Wednesday 7 November 2018

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 8th November 2018.

The 'Festival Internazionale del Film di Roma' (aka 'International Rome Film Festival') was held in Rome, Italy, from 18th through until 28th October 2018 at the Auditorium Parco della Musica, and other venues around the ancient city. This festival of film was only founded in 2006 and whilst still quite young and new compared to many others, the importance of the hosting city as well as the strong economic investment has placed the Rome Film Festival among the world's most important film festivals, with huge media coverage and world-renowned artists attending. This year there were 266 screenings of 91 films in total from thirty countries represented.

The festival's closing film was 'Notti Magiche' ('Magical Nights') by Director Paolo Virzi. Set in Rome in 1990, the film centres around three aspiring young Screenwriters who are suspected of the murder of a famous film Producer on the night that Italy's national football team is ousted from the World Cup by the Argentinian side. The final day of this years Rome Film Festival ended with screenings of films from the official lineup in cinemas around the city, plus a concert of film scores by master composers and multi-award winning Ennio Morricone and Nicola Piovani.

'Il Vizio della Speranza' ('The Vice of Hope') Directed by Edoardo De Angelis was the winner of the People’s Choice Award, as audiences voted via app and web for their favourite film of the 2018 festival. Set in the drug-infested Castel Volturno outside Naples, the film follows Maria (Pina Turco), a trafficker of surrogate mothers whose closest companion is her pitbull terrier dog. She moves women from place to place along the river where they give birth, and then a powerful and unscrupulous madam sells their babies to the highest bidder. When one woman disappears, determined to keep her unborn baby, Maria is tasked with tracking her down, however, now pregnant with her own child, Maria begins to question her role in the illicit business.

James Gardner’s Directorial debut with 'Jelly Fish' won the Best Film award, with star Liv Hill also winning a Special Jury Prize. The Special Jury Prize for Best Film went to Peter Hedges’ 'Ben Is Back' with Julia Roberts and Lucas Hedges, and the Jury Prize for Best First Film went to the psychological drama 'The Harvesters' Written and Directed by Etienne Kallos.

The Official Selection line-up this year included such titles as 'American Animals' 'Bad Times at the El Royale' which also served as the opening film, 'Beautiful Boy', 'Fahrenheit 11/9', 'The Girl in the Spiders Web' (as Previewed below for its Australian release this week), 'Green Book', 'Halloween', 'The Hate U Give', 'The House with a Clock in its Walls', 'If Beale Street Could Talk', 'Kursk', 'The Little Drummer Girl', 'Monsters and Men', 'The Old Man & The Gun', 'A Private War', 'Stan & Ollie', 'The Vice of Hope' (winner of the People's Choice Award), 'They Shall Not Grow Old', 'Three Identical Strangers', 'Boy Erased' (also Previewed below for its Australian release this week), 'The Miseducation of Cameron Post' and 'Dead in a Week : Or Your Money Back'.

This week then we have six new release movies coming to an Odeon near you. We kick off with a new instalment in an already successful film franchise taken from the pages of an equally successful set of novels featuring our titular heroine with a distinctive tattoo, her occasional lover - an investigative journalist, and a bunch of criminal types who all deserve what they've got coming. We then turn to a remake of a classic 1977 Italian horror film set in a Berlin dance academy where everything is not quite as it seems when it revealed that the academy may just be run by a coven of witches. Next up we have a black comedy set in small town America when its citizens go on the rampage when a mystery hacker releases countless personal text messages about the town's folk. This is followed up by a coming of age story of a nineteen year old lad who is sent away to gay conversion therapy by his concerned and steadfastly religious parents, and what unfolds thereafter. Next is a WWI story of a bunch of soldiers in the trenches on the front line in war torn France, who must endure a week of waiting to go on the offensive to their certain death. And we then wrap up the week with a British comedy offering about a down on her luck young woman whose life changes in unexpected ways when she inherits a pug dog.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the six latest release new movies as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release and as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are most welcome to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and in the meantime, enjoy your big screen Odeon outing during the coming week.

'THE GIRL IN THE SPIDER'S WEB' (Rated MA15+) - this is the fourth instalment in the 'Millennium' series of novels and films, that first kicked off with the originator of the international best seller series Stieg Larson who penned 'The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo', 'The Girl Who Played with Fire' and 'The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest' - all of which were made into successful films launching the movie career of Noomi Rapace as lead character Lisbeth Salander in those first three films. In 2011, David Fincher made an American version of the first film starring Rooney Mara as Lisbeth Salander and Daniel Craig as Mikael Blomkvist as an investigative journalist and occasional lover to Salander.  When Stieg Larson died in 2004 aged 50, having completed the three novels, David Lagercrantz carried the torch having penned two follow on novels so far, the first of which continues with this instalment. This time Directed by Fede Alvarez whose previous Directing credits include the 2013 version of 'Evil Dead' and  2016's 'Don't Breathe'. The film saw its Premier at the Rome Film Festival in late October, cost US$43M to make, was released in Sweden at the end of October, is released here and in the US this week and has so far received generally mixed or average Reviews.

And so to this story. Dismissed from the National Security Agency, Frans Balder (Stephen Merchant) recruits hacker Lisbeth Salander (Claire Foy) to steal FireWall, a computer program that can access codes for nuclear weapons worldwide, and which he developed in the first place. The download pretty quickly gains the attention from NSA agent Edwin Neeham (LaKeith Stanfield) who traces the activity to Stockholm. Further problems arise when the Russians steal Lisbeth's laptop and kidnap a computer geek who can make FireWall functional. Now, Lisbeth and an unlikely ally must race against time to recover the codes to avert disaster, overcome corrupt government officials, thwart cyber criminals and unravel a web of spies whilst saving the kidnapped geek. Also starring Sverrir Gudnason as Mikael Blomkvist, Sylvia Hoeks and Claes Bang.

