Showing posts with label Raffey Cassidy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raffey Cassidy. Show all posts

Friday, 1 December 2017

THE KILLING OF A SACRED DEER : Tuesday 28th November 2017.

'THE KILLING OF A SACRED DEER' which I saw this week, is a Co-Written, Co-Produced and Directed psychological horror thriller by Yorgos Lanthimos whose last film was the highly acclaimed dystopian black comedy 'The Lobster'. This film Premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival back in May this year, for the Palme d'Or for which it was nominated, but it did win The Best Screenplay Award for Yorgos Lanthimos and his scribing collaborator Efthymis Filippou. Released in the US towards the end of October, the UK in early November and here in Australia a couple of weeks ago, the film has so far taken US$3.5M at the Box Office, and has garnered generally favourable Reviews albeit it is dark, unsettling and at times a tough watch.

The film opens up with a close up shot of a beating heart, and then the camera pans out to reveal a surgeon's hands poking and prodding at tissue, muscle and skin as he finalises his delicate operation. The surgeon then removes his face mask, his bloodied surgical gloves and his medical robe and dispenses these into a bin. Here once again, Lanthimos has cast Colin Farrell as he did in 'The Lobster' as a highly regarded cardiovascular surgeon, Steven Murphy, who likes order, discipline and cleanliness in his personal and work life. As we see him walking down a hospital corridor chatting with Matthew (Bill Camp) his anaesthesiologist, they idle their time away by discussing the merits of metal over leather wrist watch straps.

We then cut to a booth in a diner where Steven sits alone, soon though to be joined by a teenage lad named Martin (Barry Keoghan). Steven would appear to be mentor, a father figure almost to Martin but the history surrounding their relationship or how it came about is unexplained. The next time they meet Steven presents Martin with a brand new wrist watch with a metal strap, for which Martin is very grateful but he prefers a leather strap, and will change it if Steven don't mind. The next day Martin appears at the hospital to thank Steven for his wristwatch and to show off its new leather strap. Steven, suggests that it would be good idea if Martin were introduced to his family over dinner. And so Martin is welcomed to dinner at the Murphy household and meets wife and mother Anna (Nicole Kidman), elder daughter Kim (Raffey Cassidy) and younger son Bob (Sunny Suljic). Steven explains away his connection to Martin as him stretching out a hand of support as a result of Martin's loss of his father ten years previously in a car accident.

To return the favour Martin invites Steven over to his home for dinner to meet with his mother. Steven reluctantly agrees but is clearly out of his comfort zone. While watching Martin's favourite movie ('Groundhog Day'), the young lad excuses himself off to bed, too tired and suggests they watch the rest the next night. Leaving Steven and Martin's mother (Alicia Silverstone) alone, she makes a sexual advance on the surgeon, which he rebukes and hastily leaves. Over the following days Martin demands more and more time of Steven, but he does not respond sensing that the boy is getting out of control. One morning, when the family are preparing for the day, Bob is running late for school and won't get out of bed. Anna sends in Steven to stir their son, to find Bob sat on the edge of his bed. He says he cannot get up, and Steven scolds him. Eventually Bob makes his father understand that he literally cannot get up, he cannot stand, he has no feeling in his legs.

Anna and Steven rush Bob to the hospital where a full neurological and physical examination is conducted using all the cutting edge technology that the hospital has at its disposal, but, they can find nothing wrong with Bob. He recovers the use of his legs temporarily, long enough for his parents to chide him for wanting an extra day off school, but, on the way out of the hospital, Bob collapses again, unable to stand or walk. While Steve and Anna maintain a bedside vigil over Bob, Kim meets secretly with Martin, with whom she is growing increasingly infatuated.

The next day Martin visits Bob in hospital unannounced. Met by Steven and Anna, Martin demands that he speak with Steven in private. During the conversation Martin reveals his true ulterior motives to Steven, revealing the truth that his father did not die in a car accident, but died on the operating table during surgery that Steven was performing at the time. Therefore Steven failed to save the life of his father, and is therefore culpable in his death, for which Martin lays the blame squarely at the surgeon's feet . . . . or hands! Martin further states coldly that to restore the 'balance' in destroying his family, he must now kill one of the members of his own family, any member, he can make that choice, but one it must be, or they will all die.

Martin goes onto explain that they will all gradually die if Steven does not comply - by succumbing to three different stages. The first is paralysis of the lower body and loss of use of the legs, which Steven has already seen manifest itself in his son, Bob. The second is complete loss of appetite and refusal to eat anything and everything, which has also now manifested itself in Bob. The third stage is bleeding from the eyes, and shortly thereafter, death. Steven, is dismissive of these wild claims believing them to be the ramblings of an unhinged young boy, but when Kim collapses suddenly during a choir rehearsal and is unable to stand on her legs, he starts to think there is something more sinister at play here. Meanwhile, Martin goes to see Steven at his place of work complaining of chest pains, and undergoes a thorough examination by Steven and his learned colleagues who give the teenager a clean bill of health in every respect.

