Showing posts with label Trainspotting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trainspotting. Show all posts

Monday, 6 March 2017

T2 : TRAINSPOTTING : Tuesday 28th February 2017.

'T2 : TRAINSPOTTING' which I saw last week has been in gestation for eight years now. In early 2009 Danny Boyle made it known that he wanted to film a follow up to his 1996 cult classic 'Trainspotting', based on the Irvine Welsh follow up novel 'Porno' and set nine years after that original film. At that time Ewan McGregor was already keen. In the ensuing years Boyle always kept his follow up film on the back burner as other projects took hold, but in 2014 it was confirmed that Welsh and Boyle had spent a week together discussing script options that would do justice to the 1996 film, and the following year it was reported that 'Trainspotting 2' would be released to coincide with the 20th anniversary of that first film in 2016. Released in the UK in late January 2017, Directed and Co-Produced by Danny Boyle, reuniting the original cast of Ewan McGregor, Robert Carlyle, Ewen Bremner, Jonny Lee Miller and Kelly Macdonald and costing US$18M the film has so far made US$26M, and has received generally positive Reviews. By comparison, the highly acclaimed 'Trainspotting' back in 1996 cost US$2.25M to make and it grossed at the Box Office US$72M.

The film opens up with Mark Renton (Ewan McGregor) pounding a treadmill at his local gym, in a world of his own, running at a pace to stand still, when suddenly the treadmill runs away from him flinging him backwards into a wall behind. He lies their motionless, while other gym junkies come to his aid. We then fast forward a few months and we see Mark arriving back home in Edinburgh from Amsterdam - the place he has called home for the past twenty years. His first stop off is to say hello to his Dad (James Cosmo) now living alone since his wife and Mark's mother died, in the same house where Mark grew up. He goes up to his bedroom which has remained unchanged since he left - complete with train locomotive wallpaper.

After this, Mark looks up Daniel 'Spud' Murphy (Ewen Bremner) who is estranged from his wife Gail and nine year old son Fergus, and living in a beat up tower block, with no job and begging on the street for loose change. He is still a heroin addict and living with the legacy of a lifelong habit, and is suicidal. He pens a note to Gail and Fergus bidding them farewell. He envisions himself falling off the tower block roof where he lives, but instead attempts self-asphyxiation by taping a plastic bag around his head. He is rescued just in the nick of time by Mark who tracks down Spud and busts the door down to pull the bag from his face. At first Spud is angry at Mark for foiling his suicide attempt, but then Mark explains that he wants to help Spud kick his habit, clean up his thinking, and help him reconcile with Simon 'Sick Boy' Williamson (Jonny Lee Miller).

Simon is the owner of The Port Sunshine Pub left to him by his now deceased Aunty. It's a dive of a pub, with next to no customers in the very run down arse end of the city. When he's not pulling a few pints for the few regular customers he does have, he's snorting cocaine and blackmailing well to do types by filming them secretly while engaged in all manner of sexual acts with his girlfriend Veronika Kovach (Anjela Nedyalkova). When Mark walks into the Pub he is greeted by Simon who asks nonchalantly 'so what have you been unto for twenty years?' They exchange social niceties but there is tension between them - Simon still having not forgiven Mark for betraying him out of £4,000 all those years ago. Simon's anger quickly erupts resulting in a full on brawl inside the pub with the fighting duo using snooker cues, beer bottles, chairs and other sundry items to beat each other senseless. When Mark comes round have been knocked out by Simon, he hands Simon a package containing £4,000 in cash - the proceeds of the drug deal that Mark stole way back when. We later see Simon discussing with Veronika how he intends to inflict emotional and physical pain on Mark for betraying him two decades earlier and how he has never forgiven him despite the four grand in his hand right now.

