Showing posts with label Steve McQueen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve McQueen. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 December 2018

WIDOWS : Wednesday 28th November 2018.

'WIDOWS' which I saw earlier in the week at my local multiplex, is an American heist drama film based on the 1983 and 1985 British television series of the same name that was written by Lynda La Plante, and which ran for two series each of six episodes. Now in 2018 that earlier inspiration has been given a makeover some thirty years later and this time is written for the screen by Gillian Flynn, the author of the acclaimed novel and later film 'Gone Girl'. Directed by Steve McQueen whose previous Directorial credits include 'Hunger', 'Shame' and '12 Years a Slave', here he has amassed an ensemble cast for a Production Budget of US$42M and what has so far received widespread Critical praise. The film saw its Premier screening at TIFF back in September, was released in the UK early in November, the US and Australia mid-November, has so far grossed US$42M and has been Critically praised.

The story here surrounds a Police shootout that leaves four career thieves and partners in crime dead during an explosive armed robbery attempt in Chicago that goes horribly wrong for the gang of four. Those men were Harry Rawlins (Liam Neeson), Carlos Perelli (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo), Florek Gunner (Jon Bernthal) and Jimmy Nunn (Coburn Goss). We see the four men in the lead up to their fateful robbery living the domestic life with their wives, children, pets, jobs and each man leaving their domestic situation on the morning of the daring heist . . .  never to return. We then cut to the funerals of each one in turn - mostly small & private, expect for Harry's which was a much grander affair attended by many guests and a few dignitaries. The widows left behind are Veronica Rawlins (Viola Davis), Linda Perelli (Michelle Rodriguez), Alice Gunner (Elizabeth Debicki) and Amanda Nunn (Carrie Coon). At Harry's funeral, after his body is lowered into the ground, Veronica is approached by Jack Mulligan (Colin Farrell) who is running for election for the position of Alderman in the South Side Ward of Chicago, offering his deepest sympathies and his support, if ever she needs anything.

Meanwhile Jamal Manning (Brian Tyree Henry) is also running for election as Alderman of the South Side Ward against Mulligan, and there is a fierce rivalry between the two. Mulligan believing that as his father and grandfather before him occupied that seat, that he has a divine right to it having been born into the role, and Manning believes that he is a man of the people and is their voice at a grassroots level. However, Manning is also a crime boss, and has his younger brother Jatemme (Daniel Kaluuya) to do his dirty work for him, including dispensing with ruthless efficiency with those that would cross the pair or stand in the way of them getting what they want. We quickly learn that Harry and his gang robbed Jamal of US$2M which went up in smoke, and now the Manning's are wanting their money back, as this money was to fund Manning's electoral campaign against Mulligan. The pair look on menacingly from a distance at Harry's funeral.

Harry's trusted long time driver Bash (Garret Dillahunt) while driving Veronica around, hands her a small package containing a key and a handwritten note with the location of a safety deposit box. Recovering the box she opens it up to reveal a note book, in which are contained copious detailed notes of Harry's former robberies, and those planned. In it are contained notes of a future robbery worth US$5M in cash. Meanwhile, Jamal has visited Veronica in her home, demanding repayment of the US$2M that her husband stole from him, and gives her one month to pay up in full or suffer the consequences. Veronica claims to have known nothing about her husbands criminal activities and doesn't have that sort of money, despite the facade of living in a plush apartment with all the trappings of success. Despite what she may or may not claim to know about her husbands 'business', she has one month.

Veronica, realising the seriousness with which Jamal speaks and the threats made against her, decides to carry out the plan as laid out in Harry's note book in order to repay her debt to Jamal. She sets up a secret meeting with the three other widows whom she has never met before, and whose details she coerced out of Bash. Veronica is successful in recruiting both Alice and Linda to assist execute her plan, but this is completely new territory to the widows and they are each pretty clueless about what's involved - they just know they've gotta complete the task now in hand, and live with the consequences whatever they might be. The fourth widow however, Amanda, does not show to their initial meeting. Veronica outlines the plan in brief and says that if the girls are 'in' to meet tomorrow night at 11:30pm at a secret location which turns out to be Harry's former warehouse and and centre of operations, which remains just as the gang left it before their last job.

