Monthly Archives: December 2013

Review: Assassination (1987)

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Bronson brings in the big guns!

Assassination is one of Charles Bronson’s later films co-starring (you guessed it) real-life wife Jill Ireland.

Bronson is a secret service agent assigned to protect the First Lady of the United Stated (Ireland with a fairly wild afro going on). Her character doesn’t much like Bronson, or he her thinking he should have been given a much more important duty.

Someone then tries to kill the First Lady which sends everybody scuttling about and Bronson trying to track down the source of the assassination plot.

I think by about 1987 Charles Bronson’s career was starting to wane and this is not one of his best films, but however it is still very accessible if you are a big fan of his films as I am.

Review: A Royal Affair (2012)

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The love triangle: Doctor, Mad King, Queen

An absolute masterpiece of drama and spectacle chronicling the marriage of Caroline Matilda of the UK to the mad King Christian VII of Denmark in the 18th Century.

The King is somewhat disinterested in his new bride who he often refers to as “mother” (then wonders why he is not potent with her!) preferring common street prostitutes. In order to deal with a King that is quite obviously bark, stark raving mad the court employs the services of a personal physician to treat him. His doctor (played by popular Danish actor Mads Mikkelsen) befriends the king and becomes his closest confidant.

All travels well until Mads starts an affair with the Queen ala Rasputin and the inevitable downward spiral begins.

Its very hard to fault this period piece, it authenticity and Mise en scène make it a must watch on there own, that’s before we even look at its very interesting and enlightening narrative.

Review: Bullet Boy (2004)

A very poignant film highlighting the major problem with gun crime in London. If you havebullet-boy just recently enjoyed the British Channel 4 TV series Top Boy you will see where it pretty much came from.

Ashley Walters plays an estate thug who has just been released from Gaol. He has a troubled relationship with his family and friends who start a tug of war between him relapsing back into his bad ways or finding a new life.

His younger brother finds his gun and terrible things start to happen. I won’t ruin the film for you by explaining too much more….

An interesting new breed of films coming out of England which ask very important social questions, ok so its all been done before (remember Stanley Baker in Violent playground in the sixties? David Mcallum letting rip with a machine gun?) but I guess each new generation has a unique take on its problems.

MELINDA SCHNEIDER LAUNCHES NEW SHOW AT 2014 TAMWORTH COUNTRY MUSIC FESTIVAL

Audiences at the 2014 Tamworth Country Music Festival are in for a special treat as songstress Melinda Schneider launches her intensely personal new stage show – BE YOURSELF – at the festival. This will be the first time the show has been performed in Australia and depicts the story of Melinda’s life through her own songs and those from other songwriters who have influenced her. Post-festival, Melinda will be taking the show on the road to theatres around the country, but when it came to selecting a place for the national launch of BE YOURSELF, Tamworth was the obvious choice for this multi-award winning country artist.

“Tamworth and the country music industry have always been very good to me,” she says. “It made perfect sense to premiere the show during the festival for the real die-hard country fans who will be there. I also think people who come back year after year really enjoy seeing something different. Country fans are so loyal, it feels good to be able to give them a whole new show.”

Penning a show about her life – both in the industry and on a personal level – has been something Melinda has always wanted to do. Inspired by the style of her theatre show paying homage to Doris Day – DORIS – So More Than The Girl Next Door – Melinda sought collaboration from friend and script writer David Mitchell, with whom she penned the Doris show.

“We got a rough song list together and started telling my story and writing the script from there,” she says. “Every song I have ever written has a story behind it and most of my songs have been inspired by happy or challenging times in my life. We all have them, I just tend to write about mine! It probably took about six weeks to write the show, then go over it and edit bits and pieces. There is also quite a strong visual element to the show, using some old footage from when I was a kid appearing on the Mike Walsh show and some other surprise bits and pieces. It takes such a long time to cut all of that together and get it looking the way you want it. It’s a mammoth task, especially with my little boy, 16-month-old Sullivan running around and keeping me up nights!”

Melinda is one of country music’s sweethearts. With nine albums under her belt, numerous awards including six Golden Guitars and a swag of sold out tours, she’s easily one of the most well respected performers in the industry today. Her songs have been recorded by artists as diverse as John Farnham, Olivia Newton-John, Ricky Skaggs and Paul Kelly. She made her stage debut at the age of three appearing with her mother, the legendary Mary Schneider, and she hasn’t stopped since. Her most recent achievement though hasn’t been musical, but personal, welcoming the birth of her first child. Her new show is an incredible legacy for him.

“Becoming a mum is the best thing that has ever happened to me,” she says. “The moment I saw Sullivan’s little face, a wave of emotion rushed over my entire body. I bonded with him straight away. I haven’t had a night away from him in 16-months and though motherhood is the hardest job I’ve ever done, I know it’s the most important thing I’ll ever do. I really want to be a good mum for him. Now I know what life is really about and what unconditional love is. Everything I do is for him.”

Sharing her life with audiences through this intimate show is nothing strange for Melinda. “I’ve always told personal stories on stage because they related to my songs and country music is all about the truth. I’m the type of person who wears my heart on my sleeve I guess, and Lord knows I love a chat, so really the show feels natural to me. I also think I decided to do this now, because I am in a great place in my life and by the time you reach the age of 40, you don’t worry as much about what others may think, you can really just be yourself.”

