Showing posts with label Burnt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Burnt. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 November 2015

BURNT : Saturday 7th November 2015.

Having worked in Hospitality for most of my career in and around kitchens, chefs, restaurants and food service in various guises, you can imagine how interested I would be in seeing 'BURNT' which I saw over the weekend. It is intriguing to see how Chefs and Cooks are depicted on the big screen. It is after all only really in the last five or so years that we have seen these types featured in the movies since a few of those who have excelled have risen to celebrity status, and with the advent of the plethora of cooking shows on television and the inordinate amount of cook books there are for sale, it is hardly surprising that Hollywood would latch to the heat of the kitchen. All that said, if it helps raise the profile of food, the industry, different cuisines and produce, and the people working in it then this must be a good thing, but is it good for Hollywood? In the case of 'Burnt', not really - because this film is half baked only - golden brown and crisp on the outside but soggy and undercooked on the inside!

What 'Burnt' does for us is take us into the hallowed territory of maybe the top 1% of all restaurants globally. It is here where the two and three star Michelin establishments reside, where the Chef's and Cook's toil away relentlessly but enjoy Rock Star status for the blood, sweat and tears they have to give working 20 hours a day to reach the zenith of perfection in their culinary craft. And it is here too where these famed restaurants as beautiful as they often are, are big holes in the ground into which the owners shovel money every day (and lots of it) with only a very small margin of return, if any!

And so it with this US$20M John Wells Directed culinary caper that sees fallen from grace former two Michelin starred Chef Adam Jones (Bradley Cooper) having lived the celebrity chef status in Paris for all its worth with sex, drugs, alcohol and rock 'n' roll crash to the bottom only to rise again  to regain his reputation, his credibility, his self-worth and a third star. We learn through back story dialogue between the characters that three years ago things got badly 'burnt' for him in Paris when he went off the rails, cost his restaurant its two star status, his team lost their jobs and then spread far & wide, and he went AWOL presumed by many contemporaries and critics to be dead. He surfaces in London having served a self imposed penance to shuck one million oysters in some seafood joint that he promptly walks out of when his milestone is reached.

He emerges after some chicanery in the kitchen of Tony (Daniel Bruhl) in London at The Langham Hotel where he delivers a commitment to take it to three star status. Tony's father (the one with all the money) agrees and so the kitchen is remodelled, Jones assembles his brigade of new and previously worked with talent, and the restaurant relaunched. The first night all goes pear shaped when guests no-show, the food is below expectations, and the write up in the press is less than favourable. Jones is the consummate artist, perfectionist and after service what follows is a Head Chef rant at his brigade the likes of which I'm not sure you would see in any kitchen anywhere . . . not even Gordon Ramsay's! These days with industrial relations compliance, human resource guidelines, and fair work requirements Jones would face an instant walk out and be hauled up in front of some IR Commission on the grounds of workplace harassment, bullying and intimidation . . . no matter how good he thinks is he! But I guess this is Hollywood after all, and you gotta give the audience what they want!

As time progresses the kitchen bridge settle into their routine, they begin to work cohesively, and a flame of romance starts to burn between Jones and his recruited Sous Chef and the only female in the kitchen Helene (Sienna Miller). There are other story sidelines here too that surround Jones fierce rivalry with Reece (Mathew Rhys) former colleague in Paris and now the equally fiery, temperamental talented London Chef at the three star 'Reece'. Additionally, there is Michael (Omar Sy) who is recruited as a Chef de Partie by Jones but back in Paris three years before Jones called the Heath Inspectors in and closed down his restaurant - beware the hidden agenda behind Michael's acceptance to join Jones in his kitchen that manifests itself when least expected!

Also there is the former working relationship with Tony, gay, but the best Maitre D' in the country and therefore somewhat forgiving of Jones' kitchen antics. Jones' drug addled past also catches up with him and as two heavies appear from time to time demanding payment on a drug debt which Jones cannot deliver on so he gets roughed up on the most demanding of days. There is also his former love interest and daughter of his recently deceased former employer in Paris, Anne Marie (Alicia Vikander), and then Helene's struggles as a single mother juggling her commitment to her young daughter Lily, and the relentless demands of the kitchen and Jones. Let's also not forget the therapy that Jones has to undergo with Dr. Rosshilde (Emma Thompson) every Friday morning and if he misses a single session all funding to his kitchen and his dream will cease immediately. And, sitting over all of this is the expectation of the eventual visit of the Michelin Men to rate the restaurant for the famed guidebook.

