more different from The Seasoning House. Was there a specific vibe you were going for or did you have any really prominent influences? Paul Hyett- Yes it is very different to The Seasoning House, I wanted to do something totally different and the thought of going from a dark, bleak film to a fun, popcorn creature really appealed to me. Influences wise, films like John Carpenterâs The Thing, the 70âs disaster movies, The Towering Inferno, Earthquake etc. I loved the whole premise of interesting characters and how they react in a confined space to a threat outside. I really wanted to have a colourful retro type movie, I kind of miss those movies, so when Howl came along I was finally able to do a fun traditional retro creature feature. Close-upfilm- The Were-Wolf movie is having a bit of a resurgence at the moment. Along with the writers did you have deliberate intentions to contribute something new to their lore? Paul Hyett- Well, it was always in the discussion to try not to over think and do something innovative for the sake of it. I thought the script worked because of its traditional aspects, and the main contemporary twists we bring are the mix of visual effects and prosthetics and taking away the mythology of full moons and silver bullets. I think wanting to ground it in a more modern world for me felt like the traditional romanticised notion of a man instantly turning into beast from a full moon would feel out of place in our movie. Firstly, I wanted to get away from big old furry werewolves. So my thoughts were to have the transformations take years to fully develop, that it comes from a bite, like a virus that gradually turns a person into a werewolf, that it would take years for the bones to continually breaking, reforming, the muscles to rip and re heal, gradually turning them into a gnarly old werewolf. Close-upfilm- It certainly made me feel a lot more empathy towards the plight of ticket inspectors and the nonsense they have to suffer. Ed Speelers is really enjoyable as an unlikely hero and leader of sorts. Did Ed carry over any of his characters leadership abilities in between takes? Paul Hyett- I suppose thereâs always a certain amount of the character that can or may be left between takes. But to be honest what was nice about Howl, and I was lucky to have such a lovely and talented cast, that it was such an ensemble cast, they really worked well together and everyone came prepared with a lot of ideas so it was a very collaborative process when we were blocking scenes and between takes. Close-upfilm- And it was great to see to see Sean Pertwee again, you've worked with him several times, at this point is he a lucky charm of sorts? Paul Hyett- Sean Pertwee is always a lucky charm. Heâs always just so great to have on the set, such a professional, always comes prepared, great at what he does and such a lovely guy to work with. And it was another opportunity for me to kill him! Close-upfilm- I loved the eclectic cast, it was almost like 'The Breakfast Club' of train passengers! Who on the carriage did you personally identify with the most? Paul Hyett- I love The Breakfast Club reference! First time Iâve heard that. Who did I identify with most? Iâd like to think Edâs character Joe, someone that doesnât really know his own potential and in the time of an emergency steps up and shows his true grit. In reality, probably more towards Paul, who makes stupid decisions and is useless in an emergency. Letâs agree somewhere between the two. Close-upfilm- My wife insists that I ask about any stories you may have about Duncan Preston? (as she was a huge 'Surgical Spirit' fan as a kid!) Paul Hyett- Letâs just say I think the world of werewolves and having your neck ripped out was certainly a new experience for him. Close-upfilm- What was the most complicated/difficult shot to achieve in Howl? Paul Hyett- I think anything with stunts and creatures and actors in harnesses. The shot of the creature smashing through the window and grabbing Rosie day was pretty tough, just as we had to shoot lots of separate plates to put together in post to accomplish the shot safely, lots of wire rigs, stunt doubles, took a lot of planning. And also using a Steadicam on a set that is essentially a long metal sausage, that was a challenge. Close-upfilm- Have you explored everything you want to within the horror genre at this point? Paul Hyett- Oh god, I've not even started yet. So many horror stories I want to bring to the screen. Close-upfilm- What is your personal favourite horror film of the last few years? Paul Hyett- Most recently, I think I was most blown away by the remake of Maniac. A phenomenal movie, totally blew me away.
