Thursday, 8 July 2021

ARMY OF THE DEAD : Tuesday 6th July 2021.

With Greater Sydney still in COVID lockdown, and as a result all cinema's closed until July 16th at least, once again as with the same time last year I'll be reviewing a few of the latest feature films released recently onto Netflix. As such, I finally got around to seeing the Zack Snyder Directed, Co-Produced, Co-Written, lensed and based on a story he created zombie heist offering 'ARMY OF THE DEAD' earlier this week. It seems that Snyder thought up the idea for 'Army of the Dead' as a spiritual successor to his 2004 debut film 'Dawn of the Dead' which was itself a remake of George A. Romero's classic film of the same name from 1978. That project was originally announced back in 2007 but spent the subsequent twelve years languishing in development hell before Netflix picked up the distribution rights in 2019, with photography kicking off mid that year. With a budget somewhere in the vicinity of US$80M, the film was released in select cinemas Stateside in mid-May this year, and was released on Netflix on 21st May. 'Army of the Dead' went on to become one of the most watched original Netflix films with an estimated 72 million viewers within its first month of release. Two prequels are slated - a film titled 'Army of Thieves' on which production wrapped in December 2020 with Netflix due to release later this year, and an anime series titled 'Army of the Dead : Lost Vegas' scheduled to be released on Netflix too. A potential sequel could also transpire if the planets align. The film has garnered mixed or average Critical Reviews with many criticising the films run time at 148 minutes.

And so the film opens with a US military convoy escorting a heavily guarded crate out of Area 51 along a deserted highway at dusk. The convoy has a head on collision with a car outside of Las Vegas, causing the crate to be jettisoned down the highway a hundred or so metres. When the military personnel approach the crate with automatic weapons raised, the cargo contained therein, a zombie, breaks free, rapidly killing and infecting the majority of soldiers in the detail. The zombie makes it to the outskirts of the city, and accompanied by the now zombified soldiers systematically begin infecting most of the Las Vegas populace. Following a military strike on the city which fails, the government quarantines the city behind huge walls.

Subsequently casino owner Bly Tanaka (Hiroyuki Sanada) and his associate Martin (Garret Dillahunt) approach former mercenary Scott Ward (Dave Bautista) who now works as a line cook in some rundown burger joint, about a job to recover US$200M from his casino vault in Las Vegas before the military sends in a tactical nuclear strike on the city. Ward agrees with the promise of a massive pay day and enlists his former crew Maria Cruz (Ana de la Reguera) and Vanderohe (Omari Hardwick), together with expert helicopter pilot Marianne Peters (Tig Notaro), German safecracker Ludwig Dieter (Matthias Schweighofer), and sharpshooter Mikey Guzman (Raul Castillo), who brings along his associate Chambers (Samantha Win). Martin joins the team so they have access to the casino. Ward's estranged daughter Kate (Ella Purnell), who works at a quarantine camp, points them towards Lily (Nora Arnezeder), a smuggler familiar with the city, who also recruits Burt Cummings (Theo Rossi), an over zealous quarantine camp security guard. When Kate learns Lily escorted her friend Geeta (Huma Qureshi) into Las Vegas, Kate insists on joining the team over her fathers staunch objection.

Fairly soon after leaving the quarantine station the group come across a zombified tiger (a undead surviving big cat of the famed Siegfried & Roy Las Vegas shows) upon entering the city. Lily shoots Cummings in the leg and states that a group of intelligent zombies known as 'Alphas' will permit them safe passage in exchange for a sacrifice. 

An Alpha female known as the Queen (Athena Perample) arrives shortly afterwards and takes Cummings away to the Olympus casino, where the Alpha leader Zeus (Richard Cetrone) infects him. Lily leads the team through a building full of hibernating, normal zombies. Using glow sticks to guide them Ward creates a path through the sleeping zombies. When Chambers accuses Martin of ulterior motives for accompanying them, he diverts her off the path, and she inadvertently disturbs the zombies, waking them. She is quickly overcome and bitten. Guzman shoots at the petrol canister on her back used for fuelling her flame thrower, killing her and the surrounding zombie horde in the resulting explosion. 

After negotiating the city's desolate landscape the group make it to Bly's casino. Ward and Kate turn on the power, Peters prepares a trashed helicopter which they were told would be waiting on the roof but she didn't expect it to be such poor mechanical condition, and Dieter sets about working on the vault with his second-to-none safe cracking expertise. 

Martin and Lily stay outside to maintain watch but instead lure the Queen out into the open. Martin snares her, beheads her and stuffs her still alive head in to a bag saying that it will be invaluable for research purposes. Zeus discovers her headless body and returns her to the Olympus casino, revealing that the Queen was pregnant with a zombie foetus. Enraged, Zeus directs the Alphas to Bly's casino. The team hear of a news bulletin reporting that the government has brought forward the nuclear strike to ninety minutes hence, adding a new sense of urgency to the whole operation. As Dieter opens the vault, Ward discovers Kate had left to look for Geeta. As Ward and Cruz go in search for her, Alphas appear and kill Cruz.

Martin traps the team in the basement, stating that Bly is only interested in the zombie head, which is worth more than the money in the vault, as the government seeks to create a zombie army. When he steps outside the casino, he discovers Lily exchanged the Queen's head for something of a similar weight and size. The zombified tiger approaches, looks him and up and down and then pounces mauling him to death. Vanderohe attempts to fight Zeus but is easily overpowered. Dieter sacrifices himself to enable Vanderohe safe refuge inside the vault. Ward, Lily, and Guzman make it to the casino lobby, where zombies attack them from all directions and pounce on Guzman, who detonates his grenades, killing himself, the zombies and destroying the stash of cash he carried. Zeus confronts them on the roof as Peters prepares the helicopter for take-off. 

Lily distracts Zeus with the Queen's head as Ward and Peters escape. Zeus impales Lily to the wall, who in her death throes drops the Queen's head off the roof sending it careering down to the ground below where is shatters in a bloody mess. Peters takes Ward to the Olympus casino in a bid to locate Kate. Inside, Kate finds Geeta and kills the infected Cummings. Ward finds Kate and Geeta and together they exit the scene aboard the helicopter. Zeus jumps onto the helicopter and a fight breaks out between him and Ward. Zeus overpowers Ward and bites him. As the nuke lays waste to Las Vegas, Zeus is momentarily distracted by the bomb flash, giving Ward the opportunity to kill him and throw him out. The resultant shockwave causes the helicopter to crash, killing Peters and Geeta. Kate survives and finds Ward who had been thrown clear but is badly injured. Ward produces a stash of cash from his inside pocket that he had secretly hidden away and gives Kate the money to begin life anew, before turning into a zombie. Kate kills him as a rescue helicopter arrives. 