At that meeting, after some soul searching and weighing up their options, Alice and Linda are both in. Veronica charges Alice to buy the getaway van and three Glock pistols, while Linda is tasked with deciphering a blueprint in Harry's plan that is the location of the planned heist. Alice purchases a van from a used vehicle auction house, and the three pistols from a gun fair. Linda however, struggles to locate the whereabouts of the building depicted on the photocopied blueprint. Meanwhile, Alice has become an 'escort' at her mother Agnieska (Jacki Weaver) suggestion, to raise some much needed cash and all the trappings that go with it. On her first 'date' she falls into a transactional relationship with David (Lukas Haas) a real estate developer. She uses David's knowledge to trace the origin of the blueprint and the location of the building depicted thereon. He comes back some days later stating that it is a safe room within Jack Mulligan's home. As for Amanda, Veronica visits her and learns that she has a four month old newborn baby, and so decides not to mention their upcoming heist or to seek her involvement. 

Bash is visited unannounced in his home by Jatemme and his henchmen seeking the whereabouts of the notebook, realising the value contained in its detailed handwritten pages. When Bash claims no knowledge of its whereabouts he is promptly beaten to a pulp and murdered while Jatemme looks on. Still with no driver to provide their getaway, Linda recruits Belle (Cynthia Erivo), her children’s babysitter, and a hairdresser in a Salon underpinned by funding from Mulligan. Veronica is reluctant, but with six days only remaining on the month long deadline to pay up, she agrees to take Belle on, and it seems like she is made of sterner stuff, and can drive. Veronica visits the Mulligan home to ask Jack for protection from Manning, to which he politely declines, and to scout out the building in advance of the heist, while Belle scans the external security systems. Veronica also successfully acquires the code to the Mulligan safe by blackmailing the CEO of the Mulligans' security company, Ken (Matt Walsh) using explicit photographs of him of a sexual nature left in Harry's notebook.

The group commences the heist at night by creating a distraction down the street to divert police attention. The house is believed to be empty save for a lone Security Guard whom they taser and incapacitate. Jack Mulligan is away at an election debate between him and Jamal Manning. Having gained access to the safe and loaded up with US$5M in cash, in making their exit they are interrupted by Tom Mulligan (Robert Duvall), father of Jack and the current sitting Alderman, who shoots and wounds Alice. Linda returns fire and kills him. They escape with the money, but are caught by Jamal's brother Jatemme who is holding Belle at gunpoint and who in turn steals it from them, leaving the four girls standing on the side of the road penniless. 

Thinking he is clear Jatemme relaxes with a big smile on his dial behind the wheel of the girls getaway van, only to be heavily shunted from behind by a station wagon with the four widows giving chase and Belle at the wheel. Jatemme looses control of the vehicle and smashes into a crash barrier head-on killing him instantly. The girls retrieve the money and make their getaway. Linda takes Alice to the nearest hospital for medical attention to her gun shot wound and remains with her. Veronica drops Belle off at home before returning to the hideout with the stash of cash. Upon leaving the hideout having taken care of some final business, Veronica torches their getaway car, before loading up the final bag of swag into her own car. 

A few days later it is announced on the radio that Jack Mulligan won the election on a wave of public sympathy following his father's murder. Linda reacquires the store she lost upon her husband's death due to his gambling debts, Alice sets up her own business, and Belle moves out of town with her own children. Out of danger of Manning, Veronica donates much of her share to endow a library building in her and Harry's deceased son's memory and name at the school he attended.

