The Reviews and the Previews, the News, and the Views of what's hot and what's not at the movies, at your cinema and at your local Odeon!
Friday, 2 January 2026
THE HOUSEMAID : Tuesday 30th December 2025
Wednesday, 24 December 2025
What's new at Odeon's this week - Thursday 25th & Friday 26th December 2025.
Turning the attention to this weeks slew of eight new release movies coming to your local big screen Odeon, we kick off with a psychological thriller that sees a struggling woman who seems happy to start over as a live-in maid for an affluent, elite couple who harbour sinister secrets . . . what could possibly go wrong? Then we turn to a comedy drama film about an American actor in Tokyo struggling to find purpose lands an unusual gig - working for a Japanese agency, playing stand-in roles for strangers. Next up we have a pair of hapless guys going through their mid-life crises who have always dreamed of remaking their all-time favourite action horror movie, but, it might just get them killed! This is followed by a Norwegian film about a fractured relationship between an acclaimed Director and his two estranged daughters, which becomes even more complicated when he decides to make a personal film about their family history. Up next is a drama offering from a first time Director about a young addict living on the streets of London who is given a shot at redemption, but his road to recovery soon curdles into a strange odyssey from which he may never escape. Following on we have a French drama offering which has an acclaimed musical conductor who has leukemia and needs a bone marrow donor, and learning he was adopted, he finds an older brother, a musician and factory worker. Then, we have a documentary that follows the career of George Orwell, and how his political observations are still relevant in present day authoritarianism; before closing out the week with an animated adventure comedy that sees SpongeBob journey to the ocean's depths to face the Flying Dutchman's ghost, encountering challenges and uncovering marine mysteries.
Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the eight latest release new films as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release or 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 week ahead.
'THE HOUSEMAID' (Rated MA15+) - is an American psychological thriller film that is Co-Produced and Directed by Paul Feig, and is based on the 2022 novel of the same name penned by Freida McFadden. Paul Feig's filmography take in his debut with 'I Am David' in 2003, and which we would follow up with the likes of 'Bridesmaids' in 2011, 'The Heat' in 2013, 'Spy' in 2015, 'Ghostbusters' in 2016, 'A Simple Favor' in 2018, and 'Another Simple Favor' released earlier this year. The film was released in the US last week, has generated largely positive critical reviews and has so far grossed US$23M off the back of a US$35M production budget.Here, we enter a twisted world where perfection is an illusion, and nothing is as it seems. Trying to escape her past, Millie Calloway (Sydney Sweeney) accepts a job as a live-in housemaid for the affluent and elite couple Nina (Amanda Seyfried) and Andrew Winchester (Brandon Sklenar). But what begins as a dream job quickly unravels into something far more dangerous - a sexy, seductive game of secrets, scandal, and power. Behind the Winchesters' closed doors lies a world of shocking twists that will leave you guessing until the very end.
'RENTAL FAMILY' (Rated M) - this US and Japanese Co-Produced comedy drama film is Co-Written, Co-Produced and Directed by Hikari (real name Mitsuyo Miyazaki) in only her second feature film offering following '37 Seconds' in 2019. Set in modern-day Tokyo, this film follows an American Actor Phillip Vanderploeg (Brendan Fraser) who has lived in Japan for seven years and who struggles to find purpose until he lands an unusual gig working for a Japanese 'rental family' agency, playing stand-in roles for strangers. As he immerses himself in his clients’ worlds, he begins to form genuine bonds that blur the lines between performance and reality. Confronting the moral complexities of his work, he rediscovers purpose, belonging, and the quiet beauty of human connection. The film has its World Premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in late September and was released Stateside towards the end of November having generated largely positive press and grossing so far US$10M.
'ANACONDA' (Rated M) - is an American action comedy film that is Co-Written and Directed by Tom Gormican and serves as a meta-reboot of the 1997 film of the same name. Tom Gormican's previous feature film making efforts are 'That Awkward Moment' in 2014 and 'The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent' in 2022. Here, wedding videographer Doug McCallister (Jack Black) and background actor Ronald 'Griff' Griffin Jnr. (Paul Rudd) who are both experiencing a mid-life crisis, travel to the Amazon to film an amateur remake of their favourite horror film, 1997's 'Anaconda'. Their project unravels when a real giant anaconda emerges, turning the light-hearted shoot into a perilous fight to stay alive. Also starring Steve Zahn, Thandiwe Newton, Daniela Melchior with Ice Cube and Jennifer Lopez making cameo appearances as themselves. The film is released Stateside this week too.
'SENTIMENTAL VALUE' (Rated M) - this Norwegian drama film is Co-Written and Directed by Joachim Trier whose previous feature film output takes in his debut with 'Reprise' in 2006, which he would follow up with 'Oslo, 31 August' in 2011, 'Louder Than Bombs' in 2015, 'Thelma' in 2017 and 'The Worst Person in the World' in 2021. Sisters Nora Borg (Renate Reinsve) and Agnes Borg Pettersen (Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas) reunite with their estranged father, the charismatic Gustav (Stellen Skarsgard), a once-renowned Director who offers stage actress Nora a role in what he hopes will be his comeback film. When Nora turns it down, she soon discovers he has given her part to an eager young Hollywood star Rachel Kemp (Elle Fanning). Suddenly, the two sisters must navigate their complicated relationship with their father, and deal with an American star dropped right into the middle of their complex family dynamics. The film had its World Premiere showcasing at the main competition of this years Cannes Film Festival in late May where it received widespread critical acclaim, won the Grand Prix, and received a nineteen minute standing ovation. The film has so far grossed US$12M since its release, has generated universal critical acclaim and has so far collected fourteen award wins and a further ninety nominations from around the awards and festival circuit, many of which are still pending a final outcome.
