Apartment 1BR
Full review can be read HERE. 3/5
The Boondock Saints 2: All Saints Day
The first film is a cult classic and is just such a brilliant film, how
do you top that? Well, you make a sequel that makes nearly no sense whatsoever
and you bring back familiar faces and replace Willem Dafoe because he was most
likely busy. This time, a hitman is hired by the mafia to murder a priest to
bring the Saints back to Boston so they can have revenge BUT of course when The
Saints arrive, with new pal Romeo as their sidekick, things do not go according
to plan. There are moments of hilarity and ridiculous scenarios as well as
amsuing details such as the emphasis on the hitman's height but this is the
world of The Saints here so you have to expect the weird stuff. 3/5
Room
The harrowing story of a woman kept captive for years in a shed with the
only positive part of her life, her young son is a film I didn't run to see at
the cinema. Mainly because of the story and the real-life story that inspired
it. Brie Larson is brilliant in the film as is the breakout star Jacob Tremblay
as Jack, their bond and chemistry is the obviously the heart and soul of the
film. Seeing the story unfold through Jack's eyes brings a new perspective on
this type of story and I can see why there was so much hype around the film
when it was first released. Waiting all this time to see it, I don't think took
anything away, but the kidnapping and the strain everything put upon Larson's
Ma is so painful to watch. Jack has his life ahead of him but Ma will be
forever scarred and forever in pain and fear, even with time and I can't let that
go. 4/5
12 Monkeys
After years of this film sitting in my ‘to watch’ pile (in my mind) I finally got the film I had heard so much about. A science fiction thriller from Terry Gilliam, when he was making great films, is hard to resist. Of course, this is a film that resonates now more than ever, revolving round a disease that was spread in 1996 driving what remained of the human race underground. Future man Bruce Willis is time travelled back in time to find out who is responsible for the virus getting out and, in that time, makes friends with crazy Brad Pitt and scientist Madelaine Stowe with fixed effects. It’s a pretty damn good film despite making me feel uneasy in the state we all find ourselves in. 3/5
Tenet
I went to support the film that was meant to welcome people back to cinemas and I still stand by this, but, this film, was not a masterpiece. Nolan has some great ideas but how executes them is with varying success. Inception was about dreams and our perception of reality, here he cross the time travel line but it isn’t really a time travel story, it’s about time inverted….WHAT?! Starting with a fantastic opening scene pumped full of adrenalin but then quickly morphed into a sequence of fast dialogue heavy scenes that do not set up the story and does not explain anything. Literally, nothing. The only hint, a drawing but that is actually pointless too. There were too many scenes you can’t hear dialogue whether that was part of it all or not. Granted, there are some fantastic visuals but the overall reason for why things are happening is just, weak. There were also quite a few plot holes which I felt were set up in a film set before this one which we will never get to see. 2/5
Beanpole
Full review can be read HERE. 4/5
Schemers
Full review can be read HERE. 2/5
Night School
I usually avoid Kevin Hart vehicles but this has Tiffany Haddish in it so I needed to see it. A fun silly comedy about a guy who struggled with school loses his job and can’t get another without a GED so he goes to night school to get one, meets group of kooky characters each with their own personalities and stories, hides his schooling from his successful girlfriend, is taught by the brilliant Haddish and has to overcome an old rivalry with a guy who knew in and now is the principle of their old high school. It’s all fun and games and dramatically plays down the fact that his character has learning difficulties that had gone unnoticed by his teachers when he was at school, but I suppose that would have been a whole other film with less laughs. 3/5
The Babysitter: Killer Queen
I have a habit of seeing sequels first but with this Netflix film, I didn’t think I needed to see the first film, but now I’ve seen this, I will go back to the start. As far as horror comedies go, this was very fun, ridiculous and I could immediately get into it despite everything that was going on. Picking up a few years later and Cole, still traumatised and trying to move on from the last film’s events decides it’s a great idea to go with his ‘best friend’ knock off blonde from next door and her friends to a lake. Of course, things go very wrong when the ghosts of the cult rise up and try and kill him again. There are flashbacks to how and why everyone joined the cult that are very amusing and silly as well as a very excellent dance scene in place of a sex scene that is better left watched and unspoiled. Cole also has a buddy along for the night of terrors, the equally mysterious and traumatised Phoebe which means our troubled boy has someone to share his story with. 3/5
Scottish Mussel
A wholesome British rom-com that is both impossibly sweet, slightly predictable and something rare all at the same time. Directed (and starring) Talulah Riley, her debut as the former is what you’d expect from the genre but just feels like a new voice that barely got heard. I don’t think this gem enjoyed enough if any attention at the cinema beyond the UK borders (please correct me if I’m wrong). When Ritchie and his friends end up mistaken for pearl thieves, the small-time criminal decides stealing rare Scottish pearls might be a way to make money. But after volunteering at the wild life centre to gain access prime mussel spots, he starts spending more time with Beth, the very passionate conservationist and he begins to change his mind. Unlucky for him, local gangsters have also taken an interest in the pearls too. 4/5