The gloss is here with a beautiful restaurant, an equally beautiful kitchen, the highest standards of culinary expertise and food porn aplenty delivered with an insight into the seemingly never ending hours of experimentation, creativity and long days and nights spent rattling the pans over a hot stove, traipsing through the markets in the early hours, and seeking inspiration from other eateries. But despite all of this it's still a half baked underdone soufflé of a film. I found the Jones character difficult to warm to and relate to, his violent bursts and abuse in the kitchen completely overcooked, the final Michelin visit and judgement just glanced over, and the Hollywood-ised account of the finest of fine dining restaurants and what goes on in and around them a little too hard to swallow, but, there are a few redeeming feature along the way!

You don't need to see this on the big screen and can easily wait for the release of the DVD and Blu-ray or download it when available. I would say that this is a case of medium-rare, rather than well done!

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday, 21 October 2015

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 22nd October 2015.

Adelaide is the city of festivals, markets, community events, charity fundraisers and being relatively new to the city I was pleasantly surprised to learn that this city also holds it's own unique 'Annual Zombie Walk' and has done so for a number of years. Now in 2015 this event has grown to in excess of 15,000 undead walkers parading through the streets taking their zombiedom very seriously with gruesome grotesque manifestations of their macabre fascination with the walking dead through their bloodied make up, dishevelled clothing, and lumbering gait as they paraded the streets of Adelaide on October 10th. This has grown to be one of the largest of its kind now - gotta love a Zombie, gotta love a charity fund raiser and when you combine the two then you gotta be on to a winner. 'The Walking Dead' descended on Adelaide, and maybe a city near you too - be afraid, be very afraid! Check out the website for more insights into the living dead.

So getting back to the living, this week there are five new movies coming to a theatre near you that first up feature a cold war drama that ticks all the boxes from its Director, Writers and lead Actor all doing what they do best and delivering a peacetime tense taught thriller of prisoner exchange, intrigue, mistrust and Uncle Sam against the Ruskies. Then there's a kitchen drama of celebrity chefs, food porn, acclaimed restaurants, Michelin stars, broken dreams and high hopes; and then a futuristic dystopian world where a relationship or reincarnation are the choices to be made that become a matter of life and death. From here it's a culture clash comedy romance of divided loyalties, affairs of the heart and the attraction of opposites, and finally yet another instalment in a low budget but hugely successful supernatural horror franchise that might just all end here . . . maybe, until next time, perhaps, so they say!

Quite a choice with genre's galore, and when you have sat through your film of choice, share your thoughts with your like minded movie mates here at Odeon Online in the Comments Box below this or any other Post. In the meantime, enjoy your movie.

BRIDGE OF SPIES (Rated M) - the winning team of Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks are at it again with this retelling of a 1960 Cold War incident involving a Soviet Union shot down U2 pilot captured behind enemy lines and at the mercy of their political system as a result. Written by Joel & Ethan Coen and Mark Charman this film was released Stateside on 16th October having cost US$40M to bring to the big screen and so far it has recouped US$18M. The story centres around the subsequent events that unfold following the 1957 arrest by the FBI of KGB spy Rudolph Abel (Mark Rylance) in New York. James Donovan (Tom Hanks) an insurance lawyer specialist is asked by his firm to take on Abel's defence, even though it is not his ordinary line of work. Whilst a nervous US wants Abel sentenced to death, Donovan lobbies for a 30 year jail term and is ultimately successful, thinking that one day Abel may serve a greater purpose.

Meanwhile, flying a sortie over Russian territory in a U2 spy plane, pilot Frances Gary Powers (Austin Stowell) is shot down, captured, interrogated and convicted. The USSR send a secret message to Donovan suggesting a prisoner exchange - the Russian for the Yank, but in the meantime another American citizen - economics graduate student Frederic Pryor (Will Rogers) is arrested trying to smuggle his German girlfriend across the newly built Berlin Wall from East into West, and is promptly arrested by Statsi Agents.  Seeking now a 2 for 1 deal, Donovan must use all his powers of persuasion and strength of character to negotiate his way out of a fragile and dangerous position for himself, the prisoners he cares about and his country. Also starring Amy Ryan and Alan Alda.

BURNT (Rated M) - Directed by John Wells this comedy drama film will satiate those with a hunger for food porn, celebrity chefs, fine dining and the world of top restaurants. Featuring an all star cast headed by acclaimed two Michelin Star Chef Adam Jones (Bradley Cooper) who lives the rock star life whilst cooking up a storm for his Parisian patrons. When it all goes awry and he loses his beloved restaurant and his lifestyle, he makes a decision to clean up his act head to London and spearhead a restaurant and take it to the pinnacle of dining and gain three Michelin stars. Going along for the ride are Sienna Miller, Daniel Bruhl, Emma Thompson, Uma Thurman and Alicia Vikander. If you can't stand the heat, get outta the kitchen!