'URCHIN' (Rated MA15+) - is a British drama film that is Written, Directed, stars and is Co-Produced by Harris Dickinson through the Production Company, Devisio Pictures, which he founded with Producer Archie Pearch. This is Dickinson's feature film making debut. On the streets of London, Mike (Frank Dillane) a young man experiencing homelessness, is hustling to get by. Roadside evangelists won't let him sleep in peace, his slippery friend won't pay up the money he stole, and before long, he finds himself in trouble with the law. As he struggles to reintegrate into society, shuffling between jobs as a line cook and a garbage collector, he must balance a newfound sense of community with his own itch for self-destruction. The film had its World Premiere at the Un Certain Regard section of this years Cannes Film Festival in mid-May this year where Dickinson won the FIPRESCI Prize and Dillane won the section's Best Actor award. It was released in the UK in early October, has garnered generally positive critical reviews and has so far grossed US$672K.
'MY BROTHER'S BAND' aka 'THE MARCHING BAND' (Rated M) - this French drama film Co-Written and Directed by Emmanuel Courcol in his third feature film making outing following 'Ceasefire' in 2016 and 'The Big Hit' in 2020. When acclaimed orchestra conductor Thibaut Desormeaux (Benjamin Lavernhe) is diagnosed with leukemia, a DNA test to find a bone marrow donor reveals that he is adopted. Thibaut meets his biological brother Jimmy Lecocq (Pierre Lottin), a cook in a school canteen who plays trombone in a local marching band in Lille. When the band loses its conductor, Thibaut steps in as replacement, and the brothers learn more about the circumstances that shaped each other's lives. The film saw its World Premiere screening at the Cannes Film Festival in mid-May 2024, and only now is it released here in Australia having so far grossed US$26M from a production of US$7M.
'ORWELL : 2+2=5' (Rated M) - is a French and US Co-Produced documentary film that is Co-Written, Co-Produced and Directed by Raoul Peck, whose most recent documentaries are 'I Am Not Your Negro' in 2016, 'Silver Dollar Road' in 2023, and 'Ernest Cole : Lost and Found' in 2024. He has also helmed a number of feature films, most recently 2017's 'The Young Karl Marx'. Here then, through archive photos, newsreel footage, films, contemporary documentaries, and notorious speeches, the Director explores how early 20th Century authoritarianism still echoes in contemporary life, especially during ongoing conflicts threatening democracy and public liberties, such as the Myanmar civil war, the Russo-Ukrainian war, the United States' War on terror and the January 6th Capitol attack, the Gaza War, and many others. The film saw its World Premiere at the Cannes Premiere section of this years Cannes Film Festival in mid-May, where it was nominated for the L'Å’il d'or. It was released in the US in early October, and will be released in France at the end of February next year. It has garnered generally positive critical acclaim and has so far grossed US$355K. The film is narrated by Damian Lewis, as George Orwell, paying particular attention to the lessons from his 1949 novel 'Nineteen Eighty-Four'.
'THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE : SEARCH FOR SQUAREPANTS' (Rated PG) - this American animated adventure comedy film is based on the 'SpongeBob SquarePants' TV series, and is Directed by series veteran Derek Drymon and stars the show's regular voice cast. This film is the fourth feature in the series after 'The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie' in 2004, 'The SpongeBob Movie : Sponge Out of Water' in 2015 and 'The SpongeBob Movie : Sponge on the Run' in 2021. There have also been two Netflix spin off instalments, with those first three films grossing at the Worldwide Box Office a total US$470M against combined production budgets of US$164M. Here then, desperate to become a 'big guy', SpongeBob (voiced by Tom Kenny), sets out to prove his bravery to Mr. Krabs (Clancy Brown), and so travels to the deepest depths of the ocean to face off against the Flying Dutchman (Mark Hamill). The film was released in the US last week, has garnered generally positive critical reviews and has so far recovered US$16M from a production budget of US$64M.
Wednesday, 6 November 2019
What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 7th November 2019.
* Stephen Moore - born 11th December 1937, died 4th October 2019, aged 81. Moore was an English Actor and one time Director, who worked in film, television and the stage since the early 1960's amassing 109 acting credits to his name. His feature film roles took in the likes of 1977's 'A Bridge Too Far' with an all star cast, 1980's 'Rough Cut' with Burt Reynolds, 1984's 'Laughterhouse' with Ian Holm, 1986's 'Clockwise' with John Cleese, 1991's 'Under Suspicion' with Liam Neeson, 1996's 'Brassed Off' with Ewan McGregor, 2002's 'Claim' with Billy Zane, and 2009's 'The Boat That Rocked' with Philip Seymour Hoffman. His small screen roles over the years, of which there were many, included recurring appearances in TV series 'Woodtsock', 'Rock Follies', 'The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy', 'Solo', 'The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole' and its follow up season 'The Growing Pains of Adrian Mole', 'The Last Place on Earth', 'Small World', 'Middlemarch', 'Black Hearts in Battersea', 'And the Beat Goes On', 'Harry Enfield and Chums', 'The Peter Principle', 'Fish', 'The Queen's Nose' and 'Merseybeat' amongst others.