In the closing scene, Vanderohe survives the blast and exits the vault emerging somewhere on the outskirts of the city with two holdall's of cash. He drives to Utah and rents a private plane, paying well over the odds in cash of course, to take him to Mexico City. On the flight, he discovers that he has been bitten.

I have to say that I enjoy a good zombie flick, and 'Army of the Dead' doesn't disappoint. Sure it's run time of close to two and a half hours is overstretched, but what Zack Snyder delivers here is plenty of rapid fire action, enough bloodshed and gore to satisfy those with a taste for such things, sufficient character development to appease those wanting some emotional heft and a palette of a post zombie apocalyptic Las Vegas that is spot on. The cast led by Dave Bautista seemed to have a ball making this film, the production values are top notch and the end result is a satisfying gore fest, that won't go down in the history books as the greatest zombie film ever made, but you can leave your brain on remote and just watch the spectacle unfold and be entertained for 148 minutes. Snyder is back to form here following perhaps his most successful outings since his debut with 'Dawn of the Dead' in 2004 and his successive films with 2006's '300' and 2009's 'Watchmen', by doing what he does best - living it up with the undead! It's just a shame that this movie didn't get the big screen surround sound cinematic release it deserves to truly appreciate the scale of Snyder's vision.

'Army of the Dead' warrants four claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard from a possible five claps.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday, 7 July 2021

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 8th July 2021.

The Far East Film Festival is an annual film festival held in Udine, in north-eastern Italy. It is one of the most important events promoting Asian Cinema in Europe. It focuses mainly on the films from East Asia and was founded in 1999, this year marking its 23rd edition held from 24th June through to 2nd July. This years Opening Night film was 'Cliff Walkers' - a Chinese historical spy thriller film Directed by Zhang Yimou, with the Closing Night film being Andrew Lau and Alan Mak's cult Hong Kong action thriller offering 'Infernal Affairs', newly restored in 4K.

In total sixty-three films were screened representing eleven countries with the line up including :-

* 'The Eight Hundred' from China in Mandarin and Directed by Guan Hu. European Festival Premier. 
* 'The Con-Heartist' from Thailand, in Thai and Directed by Mez Tharatorn. European Premier.
* 'Underdog : Parts 1 & 2' - from Japan, in Japanese and Directed by Take Masaharu. European Premier.
* 'Voice of Silence' - from South Korea, in Korean, and Directed and Written by Hong Eui-jeong.
* 'Limbo'
- from Hong Kong, in Cantonese and Directed by Soi Cheang.
* 'Blue' - from Japan, in Japanese and Directed and Written by Yoshida Keisuke. European Premier. 
* 'Madalena' - from Macau, in Cantonese and Directed and Written by Emily Chan. World Premier.
* 'Shock Wave 2' - from Hong Kong, in Cantonese and Directed and Co-Written by Herman Yau. International Festival Premier.
* 'The Way We Keep Dancing' - from Hong Kong, in Cantonese and Directed, Written and Co-Edited by Adam Wong. European Premier.
* 'Midnight Swan' 
- from Japan, in Japanese and Directed and Written by Uchida Eiji. European Premier.
* 'Seobok' - from South Korea, in Korean and Directed and Co-Written by Lee Yong Zoo.
* 'Like Father and Son' - from China, in Mandarin and Directed and Co-Written by Bai Zhiqiang. International Premier.
* 'My Missing Valentine' - from Taiwan, in Mandarin and Taiwanese and Directed and Written by Chen Yu-hsun. European Festival Premier.
* 'Money Has Four Legs' - from Myanmar, in Burmese and Directed and Co-Written by Maung Sun. 
* 'Anima' 
- from China, in Mandarin and Directed and Written by Cao Jinling. European Premier.
* 'Ito' - from Japan, in Japanese, and Directed and Written by Yokohama Satoko. European Premier.
* 'Assassins' - from the USA, in English, Vietnamese, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean and Malay and Directed by Ryan White. 
* 'One Second Champion' - from Hong Kong, in English, Cantonese and Mandarin and Directed by Chiu Sin-hang. European Premier.
* 'Fan Girl' - from The Philippines, in English and Tagalog, and Directed and Written by Antoinette Jadaone.
* 'Hand Rolled Cigarette' 
- from Hong Kong, in Cantonese, and Directed and Co-Written by Chan King-long. European Premier.
* 'Last of the Wolves' - from Japan, in Japanese and Directed by Shiraishi Kazuya. International Premier.
* 'Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy' - from Japan, in Japanese and Directed, Written and Edited by Hamaguchi Ryusuke. 
* 'Just 1 Day' - from Hong Kong, in Cantonese, and Directed and Written by Erica Li. 
* 'Back to the Wharf' - from China, in Mandarin and Directed and Co-Written by Li Xiaofeng. European Premier.
* 'Hold Me Back' - from Japan, in Japanese and Directed and Written by Ohku Akiko.
* 'Death Knot' 
- from Indonesia, in Indonesian and Directed and Co-Written by Cornelio Sunny. World Premier.
* 'Gatao : The Last Stray' - from Taiwan, in Mandarin and Taiwanese, and Directed and Co-Written by Ray Jiang. International Festival Premier.
* 'Deliver Us from Evil' - from South Korea, in Korean and Directed by Hong Won Chan.
* 'Time' - from Hong Kong, in Cantonese, and Directed by Ricky Ko.
* 'The Maid' - from Thailand, in Thai, and Directed and Edited by Lee Thongkham. International Premier.
* 'Zero to Hero' - from Hong Kong, in Cantonese, and Directed by Jimmy Wan. World Premier.
* 'Sugar Street Studio'
 - from Hong Kong, in Cantonese, and Directed and Co-Written by Sunny Lau. World Premier.
* 'Before Next Spring' - from China, in Mandarin and Japanese and Directed and Written by Li Gen. World Premier.
* 'Tough Out' - from China, in Mandarin, and Directed and Written by Xu Hui-jing. European Premier.
* 'Endgame' - from China, in Mandarin and Directed and Co-Written by Rao Xiaozhi. European Premier.
* 'Hail, Driver' - from Malaysia, in Malay, English and Chinese and Directed and Written by Muzzamer Rahmen. European Premier.
* 'Coffin Homes' 
- from Hong Kong, in Cantonese and Directed, Produced, Written and Edited by Fruit Chan. World Premier.
* 'Drifting' - from Hong Kong, in Cantonese, and Directed, Written and Co-Edited by Jun Li. 
* 'You're Not Normal, Either!' - from Japan, in Japanese and Directed by Maeda Koji. European Premier.
* 'Night of the Undead' - from South Korea, in Korean and Directed and Co-Written by Shin Jung-won. European Premier.