I enjoyed 'Widows' but not as much as I thought I would, and I felt let down by the glowing Critical acclaim that seemingly has been bestowed upon McQueen's heist actioner. The performances are top rate - especially Viola Davis and Elizabeth Debicki, the film looks good enough, but for a heist movie set in Chicago of all places, the actual and only heist takes place in the final ten minutes of a two hour+ long movie, and there are plot holes aplenty too. Four dead career criminal husbands, four grieving and at a complete loss desperate wives, political power play, father and son machinations, gangsters making demands, violence, death and emotional turmoil are all at play here, together with a seemingly completely incompetent Chicago PD. The film moves along at a goodly pace, but some of the scenes felt rushed, especially towards the end leaving questions unanswered and plot holes uncovered, and some of the characters were left hanging without any real sense of closure. Critics seems to be raving about 'Widows' but audiences less so, and I'm in the camp with the audience I must say. Despite this the film has plenty of redeeming features too and is worth a look - it's good, but it's not great!

'Widows' merits three claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard, from a potential five.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday, 21 November 2018

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 22nd November 2018.

The 'American Film Institute Festival' (AFI Fest) ran this year from November 8th though until 15th and is, according to the official website, an 'annual celebration of international cinema from modern masters and emerging filmmakers. It takes place each Autumn in Hollywood, California, USA, and features nightly red-carpet galas, special screenings, conversations and tributes. AFI Fest remains the first and only festival of its stature that is free to the public, offering the best of current cinema in Hollywood. AFI Fest 2018 is its 32nd edition. Los Angeles' longest running international film festival remains a showcase for the best festival films of the year, and an opportunity for artists to come together with audiences in the heart of the movie capital of the world'.

Films being showcased this year fall into several categories, a sample of which is given below:-
Galas
* 'On the Basis of Sex' was the opening night film. Directed by Mimi Leder and stars Felicity Jones, Armie Hammer, Justin Theroux, Kathy Bates, Sam Waterston, Jack Reynor and Cailee Spaeny.
* 'The Ballad of Buster Scruggs', Directed by Joel and Ethan Coen, starring Tim Blake Nelson, Liam Neeson, James Franco, Tom Waits, Brendan Gleeson and Zoe Kazan.
* 'Bird Box', Directed by Susanne Bier and starring Sandra Bullock, Jacki Weaver, Trevante Rhodes, Tom Hollander and John Malkovich.
* 'Green Book', Directed by Peter Farrelly and starring Viggo Mortensen and Mahershala Ali.
* 'Widows' Directed by Steve McQueen and starring Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Elizabeth Debicki, Cynthia Erivo, Jackie Weaver, Colin Farrell, Liam Neeson, Robert Duvall, Daniel Kaluuya and Jon Bernthal and as Previewed below for release this week in Australia.
* 'Destroyer' Directed by Karyn Kusama and starring Nicole Kidman, Toby Kebbell, Sebastian Stan and Bradley Whitford.
* 'Mary Queen of Scots' was the closing night film. Directed by Josie Rourke and starring Saoirse Ronan, Margot Robbie, David Tennant and Guy Pearce.

Special Screenings
* 'Amazing Grace', Directed by Sydney Pollock and starring Aretha Franklin.
* 'Everybody Knows', Directed by Asghar Farhadi and starring Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem.
* 'The Favourite', Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos and starring Olivia Colman, Emma Stone, Rachel Weisz, Nicholas Hoult and Joe Alwyn.
* 'I Am The Night' Directed by Patty Jenkins and starring Chris Pine, Connie Nielsen and India Eisley.
* 'Roma' Directed by Alfonso Cuaron and starring Yalitza Aparicio and Marina de Tavira.
* 'Stan & Ollie' Directed by Jon S. Baird and starring John C. Reilly and Steve Coogan.
* 'Under the Silver Lake', Directed by David Robert Mitchell and starring Andrew Garfield, Riley Keough, Topher Grace and Grace Van Patten.
* 'Vox Lux' Directed by Brady Corbet and starring Natalie Portman, Jude Law and Jennifer Ehle.

Midnight
* 'Cam' Directed by Daniel Goldhaber and starring Madeline Brewer.
* 'In Fabric' Directed by Peter Strickland and starring Gwendoline Christie,
* 'Knife+Heart' Directed by Yann Gonzalez and starring Vanessa Paradis.
* 'Piercing' Directed by Nicolas Pesce and starring Mia Wasikowska and Christoper Abbott.