* Diahann Carroll - born Carol Diann Johnson on 17th July 1935, died 4th October 2019, aged 84. Carroll was an American Actress, Singer and Model who was active in the entertainment industry for seven decades beginning her career in Otto Preminger's 'Carmen Jones' in 1954 with Harry Belafonte. Two years later she starred in an Otto Preminger production again - this time 1956's 'Porgy and Bess' alongside Sidney Poitier. 1961 saw 'Paris Blues' with Paul Newman, and then in 1967 another Otto Preminger offering with 'Hurry Sundown' with Michael Caine and in 1968 'The Split' with Ernest Borgnine. 1974 saw 'Claudine' with James Earl Jones and then 'The Five Heartbeats' in 1991, 'Eve's Bayou' in 1997 with Samuel L. Jackson, 'Peeples' in 2013 and 'The Masked Saint' in 2016 which was to be her last acting role. Of her total 58 acting credits, there were also appearances on television shows over the years including 86 episodes on 'Julia', 74 episodes on 'Dynasty' and seven episodes on spin-off series 'The Colby's', nine episodes on 'A Different World', seven episodes on 'Lonesome Dove : The Series', multiple episodes on 'Grey's Anatomy', 'Diary of a Single Mom', and 25 episodes on 'White Collar' most recently. Carroll also amassed forty soundtrack credits during her career, was nominated for an Oscar for 'Claudine', won the Golden Globe for 'Julia' and received two other nominations, had four Prime Time Emmy nods and all up garnered eight award wins and a further 13 nominations. She rose to prominence in some of the earliest major studio films to feature black cast members, and in 1962, Carroll won a Tony Award for Best Actress, a first for a black woman, for her role in the Broadway musical 'No Strings'. Carroll was married four times and had long term relationships also with acclaimed Actor Sidney Poitier and the English TV host and journalist David Frost. She made a full recovery form breast cancer in 1997 and co-founded the charity Celebrity Action Council working with women in rehabilitation from problems with alcohol, drugs, or prostitution.
* Rip Taylor - born Charles Elmer Taylor Jnr. on 13th January 1935, and died on 6th October 2019, aged 88. Taylor was an American Actor and Comedian, known for his exuberance and flamboyant personality, including his wild moustache and toupee. The Hollywood Reporter called him 'a television and nightclub mainstay for more than six decades' who made thousands of nightclub and television appearances. With 52 acting credits to his name, his career launched in 1964 with a small part in the film 'I'd Rather Be Rich' and from there he appeared in two episodes of 'The Monkees', on thirteen episodes of 'Sigmund and the Sea Monsters', on eight episodes of 'The Brady Bunch Variety Hour', lending his voice talents on thirteen episodes of 'Popeye and Son', on 21 episodes of 'The Addams Family' animated series and on seventeen episodes of 'The Emperor's New School' animated series. In between time there were film appearances on the likes of 'Chatterbox', 'The Happy Hooker Goes to Washington', 'The Gong Show Movie', 'Home Alone 2 : Lost in New York', 'Indecent Proposal', 'Wayne's World 2', 'The Boys Behind the Desk', 'Alex & Emma', 'The Dukes of Hazard' and 'Silent But Deadly' his last screen appearance in 2012. Taylor's first big live show was in 1966, when he went on a tour with Judy Garland and Eleanor Powell in Las Vegas. In 1981, Taylor appeared on Broadway when he replaced Mickey Rooney in the burlesque-themed musical comedy 'Sugar Babies'. He was a frequent co-star with Debbie Reynolds in her live shows in Las Vegas, Reno and Lake Tahoe. Taylor was also a close personal friend of entertainer Liberace, spent time with him, and knew him well.
* Ryan Nicholson - born sometime in 1971, died 8th October 2019, aged 47. Nicholson was a Canadian special effects make-up artist, Director, Writer, Producer and Actor who was self-taught and ran a special-effects shop called Flesh & Fantasy for a number of years before he began Directing, Producing, Writing and starring in a number of his own feature films mostly in the horror genre space through his Production Company, Plotdigger Films. These included 'Torched' in 2004 which was followed up by 'Live Feed', 'Gutterballs', 'Hangar', 'Star Vehicle', 'Famine' and 'Collar' most recently in 2014. Nicholson had 138 make up and special FX credits to his name on such film and TV shows as 'Millennium', 'Stargate SG-1', 'The 13th Warrior', 'Double Jeopardy', 'Reindeer Games', 'Final Destination', 'Scary Movie', 'The Pledge', 'Replicant', 'Dreamcatcher', 'Agent Cody Banks', 'The Chronicles of Riddick', 'Blade : Trinity', 'The Keeper', 'Ghost Rider', 'Warcraft', 'Blair Witch', 'Altered Carbon', 'Deadpool 2', 'The Predator' and 'Puppet Killer' this year for which he won an award for Best Special FX, as well as being twice nominated and a one time winner of a Gemini Award for Best Achievement in Make-Up.
* Juliette Kaplan - born Marlene Juliette Kaplan whose married name was Marlene Hoser was born on 2nd October 1939 and died on 10th October 2019, aged 80. Kaplan was an English Actress who was perhaps most famous for playing the role of battle-axe Pearl Sibshaw in the BBC comedy 'Last of the Summer Wine' across 226 episodes from 1985 to 2010. Her acting career took off in 1958 with the feature film 'A Voice Crying in the Wilderness' and then came the aforementioned 'Last of the Summer Wine' series which kept her occupied, until 2010 with interim appearances in feature films taking in 'The Death of Klinghoffer' in 2003, 'Are You Ready for Love?' in 2006, and 'Don't Let Go' in 2013 with eight episodes on 'Coronation Street' in 2015 and the short film 'You Are Whole' also in 2015 and her final screen appearance.