Anna, in the meantime, suspects there may be more to Steven's story that he is letting on. Knowing that her husband was a former alcoholic, she goes to see Matthew, to enquire if during the surgery on Martin's father, Steven could have been under the influence of alcohol. Matthew confirms in the positive. Furthermore, Ann's concerns grow more acute when at the hospital with Kim and Bob, her daughter receives a phone call from Martin. At which point she is able to get up out of bed and walk a few paces to the window and look down on the car park for Martin. He is nowhere to be seen, but they have brief conversation and she returns to her bed, and the use of her legs is lost again when the conversations ends. Anna travel to Martin's home where she confronts the boy saying why should she and her children pay for the mistakes of Steven, and asks for him to cease whatever he is doing to her family. Martin is however, unrepentant and shows no remorse for the pain and suffering he is prepared to put her family through - after all, Steven all but destroyed his family unit.

Tensions between Anna and Steven begin to mount, and they argue as he refuses to believe that anything supernatural is taking place here, despite there still being zero medical evidence to contradict that argument. Later that night Steven wakes his wife and demands that she follow him down to the basement. There Anna is confronted with a kidnapped Martin, who has been taped and bound to a chair and already badly beaten by Steven, who has demanded that he reverses whatever hold he has on his children. Again, Martin holds his ground, stating that time is fast running out. Martin's presence in the household only fuels that angst that all family members feel. Kim and Bob argue between themselves over who their father will choose to die; Steven seeks to gather as much information as he can to help him decide; and Anna states to her husband that killing one of the children is the only option as they are both still young enough and healthy to have another child to replace the one that is lost.

By the next morning while Steven still sleeps, Anna releases Martin, telling her husband that it served no purpose in keeping him bound to a chair. Later in the day, Bob begins to bleed from the eyes as foretold. That night, Steven takes hold of the situation and binds Bob, Kim and Anna each to a chair and places a pillowcase over their heads. Armed with a loaded shotgun, he places a woollen cap over his head, spins uncontrollably through 360⁰ coming to a abrupt halt and letting off a round. He misses. He attempts a second time and misses once again. He reloads, spins again and lets off a third round but this time the bullet connects with its human target.

Sometime later, Steven and his two remaining family members are sat in the same diner that Steven met with Martin in previously. They don't talk, looking solemn as Martin enters and siddles up to the service desk. He stares back at the table of three barley taking his gaze off them. Steven looks up but can hardly make eye contact. A few short moments pass, and the three get up to leave. Martin continues to glare at them as they approach the door, with a wry smile on his face.

Critics have raved about this film, some saying it is one of 2017's best. For me however, I can't see it! This film throws up more questions than it answers, and from that standpoint it is certainly a conversation starter. But perhaps that is Lanthimos' intention - to be controversial, to divide opinion and to stimulate argument. The film belongs to Barry Keoghan who is quite brilliant in the role of Martin - the well spoken, calculating yet quietly deranged adolescent Devil character to Colin Farrell's Steven who plays the stoic, steadfastly scientific God like character whose clean living tidy, organised picket fence nuclear family suburban home life gets shaken to the core by his Good Samaritan act. Nicole Kidman is on good form here too as the dutiful wife who has carved out her own successful career and who has the strength of character to stand on her two feet and be counted, but also can be subservient when the occasion calls of it - in the bedroom especially. At times this is tough watch despite the film being stylishly shot, featuring some witty thought provoking dialogue, great performances and certainly a unique spin on the horror thriller genre, but it sill poses lots of unanswered questions which still plague me as I finish this Review. It's worth a look for sure, but this film won't be for everyone - certainly more arthouse than mainstream, and based on an ancient Greek play that pre-dates Jesus Christ, it's easy to see where Lanthimos has the smarts to cross over chilling thrills, with dark humour and Greek mythology to good effect, but be warned!
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Sunday, 7 June 2015

TOMORROWLAND : Wednesday 3rd June 2015.

I think that the great man himself, Walt Disney, would be very proud of his Studio's latest offering - the US$190M Sci-Fi futuristic utopian action adventure 'TOMORROWLAND' which I saw earlier this week. Directed by Brad Bird whose Directing credits also include 'Mission Impossible : Ghost Protocol', 'The Incredibles' (and its long awaited sequel currently in the works) 'Ratatouille' and 'The Iron Giant', this film has the pedigree, the budget, the talent and the story to make this big, really big! Brad Bird also co-Produced, wrote the Screenplay and came up with the story too together with Damon Lindelof, based on the Disney theme park future world attraction that first appeared at Disneyland in the mid-50's.