The other categories are World Cinema featuring 28 films, New Auteurs with eighteen films, American Independents with eleven films showcased, Cinema's Legacy with another six and Short Films featuring forty-seven shorts. You can gain more insights from this festival of film at the official website at : https://www.afi.com/afifest/

For this week we have four new release movies coming to your local Odeon. We launch with an updated film version of a British television series of the mid-'80's that sees four recently bereaved wives of four career criminals carry on the legacy that their dead husbands left behind. We then turn to yet another version of that Lincoln Green wearing hero of Sherwood Forest who takes from the rich and gives to the poor in this action fantasy adventure the like of which you have quite probably never seen our titular long bow wielding hero in before. Next up is a court room drama about a British High Court Judge who must decide the fate of a teenage lad who desperately needs life saving surgery which flies in the face of his family's religious beliefs, and, we then wrap up with a timely Christmas oriented offering with a new slant on a classic tale.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the four 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.

'WIDOWS' (Rated MA15+) - this American heist drama film is based on the 1983 and 1985 British television series of the same name that was written by Lynda La Plante, and which ran for two series each of six episodes. Now in 2018 that earlier inspiration has been given a makeover some thirty years later and this time is written for the screen by Gillian Flynn, the author of the acclaimed novel and later film 'Gone Girl'. Directed by Steve McQueen whose previous Directorial credits include 'Hunger', 'Shame' and '12 Years a Slave', here he has amassed an ensemble cast for a Production Budget of US$40M and what has so far received widespread Critical praise. The film saw its Premier screening at TIFF back in September, was released in the UK last week, the US and Australia this week, and has so far grossed US$21M.

The story here surrounds a Police shootout that leaves four thieves dead during an explosive armed robbery attempt in Chicago. Those men were Harry Rawlins (Liam Neeson), Carlos Perelli (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo), Florek Gunner (Jon Bernthal) and Bash O'Reilly (Garret Dillahunt). Their widows Veronica Rawlins (Viola Davis), Linda Perelli (Michelle Rodriguez), Alice Gunner (Elizabeth Debicki) and Belle O'Reilly (Cynthia Erivo) have nothing in common except a debt left behind by their now dead husbands criminal activities. Hoping to forge a future on their own terms, Veronica joins forces with the other three women to pull off a heist that her husband was planning, to clear their debt and retire happy and content on the monies left over. Also starring Colin Farrell, Jackie Weaver, Daniel Kaluuya, Robert Duvall and Lukas Haas.

'ROBIN HOOD' (Rated M) - there have been many iterations of the legend of Robin Hood at both the cinema and on the television over the last century or more with more recent outings including 2010's 'Robin Hood' Directed by Ridley Scott and starring Russell Crowe, 1993's 'Robin Hood : Men in Tights' Directed by Mel Brooks and starring Cary Elwes, 1991's 'Robin Hood : Prince of Thieves' Directed by Kevin Reynolds and starring Kevin Costner, also in 1991 'Robin Hood' Directed by John Irvin and starring Patrick Bergin and 1976's 'Robin and Marian'  Directed by Richard Lester and starring Sean Connery. Now in 2018 we have a reimagining of that fabled folk hero of the English twelfth century in this action adventure offering tinged with just a hint of fantasy, and Directed by Otto Bathurst who has worked mostly in British television thus far Directing episodes of 'Black Mirror', 'Peaky Blinders', 'Teachers' and 'Hustle' amongst others over the years. Here we find Robin of Loxley (Taron Egerton) a war-hardened Crusader and his Moorish commander known affectionately as Little John (Jamie Foxx) mount an audacious revolt against the corrupt English crown with thrills, spills, action, adventure, mayhem, of course a touch of romance and stylised close quarter combat along the way. Also starring Tim Minchin as Friar Tuck, Jamie Dornan as Will Scarlet, Paul Anderson as Guy of Gisborne, Eve Hewson as Maid Marian and Ben Mendelsohn as the Sheriff of Nottingham. The film has received less that favourable Press to date.

