In Defence of Joanna Hogg’s Middle Class Problems Alex Goldstein September 6, 2019 Analysis, Features, One Off Stewart Lee once referred to Joanna Hogg’s second film Archipelago as “an art film about middle class people on a disappointing holiday”. On one level, he is right. There are also plenty of fair reasons...
A Beginner’s Guide To… Pedro Almodóvar Patrick Nabarro August 21, 2019 A Beginner's Guide To..., Features As he closes out his fourth decade directing feature films with the UK release of Pain and Glory - his twenty-first feature - this week, it feels an opportune moment to reflect on the virtuoso career of...
Why Every Generation Needs its Own Little Women Alex Goldstein August 13, 2019 Analysis, By The Book, Features Every generation gets its own adaptation of Little Women, and here is ours, with its first trailer released today. But just how well has Greta Gerwig cast her adaptation compared to past...
Tarantino: A Ranking Chris Edwards August 13, 2019 Analysis, Features, Top 10 With the filmmaker's latest, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, set to drop this week, surely this is the best time to argue over which of the previous entries in Quentin Tarantino's filmography can be held up as...
The Strong Female Character in 2019 Carmen Paddock July 26, 2019 Analysis, Features, Opinion “She’s not alone.” With this line, almost every female superhero that Marvel has in their roster was unleashed against Thanos and his cronies, kicking off the last act of Avengers: Endgame’s closing...
The Cats Trailer and the Movies’ Favourite Moggies Alex Goldstein July 18, 2019 Features, One Off, Opinion Was the Flerken a tentacle too far? Perhaps it was Pet Sematary’s Church on the red carpet that pushed everything over the edge. Whatever it was, just when we were all feline a bit overwhelmed, along came...
Unintentional Horror in Midsommar and The Dead Don’t Die Ben Flanagan July 16, 2019 Analysis, Features, Opinion Something odd is happening with horror movies this summer. Chucky just ate itself with the Child’s Play reboot, which wipes out the gore but doubles down on references for the Stranger Things audience....
Midsommar and the Horrors of Anxiety Phil W. Bayles July 12, 2019 Analysis, Features, Opinion This article contains major spoilers for Midsommar. Ari Aster doesn’t make horror movies; he makes anxiety movies. His filmography is less concerned with things that go bump in the night than provoking...
Can Horror Franchises Keep the Scares Fresh? Katy Moon July 9, 2019 Analysis, Features, Opinion Since the early days of horror cinema, franchising has had the tendency to dull the sharper edges of our favourite horror icons. Twenty-five years after they emerged from the shadows, Universal’s stable of...
Has Spider-Man: Far From Home Changed the Rules for the MCU’s Credit Stingers? Alex Goldstein July 8, 2019 Analysis, Features, One Off New phase, new rules. Spider-Man: Far From Home has been marketed very heavily as the final piece of the Avengers: Endgame puzzle, but, along with Captain Marvel, it marks the beginning of a new era. He might...
Patrick Wilson: The Everyman Scream King Katy Moon July 8, 2019 Analysis, Features, Spotlight There is a moment in The Conjuring 2 in which Patrick Wilson's ghostbuster Ed Warren, hoping to cheer a group of frightened kids, serenades them all with croony Elvis song 'Can’t Help Falling in Love'. With...
Top 10 Movie Moments of 2019… So Far Tom Bond July 5, 2019 Analysis, Features, Top 10 Every summer we like to glance back at the first half of the year and ask that all-important question: which specific moments in film did you love, regardless of the quality of the film itself? Because it's...
Virginia Woolf on Film Josefine Algieri July 4, 2019 Analysis, By The Book, Features In 1926, when film was still a young and emerging artform, Virginia Woolf wrote the essay 'On Cinema', considering the medium with all its possibilities and limitations. In it, she is particularly outspoken on...
The MCU Doesn’t Have the Guts to Make Heroes Unlikeable – But Spider-Man 3 Did Joni Blyth July 1, 2019 Analysis, Features, Opinion We’re back in the MCU after the Endgame – and where better to start over than with Spidey? Everyone has their favourite Spider-Man, but Tom Holland’s iteration will certainly go down as one of the best...
Feminism vs Capitalism in Support the Girls Tom Bond June 27, 2019 Analysis, Close-Up, Features Andrew Bujalski’s Support the Girls is undoubtedly a feminist film, despite being set in a Hooters-esque sports bar where the staff flirt for tips in low-cut tops. Its greatness lies in how it pits its cast...