Thor: Ragnarok’s Most Disappointing Part? Cate Blanchett As The Goddess of Death Tom Bond November 8, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion Thor: Ragnarok overcomes a lot of Marvel’s traditional problems – predictable three-act structure, bland quips and visuals – and turns its tics into triumphs – for example, crafting the inevitable and...
Soderbergh’s Solaris: A Superior Hollywood Remake Patrick Nabarro August 22, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion Steven Soderbergh has always been a filmmaker who belies easy stereotyping. His prolificness and his chameleon-like ability to switch between genres, between the arthouse and the mainstream, have always made...
How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Blockbusters Tom Bond July 11, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion When you’re young it’s not cool to like blockbusters. It’s not really uncool either. They’re just a fact of life. Cinema and blockbusters are one and the same. Star Wars, Back to the Future, Indiana...
Why The World’s End is Edgar Wright’s Best Film Phil W. Bayles June 26, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion "To err is human! So... err... " Hype can be a cruel mistress. After the first two instalments of Edgar Wright’s Cornetto Trilogy were respectively one of the best British horror movies of the century so...
Why Scott Pilgrim vs The World is Edgar Wright’s Best Film Tom Bond June 25, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion “He punched a hole in the moon for me. That’s pretty crazy.” It’s also not the kind of line you’d expect to find within Edgar Wright’s Cornetto trilogy. Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, Wright's first...
Why Hot Fuzz is Edgar Wright’s Best Film David Brake June 22, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion Have you ever wondered why the crime rate in Sandford is so low, yet the accident rate is so high? Ah, the plight of the middle child; stuck between the precocious first-born and the youngster who’s allowed...
Why Shaun of the Dead is Edgar Wright’s Best Film Sinead McCausland June 20, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion Fans often underestimate the staying power of Shaun of the Dead, the first of Edgar Wright's "Three Flavours Cornetto" trilogy. When held up against Wright's more recent films like Hot Fuzz, The World's End,...
Why 12 Angry Men is More Relevant Than Ever Tom Bond May 16, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion These are not tolerant times. It takes no stretch of the imagination to picture a minority man being swiftly sentenced to death because his peers were too lazy or short-sighted or racist to view his case as...
Would The Mighty Boosh Ever Work on Film? Jack Blackwell May 3, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion Julian Barratt and Noel Fielding’s surreal and ingenious comedy world The Mighty Boosh took on radio, live stage shows, and three wonderful seasons of TV. With Barratt writing and starring in the excellent...
Wrestlers in Film: The Good, the Bad and the Beefy Joni Blyth April 27, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion With Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 out this week, it’s worth taking a look at an unsung hero among the unsung heroes of the universe. Yes, the talking tree is cute and Andy Dwyer has abs and a star on the...
Why Vampire Movies Will Never Die Naomi Soanes April 21, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion Anyone that's seen the trailer for The Transfiguration will know that it appears to be a lot more Let The Right One In than Twilight. Coming across as dark, bloody and completely inscrutable, it follows all...
Why A Field in England is Ben Wheatley’s Best Film Jack Blackwell March 28, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion From Down Terrace to the soon-to-be-released Free Fire, Ben Wheatley has cemented his reputation as one of the most celebrated and interesting voices in British cinema of the last decade. Starting with...
Why Multiple Maniacs Might Be John Waters’ Masterpiece Cathy Brennan March 21, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion When I read what critics have to say about John Waters’ early films, I find they always use the word “shocking.” John Waters never shocked me; he excited me. And Multiple Maniacs may be his most...
Which Disney Movies Deserve A Remake Next? Joni Blyth March 14, 2017 Opinion Disney’s Beauty and the Beast live action remake is finally here and whether you’re excited, resentful or just plain uninterested – this is only the start. The House of Mouse have already announced a...
Zodiac At 10: Fincher’s Forgotten Masterpiece Conor Morgan March 2, 2017 Analysis, Features, Opinion We hate to break it to all the 14-year-old boys and alt-right shitheads out there, but Fight Club is not the best film ever made. Nor is it David Fincher’s best film. The same is true of Se7en, The Social...