The popular jury of audience members named Japan as this year's winner, awarding the Golden Mulberry to Uchida Eiji's 'Midnight Swan' and the Silver Mulberry to Maeda Koji's 'You're Not Normal, Either!' The Crystal Mulberry was won by Taiwan, with Chen Yu-hsun's 'My Missing Valentine' taking third place on the podium. Black Dragon pass holders also chose 'My Missing Valentine' as their top film while the Purple Mulberry went to Soi Cheang's Hong Kong thriller 'Limbo'. The three international jurors of the 'first feature' section awarded the White Mulberry to 'Hand Rolled Cigarette', the first film by Chan Kin-Long together with a special mention for Chinese 'Anima' by Cao Jinling.

For the complete low-down on this years 23rd Far East Film Festival, you can go to the official website at : https://www/fareastfilm/com/eng/

As I write this Greater Sydney, where I live, remains in COVID lockdown for three weeks now ending (at this stage) on Friday 16th July, which means all of our cinema's are closed until this date, which further means that the release of the movies as given below, slated for release this week, will be delayed somewhat across certain parts of Australia at least. That said, these movies will either have been released or are set for an imminent release somewhere in the world, and as Odeon Online has an international readership, I thought it best to carry on regardless. And so, this coming week, there are only three latest release new films coming to an Odeon close to you. And we kick off with a much delayed yet much hyped 24th film in the MCU that sees our heroine confront the darker parts of her former life when a dangerous conspiracy with ties to her past arises. This is followed by a superstar of the NBA and his young son who get trapped in digital space by a rogue AI, and to get home safely, he must team up with all your favourites from the Looney Tunes gang for a high-stakes basketball game against the AI's digitised champions of the court. And closing out the week we have an Irish offering about two school friends who decide to start a pretend straight relationship in an effort to fit in.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the three latest release new movies as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release or 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.

'BLACK WIDOW' (Rated M) - is the long awaited superhero film based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name. This is the 24th film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and the first film in Phase Four of the MCU. Its release was delayed three times from an original May 2020 date due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. 'Black Widow' saw its World Premier screenings on June 29, 2021 at various red carpet fan events in London, Los Angeles, Melbourne, and New York City and is released in the US and in Australia from this week, having garnered generally favourable Critical acclaim off the back of a US$200M production budget. This film is Directed by the Australian multiple award winning and nominated writer and film maker Cate Shortland whose three prior feature film credits are 'Somersault' in 2004 with Abbie Cornish and Sam Worthington, 'Lore' in 2012 with Saskia Rosendahl and 'Berlin Syndrome' in 2017 with Teresa Palmer.

At birth the Black Widow, aka Natasha Romanoff, (Scarlett Johansson) is given to the KGB, which grooms her to become its ultimate operative. Following the events of 2016's 'Captain America : Civil War' Natasha Romanoff finds herself on the run when the USSR breaks up and the government attempts to silence her once and for all. As the action moves to present day New York where she has become a freelance operative, she is forced to confront a dangerous conspiracy with ties to her past. Pursued by a force that will stop at nothing to bring her down, Romanoff must deal with her history as a spy and the broken relationships left in her wake long before she became an Avenger. Also starring Florence Pugh as Yelena Belova/Black Widow, David Harbour as Alexei Shostakov/Red Guardian, William Hurt, Ray Winstone, Rachel Weisz, Olga Kurylenko with Robert Downey Jnr. making an appearance as Tony Stark/Iron Man.

'SPACE JAM : A NEW LEGACY' (Rated PG) - this American live-action animated sports comedy film is Directed by Malcolm D. Lee whose previous film making credits include 'Soul Men' with Samuel L. Jackson in 2008, 'Scary Movie 5' in 2013, 'Barber Shop : The Next Cut' in 2016 with Ice Cube, and 'Night School' in 2018 with Kevin Hart. This film is a standalone sequel to 1996's 'Space Jam' which grossed US$250M off the back of a US$80M production budget. This is the first cinema released film to feature the Looney Tunes characters since 2003's 'Looney Tunes : Back in Action', and like the previous hybrid films, it will be a combination of live-action, traditional hand-drawn animation, and 3D CGI effects. Here then, LA Lakers basketball superstar LeBron James and his young son, Dom (Cedric Joe), get trapped in digital space by a rogue AI - Al-G Rhythm (Don Cheadle). To get home safely, LeBron teams up with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and the rest of the Looney Tunes gang (consisting of the likes of Porky Pig and Tweety, Speedy Gonzales, Road Runner, Wile E. Coyote, Elmer Fudd, and Yosemite Sam) for a high-stakes basketball game against the AI's digitised champions of the court - the Goon Squad, a powered up team of virtual avatars of professional basketball players. With a budget of US$150M the film is set for release Stateside from 16th July and also stars Sonequa Martin-Green as Kamiyah James and Zendaya as the voice of Lola Bunny. 

'DATING AMBER' (Rated MA15+) - is an Irish comedy drama offering Directed and Written by David Freyne in his ninth directing outing yet only his second feature film following 2017's 'The Cured' with Elliot Page. Distraught over persistent homophobic abuse, outsiders Eddie (Fionn O'Shea) and Amber (Lola Petticrew) decide to hide their sexuality from the rural Irish town in which they live by pretending to be a heterosexual couple. Amber wants to escape a life overshadowed by the suicide of her father to lead a lesbian punk life-style in a more liberal environment. Eddie is not so confident of his sexuality and intends to follow his insensitive and often absent father into the Irish Army. The film was originally released on Amazon Prime Video UK in early June last year before a cinema release in Ireland in early July, and a digital release in the US and on-demand from mid-November. Now its gets a limited showing in Australia and has garnered largely positive Reviews along the way. Also starring Sharon Horgan, Barry Ward and Simone Kirby. 

With just three 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 coming week, at your local Odeon.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Saturday, 3 July 2021

THINGS HEARD & SEEN : Tuesday 29th June 2021.

With Greater Sydney in COVID lockdown once again, and as a result all cinema's closed until July 9th at least, once again as with the same time last year I'll be reviewing a few of the latest feature films released recently onto Netflix. One such film that I watched from the comfort of my own sofa this week is the horror thriller 'THINGS HEARD & SEEN' which was released on the streaming service two months ago now and is Directed and written for the screen by Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini, and based on the novel 'All Things Cease to Appear' by Elizabeth Brundage. The film making pairing of Berman and Pulcini have yielded over the years 'American Splendour' in 2003 with Paul Giamatti and which picked up thirty-one award wins and another fifty nominations from around the awards and festivals circuit, 'The Nanny Diaries' in 2007 with Scarlett Johansson, 'The Extra Man' in 2010 with Kevin Kline, 'Girl Most Likely' in 2012 with Kristen Wiig, and 'Ten Thousand Saints' in 2015 with Asa Butterfield. 

