The curtain fell on the 62nd Sydney Film Festival on Sunday evening 19th June, and with it the winners of those films in competition were duly announced. In official competition were twelve films from around the world as highlighted previously, with the AU$63,000 prize money going to Brazilian film 'Aquarius' Directed and Written for the Screen by Kleber Mendonca Filho. Based in the seaside town of Recife in Brazil, the films tells the story of 65 year old retired music critic Clara (Sonia Braga) who is the last resident in the beachside two-storey built in the '40's Aquarius apartment building. All other apartments in the block have been acquired by a development company with new plans for the site. Clara refuses to sell - politely at first making various counter offers, but as the developers become more and more aggressive and hostile, so a battle of wits erupts between both parties sat on opposing sides of the fence. Meanwhile life goes on for Clara, and in it we see her intellect, her family, her friends, her sex life as she reflects on her life - past, present and future. The five judges were unanimous in their decision to award the top prize to this film, with Jury President, Simon Field stating 'Aquarius is a compelling and relevant statement about contemporary Brazil and the power of an individual standing up for what she believes'. Screened in competition at Cannes this year, and successful in Sydney where the film had its Australian Premier, the film is scheduled for a wider release later in the year . . . one to watch out for!
Coming to a cinema near you in the week ahead then, are four new films that kick start with another alien invasion of epic Biblical proportions that threatens our fragile planet after we have come to terms with the last one twenty years earlier. Just as we thought it was safe to look up to the skies once more, our worst global destruction nightmare has come back to whoop Uncle Sam's backside in this sequel of big, bad, mean, ugly, no good alien types - bring it on! Next up and coming back down to Earth but in the Palaeolithic Period is another sequel and the fifth instalment in this successful animated franchise that sees a bunch of familiar characters trying to escape a natural disaster that may have far reaching implications on our planet, and along the way having themselves another adventure. Then a sports comedy period piece set against a backdrop of 1980 college baseball, guys, booze, girls, more booze, drugs, hi-jinks and pranks, more booze, wild parties, pot, booze, male bonding, girls, booze, rituals, and booze and all over a three day lead up to the start of semester. And wrapping things up a foreign language offering of five teenage sisters growing up fast when their world suddenly changes and their individual and collective determination, resilience and loyalty to each other is tested.
With such a diverse offering of new cinema content you'll just have to get out to a theatre in the week ahead to catch a new movie. When you have done so, remember to share your movie going experience here at Odeon Online with your fellow readers by leaving a Comment below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you. In the meantime, enjoy your film!
'INDEPENDENCE DAY : RESURGENCE' (Rated M) - when the original film 'Independence Day' of which this is a sequel opened in July 1996 it went on to take out the highest grossing film of 1996 worldwide, grossing US$817M, and by September of that year ranked as the sixth highest grossing film of all time. Now 20 years later, it sits at the #55 spot. Made for US$75M back then and Directed by the 'Master of Disaster' himself Roland Emmerich and Co-Written by him too, that film propelled Will Smith into the stratosphere (literally) together with his other co-stars that included Jeff Goldblum, Bill Pullman, Randy Quaid, Robert Loggia, Judd Hirsch, Vivica Fox and Mary McDonnell. Along the way the movie picked up an Oscar for Best Visual Effects and 32 other award wins and another 33 nominations. And now twenty years later, in terms of real time, and movie time, the long awaited sequel has arrived.
Made for US$200M and released worldwide this coming week, Roland Emmerich is once again in the Director chair with a Co-Producer and a Co-Writer credit too, and, with a number of that original line up returning again with their cans of 'whoop-ass' to thwart them pesky alien Mo-Fo's out of the sky and into oblivion. . . or will they? This time Jeff Goldblum is back as is Bill Pullman, Brent Spiner, Judd Hirsch and Vivica Fox, joined by Liam Hemsworth, William Fichtner and Charlotte Gainsbourg. It seems that 20 years ago when the invading aliens were wiped out, they sent a distress signal to their other fleets in deep space before finally succumbing to the might of Uncle Sam, and secreting themselves away elsewhere around our fragile green planet. Over those intervening years, The United Nations has rebuilt itself and created an Earth Space Defence programme based at Area 51 using recovered alien technology as an early warning system and as its defence against future alien hostilities. What us mere mortal Earthlings didn't count on however, is that those aliens would be back - bigger, badder and more pissed off than ever, hell bent on wiping us out once and for all! Strap yourself in for death and destruction writ large as only Roland Emmerich knows how to deliver.