And so to the film itself which is very impressive looking in its CGI imagery of a future utopian world where technology is so advanced that almost anything is possible. As the film opens we have a middle aged Frank Walker (George Clooney) talking to you as though into a camera filming a message to the world, but being interrupted by someone off screen who is constantly correcting his speech.

This sets the scene as we are then taken back to the 1964 New York World's Fair where a young Frank Walker as a budding inventor and child genius is seeking to present his own invention, a jet propelled back pack, to a panel of judges to win an inventors cash prize. The judge in question is David Nix (Hugh Laurie) who chides young Walker for his inventive failings and sends him on his way, but not before he has caught the sight of young Athena (Raffey Cassidy) who sees something in Walker that clearly Nix does not. She persuades the young lad to secretly follow her into the 'It's a Small World' ride after she has presented him with a small pin on which is embossed a stylised letter 'T'. On the ride his pin is scanned and he is transported to 'Tomorrowland' eventually and after some technological high jinks falls at the feet of Athena and Nix.

The action takes us forward next to the early 21st Century and to a suburb close to Cape Canaveral where resides Casey Newton (Britt Robertson) a teenage engineering genius of a girl who just 'knows how things work' and her father Eddie (Tim McGraw) a soon to be unemployed engineer decommissioning a NASA launchpad at The Cape, and younger brother Nate (Pierce Gagnon). Casey seeks to sabotage the decommissioning of the launchpad to prolong her fathers employment, and in doing so one evening comes across a similar pin to the one given to the young Walker forty years earlier. When she touches it she catches glimpses of 'Tomorrowland' which at first frighten her but then draw her in with her inquisitive, probing and adventurous mind.

Over several occasions she visits 'Tomorrowland' each time learning and experiencing more until the battery in the pin runs flat and she can visit no more. Needing to find a new battery she locates a toy memorabilia store in Houston and makes off with the pin and all the enthusiasm in the world, but at the store everything is not quite as it seems, resulting in the re-emergence of Athena who comes to Casey's rescue. At this point too we learn that Athena is also not all she seems to be, which in turn results in Casey meeting a world weary down trodden rejected and now much older Frank Walker.

What follows is an impressively realised chase sequence though the house and grounds of Walkers home as a bunch of US Secret Service Agents give chase with the aim of dispensing with both Newton & Walker because of what they both know of 'Tomorrowland' and those they have had recent dealings with (albeit unwittingly). Thwarting their quarry, they meet up with Athena again, and Casey learns from Walker the story behind 'Tomorrowland', his involvement with it and why he was forced to leave it all behind in the 80's. She also learns that there is a device invented by Walker that has the ability to see into the past and the future, and from that they know the world will end soon . . . very soon!

From here we are transported in an instant to Paris and the top of the Eiffel Tower, which is also not all it seems, and in fact is a launchpad for a steampunk type rocket that propels them out of Paris and in to the atmosphere only to plummet back to Earth but into another dimension, which takes them all to 'Tomorrowland'. Crash landing in a now desolate, largely abandoned futuristic landscape they are greeted by Nix who oversees 'Tomorrowland' and explains why Walker was banished all those years ago, and what is in store for Earth's future - ravaged by war, conflict, poverty, greed, obesity, famine, climate change, population growth and all that bad stuff!

Seeing this, Newton realises that this future vision is not certain, but more a prophecy of what might happen without intervention, and they have the means there now to intervene and save the world. Nix though has his own agenda and is not interested in saving the world - he is seeking to rebuild his perfect utopian world of 'Tomorrowland' instead. He seeks to arrest both Walker and Newton and have them returned to Earth through a portal bridge to see out their last days before the global apocalypse. A fight ensues which ultimately results in good overcoming evil, but not at any cost as Nix and Athena perish, but the world is saved, and 'Tomorrowland' can live on with a brighter future too.

On one level I really enjoyed this film - it has stunning visuals and effects, is a solid story albeit a tad disjointed at times, and a good adventure yarn, well delivered, fast paced, ambitious, and it raises a few morality questions that are worth debating after the credits have rolled. On the other though I found the Athena character very annoying as delivered by young Raffey Cassidy; teenage engineering genius Casey could have done with a little more teenage angst and rebellion; George Clooney looked at odds with his role too on occasion and I'm not sure he is entirely cut out for this type of action fare; and as for Hugh Laurie as the criminal mastermind of the piece he just didn't do it for me and we didn't get to learn enough of his back story and how he came to be what he is.

This film is worth seeing on the big screen for sure, and at the time of writing this the critics have been less than complementary about 'Tomorrowland' giving it a mixed bag of reviews, and it has so far grossed US$142M which is also below expectations. The film deserves to be so much more, but under delivers in the final analysis leaving me somewhat disappointed given the expectations around this Disney would-be blockbuster. As for Walt looking down on us all, he will be pleased I'm sure by this modern take on everything he believed in and which formed the foundation of his empire and his legacy.



-Steve, at Odeon Online-