And so here, the films opens up sometime in 1980 where art restorer Catherine Claire (Amanda Seyfried) is living in New York with her husband George (James Norton) and four year old daughter Franny (Sophia Heger). George secures a role teaching art history at a small yet fairly prestigious college, and so he relocates the family to Chosen, New York moving into a large two hundred year old farmhouse there. 

In no time the family are settled into their new rural community and George is making a strong impression on his students at college, however, Catherine is feeling isolated and out of touch with her family and friends that she left behind in Manhattan. One day while loading pots and pans into a kitchen cupboard she notices a Bible perched up on a high shelf. Reaching it down and thumbing through the old tome, she comes across a book marked page listing all the previous occupants of the farmhouse through the nineteenth century marked out in a family tree with the dates of their deaths clearly marked. One such name is however, scrubbed out with the word 'damned' written directly below. 

Franny while sleeping one night is woken by her bedside light flickering, and on another occasion the same thing happens again only this time accompanied by the spectre of a ghost staring at her from across her room. She screams and ends up sleeping with her Mum and Dad, as she does on several occasions that follow. At the same time, both Catherine and George wake in the night by a strange smell emanating through the house, which over successive nights seems to get stronger, and seemingly comes from the garage below the main house. Soon afterwards, Catherine is in the kitchen washing dishes when she observes lights dancing across the window sill leading her to an antique ring wedged into the sash window latch. She prizes the ring from the latch using a kitchen knife, and starts wearing it later. 

A few days later brothers Eddie and Cole Lucks (Alex Neustaedter and Jack Gore respectively) knock on Catherine's door and introduce themselves as neighbours and handymen who will turn their skills to any odd jobs needing doing around the house, and cheaply too. Catherine easily convinces George to take them on, and younger brother Cole is good for babysitting duties also. George also catches the eye of Willis Howell (Natalia Dyer) a female student and stable hand at a local horse stud and begins an affair with her, but after a few sessions between the sheets she breaks it off with him abruptly.

George's colleague at college Justine Sokolov (Rhea Seehorn) who teaches fabric weaving invite the pair over to dinner. Catherine hits it off with Justine immediately and they become firm friends. Driving back home that night George behaves somewhat erratically fuelled by alcohol and one too many joints, causing the pair to fight which results in him pushing Catherine down an embankment grazing her cheek. He immediately shows remorse for his actions and apologises, but Catherine will not have it. A few days later George invites Floyd DeBeers (F. Murray Abraham), the department head, home for a cocktail having spent the afternoon out on Floyd's sail boat. While Catherine is showing Floyd around the house he also sees the dancing lights and feels the presence of a soul. He reassures Catherine that the spirit is benevolent and offers to hold a seance, to which she agrees albeit reluctantly, and urges Floyd not to mention anything to her husband because he is a devout non-believer in such things. 

At George's suggestion the couple host a party at their farmhouse, intended for George's work colleagues only, but then Catherine suggests the local neighbours too as she still feels alone and isolated. George agrees. During the party, Catherine learns from a neighbour that the previous owners were Eddie and Cole's parents, and that their father killed their mother Ella and himself, by carbon monoxide poisoning from the car exhaust (which the couple could smell previously rising up from the garage below). After the party has ended and the guests have departed Catherine confronts George about the previous ownership of the house. As voices are raised between the pair, a radio blasts into life, continues playing even when unplugged and only stops when George smashes it to the ground. At that Catherine asks George to take Franny to his parents' house for an overdue visit for a few days.

With George visiting his parents for the weekend, Catherine and Floyd hold a seance at the farmhouse. They see the ghost of Ella (Emily Dorsch), and Floyd tells Catherine there is another spirit in the house, and that she should be careful until it is revealed. 

Catherine discovers George's affair, and has a fling with Eddie. Catherine also learns from his parents over dinner that paintings George claimed were his work were painted by his gay cousin, who drowned in a boating accident at the age of nineteen, and so she storms off the dinner table only adding to the strain that their marriage is already under.

On a class outing to a New York art museum in which Justine is asked by Floyd to chaperon George, she overhears a conversation between George and his dissertation advisor who by coincidence was visiting the exhibit at the same time. He asks George how he came to be hired without a letter of recommendation from him? The next day, Floyd, having been contacted by the advisor, confronts George, who admits to forging the letter. George asks for some time to explain man to man, as a colleague and as a friend and Floyd schedules a meeting to hear his side of the story.

A few days later and Floyd is preparing to take his boat out. George sidles up and says how he misses being out on the water and how he wishes he still had the 'Lost Horizon' the boat his cousin drowned from. Floyd invites George along saying that they can easily have the conversation on the water as on dry land. While on the boat George is unsuccessful in dissuading Floyd from reporting him to HR, which he has the intention of so doing the next day. Later that evening George returns completely wet through from head to toe. Justine is sat in her car and observes George wringing wet walking back to his car. She confronts him about his affair with Willis. As Justine drives off, George follows her, catches her up and runs her off the road, placing her in hospital in a coma. Later that evening, Catherine learns of Floyd's death over a radio broadcast, and Justine's car accident.

Later George arrives home and notices Catherine has packed up the car as she prepares to leave with Franny. George puts a sedative in Catherine's protein drink. He quickly learns about her plan and a fight breaks out between the pair. Catherine falls unconscious on their bed and George murders her with an axe with several blows to her abdomen. The next morning George goes to work, and instructs Cole not to disturb Catherine, stating she is unwell. Later that afternoon George returns home, where he pretends to discover her body. The police suspect George, but have no proof and release him. He takes Franny to his parents' home in Connecticut. Catherine's soul joins Ella's. They awaken Justine and show her everything that George did. Justine speaks to the Police. George attempts to escape on the 'Lost Horizon'. A storm is seen brewing and as it intensifies and he makes vain attempts to control the boat as a hole opens up in the ocean, swallowing George, in an image seen throughout the film.

Like George says when he first takes Catherine on an inspection of the old farmhouse, it's an old place, 'but it has good bones' and the same can be said of this film. Sure, the story has a solid enough foundation and the cornerstones are there to underpin the various plot threads, but this film left me wanting so much more than what was ultimately delivered. I wouldn't call this a horror film and there's nary a jump scare in sight - it's more of a psychological thriller or a marital drama with a house haunted by a friendly ghost, a couple whose dysfunctional marriage slides from bad to worse, and a murdering two timing husband who gets his comeuppance at the hands os some unseen malevolent force all makes for a fairly predictable offering that really gives us anything new. Seyfried and Norton are grounded enough in their roles delivering solid performances as do the rest of the supporting cast, but in the end whilst this film will be heard and seen, it will quickly fade from the memory. 

'Things Heard & Seen' merits two claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard from a possible five claps.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Friday, 2 July 2021

The Odeon Online Obituary : Remembering the screen celebrities who passed away in June 2021.