* Robert Forster - born Robert Wallace Forster Jnr. on 13th July 1941, and died on 11th October 2019, aged 78. Forster was an American Actor, three time Producer and one time Director, who amassed 186 acting credits during his career which spanned from 1967 right up until the present day. His big screen debut came in John Huston's 1967 film 'Reflections in a Golden Eye' with Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor, and from this point on there was no looking back. The '70's brought the likes of 'The Don is Dead' with Anthony Quinn, 'Stunts', 'Avalanche' with Rock Hudson, and Disney's 'The Black Hole' with an all star cast. The '80's kicked off with marauding monster movie 'Alligator', and then 'Vigilante', 'The Delta Force' with Chuck Norris and Lee Marvin, and 'Hollywood Harry' which he also Produced and Directed in 1986. The '90's saw a bunch of direct-to-video movies and largely B-Grade features taking in 'American Yakuza', 'Original Gangstas', 'American Prefekt', 'Psycho' and of course his highly acclaimed role as bail bondsman Max Cherry in Quentin Tarantino's 'Jackie Brown' which gained him an Academy Award nod for Best Supporting Actor. The new decade kicked off with 'Me, Myself and Irene' with Jim Carey, 'Mulholland Drive', 'Charle's Angels : Full Throttle', 'Firewall' with Harrison Ford, 'Lucky Number Slevin' with Bruce Willis, 'Cleaner' with Samuel L. Jackson, 'Touching Home' with Ed Harris, 'Thick as Thieves' with Morgan Freeman and Antonio Banderas and 'Ghosts of Girlfriend's Past' with Matthew McConaughey. 'The Descendants' with George Clooney followed in 2011 and then 'Olympus Has Fallen' and its follow up 'London Has Fallen' both with Gerard Butler, 'The Confirmation' with Clive Owen, 'Acts of Vengeance' with Antonio Banderas, 'What They Had' with Hilary Swank and Michael Shannon, and finally 'El Camino : A Breaking Bad Story' that was released on Netflix the day of Forsters death. His TV appearances are too numerous to mention, albeit some of the more notable series he appeared included 'Banyon' in the title role over sixteen episodes form 1971 through 1973, five episodes of 'Police Story', then 'Magnum P.I.', 'Murder, She Wrote, 'Walker, Texas Ranger', 'Desperate Housewives', on ten episodes of 'Heroes', then 'Breaking Bad', and on ten episodes of 'Twin Peaks' in 2017. All up Forster had three award wins and a further thirteen nominations, and he was also a member of the 'Triple Nine Society' - an international high IQ society for adults whose score on a standardised test demonstrates an IQ at or above the 99.9th percentile of the human population.
* Patrick Ward - was born on 4th January 1950, died 14th October 2019, aged 69. Ward was an Australian Actor of film and television who had 51 credits to his name in a career spanning from 1972 through until 2011. He saw his small screen debut on five episodes of the long running Australian series 'Number 96' in 1972, and from there went on to have appearances on 'Matlock Police', on thirteen episodes of 'Catch Kandy' in 1973, and then in 1974 a role on the big screen adaptation of 'Number 96', followed by a role in the cult Aussie renegade motorcycle gang film 'Stone' that same year. 'Sidecar Racers' followed in 1975 and then sixteen episodes on 'The Unisexers', 26 episodes on 'Cop Shop' and 35 episodes on 'Arcade'. The films 'The Chain Reaction', 'Fantasy Man', 'Warming Up', 'Running from the Guns' and 'The Crossing' saw out the '80's with turns in the meantime on TV shows including 'The Love Boat', 'A Country Practice', 'Runaway Island', 'Anzacs', then mini-series 'Fields of Fire', 'Fields of Fire II' and 'Fields of Fire III', and a single episode on 'Mission : Impossible'. From the '90's onward his career began to slow down with turns on thirteen episodes of 'My Two Wives', five episodes of 'Home and Away', then 'All Saints', 'Farscape' and two features 'Jindalee Lady' and 'Restraint' with the six minute short film 'Facade' in 2011 on which he also acted as Cinematographer, Editor and added the digital effects being his last.
* Bill Macy - born Wolf Martin Garber on 18th May 1922, died 17th October 2019, aged 97. Macy was an American Actor of film, television and stage who amassed 82 screen credits to his name from 1966 up to 2010. He worked as a cab driver for a decade before being cast as Walter Matthau's understudy in 'Once More, With Feeling' on Broadway in 1958, and he went on to portray a cab driver on the soap opera 'The Edge of Night' in 1966 - his screen debut. From there he took an uncredited role on Mel Brooks 'The Producers' in 1967, with his following big screen roles over the years including the likes of 'Oh! Calcutta!', 'The Jerk' with Steve Martin, 'My Favourite Year' with Peter O'Toole, 'Bad Medicine' with Steve Guttenberg, 'Sibling Rivalry' with Kirstie Alley, 'The Doctor' with William Hurt, 'Me Myself and I' with George Segal, 'Analyze This' with Robert De Niro, 'Surviving Christmas' with Ben Affleck, 'The Holiday' with Kate Winslet, and 'Mr. Woodcock' with Billy Bob Thornton. His small screen appearances took in the role of Walter Findlay on 137 episodes of 'Maude' which ran from 1972 through 1978, and then 'St. Elsewhere', 'The Love Boat', 'L.A. Law', seven episodes on 'Nothing in Common', 'Murder, She Wrote', 'NYPD Blue, 'Chicago Hope', 'Seinfeld', 'ER', 'How I Met Your Mother', 'My Name Is Earl' and 'Hawthorn' was to be his last screen appearance in 2010.
