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THE SCENT OF GREEN PAPAYA – Tiết Tôn-Thất

March 28, 2024 Leave a comment

THROWBACK THIRTY

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

The Scent of Green Papaya (L’Odeur de la Papaye Verte in French, Mùi Đu Đủ Xanh in its native Vietnam) is a Vietnamese drama film, the feature debut of director Tran Anh Hung. Filmed with a cast of mostly non-professional actors, the film presents a poignant portrayal of Mui, a young girl from the countryside, as she transitions into adulthood while working as a servant for a middle-class family in Saigon. Set in 1951 against the backdrop of a Vietnam trying to find its place in the world following the end of French colonial rule, the movie meticulously captures the essence of the country’s culture, landscapes, and traditions, and follows Mui as she navigates her daily life within the confines of the household. When the family’s father absconds with their life savings, the tireless mother is forced to support the family through the slim profits of her tiny fabric store. As the family struggles to make ends meet, Mui becomes attracted to a friend of the family, Khuyen, who has ambitions to be a concert pianist. A decade later, and with the family in dire financial straits, Mui is sent to work in Khuyen’s home. Mui initially serves him as she has served the family – with perfection and silence – but gradually Khuyen begins to take notice of Mui’s love for him. Read more…

GHOSTBUSTERS: FROZEN EMPIRE – Dario Marianelli

March 26, 2024 Leave a comment

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

The fourth film in the ‘primary timeline’ series of Ghostbusters films that began in 1984, and the fifth Ghostbusters film overall, Frozen Empire picks up the story several years after the events of the last film, Ghostbusters: Afterlife. Callie Spengler (Carrie Coon), her boyfriend Gary Grooberson (Paul Rudd), and her children Trevor (Finn Wolfhard) and Phoebe (McKenna Grace) have now taken up residence in the New York firehouse used by the original Ghostbusters, and are using the ghostbusting equipment to fight supernatural entities across the city. However, the Ghostbusters face several threats: New York Mayor Walter Peck (William Atherton), who has never forgiven the ghostbusters for the humiliation of him back in the 80s, continues to try to have them shut down on environmental grounds, and as a result the under-age Phoebe is barred from taking part in ghost hunts, leading to her becoming estranged from her family. Meanwhile, original ghostbuster Ray Stantz (Dan Aykroyd) purchases a brass orb from local resident Nadeem Razmaadi (Kumail Nanjiani) for his occult books and memorabilia store, but quickly determines that the orb is actually a prison for Garraka, a malevolent god who has the ability to telepathically control ghosts, can lower temperatures to absolute zero, and can literally scare people to death. When Garraka escapes from the orb, Ray must come together with the new Ghostbusters – plus some old familiar faces – to stop him taking over the city. Read more…

THE RAZOR’S EDGE – Alfred Newman

March 25, 2024 Leave a comment

GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

Original Review by Craig Lysy

20th Century Fox executive Darryl F. Zanuck decided that the 1944 novel “The Razor’s Edge” by W. Sommerset Maugham would be his next passion project, which would showcase the studio’s star, Tyrone Power. He purchased the film rights in March of 1945 for $250,000 plus 20% of the net profits. Zanuck took personal charge of production with a $1.2 million budget, tasked George Cuckor with directing, but later fired him over creative differences, replacing him with Edmund Gouling. Zanuck also collaborated with writer Lamar Trotti to write the screenplay. An exceptional cast was hired, including Tyrone Power as Larry Darrell, Gene Tierney as Isabel Bradley, John Payne as Gray Muturin, Ann Baxter as Sophie MacDonald, and Clifton Webb as Elliott Templeton. Read more…

FOUR WEDDINGS AND A FUNERAL – Richard Rodney Bennett

March 21, 2024 Leave a comment

THROWBACK THIRTY

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

One of the best romantic comedies of the 1990s, and one of my personal favorite comedies of all time, is Four Weddings and a Funeral, directed by Mike Newell and written by Richard Curtis. It follows the story of Charles, a charming but perpetually single British man, who over the course of a year repeatedly finds himself attending different weddings and funerals involving his extended group of friends. As time goes on, Charles begins a relationship with Carrie, an American woman in England with whom he shares a connection, but struggles to pursue due to various comic obstacles and embarrassing misunderstandings. The film explores themes of love, friendship, and the unpredictability of life, all set against the backdrop of a series of quintessentially British social gatherings. The film launched its leading man Hugh Grant into international superstardom, briefly re-kindled the career of Andie MacDowell, and features a superb supporting cast of British character actors including Kristin Scott Thomas, Simon Callow, James Fleet, John Hannah, Rowan Atkinson, and the late Charlotte Coleman. Read more…

THE KILLERS – Miklós Rózsa

March 18, 2024 Leave a comment

GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

Original Review by Craig Lysy

Successful producer Mark Hellinger decided to setup his own production company after departing Warner Brothers. He had recently paid Ernest Hemingway $36,750 for the film rights to his 1927 novel “The Killers,” which he intended to be his company’s inaugural effort. He would oversee production, Universal Pictures would manage distribution, Robert Siodmak would direct, and Anthony Veiller would write the screenplay. Hellinger assembled a fine cast, including Edmond O’Brien as Jim Reardon, Burt Lancaster in his acting debut as Pete Lund/Ole “Swede” Anderson, Ava Gardner as Kitty Collins, Albert Dekker as “Big Jim” Colfax, Jack Lambert as “Dum-Dum” Clarke, and Sam Levene as Lieutenant Sam Lubinsky. Read more…