In June, the world bid a fond farewell to a number of stars of the silver screen and the small screen. In brief, shown below, is my passing tribute to those stars who leave an indelible mark on the entertainment industry, and in particular the world of film and television. May you all Rest In Peace, and thanks for the memories . . . . . Damaris Hayman, Clarence Williams III, Douglas S. Cramer, Ben Roberts, Lucinda Riley, Dennis Berry, John Gabriel, Ned Beatty, David Lightfoot, Lisa Banes, Dinah Shearing, Frank Bonner, Allen Midgette, Joanne Linville, Jackie Lane, Clare Peploe, John Langley, Alison Greenspan, Menelik Shabazz and Stuart Damon. 

* Damaris Hayman - born 16th June 1929, and died 3rd June 2021, aged 91. Hayman was an English Actress who was more often than not cast in upper class or eccentric roles and who began her career in 1953 in two episodes of the TV series 'The Story of the Treasure Seekers'. Following this she notched up another 119 screen acting credits taking in her first uncredited film roles in 'The Belles of St. Trinian's' and 'Mad About Men' both in 1954. Over the ensuing years she would appear in a number of other feature films albeit in uncredited roles until her first credited role in 1965 in Otto Preminger's 'Bunny Lake Is Missing' with Noel Coward and Laurence Olivier. Over the years that followed she also scored appearances in 'Mutiny on the Buses' in 1972, 'The Pink Panther Strikes Again' in 1976 for Blake Edwards and with Peter Sellers, 'The Haunting of Julia' in 1977 with Mia Farrow, 'The Missionary' in 1982 with Michael Palin and Maggie Smith with the direct to video film 'White Witch of Devil's End' in 2017 being her final screen performance. In the years in between there were also numerous roles on TV series taking in 'Emergency-Ward 10', 'Crossroads', 'Steptoe and Son', 'Z Cars', 'Ours Is a Nice House', 'The Liver Birds', 'Doctor Who', 'The Onedin Line', 'The Sweeney', 'The Young Ones', 'The Bill', 'The House of Elliot', 'One Foot in the Grave' and 'Nelson's Column'.

* Clarence Williams III - born 21st August 1939, died 4th June 2021, aged 81. Williams was an American Actor who generated ninety-nine screen acting credits to his name in a career spanning six decades and launching with an uncredited role in 1959's 'Pork Chop Hill' with Gregory Peck. He would follow this up over the ensuing years with other notable feature films including his first credited role in 1963's 'The Cool World', and then 'Purple Rain' in 1984 with Prince, '52 Pick-Up' for John Frankenheimer, 'I'm Gonna Git You Sucka' in 1988 with and for Keenan Ivory Wayans, 'Maniac Cop 2' in 1990 with Robert Davi, 'Deadfall' in 1993 with Michael Biehn, Nicolas Cage, Charlie Sheen, Peter Fonda and James Coburn, 'The Immortals' in 1995 with Eric Roberts, Chris Rock, Tony Curtis, and Tia Carrere, 'The Brave' for and with Johnny Depp and Marlon Brando in 1997, 'Hoodlum' that same year with Laurence Fishburne, Tim Roth and Andy Garcia, 'The Legend of 1900' in 1998 with Tim Roth, 'The General's Daughter' in 1999 with John Travolta, James Woods, Madeline Stowe, and James Cromwell, 'Reindeer Games' in 2000 for John Frankenheimer with Ben Affleck, an uncredited turn in 'American Gangster' in 2007 for Ridley Scott with Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe, 'The Way of War' in 2009 with Cuba Gooding Jnr., 'The Butler' in 2013 with Forest Whitaker, Oprah Winfrey, John Cusack and Jane Fonda with 'American Nightmares' in 2018 with Danny Trejo being his final screen role. In the meantime there were also 123 episodes on 'The Mod Squad' between 1968 and 1973, plus 'Hill Street Blues', 'T.J. Hooker', 'Miami Vice', 'Twin Peaks', 'Star Trek : Deep Space Nine', 'Millennium', 'Law & Order', 'Mystery Woman', 'Burn Notice', 'Cold Case' and 'Empire'

* Douglas S. Cramer
- born 22nd August 1931 and died on 4th June 2021, aged 89. Cramer was an American television Producer who was one of the most prolific and most successful Producers in the history of television, as well as being a renowned collector of contemporary art who served on the Board of numerous museums. His career launched in 1969 as Executive Vice President in charge of Production on an number of TV series including multiple episodes of 'Love, American Style', 'The Immortal', 'The Odd Couple', 'The Young Lawyers' and 'The Brady Bunch'. From 1972 onwards he moved into Producing, at first a string of made for TV movies including 'Call Her Mom', and then 'Man on a String', 'Movin' On', 'Keeping Up with the Joneses', and 'Help, Inc.' In the years that followed he also Produced the likes of 'Bridget Loves Bernie', sixty episodes of 'Wonder Woman', sixty-nine of 'Vega$', twenty of 'Strike Force', sixty-seven of 'Matt Houston', 250 of 'The Love Boat', forty-nine of 'The Colbys', 115 of 'Hotel', 217 of 'Dynasty' with too many TV movies in between time to mention. His final credit came in 1999 with the TV film 'Family of Cops III : Under Suspicion'. Cramer also established the Douglas S. Cramer Foundation with two buildings and five different exhibition spaces on his 420-acre ranch, called La Quinta Norte, near Los Olivos, California.

* Ben Roberts
- born Bennett Roberts on 1st July 1950 and died 7th June 2021, aged 70. Roberts was a Welsh Actor of television and film who was perhaps best known for his appearance in 459 episodes of 'The Bill' as Chief Inspector Derek Conway between 1987 and 2002. All up Roberts notched up just eighteen screen acting credits during his career which launched in 1978 on a single episode of 'A Woman's Place?'. He would follow this up with other small screen roles on the likes of 'The Professionals', 'Angels', 'Hard Cases', 'Tales of Sherwood Forest', 'Doctors' and 'Casualty'. In between there were a handful of feature film roles, being 'Another Year' in 2010 for Director Mike Leigh, 'Jane Eyre' in 2011 with Mia Wasikowska, Michael Fassbender and Jamie Bell, 'A Little Chaos' in 2014 for and with Alan Rickman and Kate Winslet and Stanley Tucci, 'Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children' in 2016 for Tim Burton and with Asa Butterfield, Eva Green, Judi Dench and Samuel L. Jackson, and 'Daniel' in 2019 being his final screen role. 

* Lucinda Riley
- born 16th February 1966 and died 11th June 2021, aged 55. Riley was a former Irish Actress and best selling Author of historical fiction, who generated just three screen acting roles during her short lived career in front of the camera, on six episodes of 'The Story of the Treasure Seekers' in 1982, then on a single episode of 'Auf Wiedersehen, Pet' in 1983 and 'Jumping the Queue' in 1989. She penned her first novel in 1992 'Lovers and Players' and went on to write a further sixteen novels plus, 'The Seven Sisters Series' of books consisting seven books which she wrote from 2014 up until 2021. In 2016, producer Raffaella De Laurentiis purchased the television rights to her novel series 'The Seven Sisters'.