Julia DVD review
Julia (18) Dir. Matthew A. Brown, 2015, 95 mins Cast: Ashley C. Williams, Jack Noseworthy, Tahyna Tozzi Writer/Director Matthew A. Brownâs debut feature, Julia is violent, stylish revenge fantasy that sits somewhere in-between I Spit on your Grave and 2013âs American Mary by way of Kill Bill and even a small dash of Batman Begins. Star Ashley C. Williams (The Human Centipede: First Sequence) delivers a very strong performance as the titular character, and is rightfully and easily the strongest element of a film, while suffering from a few flaws, has no shortage of ideas, directorial flair and vision. Set in Chinatown, New York, The meek Julia, a young plastic surgeons assistant is on her way to a date with Piers (Ryan Cooper). On arriving at his apartment she is almost immediately drugged and raped by him and his entourage of reprehensible party broâs, and then left for dead. She manages to make her way home, and we discover that Julia has spent most of her life being abused by various tormentors and has turned to self-harm as a result. Julia overhears someone discussing a revolutionary new therapy that sees victims taking back power from their attackers. Her mentor Sadie, helps Julia though this unorthodox healing process, but revenge is at the forefront of Juliaâs heart. This was a really great showcase for Ashley C. Williams as an actress beyond the normal tropes of the horror genre and I can see why it would be such an appealing role. I have several scenes in my head that really stand out for me as being particularly great. My favorite shots were the sustained frames of Julia at home after her initial attack, during these Williams communicates very strongly with just her eyes, at key points even breaking the forth wall and addressing the viewer directly. Juliaâs origin story is dispensed with quickly, and the plot wastes no time shifting towards her therapy, and transformation into a seductive revenger and anti-hero of sorts. The secret organisation orchestrating Juliaâs therapy headed by the mysterious Dr. Sgundud (Jack Noseworthy) and the enigmatic Sadie (Tahyna Tozzi) reminded of the clandestine âLeague of Shadowsâ in Christopher Nolanâs Dark Knight Trilogy (intentional or not). Visually, JULIA is a stunning film. The neon-noir colour palette, with beautiful reds, greens and yellows really stood out to me throughout. The shot composition is noticeably great and clear thought has gone into ensuring that Juliaâs themes of duality and transformation are reflected in the cinematography. The soundtrack is a real highlight; itâs chilled and often sugary pop contrasting brilliantly against the harsh visuals. I especially loved the tracks âJulietta 1 and 2â, by the Icelandic band Ske I really enjoyed how the tracks communicated the concept of fate/destiny and transformation for Julia. The music isnât just attractive window dressing, and serves the plot for much of Juliaâs runtime. It would be disingenuous to describe Julia as a horror film. While it certainly draws from the genre in that sometimes itâs horrifying but never really scary, itâs more accurately described as a fantasy thriller, with a comic book origin arc that demands sequels. Stylistically It owes far more to Japanese /Korean revenge thrillers Audition, I Saw the Devil and Old Boy. The supporting cast do a fine job but there is never any doubt that this is Williamâs film from the outset. My chief criticism is that while Julia is never less than beautiful both visually and aurally, from a purely narrative viewpoint I wished Julia spent a little bit more time focussing on Dr. Sgundudâs organisation and explaining the various plot points of its slightly rushed final act. Ultimately, Julia is a superior revenge film with an excellent and original look, sound and lead performance that rewards multiple viewings. I look forward to seeing Ashley C. Williams and Matthew A. Brown collaborate again on this interesting character. Review by Mark Bartlett Julia is out now on DVD and digital.
Director Matthew A. Brown and Star Ashley C. Williams Talk About Julia
Director Matthew A. Brown and Star Ashley C. Williams Talk About Julia Mark Bartlett at close-upfilm.com caught up with Director Matthew A. Brown and Star Ashley C. Williams (The Human Centipede) ahead of the release of JULIA on DVD and VOD. Williams delivers a memorable central performance in this violent, stylish revenge fantasy that sits somewhere in-between I Spit on your Grave and 2013âs American Mary by way of Kill Bill. Julia, a young plastic surgeons assistant is drugged and raped by Piers (Ryan Cooper) and his friends, and then left for dead. She manages to make her way home, where we discover that Julia has spent most of her life being abused by various tormentors and has turned to self-harm as a result. Later Julia overhears someone discussing a revolutionary new therapy that sees victims taking back power from their attackers. Be warned that some SPOILERS follow. JULIA is available on DVD and VOD now. Close-upfilm.com: I really enjoyed Julia (if thatâs the correct word for a film that tackles such a difficult topic, admired maybe?) I feel itâs vastly different to many of the revenge based horror films Iâve seen over the past few years. In some respects it felt like Juliaâs arc was almost like a comic-book movie, in that her origin story is dispensed with quickly and then sheâs mentored and becomes a revenger and anti-hero of sorts. Do you feel that thereâs more story to tell with Juliaâs character should you ever choose to go back? Matthew: Glad you enjoyed it. Yes, the arc of Juliaâs character is extreme and it was always that that most interested me in the story in the first place. Iâve always gravitated towards stories that involve characters undergoing profound-even radical-transformation. At the time, when I was approached about adapting my short VICTIM into a feature, which became JULIA-I was very into Asian cinema, Japanese /Korean revenge thriller/horrors (like Miikeâs Audition, Jee-woon Kimâs I Saw the Devil, the Old Boy trilogy), as well as Johnnie Toâs Hong Kong gangster noirs, particularly Vengeance, so this all fused together into this dark and ecstatic story of this meek girl evolving into this striking empowered âanti-heroâ as you say. Funnily enough, Iâd always envisioned JULIA as a trilogy, and so yes there is A LOT more to tell with Juliaâs character⊠Of course Ashley and I have spoken about this, so weâll see what the universe has in store. Ashley: Well, the way the film came to me was as a proposed trilogy, so it would be so so cool to go back to her story and continue the journey. I do feel that there is so much more to explore. Matthew and I have spoken about what it might entail and there are so many exciting avenues we could take. Close-upfilm.com: Ashley, This was a really great showcase for you as an actress beyond the tropes of the horror genre and I can see why it would be such an appealing role. I have several scenes in my head that really stand out for me as being great, but looking back, are there any particular sequences in Julia where you personally think to yourself âYâknow, I did a pretty good job there!â? Ashley: Thank you! I think these types of roles donât come around very often. I am extremely grateful to have been given that opportunity as an actress. When i watch the film, i am definitely pleasantly surprised at myself in certain scenes. When iâm in the moment, i donât actually remember what happened afterward, or what i did. So when watching the film, its interesting to see what actually transpires outwardly through what iâm feeling internally. I think definitely the shower scene stands out to me. The long moment when i turn my head to look into the camera and break the 4th wall in a way. That was actually the last scene we shot after a long month of shooting and i remember being so exhausted but just feeling so IN THE ZONE of this character. I was at the height of the characters transformation in a way. In this scene, Julia for the first time, senses her destiny, this dark path ahead of her. So in a way it was absolutely perfect that it ended up being the last shot we did. Cause all of what she ends up going through in the film was already in me. I had lived it already. Close-upfilm.com: Visually, JULIA is a stunning film. The colour palette, with all those beautiful reds, greens and yellows really stood out to me thoughout. Was there any story driven intention behind these choices or was the colour scheme chosen a result of your personal aesthetic/what you think looks cool? Matthew: The visual style for me is and was intensely connected to the actual story I am telling. Fundamentally this is a story about a woman, who, through intense suffering, undergoes a transformation into a holy ecstatic albeit violent/evil being. Almost like a twisted urban fairytale⊠As Julia awakens, she begins to associate things most would consider dark or ugly with extreme beauty, so everything was about this juxtaposition of beauty/ugliness, beauty/cruelty, the raw vs. the poetic⊠the dark fusing with the ecstatic⊠as this is what was living inside this woman and this is what I wanted to manifest externally and experientially. Also, the story takes place in the underbelly of NYC, an NYC seldom scene, Julia as the meek and broken nurse had chosen to live in Brooklynâs Chinatown where she could hide from the world, where those around her couldnât speak her language and vice versa, and of course Iâd be lying if I didnât say that visually that small stretch of Chinatown in Brooklynâs Sunset Park area on 8th Ave is the only place that really excited me visually when searching for where she lived. But I did this while still working on the script. So again it was all embedded in the story. And then yes, as noted above, my then fascination with Asian cinema, the âneon-noirâ lighting schemes, and the vision of Julia as the creation of this new almost mythic anti-hero, all was integrally part of both story and aesthetic⊠There never was for me the question of what I thought would look cool or not, it was that this whole story and vision was designed to deliver a brutal and ecstatic rush, which IS Juliaâs own experience. close-upfilm.com: The soundtrack throughout is absolutely awesome, so thank you for curating a new playlist for me! I especially love the two Ske tracks âJulietta 1 and 2â, coincidentally named or did you always have these songs in mind during the writing process? Matthew: Thank you! So this is one of those magical synchronicity things that happens I believe when you are committed all-in and acting from a place of real conviction. We were editing the film in Iceland as both my editor, Sverrir Kristjansson, as well as my composer, Frank Hall, are Icelandic, so it made the most sense logistically. So I was having dinner at Frankâs place one night and we were talking about his Icelandic band Ske and I was like, âman, I need to listen to this stuff, who knowsâŠâ and then BOOM, this song comes on, and my skin shivered, I was âlike this is itââfor the opening shot of Julia coming up the escalator, for