Immediately from the opening shots, you can see why some have called this essentially Skyrim the movie. Unfortunately the plot and even its themes are far more straightforward and less sophisticated than the video game. This is a Viking revenge story pure and simple, deeply steeped in Norse mythology and played completely straight. Given that period film rarely go back so far, this has some exotic appeal. Yet it is so traditional, so old-fashioned in its sensibilities that it’s difficult to discern why someone would decide that making it in 2022 would be a good idea.
Continue reading The Northman (2022)Category Archives: Films & Television
The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)
This film by Orson Welles is both shorter than it was meant to be and looks older than it should. The reason for the first is that the studio edited and cut the final film against Welles’ wishes and for the second is that it’s meant to show the grand old times before the age of the automobile. There are quite a few bits in it that I liked, such as Welles’ narration of how the rich old families used to live. Yet on the whole this didn’t work for me. The romance between the two leads is central to the story but Welles is I think not a very good director of romances. The butchering by the studio is also very visible and completely ruins the ending.
Continue reading The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)Belle (2021)
This anime is like an explosion of tropes: living a new life in an online virtual world, a magical girl who can stop the world in its tracks through the power of song, even freaking Beauty and the Beast. All presented in the form of fantastically dense and beautiful art, this is almost overwhelming to the senses but more or less does work. I think there’s some mixed messaging in its treatment of online spaces and I’m not fond of high school romance stories. Still this is a worthy update of the familiar tale and as my wife notes, one far more suited to the current era than the Disney version.
Continue reading Belle (2021)Meek’s Cutoff (2010)
Kelly Reichardt is probably my current favorite American director and this is another film that cements my love for her style. The Oregon Trail game was really before my time but I too briefly tried it and raged over how every one of your pioneers seem to eventually die of dysentery. Well, this is the story of one small group lost on that trail. As with Reichardt’s other films, the plot is straightforward and simple. It really is all about giving the audience an idea of what it was like to be a settler on the trail in 1845, complete with all of their trials, dreams and prejudices.
Continue reading Meek’s Cutoff (2010)Purple Noon (1960)
Here’s a film whose story we already know as we’ve watched the more recent American adaptation The Talented Mr. Ripley some years back. I judged this far earlier French adaptation, made only a few years after the publication of the Patricia Highsmith novel, worth watching anyway as it’s very well known and it was the film that turned Alain Delon into a star. It also helps that this version differs markedly from the American film which I believe is more faithful to the source material. This version is in some ways more traditional, both in Ripley’s motivations and in its ultimate resolution. In my opinion, that makes it less psychologically interesting but there are still good reasons to watch it.
Continue reading Purple Noon (1960)The Batman (2022)
I know this should really be watched in the cinemas but the three-hour running time put me off at the time. In the event as great as this would have looked on the big screen, I was glad I watched it at home as it’s dense enough that spacing out the experience makes it better. This film has its share of detractors but I think it’s utterly fantastic and certainly better than Christopher Nolan’s version. It’s a portrayal of a Batman that is less superhero and more obsessed ordinary man who puts on a costume to be a vigilante. Accordingly director Matt Reeves has drawn inspiration not from superhero action movies but noirs, political thrillers and spy films. The result is a film that transcends its genre and deserves to be taken seriously.
Continue reading The Batman (2022)The Sandman
It’s really quite insane that the current Golden Age of television has brought us an actually good adaptation of a property as notoriously unfilmable as The Sandman. I’ve never read the Neil Gaiman comic book series not being much of a DC fan but I couldn’t help but hear of it and even learned many of the stories in it through sheer osmosis. As I understand it, this isn’t a perfectly faithful adaptation and distances itself from being too directly tied to the DC universe. But it’s faithful enough in spirit and intention as approved by Gaiman himself that its far better than I ever imagined could be possible to see within my lifetime.
Continue reading The Sandman