* John Gabriel
- born John Monkarsh on 25th May 1931 and died 11th June 2021, aged 90. Gabriel was an American Actor, singer and a one time Producer of the TV series 'Charles Grodin Show' which he did so for six years. He gained his first screen acting role in 1953's TV series 'You Are There' with his first feature film role coming in 1958's 'South Pacific' with 'The Hunters' that same year with Robert Mitchum and Robert Wagner. Following a number of uncredited roles he appeared in the Biblical offering 'The Story of Ruth' in 1960, then 'Sex and the College Girl' in 1964 with Charles Grodin, 'Stagecoach' in 1966, 'El Dorado' also in 1966 with John Wayne, Robert Mitchum and James Caan, 'Hell's Bloody Devils' in 1970, 'Doomsday Voyage' in 1972 with Joseph Cotten, an uncredited role in 1976's 'Network' with Peter Finch, William Holden and Faye Dunaway, 'It's My Turn' in 1980 with Michael Douglas and Charles Grodin with 'The Return of Superfly' in 1990 being his final big screen role with Samuel L. Jackson and Nathan Purdee. In the years in between there were also small screen appearances in the likes of 'The Untouchables', 'General Hospital', '77 Sunset Strip', 'The Girl from U.N.C.L.E.', 'The Six Million Dollar Man', 'The Mary Tyler Moore Show', 'The Love Boat', 'Hart to Hart', on 757 episodes of 'Ryan's Hope' between 1975 and 1989, 'The Bold and the Beautiful', 'Murder, She Wrote', 'Days of Our Lives', and lending his voice to the video game 'Red Dead Redemption' in 2010. As a singer he appeared on numerous TV shows, including 'The Ed Sullivan Show', 'The Merv Griffin Show', 'The Mike Douglas Show', and 'Regis and Kathy Lee' and in 2004, Gabriel wrote and produced, along with his actress wife Sandy Gabriel, a nightclub act which he regularly toured across the United States, titled 'Words And Music', a celebration of classic American song interspersed with stories taken from his vast experience in show business.

* Dennis Berry
 - born 11th August 1944 and died 12th June 2021, aged 76. Berry was an American French Director, Actor, Writer and occasional Producer who scored his first screen acting gig in the 1967 feature 'The Collector'. He followed this up with a string of largely French feature films for the remaining '60's before turning his hand at Directing his first film in 1975 'The Big Delirium' with Jean Seberg and Isabelle Huppert. Other features and TV series followed including 'Last Song' in 1987 with Anna Karina, 'Vendetta' in 2001 and 'Wild' in 2018, plus 'Rin Tin Tin : K-9 Cop', then eighteen episodes of 'Crossbow', two on 'Stargate SG-1', thirty-four on 'Highlander' and then six on 'Highlander : Raven' all between 1993 and 1999 with multiple episodes of 'Lance of Longinus', 'Duval and Moretti' and 'Mata Hari' right up until 2017. Berry was married to Jean Seberg and Anna Karina until the time of their passing in August 1979 and December 2019 respectively. 

* Ned Beatty
- born 6th July 1937 and died 13th June 2021, aged 83. Beatty was an American Actor of stage, cinema and television who accumulated 165 screen acting credits throughout his career which launched with a starring role in the Burt Reynold's 1972 cult film 'Deliverance'. He would follow this up that same year with 'The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean' with Paul Newman, then the likes of other notable Hollywood offerings taking in 'The Thief Who Came to Dinner', 'White Lightning' and 'W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings' both with Burt Reynolds again, 'Nashville', 'All the President's Men', 'Network', 'Silver Streak', 'Exorcist II : The Heretic', 'Superman', '1941', 'Superman II', 'Stroker Ace' with Burt Reynolds once more, 'The Big Easy', 'The Fourth Protocol', 'Hear My Song', 'Prelude to a Kiss', 'Rudy', 'Just Cause', 'Cookie's Fortune', 'Life', 'Thunderpants', 'Shooter', 'Charlie Wilson's War', 'In the Electric Mist', 'The Killer Inside Me', then lending his voice to 'Toy Story 3' and 'Rango' with 'Rampart', and 'Baggage Claim' being his final screen role in 2013 before announcing his retirement. Over the years he also had roles in TV series including 'The Waltons', 'Gunsmoke', 'M*A*S*H', 'Hawaii Five-O', 'The Rockford Files', on fifteen episodes as the title character on 'Szysznyk', 'Murder, She Wrote', 'The Boys', 'Roseanne', and on thirty-three episodes of 'Homicide : Life on the Street'. Beatty was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for 'Network' plus two PrimeTime Emmy and a Golden Globe nod. He won a Drama Desk Award for 'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof' (2004) in the Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play category. Beatty was married four times and had eight children, and was described as being 'the busiest Actor in Hollywood'.

* David Lightfoot
- born sometime in 1960 and died on 13th June 2021, aged 61. Lightfoot was an Australian film Producer who generated twenty-seven screen production credits to his name, in a career that began in 1993 with his Associate Producer credit on 'Bad Boy Bubby'. He followed this up over the next three decades with the likes of 'The Sound of One Hand Clapping' in 1998, 'Sample People' in 2000 with Kylie Minogue and Ben Mendelsohn, 'Japanese Story' in 2003 with Toni Collette, 'Wolf Creek' in 2005 with John Jarratt, 'Rogue' in 2007 with Sam Worthington and John Jarratt, 'Coffin Rock' in 2009, 'Turkey Shoot' in 2014 with Dominic Purcell, 'A Few Less Men' in 2017, 'Outlaws' that same year with Ryan Corr and Matt Nable, 'Bad Blood' in 2017 also and 'Never Too Late' in 2020 with James Cromwell, Shane Jacobson and Jacki Weaver being his final Producer credit. 