Melinda will be performing songs such as The Story of My Life, Sgt Bean, Courageous and of course, Be Yourself. There will also be some tracks from earlier in her career and songs from other artists who have influenced her. The show is an insight into Melinda as a person and what has made her the woman she is today. This is a show for anyone who is a fan of her music, or just a fan of great songwriting in general, and her only Tamworth performance. Don’t miss the chance to catch Melinda Schneider’s brand new stage show BE YOURSELF as it launches at Tamworth Country Music Festival in 2014. Tickets are on sale now.

 

Review: Blutsfreundschaft aka Initiation (2009)

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..look theirs nothing queer about it..just a group of guys who all dress alike, spend all their time together, are constantly grabbing each other and clearly hate women!

I have been waiting to watch this film for a while spotting that it starred veteran Austrian actor Helmet Berger who I could never forget in Tinto Brass’s highly underrated film Salon Kitty. However like a lot of foreign films being released these days it usually takes some time for English subtitles to become available.

Initiation is something of a black comedy posing questions about fiercely masculine neo-nazi skinheads on one hand and gay people on the other. Certainly there is a lot of confrontation in this film and it pulls no punches in showing the excessive violence of the skinheads, but it also for example uses slow motion and effects to try and pose a nasty skinhead gig as very balletesque, at times it even becomes a musical! This quickly suggests there is something more to this film than just showing the ridiculous life of skinheads.

Indeed throughout it seems most of the skinheads have issues with their own sexuality hinting that maybe their hatred of the gay locals masks something within themselves. The funniest scene was perhaps a member of the local Nazi party who delivers a long, fiery speech against everything including homosexuals and the price of fish; then instantly in the next scene is seen being led up stairs by two young male prostitutes in the local brothel!

The lead character Axel becomes torn between the local skinhead gang who offer him lots of blokey masculine mateship including a gang bang with the gangs moll and Berger, a gay dry cleaner, and his companions who befriend the troubled youth with compassion. You have to ask yourself the question, why do they bother, but this becomes clear as we are invited into Berger’s troubled past as a youngster in the Hitler Youth as so many of his generation were forced.

This film certainly delivers with the type of surreal spectacular we tend to expect from Helmet Berger and it is certainly confronting but not in the ways we initially might think.

 

Review: The Woman (2011)

A fairly normal type of American father goes hunting andwoman1002194831 comes upon a a strange wild girl who has obviously grown up in the forest Ala Tarzan.

He decides to take her home and civilize her by locking her in a Cellar and gets the whole family involved in looking after her like a Pet. Now this might seem somewhat strange to you already, but the fact that everything seems so normal with the family and their little house, almost fools you into believing its a very reasonable proposition…

Its only later (with one sharp slap to the wife) that we begin to realize that things are not quite right with this all American family.

I suspect the Director was going for a black-comedy with this piece, I found it very funny, if not quite bizarre and unsettling as it unfolds, I was reminded somewhat of American Psycho and that same off-beat humor.

Review: Dogma 2: The Idiots (1998)

I have seen very few of the Dogma films that came out in the nineties that I particularlyThe Idiots (1998) enjoyed, indeed I found the whole “phenomenon” of Dogma the height of pretentiousness. Now of course I have to eat my words after laughing my way through The Idiots!

Despite being completely politically incorrect (but no more so than Borat or Bruno) this film is very, very funny. It follows a group of malcontents who enjoy freaking out local small town residents by going on field trips and “spassing” or imitating developmentally-impaired people. Much mayhem ensues with people going out of their way to pretend they are not perturbed by the antics and show how understanding and sympathetic they are!

NB: I warn anyone thinking of watching the film that there is some hardcore sex (its danish..I mean hardcore!) and full frontal nudity in the film, but this is quite relevant and very funny in context.

 

Review: The House on Garibaldi Street (1979)

It has become fashionable to pick on Israel in this decade, so a film like The House on House1Garibaldi Street is maybe something a lot of people would not be very interested in anymore.

If like me you believe remembering the Holocaust is not just an “excuse” for Israeli foreign policy in this day and age the film will have a lot of meaning for you.

The film follows the capture (or kidnapping depending on how you lean politically) of Adolf Eichmann and his return to Israel to face trial for crimes against humanity. An all star cast headed by Martin Balsam and Topol bring a very credible account of this exciting real-life tale to the screen.

Review: The Confession (1970)

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Yves Montand lost more than 15 kilos to play his role as Artur

A gem of a French film from the 1970’s based on the true story of the Czechoslovak communist Artur London, a defendant in the Slánský trial.

It is the Stalinist period of Czechoslovakia and purges of foreigners are taking place. It seems the current purge is targeting all the members of the communist brigades that fought in the Spanish Civil War. Part of the paranoia that Stalin suddenly started to feel towards all foreigners in general.

Artur is subjected to months of imprisonment and torture in order to compel him to confess to crimes against the state he did not commit for a show trial. A lot of the torture consists of forcing him to walk in circles in his cell for hours on end. Frankly I got sore feet just watching him.