SIRENS – Rachel Portman

March 14, 2024 Leave a comment

THROWBACK THIRTY

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

Sirens is an Australian comedy-drama film written and directed by John Duigan, starring Hugh Grant, Tara Fitzgerald, Sam Neill, and supermodel Elle MacPherson. It is loosely based on the life of artist and author Norman Lindsay, who was one of the most prolific and popular Australian artists of his generation, and is set in Australia in the 1920s. Grant plays Anthony Campion, an Anglican priest newly arrived in Australia from the United Kingdom, who is asked to visit Lindsay (Neill) by the church, who have concerns about a blasphemous painting of a crucifix that the artist plans to exhibit. When Campion and his reserved wife Estella (Fitzgerald) arrive at Lindsay’s home they are initially shocked to discover just how sexually free and uninhibited Lindsay, his wife Rose, and their beautiful ‘models’ are. However, as the days pass Estella finds herself increasingly intrigued by their relationship, which leads to her beginning to embrace her own sexuality in unexpected ways. Read more…

THE PRIMEVALS – Richard Band

March 13, 2024 2 comments

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

The story behind the new fantasy adventure movie The Primevals is quite fascinating. In the late 1960s filmmaker David Allen set out to make a movie paying homage to his beloved Edgar Rice Burroughs adventure stories, and he originally envisaged a film about an unevolved Viking society that was threatened by a race of malevolent lizard-men. As the years went by Allen had to repeatedly abandon and return to the project, due to lack of funding and various other issues, until eventually he teamed with low-budget filmmaker Charles Band and his production company Full Moon Entertainment. Finally, in the summer of 1994, Allen shot his film – now entitled The Primevals – but he was unable to finish the complicated post-production due to yet more financial difficulties. Allen tinkered with the special effects for almost five years, but then in 1999 he died of cancer, and the unfinished film sat dormant for nearly two decades afterwards, despite Charles Band and Allen’s protégé Chris Endicott repeatedly trying to raise enough money to finish the film. Eventually, in 2018, an online crowdfunding campaign was successful, and the film was completed – although, even here, much of the final FX work was done by Allen’s former colleagues donating their time for free. The film finally premiered at the Fantasia Film Festival in Canada in July 2023, and is now being released to the wider public, almost 55 years since it was first put into production. Read more…

HANGOVER SQUARE – Bernard Herrmann

March 11, 2024 Leave a comment

GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

Original Review by Craig Lysy

Actor Laird Cregar saw opportunity for a film adaptation of the popular 1941 novel “Hangover Square,” a murder melodrama by Patrick Hamilton. He convinced 20th Century Fox executive Darryl F. Zanuck to purchase the film rights, Robert Bassler was assigned production with a budget of $1.145 million, Barré Lyndon was hired to write the screenplay, and John Brahm was tasked with directing. A fine cast was recruited, including Laird Cregar as George Harvey Bone, Linda Darnell as Netta Langdon, George Sanders as Dr. Allan Middleton, Faye Marlowe as Barbara Chapman and Alan Napier as Sir Henry Chapman. Read more…

Academy Award Winners 2023

March 10, 2024 Leave a comment

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) have announced the winners of the 96th Academy Awards, honoring the best in film in 2023.

In the Best Original Score category Ludwig Göransson won the award for his score for Oppenheimer, director Christopher Nolan’s epic drama about the life and work of the theoretical physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer whose work on the Manhattan Project in the 1940s led to the creation of the world’s first nuclear weapon. Accepting his award, Göransson said:

“Thank you Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas for inviting me on this incredible world. Christopher Nolan it was your idea to use the violin in the score, and it allowed me to work and collaborate with my wonderful wife and acclaimed violinist Serena Göransson. We had… we recorded at night and we were rushing to home and put our kids Apollo and Romeo down to bed, but the result of that was amazing and it really set a really nice tone for the film of that performance. Theresa Stanislav, Jake Brown, Chris Fogel, Anthony Parnther, Alyssa Park, thank you for making the music sound great, and to my parents up there, thank you for giving me guitars and drum machines instead of video games! Thank you!

The other nominees were Joscelin Dent-Pooley (Jerskin Fendrix) for Poor Things, Laura Karpman for American Fiction, Robbie Robertson for Killers of the Flower Moon, and John Williams for Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.

In the Best Original Song category, the winners were Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell for “What Was I Made For” from the smash hit movie Barbie.

The other nominees were Jon Batiste and Dan Wilson for “It Never Went Away” from American Symphony, Scott George for “Wahzhazhe – A Song for My People” from Killers of the Flower Moon, Mark Ronson and Andrew Wyatt for “I’m Just Ken” from Barbie, and Diane Warren for “The Fire Inside” from Flamin’ Hot.