'THE CHILDREN ACT' (Rated M) - this English drama film is Directed by British film, television, theatre and opera Director Richard Eyre and is written for the screen by Ian McEwan based on his own 2014 novel of the same name. The film saw its World Premier screening at TIFF way back in  September 2017, went on general release in the UK in late August, in the United States in mid-September and now gets a go in Australia this week. The film has garnered generally positive Reviews and has so far grossed US$12M. Here, working through a marital crisis with her husband Jack (Stanley Tucci), a High Court Judge Fiona Maye (Emma Thompson) must determine if she should order a life-saving blood transfusion for a seventeen year old lad Adam Henry (Fionn Whitehead) with leukaemia, despite his parents Kevin and Naomi Henry (Ben Chaplin and Eileen Walsh respectively) refusal to accept medical treatment on the grounds that they are devout Jehovah's Witnesses, and any such treatment goes against their biblical beliefs.

'THE NUTCRACKER AND THE FOUR REALMS' (Rated PG) - this American fantasy adventure film is Directed by Lasse Hallstrom and Joe Johnston and is a reworking of E. T. A. Hoffmann's short story 'The Nutcracker and the Mouse King' and Marius Petipa's 'The Nutcracker'. The story here tells of young Clara Stahlbaum (Mackenzie Foy) who is given an egg shaped box as a Christmas present from her father Mr. Stahlbaum (Matthew Macfadyen). But Clara needs a magical, one-of-a-kind key to unlock a box that contains a priceless gift. A golden thread leads her to the coveted key, but it soon disappears into a strange and mysterious parallel world. In that world, she meets a soldier named Captain Phillip Hoffman (Jayden Fowora-Knight), a group of mice and the royalty who preside over three realms. Clara and Phillip must now venture into a fourth realm to retrieve the key and restore harmony and peace to the unstable land. Also starring Helen Mirren as Mother Ginger, Keira Knightley at the Sugar Plum Fairy and the ruler over the Land of Sweets; Richard E. Grant as Shiver, the ruler over the Land of Snowflakes; Eugenio Derbez as Hawthorne, the ruler over the Land of Flowers and Morgan Freeman. The film cost in the region of US$120M to make, was released in the US earlier this month, has so far taken US$118M and has generated largely unfavourable press to date.

With four 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-

Saturday, 7 October 2017

Birthday's to share this week : 8th - 14th October 2017.

Do you celebrate your Birthday this week?