* Robert Evans - born Robert J. Shapera on 29th June 1930, died 26th October 2019, aged 89. Evans was an American Film Producer and Studio Executive. Evans began his career in a successful business venture with his brother, selling women's clothing. By accident in 1956 he fell into the screen acting business, but by 1962 he decided to go into Film Producing instead, using his accumulated skills and wealth from the clothing business. And so began a stellar rise in the movie making industry. In 1967 he had risen to be the head of Paramount Pictures where he turned around the company's failing financial position, and by 1974 he chose to step down in order to Produce his own pictures. In 1980, Evans' career, and his personal life, took a downturn after he pleaded guilty to cocaine trafficking and as a result over the next 12 years, he Produced only two films, but come 1993, he began to produce films on a more regular basis. At Paramount, he Produced amongst others 'Barefoot in the Park', 'The Odd Couple', 'Rosemary's Baby', 'The Italian Job', 'True Grit', 'Love Story', 'Plaza Suite', 'Harold and Maude', 'The Godfather', 'Serpico', 'The Great Gatsby' and 'The Conversation'. As a Producer in his own right, he was responsible for the likes of 'Chinatown', 'Marathon Man', 'Urban Cowboy', 'Popeye', 'The Cotton Club', 'The Two Jakes', 'Sliver', 'The Phantom', 'The Saint' and 'How to Lose a Guy in Ten Days' which was to be his last feature film in 2003. All up Evans had 21 Producer credits, fifteen as Actor and two as Writer and he picked up nine award wins and two nominations throughout his career. Evans was married seven times, five wives were Actresses - Sharon Hugueny, Camilla Sparv, Ali McGraw, Phyllis George and Catherine Oxenberg - the latter marriage having been annulled after just nine days. In 1998 at a dinner party Evans suffered a stroke while proposing a toast. He flatlined in the ambulance but was resuscitated. He then suffered two further strokes in quick succession, was left paralysed to his right side and completely unable to speak. He eventually regained his ability to talk and returned to Producing. From 2013, he was dependant on a cane for shorter walks and had limited mobility.
* Anne Phelan - born 2nd August 1948, died 27th October 2019, aged 71. Phelan was an Australian Actress of the theatre, television and cinema who amassed sixty acting credits during her career which launched in 1973 on a single episode of private detective TV drama series 'Ryan'. From there she starred in six episodes of 'Matlock Police' before scoring her first feature film role in Fred Schepisi's 'The Devil's Playground' in 1976. Between 1974 and 1977 Phelan starred in 523 episodes of the Australian soap opera 'Bellbird' before her next film role 'Hard Knocks' in 1980. There were then occasional roles on the likes of 'A Country Practice', 'Sons and Daughters' and then 128 episodes on 'Prisoner' leading into her next big screen role on 'I Live with Me Dad' in 1985. The successive years brought regular appearances on TV shows including 'The Flying Doctors', seven episodes on 'Col'n Carpenter', then 'Law of the Land', 'Blue Heelers', on 320 episodes of 'Something in the Air', on fourteen episodes of 'Marshall Law', on fourteen episodes of 'Neighbours', and on 42 episodes of 'Winners & Losers' which was to be her final screen appearance. In the meantime there were three further film roles on 'The Craic', 'Charlie & Boots' and 'Inanimate Objects'. During her career she also starred in numerous theatre productions across Australia. In 2007, Phelan was awarded the O.A.M. (Order of Australia Medal) in the Queen's Birthday Honours List for her services to the arts as an Actress, and to the community, particularly through support for women living with the HIV virus and for asylum seekers and refugees. She was a Member of Actors for Refugees, an Ambassador for Alzheimer's Australia Victoria, a Patron of Positive Women (Victoria), and a Recipient of the Oz Showbiz Cares / Equity Fights AIDS 2002 Activist of the Year Award.