THE LOBSTER (Rated MA15+) - this film is hardly genre specific - science fiction, futuristic, comedy, romance and drama all interwoven in the first English language film for Greek Director, Producer and Writer Yorgos Lanthimos. Set in some near dystopian future world, or perhaps even a parallel universe the premise here is that the single, unattached men are required by the laws of The City to check into a hotel wherein they are given 45 days to find a match, or be killed and reincarnated into an animal of their choice and then sent into the woods surrounding the hotel facility to live as your chosen beast in the wild. Colin Farrell plays David who arrives at the hotel with his dog which is in fact his reincarnated brother who was unsuccessful before him. David has determined that should he be unsuccessful in his hunt for the perfect match, that he wants to be lobster because of his love for the sea. Also starring Rachel Weisz, Ben Whishaw and John C. Reilly this film might be as disturbing as it is funny. It won the Jury Prize at this years Cannes Film Festival, and is showing too at the current Adelaide Film Festival.

ALEX & EVE (Rated M) - this Aussie comedy is Directed by Peter Andrikidis and started its life as a series of three successful stage plays, now finding its way onto the big screen. Here we have Alex (Richard Brancatisano), a Greek Orthodox school teacher who falls for a Lebanese Muslim legal eagle Eve (Andrea Demetriades) and of course within the cross cultural divide this union is severely frowned upon by both families. It is here that the emotional dilemma is created from the get go as Eve's family have plans for an arranged marriage already to someone much more suitable and of their own kind. Needless to say opposites attract and so we have it here as the turbulence created by both families will test the two star crossed lovers as they combat with their families, their cultures, their expectations and the path they should take.

PARANORMAL ACTIVITY : GHOST DIMENSION (Rated M) - When the first film in this franchise came out it was groundbreaking stuff, resetting the tone for found footage horror, and sure enough that first film was made for just US$15K on the smell of an oily rag and it raked in over US$190M and set in place a burgeoning series that has since gone off in various directions and perhaps a little off the rails too - although there is an inkling of mythology that binds them all together. The first and second instalments had genuine scares, were well conceived, delivered on the cheap and did incredibly well, and this sixth offering is supposedly where it all ends. Here a video game designer moves to a new home with his brother, wife and child and not before long they uncover a video camera and number of video tapes that reveal two young girls, Kristi and Katie, being inducted into the demonic coven of their grandmother. No doubt it will get ugly, scary and things will go bump in the night as they fight back to protect their own daughter from a supernatural entity with its own plans for the young girl.

What a choice - so many movies and so little time! You can laugh, you can cry, you can scream and you can possibly sit on the edge of your seat in the week ahead, so do yourself a favour and catch a movie in the next seven days and then give us all some feedback.

See you at the Odeon.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Saturday, 26 September 2015

Birthday's to share this week : 27th September - 3rd October 2015.

Do you celebrate your Birthday this week?

Alicia Vikander does on 3rd October - check out the tribute to this Birthday Girl turning 27 at the end of this feature.

Do you also share your birthday with a well known, highly regarded & famous Actor or Actress; share your special day with a Director, Producer, Writer, Cinematographer, Singer/Songwriter or Composer of repute; or share an interest in whoever might notch up another year in the coming seven days? Then, look no further! Whilst there will be too many to mention in this small but not insignificant and beautifully written and presented Blog, here are the more notable and noteworthy icons of the big screen, and the small screen, that you will recognise, and that you might just share your birthday with in the week ahead. If so, Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online!

Sunday 27th September
  • Gwyneth Paltrow - Born 1972, turns 43 - Actress
  • Meat Loaf - Born 1947, turns 68 - Actor | Singer | Songwriter
  • Denis Lawson - Born 1947, turns 68 - Actor
Monday 28th September
  • Naomi Watts - Born 1968, turns 47 - Actress | Producer
  • Hilary Duff - Born 1987, turns 28 - Actress | Producer | Singer
  • Mira Sorvino - Born 1967, turns 48 - Actress | Producer
  • Brigitte Bardot - Born 1934, turns 81 - Actress | Singer
Tuesday 29th September
  • Luke Goss - Born 1968, turns 47 - Actor | Writer | Producer | Director | Singer
  • Ian McShane - Born 1947, turns 73 - Actor | Producer
  • Nicolas Winding Refn - Born 1970, turns 45 - Director | Producer | Writer
Wednesday 30th September
  • Eric Stoltz - Born 1961, turns 54 - Actor | Producer | Director
  • Angie Dickinson - Born 1931, turns 84 - Actress
  • Marion Cotillard - Born 1975, turns 40 - Actress | Singer
  • Monica Bullucci - Born 1964, turns 51 - Actress
Thursday 1st October
  • Julie Andrews - Born 1935, turns 80 - Actress | Singer
  • Randy Quaid - Born 1950, turns 65 - Actor | Producer
  • Zach Galifianakis - Born 1969, turns 46 - Actor | Producer | Writer
Friday 2nd October
  • Sting - Born 1951, turns 64 - Actor | Singer | Songwriter
Saturday 3rd October
  • Clive Owen - Born 1964, turns 51 - Actor | Producer
  • Denis Villeneuve - Born 1967, turns 48 - Director | Writer
  • Neve Campbell - Born 1973, turns 42 - Actress | Producer
  • Alicia Vikander - Born 1988, turns 27 - Actress
Alicia Amanda Vikander was born in Gothenburg, Sweden to mother Maria Fahl, an actress, and father Svante Vikander, a psychiatrist. At five months old her parents separated and for the most part thereafter was raised by her mother, although she had access to her father every other weekend with whom she would grow up enjoying the company of his other five children. She studied ballet at the Royal Swedish Ballet School in Gothenburg from the age of nine and at fifteen moved to Stockholm where she trained to become a principal dancer. At the Gothenburg Opera she appeared in several musicals including 'Les Miserables' and 'The Sound of Music'. By the age of sixteen she was travelling the world to fine tune her acting craft. Due to injuries over the subsequent years her career in dancing became sidelined as her career in acting began to take hold, although for a short time she was considering a move into the legal profession gaining a place at law school, which she also sidelined in favour of acting - a wise choice in the long term it would appear!