Steve McQueen does on 9th October - check out my tribute to this Director, Producer and Writer Birthday Boy turning 48, 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 8th October
  • Sigourney Weaver - Born 1949, turns 68 - Actress | Producer 
  • Kristanna Loken - Born 1979, turns 38 - Actress | Producer 
  • Paul Hogan - Born 1939, turns 78 - Actor | Writer | Producer
  • Chevy Chase - Born 1943, turns 74 - Actor | Writer | Singer | Producer
  • Edward Zwick - Born 1952, turns 65 - Director | Producer | Writer
  • David Yates - Born 1963, turns 54 - Director | Producer | Writer
  • Matt Damon - Born 1970, turns 47 - Actor | Producer | Writer
Monday 9th October
  • Brian Blessed - Born 1936, turns 81 - Actor | Director
  • Tony Shalhoub - Born 1953, turns 64 - Actor | Producer | Director
  • Scott Bakula - Born 1954, turns 63 - Actor | Producer | Writer
  • Guillermo del Toro - Born 1964, turns 53 - Producer | Director | Writer | Actor | Make-up FX
  • Peter Docter - Born 1968, turns 49 - Writer | Director | Producer | Actor | Animator
  • Steve McQueen - Born 1969, turns 48 - Director | Writer | Producer | Actor | Cinematographer
  • Chris O'Dowd - Born 1979, turns 38 - Actor | Writer | Producer | Director
  • Brandon Routh - Born 1979, turns 38 - Actor | Producer  
Tuesday 10th October
  • Charles Dance - Born 1946, turns 71 - Actor | Writer | Producer | Director
  • Martin Kemp - Born 1961, turns 56 - Actor | Director | Producer | Writer | Singer | Songwriter  
Wednesday 11th October
  • David Morse - Born 1953, turns 64 - Actor | Producer
  • Sean Patrick Flanery - Born 1965, turns 52 - Actor | Producer | Director
  • Lennie James - Born 1965, turns 52 - Actor | Writer
  • Luke Perry - Born 1966, turns 61 - Actor | Producer | Writer
  • Justin Lin - Born 1973, turns 44 - Producer | Director | Writer | Editor
  • Dawn French - Born 1957, turns 60 - Actress | Writer | Producer | Singer
  • Joan Cusack - Born 1962, turns 55 - Actress | Writer  
Thursday 12th October
  • Hugh Jackman - Born 1968, turns 49 - Actor | Producer | Singer
  • Josh Hutchinson - Born 1992, turns 25 - Actor | Producer  
Friday 13th October
  • Chris Carter - Born 1956, turns 61 - Writer | Producer | Director 
  • Sasha Baron Cohen - Born 1971, turns 46 - Actor | Writer | Producer | Singer | Songwriter
  • Kelly Preston - Born 1962, turns 55 - Actress   
Saturday 14th October
  • Lori Petty - Born 1963, turns 54 - Actress | Writer | Director | Producer
  • Mia Wasikowska - Born 1989, turns 28 - Actress | Writer | Director
  • Christopher Timothy - Born 1940, turns 77 - Actor | Director | Producer | Writer
  • Cliff Richard (aka Harry Webb) - Born 1940, turns 77 - Singer | Actor 
  • Steve Coogan - Born 1965, turns 52 - Actor | Writer | Producer 
  • Ben Whishaw - Born 1980, turns 37 - Actor 
Steven Rodney McQueen was born in London, England and hails from Trinidadian and Grenadian ancestry. He was raised in the west London suburb of Hanwell, in the Borough of Ealing where he attended the Drayton Manor High School. He subsequently stated, long after leaving, that he did not have a very good experience with his school years saying that he was placed in a class for pupils best suited for manual labour types and more menial career pathways, and that because he was dyslexic and suffered with a lazy eye, that these could have been reasons for him being marginalised in this way. He studied A-level Art at Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College, followed by Art and Design at the Chelsea College of Art, and then Fine Art at Goldsmiths College, University of London which is where his initial interest in film was first ignited. He spent a brief period at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University but left this finding the course too restrictive and not experimental enough. He cites those who have had the most profound influence on his career as being the likes of Andy Warhol, Sergei Eisenstein, Buster Keaton and Billy Wilder.

McQueen's film debut came in his 1993 ten minute short, 'Bear' which he Directed and also stars in, and which he presented at London's Royal College of Art. The film, shot in black and white, depicts a wrestling match between two naked black men (Vernon Douglass and McQueen) who alternate questionable relations and glances of aggression and erotic attraction. He followed this up in 1995 with the black and white seven minute short film 'Five Easy Pieces' about a woman walking a tight rope; then 'Stage' in 1996 which McQueen also Wrote and Produced, and that same year 'Just Above My Head' is another ten minute short offering which McQueen also stars in. 1997 saw the one minute 'Exodus' which he also Wrote and Edited, the two minute 'Catch' and the five minute 'Deadpan' which McQueen stars in again too recreating that classic 1928 silent Buster Keaton film 'Steamboat Bill, Jnr' in which the facade of a house collapses around Keaton who is saved by standing exactly in the right spot as a window, shot from varying camera angles. 'Drumroll' followed in 1998 and the six minute 'Prey' closed out the decade in 1999.  