* Lisa Banes
- born 9th July 1955 and died 14th June 2021, aged 65. Banes was an American Actress of film, television and theatre who appeared on Broadway several times in the Neil Simon play 'Rumors' in 1988, in the musical 'High Society' with Anna Kendrick in 1998, in 'Accent on Youth' with David Hyde Pierce in 2009, and most recently in the 2010 revival of 'Present Laughter' with Victor Garber. Her film and TV roles took in 86 credits, with feature film appearances including her 1984 screen debut in 'The Hotel New Hampshire', then 'Marie' with Sissy Spacek, Morgan Freeman and Jeff Daniels, 'Cocktail' with Tom Cruise and Bryan Brown, 'Young Guns' with Emilio Estevez, Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips and Charlie Sheen, 'Miami Rhapsody' with Sarah Jessica Parker, Mia Farrow and Antonio Banderas, 'Without Limits' with Billy Crudup and Donald Sutherland, 'Dragonfly' with Kevin Costner, 'Freedom Writers' with Hilary Swank, 'Gone Girl' with Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike with 'A Cure for Wellness' in 2016 with Dane DeHaan and Jason Isaacs being her last big screen role. In the years in between there were also multiple roles in TV movies and TV series taking in the likes of 'The Equalizer', on thirty-four episodes of 'The Trials of Rosie O'Neill', 'L.A. Law', 'Roseanne', 'Murder, She Wrote', 'Frasier', on twenty-eight episodes of 'Son of the Beach', 'The Practice', on thirteen of 'One Life to Live', 'NYPD Blue', 'The King of Queens', 'Boston Legal', 'The Unit', 'Desperate Housewives', 'The Good Wife', 'Masters of Sex', 'Madam Secretary', 'The Orville', with a single episode on 'Them' this year. On 4th June 2021 she was critically injured in New York City when she was struck in a hit and run by a motorised scooter which drove through a red light while she was crossing Amsterdam Avenue in Manhattan. She suffered a traumatic brain injury and was unable to recover, dying ten days later.

* Dinah Shearing
- born 12th February 1926, died 14th June 2021, aged 95. Shearing was an Australian Actress of radio, television, cinema and theatre. She was especially active on stage working with Sydney and Melbourne Theatre companies, Elizabethan Theatre Trust, Independent Theatre and many others from 1948 through until 2008. Her screen roles were more limited over the years with only twenty-eight credits to her name ranging from her debut appearance in the TV movie 'A Phoenix Too Frequent' in 1957, to her feature film debut in 1983's 'Buddies' with Colin Friels and then 'A Spy in the Family' in 1985 and 'The Long Wet' in 2001. Leading up to that initial big screen role and subsequently she has appeared in the likes of 'The Sullivans', 'Singles', 'Five Mile Creek', 'Rafferty's Rules', 'E Street', 'A Country Practice', 'Wildside', 'All Saints', with 'Farscape' in 2002 being her final screen role. Shearing was awarded the A.M. (Member of the Order of Australia) in the 1993 Queen's Birthday Honours List for her services to the performing arts. At the time of her passing, she had been active in community arts programmes, volunteer work and had also branched into Directing a number of stage plays. 

* Frank Bonner
- born Frank Woodrow Boers Jnr. on 28th February 1942 and died 16th June 2021, aged 79. Bonner was an American Actor and TV Director with fifty-nine screen acting credits and twenty as Director during his career which launched in 1967 in the film 'The Equinox . . . A Journey Into the Supernatural' and he followed this up in 1970 playing that same character again in 'Equinox'. His other feature film roles included 1972's 'The Hoax', 'Little Cigars' in 1973, 'Las Vegas Lady' in 1975 with Stella Stevens, 'The Longshot' in 1986, 'Going Under' in 1991 with Bill Pullman, Robert Vaughn and Ned Beatty, 'Shut Up and Kiss Me!' in 2004, 'Remembering Phil' in 2008 with 'Under the Hollywood Sign' in 2014 being his final screen role. In the intervening years there were also many TV movies and TV series taking in 'The Young Lawyers', 'Mannix', 'Cannon', 'Police Woman', 'Fantasy Island' and then perhaps the role for which he is best remembered as Herb Tarlek on eighty-eight episodes between 1978 and 1982 of 'WKRP in Cincinnati' and a role he would reprise on a further forty-six episodes of 'The New WKRP in Cincinnati' between 1991 and 1993 (of which he would Direct a total thirteen). There was also 'The Love Boat', 'Matt Houston', 'Scarecrow and Mrs. King', 'Murder, She Wrote', 'Sidekicks', 'Just the Ten of Us' and 'Saved by the Bell : The New Class'. In addition he also Directed eight episodes of 'Just the Ten of Us', eleven of 'Harry and the Hendersons', and 105 of 'City Guys' between 1997 and 2001. Bonner was married five times and had five children (four biological), seven grandchildren and one great grandchild, at the time of his death.

* Allen Midgette
- born 2nd February 1939, died 16th June 2021, aged 82. Midgette was an American Actor perhaps best known for playing Andy Warhol on a 1968 University lecture tour after the attempted murder of the artist that same year. Midgette notched up just thirteen screen acting credits to his name taking in his debut feature film role in 1962's 'The Grim Reaper' for Bernardo Bertolucci, and then 'Before the Revolution' for Bertolucci again in 1964, then 'The Nude Restaurant' for Andy Warhol in 1967, '****' for Andy Warhol again also in 1967, 'Lonesome Cowboys' in 1968 for Warhol once more, '7254' in 1971, '1900' for Bertolucci once again in 1976 with Robert De Niro and Gerard Depardieu, 'Suffocating Heat' in 1991 in which he played Andy Warhol and the Blondie music video in 2011 for 'Mother' in which he again plays Andy Warhol being his final screen appearance. 

* Joanne Linville
- born 15th January 1928, died 20th June 2021, aged 93. Linville was an American Actress of film and television and who with fellow Actress Irene Gilbert co-founded the Stella Adler Academy in Los Angeles in 1985. Linville amassed eighty-four screen acting credits throughout her career which kicked off in an uncredited role in 1950 in the feature film 'Copper Canyon' with Ray Milland and Hedy Lamarr. From here, she would go onto roles in other feature films including over the years, 'The Goddess' in 1958 with Lloyd Bridges, Michael Winner's 'Scorpio' in 1973 with Burt Lancaster, 'Gable and Lombard' in 1976 with James Brolin and Jill Clayburgh, 'A Star Is Born' in 1976 with Kris Kristofferson and Barbra Streisand with 'The Seduction' in 1982 being her final feature film outing. In the meantime and since there were also appearances on TV shows including 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents', 'Have Gun - Will Travel', 'The Twilight Zone', 'Laramie', 'Dr. Kildare', 'Route 66', 'The Fugitive', 'Bonanza', 'The Invaders', 'Star Trek : The Original Series', 'Gunsmoke', 'The F.B.I.', 'Hawaii Five-O', 'Columbo', 'Kojak', 'CHiPs', 'Barnaby Jones', 'Charlie's Angels', 'Dynasty', 'L.A Law', with a single episode on 'Starship Excelsior' in 2016 being her final acting role. Linville was married to Actor/Director Mark Rydell from 1962 until their divorce in 1973. Linville played gossip columnist Hedda Hopper in the 2001 television movie 'James Dean' with James Franco playing the title role and Rydell directed the film. She was the author of an instructional/biographical book published in 2011 titled 'Joanne Linville's Seven Steps to an Acting Craft'.