'SUSPIRIA' (Rated MA15+) - way back in 1977 the acclaimed Italian Director, Producer and Screenwriter Dario Argento, perhaps best known for his work in the horror film genre during the '70's and '80's, released what was to become one of his most successful films - 'Suspiria', partially based on Thomas De Quincey's 1845 essay 'Suspiria de Profundis' ('Sighs from the Depths'). Now some forty years later this supernatural horror film gets a makeover courtesy of Italian Director and Co-Producer Luca Guadagnino. Costing US$20M to make, the film saw its World Premier at the Venice International Film Festival in early September, went on release in the US last week, and the UK next week, and has so far generated largely favourable Reviews. The story here unfolds as young American dancer Susie Bannion (Dakota Johnson) arrives in West German Berlin in 1977 to audition for the world famous Helena Markos Dance Company. When she vaults to the position of lead dancer, the woman she replaces breaks down and accuses the company's female Directors of witchcraft. Meanwhile, an inquisitive psychotherapist Dr. Josef Klemperer (Tilda Swinton) and another member of the dance troupe uncover dark and sinister secrets as they probe the depths of the studio's hidden underground chambers that lead them to believe that the academy is controlled by a coven of witches. Also starring Chloe Grace Moretz, Mia Goth and Jessica Harper who starred as Susie Bannion in the original film. Tilda Swinton plays three roles in the film.

'ASSASSINATION NATION' (Rated MA15+) - this American black comedy thriller is Written and Directed by Sam Levinson (son of Barry Levinson), received its World Premier screening at the Sundance Film Festival back in January this year, was released in the US and the UK towards the end of September, has received mixed or average Reviews and has so far grossed just US$2M. Here, the story unfolds in the town of Salem, Massachusetts, where High School senior students Lily Colson (Odessa Young) and her three best friends Sarah (Suki Waterhouse), Bex (Hari Nef) and Em (Abra) live in a malaise of text messages, social media posts, selfies and online chats, pretty much like the rest of the 'civilised' world. However, their small town world gets turned upside down and inside out when a mystery anonymous hacker starts to reveal personal messages and secrets of thousands of people. As anger spills over into full-blown violence, the four girls soon find themselves fighting for their lives and for their survival against an armed and very angry mob. Also starring Bill Skarsgard, Maude Apatow and Joel McHale. 

'BOY ERASED' (Rated MA15+) - this American and Australian Co-Production is a coming of age drama based on the 2016 memoir of the same name by Garrard Conley, and is Directed, Co-Produced, Written for the Screen and also stars Joel Edgerton. The film saw its World Premiere at the Telluride Film Festival back in early September and went on release in the US last week, where it has garnered generally positive Press. Here, Jared Eamons (Lucas Hedges) is the son of Marshall (Russell Crowe) a Baptist Pastor and Nancy (Nicole Kidman) living in small town America, who is outed to his parents as gay at the age of nineteen. Jared is quickly pressured into attending a gay conversion therapy programme, or else suffer the consequences and be shunned by his family, friends, and his church. It is within the programme that Jared comes into conflict with its head therapist Victor Sykes (Joel Edgerton). The film also stars Joe Alwyn, Xavier Dolan, Troye Sivan and Flea. 

'JOURNEY'S END' (Rated M) - this British film is an adaptation of the 1928 stage play of the same name by R.C.Sherriff and is the fifth adaptation of that play to grace the big and small screen. Directed by Saul Dibb the film stars an ensemble cast and has so far generated generally positive Reviews since its Special Presentation screening at TIFF way back in September 2017, and its initial release in Ireland in early February this year. Now only does it get a limited release in Australia. The story here occurs in the Spring of 1918 near St. Quentin, France. The war has already dragged on for four years almost, with millions killed in the process and it will continue on for another six months at least, taking out countless lives needlessly as it does. Taking us into the heart of a WWI battle zone we follow fresh-faced teenage Second Lieutenant Raleigh (Asa Butterfield), who gets himself assigned to the command of Captain Stanhope (Sam Claflin). The drama plays out amid the tensions, anxieties and camaraderie that unite these men and their infantry colleagues that including cook Mason (Toby Jones) and battle-worn Trotter (Stephen Graham) and Hibbert (Tom Sturridge) as they begin a week where they have already heard that a huge German offensive is expected and soon. They know little else except that they can expect no reinforcements and not to be evacuated . . . . and so they await their fate. Also starring Paul Bettany and Robert Glenister.

'PATRICK' (Rated PG) - here Mandie Fletcher Directs this British comedy offering hot on the heels of her 2016 Directed 'Absolutely Fabulous : The Movie'. The story here unfolds about one Sarah Francis (Beattie Edmondson, daughter of Adrian Edmondson and Jennifer Saunders) who is a young woman whose life is just a tad on the skids. The last thing she is looking for is someone or something else to look after, especially not someone or something who dribbles, snores and eats garbage from the kitchen bin. However, like it or lump it, her Grandmother has left Sarah her prized possession in her will, a very spoilt pug dog called Patrick. As this new canine friend proceeds to wreak havoc in all areas of Sarah’s life, its not long before a sort of miracle happens as Patrick slowly but very surely begins to turn her life around. Also starring Jennifer Saunders, Ed Skrien, Gemma Jones, Bernard Cribbins and Peter Davison.

With six new release films this week to tempt you out to your local Odeon, remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephile friends afterwards here at Odeon Online. In the meantime, I'll see you sometime somewhere in the week ahead at your local Odeon.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

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