Meanwhile Francis 'Franco' Begbie (Robert Carlyle) is serving 25 years jail time and has just had his parole appeal declined for another five years. He hatches a plan to escape from jail by having a fellow inmate stab him below the ribs with a large knitting needle, in order that he can be hospitalised. The stabbing does not go according to plan resulting in a punctured lung, not life threatening, but enough to have Begbie carted off to hospital, from where he successfully does escape. Begbie visits Simon at Port Sunshine, and Begbie is still also bitter about being double crossed by Mark earlier and is out for revenge. Simon pretends to collaborate with Begbie saying that he knows of Mark's whereabouts in Amsterdam, not letting him know that he is in fact in Edinburgh, and saying that Begbie should in fact lie low for a while pending further intelligence from Simon's source in Amsterdam. Meanwhile Begbie begins burgling houses to raise some cash, coercing his son Frank Jnr. to accompany him as a 'chip off the old block' despite Frank Jnr. having enrolled at Hotel Management College. While selling off the proceeds of his house burgling activities to a known 'businessman' Begbie stumbles across fridges wrapped up in cling film on several pallets. He breaks inside one such fridge to reveal  bags containing thousands of Viagra tablets and more boxes of the same. He takes a box for his own personal use, because he has been experiencing some difficulties in that department since reuniting with his wife.

In the meantime, Mark takes Spud for a run up to Arthur's Seat overlooking Edinburgh telling him that he should simply swap his drug addiction for another addiction, such as exercise, or boxing, or whatever else he is good at, or interested in. Spud takes this on board and starts writing his memoirs of the exploits of the of four them twenty years ago. Later Mark, Simon and Veronika visit Glasgow with the purposes of stealing the bank cards of the gathered patrons at the Orange Lodge and do so big time while the gathered crowd are pre-occupied with live entertainment and their backs are turned on the cloakroom . . . and their wallets.

Simon and Mark also hatch a plan to gain government funding for start up businesses in distressed areas. They make a formal presentation to several gathered officials at the Scottish Parliament Building on the pretext that The Port Sunshine Pub is to be made in to a boutique hostel by restoring it to its famous landmark and destination heritage, rather than the run down dive bar that it is today. Rather they want to turn it into a Veronika's 'leisure club' featuring sauna's and happy endings. When the funding of £100,000 is duly granted they begin work on the upstairs conversion, with Spud spearheading the demolition and building works using various dodgy contractors that he is able to mobilise.

Going out to celebrate their good fortune Mark and Simon go to a nightclub. Unknown to them, and armed with his box of Viagra tablets, so does Begbie. Mark excuses himself to take a leak, and meanwhile Begbie thinks he has scored and excuses himself too to visit the toilet to down another Viagra tablet. The two end up in cubicles next to each other, but don't know it. Begbie fumbles with a packet and drops it. As it rolls under the cubicle Mark picks it up and the two have an exchange of words. At first they don't recognise each others voices, but then it dawns on them simultaneously. What ensues is a foot chase out of the club, through the back streets and alleyways of Edinburgh and into a multi-storey car park, with Mark making a close call getaway on the top of a 4WD.

Begbie then visits Spud to ascertain where Mark is hiding. Begbie comes across Spuds writings about their history together. Coincidentally, Veronika visits Spud at the same time, and Begbie puts two and two together and adds the girl to the jigsaw puzzle. Using Veronika's mobile phone he texts Mark and sets up a time to meet, at midnight, at The Port Sunshine. Veronika and Spud manage to elude Begbie giving Spud just enough time to forewarn Mark and Simon at the Pub of Begbie's intentions. Begbie arrives and is greeted by Mark, Simon and Spud. A fight breaks out, Simon is knocked out and Mark is chased upstairs to the partially refurbished 'leisure club'. Mark hides in one of the unfinished saunas but is overcome by Begbie, eventually falling through a roof space and left dangling by his neck entwined in exposed wires and slowing choking to death. As Begbie watches on with a smile on his face, he is knocked unconscious from behind by Spud using a toilet bowl.