At home in Sweden she gained early work on a number of television shows and made for TV movies - 'Min balsamerade mor' in 2002, 'En decemberdrom' for three episodes in 2005, the mini-series 'Levande foda' in 2007 and then on the longer running 'Andra Avenyn' for 39 episodes from 2007-2008.

From 2007 there were a number of short films in her native country launching with 'Darkness of Truth' and 'The Rain', 'My Name is Love' in 2008, and 'Susans Iangtan' in 2009. Her feature film debut came in 2010 in the acclaimed 'Pure' for which she won the Best Actress Award at the Swedish Guldbagge Awards - the equivalent there of the Academy Awards or the BAFTA's.

After this was her lead role in 'The Crown Jewels' in 2011, however, international recognition came in 2012 playing the role of Kitty in the Joe Wright Directed British adaptation of 'Anna Karenina' alongside Keira Knightly, Jude Law, Domhnall Gleeson and Emily Watson. The film picked up numerous awards including a Breakthrough Performer Award for Vikander at the Hamptons International Film Festival. She followed this up that same year with the Danish period piece 'A Royal Affair' with Mads Mikkelsen which gained a Best Foreign Language Film nomination at the 2013 Academy Awards. That year, she was also nominated at the BAFTA's for a Rising Star Award but missed out to Juno Temple.

2013 saw her star in Bill Condon's 'The Fifth Estate' about the rise of WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange as portrayed by Benedict Cumberbatch. The film also starred Stanley Tucci, Anthony Mackie and David Thewlis. Next up was the Swedish film 'Hotell' for which she won the Best Actress Award at the Marrakech International Film Festival.

'Testament of Youth' came next with Vikander in the lead role as Vera Brittain recounting her WWI memories as a war time nurse. This was followed up that same year with Aussie crime drama 'Son of a Gun' with Ewan McGregor and Brenton Thwaites, and then 'Seventh Son' with Jeff Bridges, Julianne Moore, and Djimon Hounsou. 'Ex Machina' came earlier this year in the Alex Garland Directed film in which she stars as humanoid robot Ava, alongside Domhnall Gleeson again, and Oscar Isaac. Most recently there has been 'The Man from U.N.C.L.E.' Directed by Guy Ritchie and starring Henry Cavill and Armie Hammer as the reprised 60's Agents Napoleon Solo and Ilya Kuryakin respectively.

Coming soon is 'Burnt' with Bradley Cooper, Sienna Miller, Uma Thurman and Emma Thompson due before the end of the year, as is 'The Danish Girl' with Eddie Redmayne and Ben Whishaw. 'Tulip Fever' is currently in post-production for 2016 and stars Dane DeHaan, Christoph Waltz and Judy Dench, 'The Light Between the Oceans' due next year too and starring Michael Fassbender and Rachel Weisz, and currently filming is the fifth instalment in the Bourne franchise as Directed by Paul Greengrass and starring Matt Damon as Jason Bourne with Tommy Lee Jones and Vincent Cassel and due in mid-16.

Vikander has 26 acting credits to her name and has won seven awards and another seven nominations to date - she expects big things from next years Academy Awards too where she may have multiple films in contention. Recently split from Michael Fassbender, Vikander seems more intent on keeping busy, chasing the Oscar dream and polishing her celebrity status as her star continues to rise.

Alicia Vikander - young, beautiful, talented, determined, committed, hard working, in demand, already much praised and with the Hollywood world at your feet - Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-