McQueen continued Directing, Writing and Producing short films from 2000 until his first full length feature film in 2008. 2000 kicked off with 'Cold Breath', then the fifteen minute 'Illuminer' in which he also stars in 2001, the fifteen minute 'Girls, Tricky' that same year, and then the 23 minute '7th Nov.'. 'Western Deep' - a 24 minute short film exploring the sensory overload of miners working a South African gold mine as they are exposed to dark claustrophobic conditions and the ever deafening noise of heavy drilling machinery all around them came in 2002, and then the 24 minute 'Carib's Leap' later that year too.  2004 saw the six minute 'Charlotte' with Charlotte Rampling, then fourteen minute long 'Pursuit' in 2005, 'Unexploded' in 2007, 'Running Thunder' running for twelve minutes, and the eighteen minute 'Gravesend' take us up to his first feature. In between time McQueen was commissioned to go to Iraq as the official war artist in 2006, and the following year he showcased 'Queen and Country' an art installation commemorating the deaths of British soldiers killed in action during the Iraq War by presenting their portraits as a sheet of postage stamps. 

2008 saw that debut as Writer and Director on 'Hunger' a British/Irish historical drama Co-Production that starred Michael Fassbender as Bobby Sands, an Irish member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army who died in 1981 whilst on hunger strike while imprisoned at Northern Ireland's Maze Prison. The film also starred Liam Cunningham and Premiered at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival winning the Camera d'Or Award for first time feature film makers. The film went onto win the BAFTA for Director/Writer McQueen, won major prizes at Toronto, Venice and Sydney and all up accumulated 45 award wins and a further 33 nominations. 

Later that year McQueen returned to short films with the eleven minute 'Rayners Lane', then the seven minute 'Static' in 2009 and then the thirty minute 'Giardini' also in 2009. The latter two films he also Wrote, and he took a Producer credit on 'Giardini' too. 

This leads us to 'Shame' in 2011, again Written and Directed by McQueen and starring again Michael Fassbender. Made for US$6.5M the film grossed US$18M at the Box Office and was Critically praised picking up 49 award wins and another 90 nominations including one Golden Globe and two BAFTA nods and four major award wins at the 2011 Venice Film Festival. Carey Mulligan and James Badge Dale also star in this confronting film about a sex addict whose life is suddenly turned upside down and inside out when his estranged sister rocks up on his doorstep.

2013 saw the release of '12 Years a Slave' - a historical biographical drama adapted from the 1853 slave memoir 'Twelve Years a Slave' by Solomon Northup, a New York State born into freedom African-American who was kidnapped in 1841 by two conmen in Washington D.C. and sold into slavery. For the following twelve years Northup was put to work on the plantations across Louisiana before being released. The film cost US$17M to make and grossed US$188M at the Box Office and was widely acclaimed by Critics and audiences alike. Starring Michael Fassbender as slave owner Edwin Epps and Chiwetel Ejiofor as Solomon Northup, the film also starred an ensemble cast including Benedict Cumberbatch, Brad Pitt, Paul Giamatti, Paul Dano, Lupita Nyong'o, Sarah Paulson and Scoot McNairy. The film went on to win three Academy Award wins including Best Motion Picture of the Year, Best Performance by an Actress for Lupita Nyong'o, and Best Adapted Screenplay and was nominated for another six including Best Director for McQueen. The film also picked up the Golden Globe win for Best Motion Picture and six other nominations; two BAFTA's including Best Film and Best Lead Actor for Chiwetel Ejiofor and eight other nominations; one SAG Award win and three other nods. All up '12 Years a Slave' reaped a total 238 Award wins and another 326 nominations, appeared on one hundred Critics 'Top Ten' lists for the Best Films of 2013 and was rated at number-one on 25 of those, and was the first film to receive a Best Picture Academy Award by a black Director or Producer.

McQueen followed this up with the ten minute short film 'Ashes' in 2014, then the nine minute short film for singer Kanye West and his new single 'All Day/I Feel Like That' in 2015, and finally the three minute 'Mr. Burberry' in 2016 promoting Burberry's new fragrance for men.

