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Cinema Rat - April 2008

Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007)


Starring: Cate Blanchett, Geoffrey Rush, Clive Owen, Abbie Cornish
Director: Shekhar Kapur
Screenplay: William Nicholson, Michael Hirst

Running Time: 114 minutes


PIC proves that having the same creative team to duplicate the winning formula of a previous instalment on the same subject matter, is not always going to be successful.

Set almost 30 years after 1998’s Elizabeth, Elizabeth: The Golden Age doesn’t so much strike with an rapier, but more like a butter knife – a blunt one at that.
It is 1885 and English Catholics are trying to undermine Elizabeth’s reign with the overt help of Rome’s champion, King Phillip II of Spain. Elizabeth turns to her trusted, if somewhat Machavellian sidekick Sir Francis Walsingham to watch her back. In steps the soon-to-be-knighted Walter Raleigh to also lend a hand and help her prepare for the coming Spanish invasion. When the battle finally comes, it’s almost anti-climatic. Add to it a couple of minor subplots involving Mary, Queen of Scots, and Sir Walter bonking one of Elizabeth’s lady’s in waiting (much to the Monarch’s chagrin as she has eyes for the roguish privateer), and you have your movie.
So what are the problems? Well, there's only one main hiccup, and that's the screenplay. The actors do ok, the cinematography isn't too shabby, even the direction gets a pass mark (although he can take some responsibility for interpreting the screenplay). Slow and ponderous is an understatement, not helped by bad misuse of English. Period pieces need a certain kind of language to fire (good examples include The Crucible, Dangerous Liaisons and Pride and Prejudice). This one doesn’t wash, which is weird, when you consider the first movie went over so well.

There is the odd, minor historical inaccuracy, but that could be easily forgiven if the movie was in drive, instead of being stuck in first-gear. Worth a miss.

1.5 stars out of 5
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Nid de Guipes (The Nest) (2002)



Starring: Samy Naceri, Benoit Magimel, Nadia, Fares, Pascal Greggory, Sami Bouajila
Director: Florent Emilio Siri
Screenplay: Florent Emilio Siri, Jean-Francois Tarnowski

Running Time: 107 minutes


FRENCH take on Assault of Precinct 13 is a good little number that comes with an interesting, albeit flawed, synopsis that makes it just as good as the John Carpenter original.
A group of thieves decide to pull a heist on a high-tech facility based in a barren industrial estate in the middle of the night. Job seems simple enough and everything is in place for the raid to be a success. Cue a French special forces team who are escorting Albanian mafioso Abedin Nexhep to a European court to stand trial for being in charge of a massive prostitution ring. The route they take just happens to be going past the exact same factory the aforementioned criminal gang are going to knock off. Special forces get ambushed by war criminal’s henchmen forcing them to seek refuge in the factory. Stage is now set for a siege of bloody proportions.
Set pieces are well constructed, and the camerawork is fast-paced without losing the viewer. Talent is all good, with a nice turn from Naceri as the defacto leader of thieves, and Fares is believable as the female head of the special forces. Only thing that left me wondering out loud was how a legion of Albanian gangsters not only managed to get in France unnoticed, but managed to do so with a cache of weapons that could arm a small third-world dictatorship.
Like Assault of Precinct 13 theme asks what would happen when two forces on opposing sides of the law are set together for the common good and thus the ambiguities that present themselves in such a scenario.

3.5 stars out of 5
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Character Actors I Like

You know how it goes - there’s a movie on and an actor appears, and you go “who is that guy? I’ve seen him somewhere before.” Sometimes they only grace the screen for a minute or two, at other times they’re central to the plot. What they all have in common though, is a hard-to-ignore presence. Some have gone on to be more well known than others, and quite a few of them have passed away too young. Here is my salute to the humble character actor – the guy who often makes the leads look good!

WILLIAM MACY

Star Turns:
Benny & Joon, Fargo, Boogie Nights, Pleasantville, The Cooler, Bobby

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

JT WALSH

Star Turns:
Good Morning Vietnam, Red Rocks West, Hoffa, Slingblade, Breakdown

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BRION JAMES

Star Turns:
Flesh and Blood, Blade Runner, Cherry 2000, Another 48 Hours

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TRACEY WALTER

Star Turns:
Repo Man, Conan the Barbarian, Conan the Destroyer, Erin Brockovich

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

DAVID THEWLIS

Star Turns:
Naked, The Big Lebowski, Kingdom of Heaven, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

STEPHEN TOBOLOWSKY

Star Turns:
Mississippi Burning, Groundhog Day, The Insider, Memento

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

CLANCY BROWN

Star Turns
Carnivale, Highlander, Deadly Pursuit, The Shawshank Redemption

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

RICHARD JORDAN

Star Turns:
Logan’s Run, Gettysburg, The Mean Season, The Hunt for Red October

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

LUIZ GUZMAN

Star Turns:
Traffic, NYPD Blue, Boogie Nights, Out of Sight, The Bone Collector

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

WES STUDI

Star Turns:
Last of the Mohicans, Heat, Crazy Horse

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

JOHN CAZALE

Star Turns:
The Godfather, The Godfather Part II, The Conversation, Dog Day Afternoon, The Deer Hunter

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

VINCENT SCHIAVELLI

Star Turns:
Ghost, The People Vs Larry Flint, Tomorrow Never Dies, Man on the Moon

----------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------------------------- -----------

MAKO

Star Turns:
The Sand Pebbles, Conan the Barbarian, Tucker: the Man and His Dream, Seven Years in Tibet
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Death Proof (2007)



Starring: Kurt Russell, Sydney Poitier, Rosario Dawson, Jordan Ladd, Zoe Bell, Rose McGowan, Quentin Tarantino
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Some Over-Rated Movies

One man’s euphoria is another man’s despair, which can be the subtext of this line up. Like most of the arts, personal choice has its place, and thus is the main plank for this list. Most of them are pretty good. I guess the point is they are not as good as I expected them to be – whether it be the hype, or the expectations put on the director, screenwriter and actors. Feel free to add to the list via comments, or chastise me for being a dumbass!

Triumph of the Will, 1935
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MOST UNDERRATED MOVIES OF ALL TIME, PART 2

Ok, ok, I've taken some hits over the first part and how under rated the flicks really were/are. Thing is, I know film buffs rate most of these pics really well, but this is more aimed at where they rate with Joe Average. Just to let you know where I'm coming from!

Cinema Paradiso, 1988
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MOST UNDERRATED MOVIES OF ALL TIME, PART 1

A personal perspective on movies that to my mind have not had the recognition they deserve. Some will argue they have, others might agree. Here’s part one. Part two to follow soon…


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TOP 17 MOVIES OF ALL TIME

EVERYONE has a set of movies that reminds them from time-to-time why they love the art form – could be the cast, the director, the screenplay or cinematography, but more likely than not, a mixture of all those ingredients. Starting out with a list of about 1600 movies I intended for this to be a Top 10 list and did manage to whittle it down some, but then got to a point where I just couldn’t lose any more. It should also be noted this covers only the movies I have seen. There are plenty that I haven’t that would probably make the list. They have been put in year of release order. For the record my personal overall fav is Dead Poet’s Society…..

Casablanca, 1942
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The Door in the Floor (2004)


Starring: Jeff Bridges, Kim Basinger, Jon Foster, Elle Fanning, Mimi Rogers
Director: Tod Williams

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