In film-music adjacent news, composer Kris Bowers also won an Oscar, not for music, but for co-directing and producing the documentary short film The Last Repair Shop, which is about a workshop in Los Angeles who find, repair, and donate musical instruments to under-privileged students in the Los Angeles Unified School District. This makes Bowers one of the few full-time film music composers to win an Academy Award for something other that composing.

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DUNE, PART TWO – Hans Zimmer

March 8, 2024 1 comment

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

The first true blockbuster of 2024, Dune Part Two is the continuation of director Denis Villeneuve’s epic adaptation of Frank Herbert’s classic science fiction novel. I’m not going to recap the plot of the first film – if you’ve seen it, you know it, if you haven’t, go watch it – but it essentially picks up immediately where the first film ends, with young Paul Atreides, having survived the attack on his family that killed his father, heading into the desert with the Fremen, the native inhabitants of the desert planet Arrakis. Meanwhile the Harkkonens – the sworn enemies of House Atreides – have taken back stewardship of the planet and resumed mining the valuable ‘spice’ that is only found in Arrakis’s vast sand dunes. However, as Paul begins to adopt the Fremen ways, and falls in love with Fremen warrior Chani, his mother Jessica is subtly manipulating events in the background to bring about the prophecy that has followed Paul since his birth – that he is both the kwisatz haderach and lisan al gaib, a messiah figure across different cultures. Timothée Chalamet, Rebecca Ferguson, Josh Brolin, Stellan Skarsgård, Dave Bautista, Zendaya, and Javier Bardem reprise their roles from the first film, while Austin Butler, Florence Pugh, and Christopher Walken, join the ensemble cast. Read more…

GOLDEN GATE – Elliot Goldenthal

March 7, 2024 Leave a comment

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

Golden Gate is a romantic drama written by acclaimed playwright David Henry Hwang, and directed John Madden. The film is set in San Francisco in the 1950s and stars Matt Dillon as FBI Agent Kevin Walker, who is sent with his partner to investigate potential links between the residents of San Francisco’s Chinatown and the emerging communist ‘threat’ posed by Chairman Mao’s China. His investigation leads to the prosecution and eventual imprisonment of several local residents on trumped-up charges, one of whom – Chen Jung Song – is clearly innocent. A decade later, Song and his cohorts are released, but Song has never recovered from his ordeal, and Walker watches as he jumps to his death from the Golden Gate Bridge. In the aftermath of this, Walker meets Song’s daughter Marilyn (Joan Chen), and the two of them unexpectedly embark on a torrid love affair – an affair which eventually causes Walker to begin to question his ethics and morals, and the part he played in her father’s death. Read more…

COVER GIRL – Morris Stoloff, Jerome Kern, and Ira Gershwin

March 6, 2024 Leave a comment

GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

Original Review by Craig Lysy

Columbia Pictures wanted to showcase their star Rita Hayworth, the most popular pinup girl for American soldiers in WWII, and chose a musical romantic comedy to be adapted from the story “Cover Girl” by Erwin Gelsey. Arthur Schwartz was assigned production, Charles Vidor was tasked with directing, and Virginia Van Upp was hired to write the screenplay. Gene Kelly was on loan from MGM and was given creative control and would also manage choreography. Rita Hayworth would star as Rusty Parker. Joining her would be Gene Kelly as Danny McGuire, Lee Bowman as Noel Wheaton, Phil Silvers as Genius, and Jim Falkenburg as Jinx Faulkenberg. Read more…

MASTERS OF THE AIR – Blake Neely

March 5, 2024 Leave a comment

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

Masters of the Air is the latest TV mini-series from executive producers Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks looking at the American military experience in World War II. It serves as a companion piece its predecessors Band of Brothers (2001) and The Pacific (2010), as well as the 2020 movie Greyhound, and is based on the 2007 book of the same name by Donald L. Miller, which follows the actions of the 100th Bomb Group, a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bomber unit in the Eighth Air Force in eastern England during World War II. Led by Gale ‘Buck’ Cleven and John ‘Bucky’ Egan, the group embarks on a series of dangerous missions to bomb targets inside German-occupied Europe. The series stars Austin Butler and Callum Turner as Buck and Bucky, with support from Anthony Boyle, Nikolai Kinski, and Saltburn’s Barry Keoghan. Read more…

MR. SKEFFINGTON – Franz Waxman

March 4, 2024 Leave a comment

GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

Original Review by Craig Lysy

Executive Jack L. Warner of Warner Brothers decided that the popular American Book of The Month Club novel “Mr. Skeffington” (1940) by Elizabeth von Arnim could be successfully adapted to the big screen. He purchased the film rights and would manage production along with the Epstein brothers, Julius and Philip. A $1.521 million budget was provided, the Epstein brothers would write the screenplay, and Vincent Sherman would direct. Casting was a challenge in that studio stars Merle Oberon, Hedy Lamar and Paul Henreid all turned down offers. Eventually Bette Davis accepted the role of Fanny Trellis Skeffington. Joining her would be Claude Rains as Job Skeffington, and Richard Waring as Trippy Trellis. Read more…