Next up for McQueen is 'Widows' based on the television crime drama series of the same name from 1983 and 1985 created by Linda La Plante. This big screen adaptation is currently in Post-Production for a late 2018 release and is Directed, Co-Produced and Co-Written for the screen by McQueen with 'Gone Girl' scribe Gillian Flynn also Co-Writing the Screenplay. The Chicago set film tells the story of four armed robbers who are killed during a bungled heist attempt, only to have their widows step up to take over the job and the legacy they left behind. The film stars an ensemble cast including Viola Davis, Elizabeth Debicki, Michelle Rodriguez, Cynthia Erivo, Jacki Weaver, Colin Farrell, Liam Neeson, Robert Duvall, Jon Bernthal, Lukas Haas and Daniel Kaluuya.

All up McQueen has 32 Director credits to his name, eight as Writer, six as Producer, five as Actor (on his own short films), three as Cinematographer and one as Editor. He has amassed 83 Award wins and another 86 nominations including the Oscar and the BAFTA for Best Picture for '12 Years a Slave'. He is married to Bianca Stigter, a Dutch cultural critic and they have two children together. He was awarded an OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) by HRH Queen Elizabeth II in 2002 and this was elevated to a CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the Queen's 2011 New Years Honours List to mark his services to the visual arts.

Steve McQueen - cut his teeth for fifteen years honing his film making skills on short films and art installations; was 38 years of age when he Directed his first feature length film, has cast Michael Fassbender in all three of his first three features; shoots his films mostly using just one camera; shoots his dialogue scenes in often just one single take or a series of extended takes; is not adverse to filming confronting and at times brutal subject matter; and was voted in 2014 by Time Magazine as one of the 100 Most Influential People in the World. With such a track record, we look forward to your next Production, and in the meantime Steve, Happy Birthday to you, from Odeon Online.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Thursday, 6 February 2014

12 YEARS A SLAVE - 5th February 2014

There is a lot of buzz around '12 YEARS A SLAVE' which I saw last night at The Cremorne Orpheum Picture Palace. Hardly surprising really given that it will tick many of the Academy's boxes - strong cast, period piece, true story, human tragedy, adversity, courage, well filmed if a little art house - all the makings of an Oscar win or two.

This film introduces us to accomplished violinist Solomon Northrup (played brilliantly by Chiwetel Ejiofor) residing as a free man with his family in Saratoga in 1841. Life is good, and as a free man he can almost do as he pleases, until after a drunken celebratory evening with new found 'friends' wakes up locked up and banged up in chains somewhere in Washington. Savagely beaten by his keepers for being black, he is shipped off down South and given the new name of 'Platt' which he carries through with him for the next twelve years as a slave on the timber, then cotton and then sugar cane plantations working for the ruling white man.

Sold off by Paul Giamatti, initially to Benedict Cumberbatch who treats him with some respect, gives a degree of responsibility and offers random acts of kindness including the provision of a violin. A couple of years in though and as a result of a run-in with a 'Master' on the timber plantation, Platt is sold to Michael Fassbender (Edwin Epps) who is a very different box & dice altogether. Nasty, malicious, controlling and prepared to go to any length to exert his supreme authority over his black 'property' this is where the film veers into grim, sadistic, heart wrenching, and horrific territory. Fassbender delivers a strong believable performance however, that will have you gawping in disbelief at the cruelty humans are capable of doing to each other because of the colour of their skin (bearing in mind this is a true story of an era that Americans would rather forget!).

For a brief time Platt is sold off to third Master for just one cotton season before returning to the Epps plantation and back to the waiting, wringing hands of Fassbender. Brad Pitt appears in two closing scenes as Platt's white slavery abolitionist saviour and ticket back to freedom, his family and Saratoga ultimately.

This is not an uplifting film, even at the end when Solomon Northrup is reunited with his grown family. There is much hardship, adversity, anguish, violence and horror in this film, but it is a story worth telling, and Director, Steve McQueen handles the subject matter well, and has given us a film experience that will leave you thinking long after the credits have rolled.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-