'ICE AGE : COLLISION COURSE' (Rated PG) - the first film in this hugely successful animated franchise launched in 2002 with 'Ice Age' from Blue Sky Studios and it returned US$383M from its US$59M outlay. Since then there has been 'Ice Age : The Meltdown' in 2006, 'Ice Age : Dawn of the Dinosaurs' in 2009, 'Ice Age : Continental Drift' in 2012 - all increasingly well received. The first four films were made for a combined US$324M and have collectively returned US$2.81B with 'Meltdown' sitting at #93 in the all time highest grossing movies list, 'Continental Drift' at #45 and 'Dawn of the Dinosaurs' at #42. Not a bad effort it must be said. This time around largely the same voice cast return as Scrat continues his search for the elusive acorn which sends him on a trajectory outside of Earth's atmosphere where his actions inadvertently set in motion a series of potentially Earth altering events. To save themselves Manny (Ray Romano), Sid (John Leguizamo), Diego (Denis Leary), Ellie (Queen Latifah), Buck (Simon Pegg) and Shira (Jennifer Lopez) amongst others, leave their home land and embark on a journey to new and distant lands to save themselves - along the way getting up to all sorts of (mis)adventures, scrapes and challenges, and meeting up with a whole new bunch of characters.
'EVERYBODY WANTS SOME !!' (Rated MA15+) - Directed, Written and Co-Produced by Richard Linklater for US$10M this college sports comedy is set back in 1980 at the fictitious Southeast Texas State College on the cusp of a new semester - three days and 15 hours before to be exact, so plenty of time for freshman Jake (Blake Jenner) to get to know his new college buddies, check out the chicks, score some weed and get drunk! Moving into his new house with other members of the Southwest Texas Cherokees college baseball team, he quickly gets acquainted with Billy (Will Brittain) whom Jake will share a room with, Plummer (Temple Baker), Roper (Ryan Guzman), Dale (Quentin Johnson), Finnegan (Glen Powell), Brumley (Tanner Kalina), Jay (Juston Street) and Willoughby (Wyatt Russell). And what better way to get acquainted than to head out drinking, meet some girls, party hard, play some pranks, and then do it all over again tomorrow, and the next day. Praised for its simple, smart storyline; its faithful reproduction of the era; its soundtrack and the good old dose of nostalgia this serves up, this could almost be seen as a follow-up to Linklater's 1993 'Dazed and Confused' tribute to the last day of school for a bunch of 1976 high school graduates.
'MUSTANG' (Rated M) - this Turkish language film has received much critical acclaim for Writer and Director Deniz Gamze Erguven, and in the process picked up an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Language Film, along with 38 wins and 46 other nominations. The story is set in a rural northern Turkish community and on the last day of school five sisters (all non-professional actors chosen deliberately) frolic around on the beach with some male classmates. Overseen by a nosey interfering neighbour who reports the orphaned girls antics to the domineering Aunt and Uncle, the surrogate parents instantly confiscate 'all instruments of corruption' such as close fitting clothes, mobile phones, computers, make-up, magazines and all the trappings enjoyed by mid-teen years girls almost everywhere. As a consequence, the girls are quickly taught life lessons in good housekeeping skills and how to prepare for marriage as they become prisoners in their own home, and marriage is prepared with would-be local male suitors. With fierce determination, safety in numbers, a strong resilience and a overwhelming sense of loyalty toward each other will the sisters overcome the fate that awaits them?
Four films once again that couldn't be more different in their themes, genres, and target audience. That said, coupled with those films still doing the rounds and out on general release, there is something that is sure to suit almost all styles, tastes and age groups. So, get out amongst it to your local movie theatre and enjoy your movie of choice. I'll see you, at the Odeon.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-
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