which we hadnât yet found the right trackâand Frank wasnât sure, he thought initially itâs too poppy; I asked what itâs called: âJuliette 1â. I think I almost cried. Then another track comes on, the only other track on the album I really responded to, and I thought, fuck this is perfect for when Juliaâs floating all high through the streets the morning after the castration, and again Frank felt maybe itâs too poppyâŠWhatâs this one called?: âJuliette 2â. These were the only two tracks sung by this Japanese singer, who turns out wasnât even a singer, rather an artist and then girlfriend of one of the band members and she just made up the lyrics on the fly. For Juliette 1, when Julia is coming up the escalator on her way to her dream date, the lyrics are (in Japanese): âhe loves me, he loves me notâ. Close-upfilm.com: I really enjoyed how the Ske tracks introduced the three acts and communicated the concept of fate/destiny and transformation for Julia, the bookend scenes with Ashley on the escalator illustrate that best for me. The escalator is leading Julia to a predetermined fate at the beginning, Julia walks to a similar track at the beginning of act two and is thus in control of her own destiny, then finally her fate is sealed again (and her transformation complete) for the final act. On the second watch I also noticed several shots composed in thirds with multiple reflections of Julia, was fate and destiny a big focus in the script initially? Matthew: Thank you for this. The entire vision was built around Julia being summoned towards her dark fate/destiny. This is the story outside the picture I was talking about before. This is THE driving force for so much of the approachâwhen sitting down with my composer for the first time, for example, the discussion was all about how to create the feeling of eternity in the frame⊠the feeling that the universe is summoning us to be and own who we really are, and the indescribable beauty of realizing that fully. The opening shot in the escalator was so fundamental strictly because of this: It IS Julia being summoned towards this her dark fate. The other even more fundamental shot I will talk more about below as I saw you brought it up⊠Close-upfilm.com: Iâll give up my favourite and say I absolutely loved the slow zoom shot in the bath-tub post attack. Ashley communicated so much with just her eyes, and when she looks directly into the camera itâs like Julia is breaking the forth wall and addressing the viewer directly. I thought there were a few ways to read this scene but did you have any particular intentions when the scene was conceived? Matthew: This is the moment in Juliaâs life when for the first time she senses the dark path, her Destiny, ahead of her⊠The feeling is beyond words, it comes with a certain certitude, a knowledge, that she is here for something much greater than she realizes⊠though she doesnât yet know what to do with it. It is the universe speaking directly to her soul. Juliaâs turning and looking directly into the lens like this was scripted as such⊠because the entire vision of the movie is encapsulated for me in this moment. The incredible thing is that this shot was literally the very last take of the very last set-up of the entire shootâIt wasnât intended to be that way; weâd had to make up for not having made one of our daysâin fact the only day throughout the shoot that we didnât make. It was the way it had to be. close-upfilm.com: Self-harm and sexual abuse are obviously very complex topics to tackle in genre cinema. Did you feel any responsibility to tell a story that would resonate with victims in a helpful/meaningful way? Matthew: My intention was always for JULIA to live in a heightened reality as opposed to a gritty docudrama type of film which would necessitate tackling the subject of rape head on, so it was very important for me to establish the tone of the story right from the get-goâpictorially, tonally, emotionallyâso my hope is that this could not be mistaken for something other than it is. But I was always very conscious of the gravity of the subject. My mom is a clinical psychologist whoâs dealt a lot with patients not unlike Julia so I spent a lot of time discussing with her, also with regards to the therapyânot that she thought this was a viable way to healâbut it was important to me that it was grounded in truth, as I in no way wanted to sensationalize the act. We chose to show the rape in flashbacks so as to allow the audience to come close to Julia inside her pain, to make it about the darkness sheâs living in on a day-to-day basis, rather than about the act. For me this is not a film about rape. It is a film in which a woman, who has spent her whole life suffering abuse at the hands of others, is pushed to the point where she cannot live with herself any longer. To force a character to the extremity of being and perception at which Julia arrives, wherein they have no option but to either transcend/ transmute the pain, or not go on living any longer, something truly terrifying needed to happen to her, something that would break anyoneâman or womanâand rape, I donât know of anything that could tear at someoneâs sense of self more than that. At one of our festival screenings in Australia, a woman approached Ashley and I after the screening, saying that watching this film made her understand a friendâs suicideâa friend who had undergone something akin to Julia. This had a huge impact on both Ashley and I. I only hope others who may have had similar experiences can also take something away from what weâve created. Ashley: I think Matthews answer to this question says everything i feel too! close-upfilm.com: Ashley, My wife was thrilled to hear that you were in her all time favourite movie âWillowâ at a young age! Was drama and creativity a big part of your family growing up? Did you have any particular heroes or influences? Ashley: Ahh thats so cool! I love that film too. So cool to have been a part of it. So yes, I was brought up in a very creative environment. My parents made sure we had a lot of freedom to explore. I had a lot of energy around the house, so I was constantly, singing, dancing, I played musical instruments, made forts, went exploring, and eventually my mom started taking me to auditions for local theatre productions. I started booking roles like Tigerlily in Peter Pan and Annie in the musical Annie. I loved being on stage. I donât know what it was, but i guess I started getting good at it and loved it so much and eventually I was like hmm.. maybe this is who I am. I was obsessed with musicals at a very young age too. I think Barbara Streisand was a big influence at the time. Then when I started watching more adult movies, I was truly inspired by Vivien Leighâs performance in Gone with the Wind. I wanted to do that. Be her. I started reading books about her and her career and what it was like to be a movie actress and play such challenging roles so convincingly etc. My idols became Katherine Hepburn, Vivien Leigh, Isadora Duncan and Meryl Streep. I moved to New York City and went to acting school. I wanted to be rooted in theatre first. Get good at my craft. I think when i was younger the current Hollywood turned me off a lot and i had nobody pushing me in that direction. So i didnât start to pursue the main stream until about 2 years ago. I didnât want to be known as a pretty face or sucking up to some producer. I wanted to be known for my work as an actress. Little did I know that that would be the longest, hardest road imaginable. Maybe if I had gone to Hollywood at a much younger age my career would be in a very different place now. But it has proved to be the most rewarding and growing experience of my life. close-upfilm.com: Iâm looking forward to seeing you appear in feature roles outside the horror genre, anything coming up that you can share with us? Ashley: A few things are in development. Will be able to share that news soon ! close-upfilm.com: Matthew, Do you know what your next project is yet and would you mind sharing any details? Matthew: I have a number of things in active development now, including a brutal and tragic NY-based gangster film, a WWII war/horror film, also a kickass manga-style Yakuza film.. but donât want to give details beyond that right now. Soon though! Thank you for these insightful questions.
Interview- Alan Jones, founder of Film4 FrightFest
Mark Bartlett at Close-Up Film interviewed FrightFest Festival founder Alan Jones, who has just launched the new FrightFest Presents distribution label to VOD. The initial six titles (AAAAH!, NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB, SAND, AFTERDEATH, SOME KIND OF HATE and ESTRANGED) are on on itunes now and have been carefully curated to appeal to horror aficionados. Mark- First I wanted to thank you for putting on a great FrightFest. I think I got to see more films this year than I ever got to see at any of the previous ones I've been to. I though the line-up was really strong. Alan- Good Mark- The timing's really good actually, because I've just finished watching AFTERDEATH just now, and... Alan- What'd you think? Mark- Erm, it has really, really giant ideas. It's gone to a place in the last ten minutes where the stakes are really really huge. And there's a minute or two left to go and I'm not sure how it's going to end. Really, Really big ideas for such a low budget. Alan- Yeah I really liked it. We liked it because we thought for the budget, it looked great. And the acting was good, and the ideas were terrific. I just love the whole idea of them being sort of fantasy versions of themselves. You know what I mean? I thought that was such a nice, a neat way of putting that across. I thought that was really well done. I like those guys a lot. The AFTERDEATH people were really amazing. As soon as we offered, we asked if we could have the movie for our FrightFest presents label. You know, they didn't have to think about it too long, they just said yeah. People have really gone for it. They've been our supporters as much as we've supported them so I'm really pleased. Mark- Are you involved with any of the films at their inception at the label, or are they just coming to you fully formed? Alan- No, none of them at all. That might change of course. Literally, my only meddling in that area, is sometimes I go on location for these films. I actually report on them for various outlets. I often say 'Ooh, this looks good, can you make sure FrightFest sees it first?' so we can show it, they always say yes. but that's actually my only involvement in it. Mark- So, you've been doing FrightFest for a number of years now. Alan- Sixteen! Mark- What's prompted you and your partner to start the label now? Alan- It's an idea we've had, and it's kind of stuttered over a couple of years. We have had a few false starts on this. ICON distribution have been one of our strongest supporters since we began. Since the year 2000 when we started FrightFest they've always given us movies if they can. They always came to us and said 'we've got this movie, Would you like it?' We've gone 'Yes!', they've really understood everything we've done. I've known everyone in the company all the way through the time. That's rare too actually because personnel changes so much. But y'know, I love that the people involved with us at the moment have been there forever. And so we've got to know them while they've got to know us. What they basically identified was the fact that we know our stuff. We know what films work for an audience, and for a niche audience specifically. None of the films we're dealing with on FrightFest presents could be considered mainstream. I think it's going to be, I think it's always going to have a cult audience. But that's the audience we want. If one breaks out that's fantastic. The Stephen Oram movie might 'Aaaah!'. That's picking up a lot of heat from a lot of people. People are really enjoying that because it's so different, and so unusual. And so that's the reason. Prior to FrightFest we were submitted something like 200 feature films and we do go through them. Sometimes people don't believe me when I say that but we actually do. I don't know how other festivals deal with it we we watch them all, all the way through. We don't fast-forward, because you never know, something might happen halfway that changes everything. The six films we chose for FrightFest presents came about because of that selection process. We would go to ICON and say, 'take a look at this, what do you think?', and they would invariably come back and say 'wow, this isn't the sort of film we would ever deal with', because they're looking for things that are a bit more mainstream, y'know like IT FOLLOWS and THE GUEST, you know the type of films ICON release like THE TRANSPORTER... Those types of films. But they realised that we know our stuff when it comes to the quirky arena. As a result of that they trust us to do it. I think we've come up with six great titles with a wider appeal than even we expected them to have. Mark- Well that was going to be one of my next questions, about the shear amount of content you have to sift through. After sixteen years you must have seen hundreds, thousands of horror movies at this point? How are you able to stay so energised about the genre at this point? I'm sure it'd be nice if someone could curate for yourself sometimes? Alan- I've always loved it, I've loved horror ever since I was a child. I'm lucky to have made this my profession and I don't ever want to denigrate that. I know the position I'm in is a good one, and I'd never, ever abuse that position. I actually think it's really important, and for me that's why FrightFest works because I'm a fan as much as the rest of you. I would never want any dividing line between us and the audience. That's not what it's about for me, as much as I can I'm in the audience. That's how you get to find out what people want to see and what's going on. The film-makers appreciate that as well. As much as we're supporting film-makers, they're supporting us by allowing us to show their excellent work. If we can give something else back and say 'Hey, we've got this new label. Would you consider being on it?' I think it's a whole new way of delivering product to your audience, I don't like calling it product at all but that's the way some distributors speak. If anything goes really well on the VOD platform, then we'll release it as a physical item. I think AAAAH! will go that way definitely. I think that's going to be popular and the one people will watch again and again. Mark- Welllll, I've got my personal opinions on that Alan. Having seen all six films I have to say I really really loved AFTERDEATH, SAND, and particularly NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB. Alan- Well, NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB... I don't know whether you've seen my intro or not but I just get so enthused about it. The Director Kyle Rankin is an old friend. Not that it would matter, if his film was terrible I would have told him trust me! But I loved this one, I thought it was so funny, so moving. Mark- Yeah, I thought it was really charming, kind of like THE UNBREAKABLE KIMMY SMIDT in a lot of ways. The lead actress Maria Thayer was very funny, as was the whole cast... And I just love Ray Wise. Alan- Yeah, I agree with you wholeheartedly. The last twenty minutes I thought were so lovely, it kind of leaves you out of breath. I just really loved it, and was really happy when Kyle told us we could have it. Yeah I really want that to break out because it's got really wide appeal with a lot of audiences. I know it's got horror elements, but it's got a lot of heart and soul with it too. I'm really pleased about that one. What did you think about SAND? Mark- SAND I just found to be fully enjoyable, I expected a creature feature and it delivered on that. But there was a twist on the concept and I just felt it was a really great execution of a simple idea. Alan- It really was. To take a beach, and have that be the enclosed space you're working in, I just thought it was really well done. It was the first film we thought would work for the label and it was the first film we acquired. Mark- I saw SOME KIND OF HATE at FrightFest and really enjoyed that too. What I especially liked was that it was trying to bring back the pop icon status of the Horror baddie in (antagonist) Moira. What I've been looking for, for some time is a return to the larger than life characters like Freddy Kruger and Jason Vorhees. I really felt it was trying to honour that. Alan- Yeah, true. It was the director Adam Egypt Mortimer's intention to do that but in a more French, extreme way. I often see him at festivals and we talk about this all the time, he's a massive fan of MARTYRS, INSIDE, FRONTIERS and stuff like that. Mark- Me too! Alan- He was trying to give that sort of edge to the movie and I think he succeeded. I think it's really great. We were quite worried about that film, in that the BBFC would look at what it's about, self-harm... I don't know if you remember but SOUL-MATE had a bit of trouble because of that. When they passed it we were delighted of course. I'm happy you liked it because it's one of my particular favourites. I'd like to see it continue. Adam's doing about 300 different movies at the moment but I'd like to see him return to that character. It's done very very well in America. Mark- You must be delighted with how AAAAH! is doing? Lots of people are talking about it. Alan- It's just so different isn't it? People either really love it or hate it. We've been road showing it in various places on Friday nights and some people are coming out saying 'God, that was dreadful!' while others found it completely fantastic, it's that divisive. And that's not a bad thing because it makes people talk about it. It's great if you go into it knowing nothing. When I first saw it I didn't know what was going on for the first ten minutes, until of course you lock into the film and go 'Oh, I understand'. I'm really happy with it. Mark- What kind of films scared you as child? Do you still have a sphere of influences that effects what type of film you want to see now? Are you still chasing you feeling you had when you were younger when you were more easily frightened? Alan- Well, that's what every horror fan's after isn't it? I was lucky in that the first horror film I saw in the cinema when I was old enough was Mario Bava's BLOOD AND BLACK LACE, and of course when I look back, I can see that set everything I've done since in stone. It was Italian, the fact that I wrote the Dario Argento book, my love of baroque, a bit of violence, slashers... It's all there! I'm happy to say with no regrets that everything stems from that. And I realised pretty soon afterwards that not all horror was going to shock you to death like that one. Y'know the ropey stuff comes along as well, but you can gauge it. Classics like PSYCHO, TEXAS CHAINSAW, THE EXORCIST, HALLOWEEN... The last film that really did get to me was MARTYRS. I was such a major supporter of the film at the time because I thought 'My God! I've never seen anything like this!'. That's the sort of thing I was looking for. Have you seen BONE TOMAHAWK? Mark- No, not yet but I'm excited for it. Is it the Kurt Russell one? Alan- Yes. That one really did shock me in a way that I haven't been shocked, you'll see what I mean when you see it. It's the first time in a long time when I've turned to the person next to me and said 'that was really something wasn't it?'. Mark- I've watched WE ARE STILL HERE a few times in recent weeks and that really did it for me. Alan- Yeah that's a really great movie. Director Ted Geoghegan is a really savvy guy and really knows his stuff. He's really contoured that movie exactly how he wanted it. That's a great one! What did you think of ESTRANGED? Mark- I enjoyed it, I'll confess to not liking it as much as NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB, SAND or SOME KIND OF HATE Alan- That's ok! You can see in our first six titles for FrightFest presents that we've chosen something for everything no matter where your taste in horror lies. We didn't initially plan in that way, but we realised we had a sci-fi movie, a zom-rom-com, a creature feature, a supernatural slasher. We couldn't have planed it better.
My Top 100 Favourite Movies of all Time
In no particular order...... Goodfellas A Nightmare on Elm Street The Dark Knight The Shining Rocky The Fly Beauty and the Beast Eyes Wide Shut Transformers: The Movie Batman There Will Be Blood Fight Club Nightcrawler Swingers Clueless Grease When Harry Met Sally American Beauty There's Something About Mary Trainspotting Pulp Fiction Reservoir Dogs Batman Returns Taxi Driver Blue Velvet The Big Lebowski Alien Seven Kill Bill Batman Begins Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Drive The Silence of the Lambs Carrie 2001: A Space Odyssey Star Wars: Episode IV- A New Hope The Matrix The Dark Knight Rises Pinocchio X-Men Jurassic Park X-Men: Days of Future Past Iron Man 3 Guardians of the Galaxy Captain America: The Winter Soldier The Avengers Dawn of the Planet of the Apes Commando Star Wars: Episode V- The Empire Strikes Back Aliens Robocop Black Swan Toy Story Mad Max: Fury Road Night of the Living Dead Who Framed Roger Rabbit The Incredibles Whiplash Predator The Exorcist Jaws Interstellar Gremlins Full Metal Jacket Terminator 2: Judgement Day Real Steel Dredd Beavis and Butthead Do America Evil Dead 2 Beetlejuice Hellraiser Akira The Texas Chainsaw Massacre The Muppets Christmas Carol Ghostbusters American Psycho Halloween Interview with the Vampire Spirited Away Superbad Clerks The Wedding Singer The Mask The Truman Show Groundhog Day Shaun of the Dead It's a Wonderful Life South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut The Godfather Birdman The King of Comedy Titanic Hairspray L.A Confidential The Shawshank Redemption Scarface The Blues Brothers Chef Home Alone The Breakfast Club
Review: Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
Cards on the table immediately, Alfonso Gomez-Rejon's second feature Me and Earl and the Dying Girl is utterly, completely fantastic, and more than deserving of the heaps of plaudits already bestowed upon it. It's easy to see how, when the film premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival, it was honoured with a standing ovation and won the U.S. Grand Jury Prize. Me and Earl and the Dying Girl Is written by Jessie Andrews and based on his 2012 novel of the same name. It's bevy of stars include, Thomas Mann (Project X), Olivia Cooke (Bates Motel, The Quiet Ones), Ronald Cyler II in his feature debut, Jon Bernthal (The Walking Dead, Fury, soon to be seen as The Punisher in Marvel's Daredevil), Nick Offerman (Parks and Recreation), Connie Britton (Friday Night Lights) and Saturday Night Live veteran Molly Shannon. You also get an hilarious and unexpected A-list cameo. Senior Greg Gaines (Thomas Mann) drifts through school life while only paying friendly lip service to various social cliques while not belonging to a single group. Rachel Kushner (Olivia Cooke), has been diagnosed with leukaemia, and Greg is guilted by his folks (Nick Offerman and Connie Britton) into befriending her despite her initial reluctance. Greg introduces Rachel to his longtime 'Co-worker' Earl (Ronald Cyler II), who he shares a joint passion for the classics of world cinema. Together, they shoot numerous parody versions of classic films with a zero budget, with hilarious titles such as 'Crouching House Cat, Hidden House Cat' and 'A Sock-Work Orange' (obviously told in sock puppets). Bonding over the homemade movies Earl decides to share with Rachael. The film chronicles the trio's budding friendship as Rachel goes through chemotherapy. Greg begins spending less time on his education and more time caring for his increasingly sick new friend. The performances are great right across the board, with the central trio all delivering equally likeable and relatable performances, the quality of writing emphasises the individuality of the three main players while completely selling their friendship. Rachael is inclusive, open minded and encouraging, Greg is good humoured, kind-hearted but isolated. Earl anchors everything with his cool, laid back and wise outlook on life. The biggest laughs arguably come from the supporting cast with Molly Shannon as Rachael's inappropriately flirtatious mom, and Nick Offerman as Greg's cuisine adventurous Dad being the highlights. It manages to be truly romantic without any of the contrivances of other films within its genre. Rather than provide plot resolutions that fall in line with teen movie tropes, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl ensures its sentimentality always feels natural, even at the risk of failing to deliver a satisfying conclusion. It's a tightrope walk that would fail in less skilled hands, but Gomez-Rejon just about manages to pull it off. The hearty, tear jerking high school comedy genre is a crowded arena, and Gomez-Rejon is brave to show off a completely different set of skills after helming last year's far above average meta-slasher remake The Town that Dreaded Sundown (which we also absolutely recommend checking out). The camera work and shot composition is such a huge part of why everything works so well, Gomez-Rejon directs like this is the first and last film he'll ever make, with numerous creative implementations of swooning camera movement throughout. A large array of shots are included, and as Greg and Earl both wear their love for cinema on their sleeve, Gomez-Rejon has shot Me and Earl and the Dying Girl with an academic passion far above the standard, workman-like requirements of the American high school movie. Beyond framing choices, much detail is packed into its scenery that will reward multiple watches. This delivers on some of the films ultimate themes that I won't spoil here. Within these details many other creative mediums are employed not limited to claymation, origami, puppetry... even exotic foods. Gomez-Rejon manages to bring real thespian heft to this coming of age tale, perfectly balancing comedic elements and dramatic weight. The fact that it does so while delivering some real relatable insight into heavy topics such as mortality, loss and the purpose of art is a real achievement which instantly catapults Me and Earl and the Dying Girl to the heights of the very best movies about youth and school. The lighting is lovely and the score, by Brian Eno and Nico Muhly is appropriate and enjoyable if not particularly memorable. The stunning cinematography by Chung-hoon Chung is noticeably great throughout, with many frames composed in a clearly symmetrical fashion that's reminiscent of the films of Wes Anderson. In so many ways it's absolutely a love letter to art and cinema, with various homages not just within the Greg and Earl's Be Kind Rewind style, Sweded versions of classics, but also within the film itself. There's something transcendent and Kubrick-ian about Cooke's final scene, as it evokes both 2001: A Space Odyssey's birth of the star child as well as the wide-eyed, prison brain washing in A Clockwork Orange. It winds up finally revelling not just in the universal language of film, but also it's small, personal and intimate nature. Movies like Me and Earl and the Dying Girl are the rarest commodity within a genre that often rewards sticking to a strict formula. it's so infrequent that we get to witness high-school comedy handled with such intelligence, such effective charm and panache. The experience finally makes us feel we've just watched the birth of a new auteur in the form of Alfonso Gomez-Rejon.