* John Witherspoon - born 27th January 1942, died 29th October 2019, aged 77. Witherspoon was American Actor and Comedian who had 84 acting credits to his name spanning a career that launched on two episodes of 'The Richard Pryor Show' in 1977. From there he worked on other notable TV shows including 'The Incredible Hulk', 'Barnaby Jones', 'WKRP in Cincinnati', 'Hill Street Blues', 'L.A. Law', on ten episodes of 'Townsend Television', 'The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air', on 101 episodes of 'The Wayans Bros.', on eighteen episodes of 'The Tracy Morgan Show', on 55 episodes of the animated adult series 'The Boondocks', on 28 episodes of 'The First Family', and on 31 episodes of 'Black Jesus' most recently. His film acting credits took in the likes of 'The Jazz Singer' in 1980 (his first big screen appearance), then 'Ratboy', 'Bird', 'House Party', 'Boomerang', the first of the 'Friday' stoner comedy franchise which launched with 'Friday' in 1995 that saw two sequels with 'Next Friday' in 2000, 'Friday After Next' in 2002 and 'Last Friday' which was in Pre-Production at the time of Witherspoon's death. In between there was also 'Vampire in Brooklyn', 'Bulworth', 'Little Nicky', 'Little Man', 'After Sex' and 'Bring Me the Head of Lance Henriksen' which was in Post-Production at the time of his death.This week we have six latest cinematic releases coming too your local Odeon, and we kick off with a sequel to a 1977 novel adapted into a classic horror film in 1980 by both a highly acclaimed and prolific author, and a regarded Director. This sequel picks up the story a few decades later with the young lad of that initial instalment now a grown man still fighting a few demons from his tormented childhood in a remote isolated Hotel during the Winter months, whilst coming to the aid of a young girl with similar powers to his own to combat a deadly foe. We then turn to a Spanish foreign language film about an ageing and ailing film Director who recounts his past life in order to seek some salvation for his future years. Next up is the first Christmas offering to herald in the festive film season with his love story about a hapless girl who seems to be unlucky in love and equally as unfortunate in life, but her life takes on an unexpected upturn when she meets a man, that leads her to question whether it's all too good to be true. And we close the week with a trio of Australian films, the first a film about loss and love set in the far outback of western New South Wales when a young local girl befriends an emu and the unlikely pair become firm friends; before a slasher horror offering about eight women who are hunted down in a deadly game of cat and mouse and all in the name of sport by eight crazed stalker killers, and finally a documentary shining a light on mens health from five very different characters living, working, surviving and doing their thing in very different environments.
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 week ahead.
'DOCTOR SLEEP' (Rated MA15+) - is an American horror film based on the 2013 novel of the same name by Stephen King, which is a sequel to King's 1977 novel 'The Shining'. The film, set several decades after the events of 'The Shining', combines elements of the 1977 novel and its 1980 film adaptation of the same name directed by Stanley Kubrick. Doctor Sleep is Written, Directed, and Edited by Mike Flanagan whose previous credits take in such horror offerings as 2011's 'Absentia', 2013's 'Oculus', 2016's 'Hush', 'Before I Wake' and 'Ouija: Origin of Evil' and 2017's 'Gerald’s Game' again based on a Stephen King novel. Flanagan also created, Directed, Produced, Wrote, and Edited the Netflix supernatural horror series 'The Haunting of Hill House' in 2018, and he is currently developing a stand-alone second season, titled 'The Haunting of Bly Manor'. The film is released this week too in the US and Canada.Struggling with alcoholism, Dan Torrance (Ewan McGregor) remains traumatised by the sinister events that occurred at the Overlook Hotel in the remote Colorado Rockies when he was a child. His hope for a peaceful existence soon becomes shattered when he meets Abra (Kyliegh Curran), a teenager who shares his extrasensory gift of the 'shine'. Instinctively recognizing that Dan shares her power, Abra has sought him out, desperate for his help against the merciless Rose the Hat (Rebecca Fergusson) and her followers, The True Knot, who feed off the shine of innocents in order to become immortal. Forming an unlikely partnership, Dan and Abra engage in a brutal life-or-death battle with Rose. Abra's innocence and fearless embrace of her shine force Dan to call upon his own powers as he has never had to do before facing his fears and reawakening the ghosts that he thought were firmly locked away in his closet. Also starring Cliff Curtis, Bruce Greenwood, Carl Lumbly and Alex Essoe.
'PAIN AND GLORY' (Rated MA15+) - is a 2019 Spanish drama film Directed and Written by the highly acclaimed and much awarded Spaniard Pedro Almodovar. The film was released in its native Spain in late March this year, saw its international debut at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival, where the film was selected to compete for the Palme d’Or, while Banderas won the award for Best Actor and Alberto Iglesias won for Best Soundtrack. 'Pain and Glory' has been selected as the Spanish entry for Best International Feature Film at the 92nd Academy Awards. The film tells of a series of reencounters experienced by Salvador Mallo (Antonio Banderas), a film Director in his physical decline. Some of them in the flesh, others remembered: his childhood in the 60s, when he emigrated with his parents to a village in Valencia in search of prosperity, the first desire, his first adult love in the Madrid of the 1980's, the pain of the breakup of that love, writing as the only therapy to forget the unforgettable, the early discovery of cinema, and the void, the infinite void that creates the incapacity to keep on making films. In recovering his past, Salvador finds the urgent need to recount it, and in that need he also finds his salvation. Also starring Penelope Cruz, Asier Etxeandia and Leonardo Sbaraglia, the film was released in the UK in late August, in the US in early October, has so far grossed US$31M and has garnered mostly positive Reviews.'LAST CHRISTMAS' (Rated PG) - in this British RomCom Directed by American film maker and Actor Paul Feig whose previous Directorial movie outings take in 'Bridesmaids', 'The Heat', 'Spy', 'Ghostbusters' and 'A Simple Favour', with numerous television Directing and acting gigs in the meantime. Co-Produced, Co-Written for the screen and based on a story by Emma Thompson here we find a young woman named Kate (Emilia Clarke), who has been continuously unlucky and plagued by poor decisions, accepts a job as Santa's elf in a department store during the Christmas holidays. When Kate meets Tom (Henry Golding) on the job, her life takes an unexpected turn, but is it all too good to be true. Also starring Michelle Yeoh and Emma Thompson, this film costs US$30M to make, and is released this week too in the US and next week in the UK.
