Bushwick – Review Rachel Brook August 25, 2017 Reviews Bushwick assails the eyes and ears with near-continual gunfire and quease-making handheld cinematography. Being forced to follow the characters quickly becomes tedious, and not only visually. The majority of...
The Odyssey – Review Rachel Brook August 20, 2017 Reviews The Odyssey is a radiant and celebratory combination of scientific discovery, cinema history and family saga. It’s as beautiful above sea level as below, boasting lusciously detailed production design. The...
Step – Review Rachel Brook August 13, 2017 Reviews It’s frustrating that Step doesn’t bother to explain what step dance is, but if you’re willing to overlook this there is real insight within. The main subjects, high school seniors applying to college...
Tom of Finland – Review Rachel Brook August 12, 2017 Reviews Whatever your expectations of Tom of Finland, it is sure to upend them. While much promotion has placed Touko Laaksonen’s erotic drawings emphatically front and centre, the film’s Touko keeps them...
The Incredible Jessica James – Review Rachel Brook July 28, 2017 Reviews Frances Ha fans, listen up. A new twenty-something struggling creative is in town, and she has a lot to say. As does writer-director Jim Strouse, whose brainchild Jessica James is an absolute joy to spend time...
Top 10 Unconventional Romantic Comedies Rachel Brook July 27, 2017 Analysis, Features, Top 10 Sundance hit The Big Sick lands in UK cinemas on Friday. This relationship comedy is unconventional for at least two reasons. First, its tale of illness renders the leading lady (Zoe Kazan) comatose for a...
The Big Sick – Review Rachel Brook July 26, 2017 Reviews Ranging from gently witty to laugh-out-loud funny, The Big Sick is a vibrant comedy-drama which always engages despite broadly conventional structure and lack of stylisation. What it lacks in style, it makes...
Cars 3 – Review Rachel Brook July 13, 2017 Reviews Although it’s hardly the most eagerly anticipated Pixar film of recent years, Cars 3 is great fun. While elements of the plot are nonsensical or just not adequately thought through, both the screenplay and...
The Midwife – Review Rachel Brook July 8, 2017 Reviews French legends Catherine Deneuve and Catherine Frot go tête à tête in The Midwife. Despite the rather twee sun-dappled publicity images, Martin Provost’s film plays like a less grim and more substantial...
Tommy’s Honour – Review Rachel Brook July 7, 2017 Reviews Tommy’s Honour makes for an enjoyable slice of social history and provides enough interest from community and familial drama to eclipse the attentions of the niche audience segment who care about the history...
The Last Word – Review Rachel Brook July 6, 2017 Reviews The Last Word is a rare and unusual treat which ignores the obsessive boundaries of Hollywood genre filmmaking, and is all the richer for it. It takes a while to find its groove, however; the opening,...
Romans – EIFF 2017 Review Rachel Brook July 1, 2017 Reviews Romans tells a mostly gripping and urgent story, but the film’s underwhelming and sometimes misjudged decisions keep it from rising above superior fare that tackles similar issues, namely Spotlight and...
A Man Called Ove – Review Rachel Brook June 30, 2017 Reviews On first introduction, Ove (Rolf Lassgård) is a grumbling, busybody stickler whose pedantic neighbourhood rule enforcement and chastisement is likely to be interpreted as over-the-top. The dry comedy of the...
In This Corner of the World – Review Rachel Brook June 28, 2017 Reviews In This Corner of the World starts in media res, offering early indication of the fragmentary structure it never quite overcomes. Though the soft-hued pastel palette is gorgeous to look at – particularly...
Satan Said Dance – EIFF 2017 Review Rachel Brook June 24, 2017 Reviews Like Xavier Dolan’s Mommy, Satan Said Dance is shot in 1:1 aspect ratio, amplifying the sense that the main character finds her life entrapping. Though Katarzyna Roslaniec’s film has flashy style and...