* Jackie Lane
- born 10th July 1941 and died 23rd June 2021, aged 79. Lane was an English Actress of television who garnered just six screen acting credits to her name during the 1960's. She starred with Charlie Drake in the TV production 'Grandad was a Wrestler' in 1959, was a panelist on 'Juke Box Jury' in 1961 and got her first acting break in the TV mini-series 'The Caucasian Chalk Circle' in 1962, before taking a role in the early BBC soap opera 'Compact' in 1963 across nine episodes. She then took roles in single episodes of 'Coronation Street', 'The Protectors' and 'The Villains' in 1964 and '65, before perhaps her most well known role as Dodo Chaplet, a companion of the Doctor on nineteen episodes of 'Doctor Who' in 1966 opposite William Hartnell as the Doctor. After leaving 'Doctor Who', which was to be her final screen appearance, Lane went to work as a secretary at the Australian Embassy in Paris before retuning home to England to became a theatrical agent, representing Tom Baker, who would play the Fourth Doctor, and Janet Fielding, who would play companion Tegan Jovanka. The agency which she managed was Jackie Lane Ad Voice. In 2013, the BBC made a 'docudrama' titled 'An Adventure in Space and Time', telling the story of the creation and early days of 'Doctor Who', as part of the programme's 50th anniversary celebrations.

* Clare Peploe
- born sometime in 1942, died 23rd June 2021, aged 79. Peploe was a British Italian Screen writer, Director and one time Producer whose writing career launched in 1970 with the co-credit for the cult film 'Zabriskie Point'. In 1976 she served as Second Unit Director on '1900' for Bernardo Bertolucci who was two years later to become her husband, until his passing in 2018. Her next writing credit came with 1979's 'Luna' again Directed by her then husband Bertolucci with her first outing as Director on the twenty-nine minute short film 'Couples and Robbers' which she also co-wrote and which garnered an Oscar and a BAFTA nod for Best Short Film, Live Action. 'High Season' followed in 1987 with Jacqueline Bisset and James Fox, then 'Rough Magic' in 1995 with Russell Crowe, Bridget Fonda and Jim Broadbent, with 'The Triumph of Love' in 2001 with Mia Sorvino and Ben Kingsley being her final feature film offering. Peploe both Directed and wrote the screenplays for the last three mentioned films here. Her one Producer credit was on the Bertolucci Directed 1998 film, which she also co-wrote, 'Besieged', with Thandie Newton and David Thewlis. 

* John Langley
- born 1st June 1943 and died 26th June 2021, aged 78. Langley was an American television and film Producer, Writer and Director who accumulated thirty-eight production credits, twelve as writer and five as Director during a career which launched in 1983 with the documentary film 'Cocaine Blues' which he Produced, wrote and Directed. His other four film making credits are 'Stop the Madness' a video short from 1986, 'Maximum Potential' in 1987 about the work out routines of Dolph Lundgren, 'American Expose : Who Murdered JFK' in 1988 and the video film 'Dog Watch' in 1997 with Sam Elliott and Paul Sorvino. His Producer work over the years took in the likes of 'Wild Side' with Christopher Walken, 'Gunfighter's Moon' with Lance Henriksen, 'Tiptoes' with Matthew McConaughey, Gary Oldman, Peter Dinklage and Kate Beckinsale, 'Brooklyn's Finest' with Richard Gere, Don Cheadle, Ethan Hawke and Wesley Snipes, and 'Leaves of Grass' with Edward Norton and Keri Russell being his final feature film credit in 2009 before going onto Executive Produce thirty-five episodes of 'Las Vegas Jailhouse', eight of 'Undercover Stings', seventeen of 'Vegas Strip', seventy-one of 'Jail' and perhaps his most noted work as creator and Producer on 201 episodes of 'Cops' which premiered in early 1989 and aired until May 2020. Langley won various awards for the 'Cops' TV series, including the American Television Award and four Emmy Award nominations. His DVD's, have won various awards for greatest sales records in the mid-1990's when he founded Real Entertainment and pioneered the reality DVD market with VHS releases of multiple reality titles like 'Cops: Too Hot for TV' and 'The Amazing Video Collection'. Langley died of a heart attack while competing in the coast to coast Ensenada, Baja California to San Felipe 250kms off road race.

* Alison Greenspan
- born 2nd December 1972, died 27th June 2021, aged 48. Greenspan was an American film and television Producer who notched up eighteen production credits throughout her career which kicked off in 2003 with 'What a Girl Wants' featuring Amanda Bynes, Colin Firth, Kelly Preston and Jonathan Pryce. She would follow this up with the likes of 'Catwoman' in 2004 with Halle Berry, 'The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants' in 2005 with Amber Tamblyn, America Ferrera and Blake Lively, then 'The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2' in 2008 featuring the same cast reprising their roles, 'Nights in Rodanthe' with Richard Gere and Diane Lane also in 2008, 'The Lucky One' in 2012 with Zac Efron, 'If I Stay' in 2014 with Chloe Grace Moretz, 'You're Not You' in 2014 too with Hilary Swank, 'Unforgettable' in 2017 with Katherine Heigl and Rosario Dawson and then twenty-three episodes of the TV series 'For Life' last year and this being her final screen credit. 

* Menelik Shabazz
- born sometime in 1954 in Barbados and died 28th June 2021, aged 67. Shabazz was a British film Director, Producer and Writer acknowledged as a pioneer in the development of independent Black British cinema. In 1976 he Directed 'Step Forward Youth', a thirty minute short documentary about London-born black youths, and in 1978 he Directed 'Breaking Point' which was shown on prime-time British TV and contributed to the repeal of the Sus Law that was being used to criminalise Black youth. Shabazz's first feature-length film was 'Burning an Illusion', which he wrote and Directed and was released to acclaim in 1981 and was hailed as 'one of the most important feature films ever made in Britain'. It was only the second British feature film to have been made by a black Director. 'Blood Ah Go Run', the thirteen minute short documentary made in 1981, charts the response of the Black community to the New Cross fire in London, including the 'Black People's Day of Action', and the subsequent uprising in Brixton. It would not be until 2011 that he would helm his next doco, that being 'The Story of Lovers Rock', with 'Looking for Love' in 2015 and 'Pharaohs Unveiled' in 2019 being his final film making, writing and production credit. In 1998, Shabazz founded Black Filmmaker Magazine (bfm), the first black film publication aimed at the global black filmmaking industry, and over the next decade the publication was distributed in Europe and the US. In 1999 he started the bfm International Film Festival as a platform for screening black world cinema and to inspire British talent, which became the biggest of its kind in Europe.

* Stuart Damon
- born Stuart Michael Zonis on 5th February 1937 and died 29th June 2021, aged 84. Damon was an American actor of film, theatre and television who amassed forty-two screen acting credits to his name over a career spanning six decades and which launched on a single episode of 'Naked City' in 1962. He would follow this up with the made for TV movie 'