- 'APPRENTICE' - English/Malaysian, Australian Premier, Directed by Boo Junfeng
- 'AQUARIUS' - Portuguese, Australian Premier, Directed by Kleber Mendonca Filho
- 'CERTAIN WOMEN' - Australian Premier, Directed by Kelly Reichardt, with Kristen Stewart, Laura Dern and Michelle Williams
- 'THE CHILDHOOD OF A LEADER' - English/French, Australian Premier, Directed by Brady Corbet, with Robert Pattinson, Liam Cunningham and Berenice Bejo
- 'THE ENDLESS RIVER' - Australian Premier, Directed by Oliver Hermanus, with Clayton Everton, Crystal-Donna Robers and Nicolas Duvauchelle
- 'GOLDSTONE' - World Premier, Directed by Ivan Sen, with Aaron Pedersen, Alex Russell and Jackie Weaver
- 'IT'S ONLY THE END OF THE WORLD' - French, Australian Premier, Directed by Xavier Dolan, with Vincent Cassel, Marion Cotillard and Gaspar Ulliel
- 'LAND OF MINE' - English/German/Danish, Australian Premier, Directed by Martin Zandvliet, with Joel Basman, Louis Hofmann and Roland Moller
- 'LETTERS FROM WAR' - Portuguese, Australian Premier, Directed by Ivo M. Ferreira
- 'NOTES ON BLINDNESS' - Australian Premier, Directed by Peter Middleton and James Spinney, with Dan Skinner and Simone Kirby
- 'PSYCHO RAMEN' - Hindi, Australian Premier, Directed by Anurag Kashyap
- 'VIVA' - Spanish, Australian Premier, Directed by Paddy Breathnach
In Special Presentations exclusively at Sydney's State Theatre are fifteen films all receiving their Australian Premier, these are 'Blood Father' with Mel Gibson; 'Captain Fantastic' with Viggo Mortensen; 'Demolition' with Jake Gyllenhaal; 'Down Under' getting its World Premier for Director Abe Forsythe; 'Elvis & Nixon' with Michael Shannon and Kevin Spacey respectively; Richard Linklater's 'Everybody Want's Some'; the Jim Jarmusch tribute to Iggy Pop and the Stooges 'Gimme Danger'; 'A Journey of a Thousand Miles : Peacekeepers'; 'Julieta' by Pedro Almodovar; 'Maggie's Plan' with Ethan Hawke, Julianne Moore and Greta Gerwig; 'Mahana' by Lee Tamahori with Temuera Morrison; 'Saint Amour' with Gerard Depardieu; 'Sing Street' by John Carney with a thumping 80's soundtrack, big hair, wide lapels and fashion faux-pas we'd rather forget; 'Suburra' - an Italian Mafia/political/religious thriller; and 'War on Everyone' by John McDonagh with Alexander Skarsgard and Michael Pena. For more on the 2016 Sydney Film Festival you can go to : www.sff.org.au
This week however, there are just three new films to get you out to your local Odeon kicking off with a sequel to a franchise that has been going strong for thirty or so years featuring your favourite pizza chomping heroes in a half shelf doing their ninja best to save the world . . . again! Then a supernatural horror sequel based on a real haunting in a London suburb back in the 70's as investigated by psychic investigators that its seems the genre and this franchise owe much to. And wrapping up, an English language Spanish dramedy offering featuring badass aid workers, a corpse, a well and a length of rope.
As always, when you have sat through your movie of choice in the week ahead - be it one of these as Previewed below, or any one of those Reviewed or Previewed in previous Posts, share your views and opinions with your like minded cinephiles by leaving a Comment in the space provided below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you. In the meantime, enjoy your film.
'TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES : OUT OF THE SHADOWS' (Rated M) - the 'TMNT' or 'Ninja Turtles' go back thirty plus years to 1984 when they first appeared in comic books published by Mirage Studios. In case you didn't know, they are four fictional teenage anthropomorphic turtles who are named after four Renaissance Italian artists - Donatello (Donnie), Michelangelo (Mikey), Leonardo (Leo), and Raphael (Raph). They were trained by their anthropomorphic rat sensei (Splinter) in the art of ninjutsu. Over the years there have been a long succession of comic books, animated television series, an anime series, live action series, and the first round of feature films in 1990 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' then 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze' in 1991 and 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III' in 1993 with a CGI animated feature 'TMNT' in 2007. Fast forward to 2014 and Michael Bay Produced a reboot at a cost of US$125M which made just shy of US$500M which Jonathan Liebesman Directed, making a sequel almost inevitable. And so two short years later, here it is with Michael Bay once again Producing with the Director credit going this time to Dave Green with a US$135M budget. The film opened in the UK on 30th May, in the US on 3rd June and has so far recovered US74M of its outlay.
So this time around we have our intrepid gang of four pizza loving, scene stealing, vigilante do gooders in the half shell who go head to head with an escaped from custody Shredder (Brian Tee) who then teams up with Baxter Stockman (Tyler Perry) an unhinged scientist with god-like tendencies hell bent on world domination. To do their dirty work are two henchmen Bebop (Gary Anthony Williams) and Rocksteady (Stephen Farrelly) who are turned into powerful animal mutants using a mutagenic compound given to Stockman by the evil alien warlord Krang (Brad Garrett), who also has his own agenda for planet Earth that our turtle friends must contend with too. But what these bunch of nasties clearly didn't count on were the four ninja turtles and there own allies in the form of April O'Neil (Megan Fox), Vern Fenwick (Will Arnett), Casey Jones (Stephen Amell) and Police Chief Rebecca Vincent (Laura Linney) who together, are gonna save all humanity!
'THE CONJURING 2 : THE ENFIELD POLTERGEIST' (Rated MA15+) - another sequel of the supernatural horror kind is haunting a cinema near you this week and following on from the 2013 hugely successful 'The Conjuring' as Directed back then by James Wan and made for US$20M and grossing a staggering US$318M making it one of the most commercially successful horror films of all time, and critically well received too. That first film was set in 1971 on Rhode Island, and this follow up sees the same couple - paranormal investigators and writers Ed and Lorraine Warren (Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga respectively) reprise their roles but travel from a self-imposed sabbatical to Enfield, in London, England in 1977 to help out Peggy Hodgson (Frances O'Connor) an overwhelmed and distraught mother of four who believes that something evil lurks in her Enfield Council house. Based on their own experiences and what they encounter within the house they believe that one of the Hodgson girls is possessed by demonic forces, and as they try to help, so they become the target! Based on a true story as investigated by the real Ed and Lorraine Warren into the alleged poltergeist activity in the Enfield house between 1977 and 1979, this sequel is once again Directed by James Wan who also co-wrote the Screenplay.
'A PERFECT DAY' (Rated M) - this English language Spanish comedy drama film is Written and Directed by Fernando Leon de Aranoa, and was screened in Cannes during the Directors Fortnight a year ago in May 2015, before its Spanish release in late August last year, and now it winds up on Australian shores. This tells the story of a bunch of aid workers based on the book by Spanish physician Paula Farias who worked for 'Doctors without Borders' in The Balkans back in 1995. Here Mambru (Benicio del Toro), B (Tim Robbins) and Sophie (Melanie Thierry) and joined by their interpreter Damir (Fedja Stukan) as they seek to retrieve a corpse dangling down a well somewhere in the former Yugoslavia after the conflicts there have ended and the UN Peacekeeping forces have taken up residence. What seems like a routine 'extraction' proves to be more challenging and complicated than they initially thought. Joined by Mambru's former lover Katya (Olga Kurylenko) and a young local lad Nikola they face obstacles, defy death, overcome the absurdness of war, challenge authority, and traipse through a war torn landscape in search of a length of rope to complete the 'extraction' before the corpse contaminates the valuable water supply at the bottom of the well. A slow burning film underpinned by a strong cast that has received mixed Reviews, one award win and another eighteen nominations from around the circuit.
Three films this week that offer up something for the kids and something for the adults, and with plenty of other choice doing the rounds and still on general release as Reviewed and Previewed on these humble pages, there is no reason at all not to get out to your local multiplex or independent theatre. I'll see you, at the Odeon.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-
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