'EMU RUNNER' (Rated PG) - this Australian drama film is Directed, Written and Co-Produced by Imogen Thomas in her feature film debut and tells the story of the impact a mother's death has on an Aboriginal family living in an isolated community in western New South Wales, which is perched on an ancient river and surrounded by sprawling plains. The story is seen through the eyes of Gem (Rhae-Kye Waites), a spirited eight year-old girl, who deals with the grief of her mother's death by forging a bond with a wild emu, a mythical bird of her ancestors. This spiritual dreaming is a bond she will do anything to keep, but one that puts her at odds with the new social worker, and her loving father Jay Jay (Wayne Blair) who is at a loss on how to handle her somewhat wayward young daughter whose new found interest seems to be her only interest.
'THE FURIES' (Rated R18+) - here Australian Director and Writer Tony D'Aquino helms his first full length feature film, in the form of this Aussie outback horror slasher flick that is sure to please lovers of the genre. In it, we find a pair of rebellious high school students Kayla (Airlie Dodds) and her best friend Maddie (Ebony Vagulans) are stalked and abducted by a sinister presence while out bombing their neighbourhood with graffiti. Waking up in the woods, bound, disoriented and confined within a claustrophobic coffin-like box, Kayla's first thought is of Maddie. It's easy enough for her to breakout from her confines, but before she has a chance to ponder what fate has befallen her and her friend, Kayla notices a terrifying masked man fast approaching, armed with a razor-sharp axe. As a chase ensues, it soon becomes clear that Kayla and her pursuer are not alone. There are six more young women, each with a masked stalker assigned to them, hell-bent on murder. As the threat of more rampaging killers closes in, she races to save as many girls as she can in a deadly game of cat and mouse. But when the girls turn on each other, Kayla's killer instinct in unleashed and she does whatever it takes to survive and seek revenge on her abductors. Also starring Linda Ngo, Taylor Ferguson, Danielle Horvat, Jessica Baker, Kaitlyn Boye and Harriet Davies as the six other woman being hunted, with Steve Morris, Ben Toyer, Leon Stripp and Dean Gould as the stalking killers.'HAPPY SAD MAN' (Rated M) - here Australian film maker and Co-Producer Genevieve Bailey brings us this documentary (which she also Edited and acted as Cinematographer) of men exploring their emotional selves. Here we journey from Bondi Beach to the outback; we laugh and cry alongside a war photographer travelling between global conflict zones (Jake), we visit a farmer and outreach worker from country Victoria (Ivan), an ageing hippie musical nomad and the inspiration behind the film (John), the founder of a non-profit surf community raising awareness of mental health (Grant), and a sensitive dog-loving artist (David). Each portrait is an intimate and heartwarming look into vulnerability, friendship and compassion. 'Happy Sad Man' is Bailey's second feature length documentary following 2011's 'I am Eleven' which was filmed in fifteen countries and in twelve languages over a period of six years to explore the lives of eleven year old children in different environments. It received critical acclaim and a theatrical release in Australia spanning more than eight months and was named New York Times Critic’s Pick when it opened across US cinemas. The film became the highest grossing Australian documentary to be released theatrically in the US – playing extended seasons and reaching over 100 cities. It won Best Documentary of the Year at the IF Awards in Sydney and awards in the US, France, Spain and Brazil.
With six new release movies 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-
Friday, 28 September 2018
A SIMPLE FAVOUR : Tuesday 25th September 2018.
I saw 'A SIMPLE FAVOUR' earlier in the week, and this American mystery comedy thriller is Directed and Co-Produced by Paul Feig whose previous feature film Director credits include 2016's 'Ghostbusters', 2015's 'Spy', 2013's 'The Heat' and 2011's 'Bridesmaid's' as well as numerous episodes of television series including 'The Office', 'Arrested Development', 'Weeds' and 'Nurse Jackie'. Here, he adapts for the big screen the 2017 novel of the same name by Darcey Bell. The film was released in Australia and the USA two weeks ago, has received generally positive Reviews especially for its plots twists and turns and the performances of its two principle female cast, and has so far generated US$46M off the back of its US$20M production budget outlay.
We are first introduced to Stephanie Smothers (Anna Kendrick), a widowed single mother, via her on screen vlog which she runs from the comfort of her own kitchen to an audience of Mum's preaching the gospel according to her helpful household crafts, cooking and essential arsenal of basic home skills that every Mum should possess. She digresses, and begins to recount the story of how her very best friend Emily Nelson (Blake Lively) disappeared four days ago seemingly without a trace, and just how worried she is for her friends safety and wellbeing. In flashback, we learn how Stephanie and Emily first became acquainted, through their sons Miles (Joshua Satine) and Nicky (Ian Ho) respectively who attend the same junior school together. Emily is a busy working Mum, working as the PR Director for fashion guru Dennis Nylon (Rupert Friend).
Through their children who coerce their Mum's into play dates, Stephanie and Emily quickly bond and become firm friends, with Emily frequently inviting Stephanie back to her lavish household for afternoon martini's while the kids amuse themselves at play. On one such occasion, after several rather large and potent martini's the girls trade their deepest secrets.
Emily goes first stating her frustration at the lack of success of her husband, Sean Townsend (Henry Golding), an English professors' writing career (it's been ten years since his first and last book), and their poor financial situation which has them up to the eyeballs in debt despite their apparent wealth. Despite Emily's frustration and derision of her husband, she seemingly loves him and is very openly affectionate towards him in front of a slightly embarrassed Stephanie. Then it's Stephanie's turn to come clean with her deepest darkest secret and she admits that as a teenager, after her father died, she had sex with her half-brother, Chris (Dustin Milligan), which Emily playfully teases her about calling her a 'BrotherFucker'.
