Writing on Screen: How Biopics Portray Authors Sophie Maxwell May 2, 2019 Analysis, Close-Up, Features In his essay on Richard Eyre’s Iris Murdoch biopic Iris for the Guardian, Martin Amis claims that ‘very broadly, literature concerns itself with the internal, cinema with the external.’ These supposed...
The Melancholy of the Outsider: Tim Burton’s Fantastical Worlds Patrick Nabarro March 27, 2019 Analysis, Close-Up, Features Tim Burton returns this weekend with his 19th feature film as director: a live-action version of Dumbo. While the lingering fascination with his films, and the cultural lure of a reimagined Disney gem like...
The Evolution of Marvel’s Women James Andrews March 6, 2019 Analysis, Close-Up, Features Wrack your brains for somewhere the DC Extended Universe has beaten its rival, Marvel, and you will probably land on Wonder Woman. As well as reintroducing female-led superhero movies after Elektra in 2005, it...
The Changing Face of AI in Anime and its Western Remakes Liz Gorny February 5, 2019 Analysis, Close-Up, Features "I am who?” Tima, the child robot of Rintaro's Metropolis (2001), asks just before she plunges from the edge of a high-rise tower and Metropolis collapses around her. She is parroting the first words ever...
Into Heaven’s Mouth: Remembering Alfonso Cuarón’s Y Tu Mamá También Patrick Nabarro December 12, 2018 Analysis, Close-Up, Features, One Off If we include the about-to-be-released Roma, Alfonso Cuarón has only directed eight feature films across a near 30-year career. The reason for this relative slimness of output is likely to have many factors...
Widows’ Best Shot and How it Takes Over the Film Calum Baker November 11, 2018 Analysis, Close-Up, Features, One Off Any conversation about the director Steve McQueen will involve his long shots. It’s impossible to think of Hunger without remembering Michael Fassbender and Liam Cunningham just chatting for 17 minutes, in...
The Emotional Cinematography of A Single Man Josefine Algieri October 23, 2018 Analysis, Close-Up, Features Tom Ford’s directorial debut A Single Man (2009) is based on Christopher Isherwood’s 1964 novella of the same name, but has its own unique style. Drawing both from personal experience and his professional...
Lost in Translation and the Lonely City Tom McAdam October 4, 2018 Analysis, Close-Up, Features Before its release back in 2003, no one quite knew what to expect from Lost in Translation, an indie romantic comedy set in Japan, starring Bill Murray and a then largely unknown 17-year-old Scarlett...
50 Years of Night of the Living Dead Katy Moon October 1, 2018 Analysis, Close-Up, Features You’re trapped in a secluded farmhouse, surrounded by a growing horde of the ravenous undead. Do you hole up in the secure but inescapable cellar? Or do you stay above ground and try to fortify the...
At The Movies With Clarence And Alabama: True Romance Turns 25 Rory Steabler September 10, 2018 Close-Up, Features, Nostalgia True Romance turns 25 today. A quarter-century after that love letter to sex, violence, and Elvis Presley hit screens (and bombed), we have to ask ourselves: we’re all pretty much over Quentin Tarantino,...
Why Melissa McCarthy is the Best Screen Comedian of the Decade Alice Rooney August 21, 2018 Close-Up, Features, Spotlight With The Happytime Murders out this week and Melissa McCarthy’s previous release, Life of the Party, still managing to draw in crowds ready for a guaranteed laugh with the girls, it looks like her magical...
Why The Shallows Isn’t Really About A Shark James Andrews August 7, 2018 Analysis, Close-Up, Features The plot of 2016 movie The Shallows is pretty easy and quick to sum up: it's Blake Lively versus a shark. This excellent, taut thriller sees her surfer, Nancy, get attacked and injured by a great white - then...
The Heist Film: A History Alice Rooney June 19, 2018 Analysis, Close-Up, Features As a common sub-genre of crime films, the heist is going through a renaissance. In recent years, we have moved from the likes of The Bank Job, a film where Jason Statham does exactly what the title says on the...
Exploring the City and the Self in Jeune Femme Sinead McCausland May 17, 2018 Close-Up, Features, One Off Whether you're a Francophile or not, we’ve all seen and experienced at least one version of the streets of Paris. In 1951’s An American in Paris, Vincente Minnelli turned the Parisian streets into an...
Annihilation and the Terror of the Uncanny Tom Bond April 18, 2018 Analysis, Close-Up, Features Even if you saw Annihilation when it first hit Netflix a month ago, you probably haven’t been able to forget its most powerful scenes. Ostensibly a sci-fi mystery about a meteorite and the strange shimmering...