Simon, Mark and Spud load the unconscious Begbie into the boot of Simon's car and drive him back to the prison from whence he escaped, leaving him there to be discovered by Prison Guards. Veronika has made off back to her home in Bulgaria with the £100,000 grant by using Spuds forgery skills that he learned whilst in prison to forge the bank transfer papers assigning these monies from Simon's account to her own. Simon has reconciled his differences with Mark, Spud gets serious about Writing and his musings form the basis of a book, and Mark moves back into the home of his upbringing with his Dad following the collapse of his marriage back in Amsterdam.

It's good to see Renton, Sick Boy, Begbie and Spud back on the big screen, reunited and doing what they do best after twenty years. Danny Boyle has crafted a solid film that pays homage to the first instalment through similar themes and flashbacks to those earlier heady days, and beyond, to the boys individual childhoods and what made them. The film is creative in its plot lines, it is well played out by the principle characters although Begbie's role is the strongest as the hard nosed unpredictable opinionated tough guy who drops the 'C' word at every opportunity, and Spud's the least formed as the would-be storyteller. In the middle are Mark and Simon - long term best friends divided by an act of betrayal who come good in the end but not before treading some shifting sands beneath their feet. There is a thumping soundtrack featuring classic '80's and '90's tunes mixed in with more recent rhythms, but is all this enough to put this follow up on a par with the original. For me, not, but it is certainly worth the price of your ticket. Maybe age, the passing of time and the different era has wearied them just a little too much to make the post-Thatcher years and the '90's cultural explosion that trademarked the first film seem like a distant, if glorious, memory.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Sunday, 19 October 2014

Birthday's to share this week : 19th - 25th October 2014.

Do you celebrate your Birthday this week? Danny Boyle does, on 20th October  - check out the tribute to this Birthday Boy 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 or 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 19th October
  • Jon Favreau - Born 1966m turns 48 - Actor | Director | Producer
  • Michael Gambon - Born 1940, turns 74 - Actor
  • Jason Reitman - Born 1977, turns 37 - Director | Producer | Writer
  • John Lithgow - Born 1945, turns 69 - Actor
  • Trey Parker - Born 1969, turns 45 - Writer | Producer | Actor
  • John le Carre - Born 1931, turns 83 - Writer | Producer
Monday 20th October
  • Viggo Mortensen - Born 1958, turns 56 - Actor | Producer
  • Danny Boyle - Born 1956, turns 58 - Director | Producer | Writer
  • Thomas Newman - Born 1955, turns 59 - Songwriter | Composer | Musician
  • Timothy West - Born 1934, turns 80 - Actor
Tuesday 21st October 
  • Carrie Fisher - Born 1956, turns 58 - Actress | Writer
  • Ken Watanbe - Born 1959, turns 55 - Actor | Producer
Wednesday 22nd October
  • Jeff Goldblum - Born 1952, turns 62 - Actor | Producer
  • Christopher Lloyd - Born 1938, turns 76 - Actor
  • Bill Condon - Born 1955, turns 59 - Director | Producer | Writer
  • Spike Jonze - Born 1969, turns 45 - Director | Producer | Actor | Writer
  • Derek Jacobi - Born 1938, turns 76 - Actor
  • Jan de Bont - Born 1943, turns 71 - Director | Producer | Cinematographer
  • Catherine Deneuve - Born 1943, turns 71 - Actress
Thursday 23rd October
  • Ryan Reynolds - Born 1976, turns 38 - Actor | Producer
  • Sam Raimi - Born 1959, turns 55 - Director | Producer | Writer | Actor
  • Ang Lee - Born 1954, turns 60 - Director | Producer | Writer
Friday 24th October
  • Kevin Kline - Born 1947, turns 67 - Actor
  • F. Murray Abraham - Born 1939, turns 75 - Actor
  • Martin Campbell - Born 1943, turns 71 - Director | Producer
Saturday 25th October
  • Gale Anne Hurd - Born 1955, turns 59 - Producer | Writer
  • Katy Perry - Born 1094, turns 30 - Singer | Songwriter | Actress
Daniel 'Danny' Boyle was born in Radcliffe, Lancashire to Irish parents. Raised in a working class Irish environment, he was an alter boy for eight years with his parents intentions that the young Danny would enter the priesthood. He studied at Thornleigh Salesian College in Bolton, and then Bangor University where he studied English and Drama. 

After leaving school he started his career at the Joint Stock Theatre Company in London before moving to the Royal Court Theatre where he Directed several plays including a number for the Royal Shakespeare Company. He has subsequently and more recently returned to the theatre to Direct 'The Children's Monologues' in 2010 and 'Frankenstein' in 2011. He was also the Artistic Director for the 2012 London Olympic Games Opening Ceremony titled 'Isles of Wonder' which was much lauded at home and overseas.

In 1987 Boyle started work as a Producer for BBC Northern Ireland and then as a Director on various TV shows including 'Screenplay' and 'Inspector Morse'. Up to 1994 he worked as Director and/or Producer on several TV films, but it was his 1994 breakout feature film debut 'Shallow Grave' that became the most commercially successful British film of 1995. This in turn led to the big screen adaptation of Irvine Welsh's book 'Trainspotting' in 1996 which not only brought Boyle further critical acclaim, but established too the careers of Ewan McGregor and Robert Carlyle.

Having established himself as a British filmmaker of some repute he moved to Hollywood to shoot 'A LIfe Less Ordinary' again with Ewan McGregor and an up & coming Cameron Diaz in 1997. From there he moved onto 'The Beach' - the adapted Alex Garland novel shot in the idyllic coastal islands off Thailand and starring Leonardo DiCaprio, and again Robert Carlyle.



Before Directing the post apocalyptic zombie horror thriller '28 Days Later' in 2002 he Executive Produced 'Twin Town' which was the launchpad for Rhys Ifans in this Swansea based crime film. '28 Days Later' largely reinvigorated the zombie genre that is still going strong to this day. This screenplay was written by previous collaborator Alex Garland - it made over ten times its budget at the global Box Office and therefore was sure to spawn a sequel - which it did in 2007 with '28 Weeks Later' which Boyle did not Direct, but he did Executive Produce. Working with Alex Garland again, he Directed the Sci-Fi offering 'Sunshine' in 2007.

2008's 'Slumdog Millionaire' was a huge success for Boyle. Costing just US$15M to make it raked in US$380M globally and garnered eight Academy Award wins including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay and Best Song as well as two further nominations. All up, 'Slumdog Millionaire' brought in 149 Awards and 81 other nominations across the world.







This was followed up in 2010 with '127 Hours' which Boyle Directed, Produced and Wrote and starred James Franco as Aron Ralston who literally finds himself 'Between a Rock and a Hard Place' in Blue John Canyon in Utah. Resorting to drastic measures to free himself, this film collected six Academy Award nominations but failed to win any, but, did bring in 26 worldwide Award wins and 118 total nominations.

In between his commitments to the 2012 London Olympic Games he Directed and Produced 'Trance' in 2013 with James McAvoy in this hypnotherapy fine art heist film where not everything is quite as it seems. Next up for Boyle is 'Jobs' currently in pre-production with Christian Bale rumoured to play Steve Jobs, and thereafter 'Porno' - the long awaited Irvine Welsh follow-up to 'Trainspotting' for a possible 2016 release.

When not behind the camera, Boyle is a Trustee of the UK African Arts Charity 'Dramatic Need', sending music, arts and entertainment professionals to host workshops in underprivileged communities in rural Africa, as a means of promoting creative expression to overcome some of the challenges faced in these locations. He is also a Patron of 'HOME' in Manchester - a centre for arts, film, theatre and books due to open in 2015. He has three children - Caitlin (born 1985), Gabriel (born 1989) and Grace (born 1991) from a former relationship with Gail Stevens from 1983 - 2003.

Danny Boyle - diverse film making talent; theatre, film and TV lauded; the brains behind one of the greatest shows on Earth; and often surrounded with familiar acting, writing and sound collaborators - Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-