One day, Emily calls Stephanie asking a simple favour of her. She asks if Stephanie could collect Nicky from school and look after him for a few hours as she has a work crisis to deal with which requires her urgent attention in the city. Stephanie as cordial and obliging as always is only happy to help out her good friend, particularly as her husband Sean is in London attending to his own sick mother. However, time marches on and not having heard from Emily for two days, despite voicemail and text messages left, she calls her employer who tell her that Stephanie is in Miami for a few days.Stephanie also calls Sean, who tells her that Emily has a history of just disappearing unannounced for a few days, but they both agree to alert the Police. While talking with two Police Officers, Sean indicated that Emily had no family, while she previously told Stephanie she had a sister, and that they had matching tattoos on their wrists. Stephanie mentions to Sean that she learned Emily hated having her photo taken, and Sean confirms a similar incident, but neither know the reason for this.
And so Stephanie turns Super Sleuth and goes to the Dennis Nylon headquarters in the city and sneaks into Emily's office and finds a photo of her, captioned with 'Gotta Have Faith' in handwriting below. Stephanie uses the photograph to create a missing person poster which she distributes around the town. The Police Officer handling the case, Detective Summervile (Bashir Salahuddin) reports to Sean that Emily lied about taking a trip to Miami, and instead rented a white Kia in Michigan. A fan of Stephanie's vlog reports seeing someone fitting Emily's description and vehicle in Michigan, and the car is discovered near the Squaw Lake Bible Camp. Upon closer inspection, the Police discover her drowned body in the water.
Sean mourns the loss of his wife despite her foibles, quirks, idiosyncrasies and flights of fancy and Stephanie grieves the loss of a her best friend. Sharing their collective grief, and whilst taking care of their two young boys, the pair grow close and begin a relationship, resulting in Stephanie moving in with Sean to his former matrimonial home. Following an autopsy of Emily's body, Detective Summerville reveals that Emily had sever liver damage, was overdosed on heroin and that only weeks before her death Sean had taken out a US$4M life insurance policy on his wife.
Emily however, it seems is alive and has been spying on Sean and Stephanie from afar. Upset by how events have transpired she sends a 'BrotherFucker' note to Stephanie. This spurs Stephanie to continue with her investigations, so she seeks out Diana Hyland (Linda Cardellini) who a few years back painted a rather provocative portrait of a naked Emily. Diana states that the girl in the portrait, who posed with her hair dyed raspberry red was named Claudia and described her as a con artist and her muse all in the same sentence. She just disappeared after that never to be heard of again - until now. Diana gives Stephanie a clue to a Summer Camp which she attended as a teenager, and so the vlogger turned Super Sleuth drives there, where she trawls through various year books in search of further clues.At the Summer Camp, Stephanie comes across a year book entry showing two twin sisters aged sixteen or so - unmistakably Emily with her sister, but that their real names are recorded as Faith and Hope McLanden.
Stephanie later reaches out to Emily through a series of cryptic messages on her vlog which she knows that Emily is monitoring. They meet at the cemetery where Emily is supposedly buried, and sip on martini's for old times sake. Emily explains that in their teens they ran away from home to escape their abusive and controlling father, then went their separate ways agreeing to meet up again when the dust had settled on their disappearance, but never did. In the intervening years Faith wasted away her life, got drunk, addicted to heroin, had a string of dead end relationships and is living on the edge with no money to her name. Hope however, carved out a successful career, married well and settled down to family life. Now some sixteen years on, and Faith reached out wanting to reconnect, and bribing Emily for US$1M otherwise she'll blow the lid on their disappearance and their reasons behind it, all those years ago. Hope had little alternative under the circumstances but to dispense with her sister, which she did in the lake by drowning her while the both swam, recounting memories from those bygone days.
Emily spins a yarn and tells Stephanie that it was Sean's idea to fake her own death, realise the insurance monies, skip the country and live happily ever after. Stephanie reluctantly agrees to help Emily reappear having won the support of Stephanie's vlog audience and frame Sean for physical abuse (which she manufactures evidence of) and insurance fraud. Sean is promptly taken into custody, charged and released on bail. Stephanie secretly changes her mind about Emily's antics and proposed plan, and invents an argument with Sean in front of Emily to incriminate her, while Police listen in on microphones planted in the room. Emily however, did not come down in the last rain shower, and after sidling up to Sean all lovey dovey predicts their ruse, and renders the microphones useless beforehand. Emily confesses to her crimes, holds the pair at gunpoint, tells them she will kill them both and make it look like a murder-suicide. She shoots Sean in the shoulder and turns the gun on Stephanie. Stephanie then reveals that she has a hidden camera concealed as a button in her blouse and is live-streaming the whole event through her vlog. Emily never saw that coming and runs into the street trying to make a quick exit, where she is hit by a car, and is then arrested by Police Officers who arrive at these scene with her crawling along the street unable to walk.The closing commentary as the credits roll pick up the story six months down the track explaining that Emily was sentenced to twenty years in prison - a life she seems to be reasonably well adjusted to. Sean was cleared of all charges and has became a successful professor at a major University somewhere out of town where he lives with his son, Stephanie's vlog expanded to one million subscribers, and her success in handling Emily's case led her to becoming a part-time private detective which she has an aptitude for having brought thirty criminals to justice already.



























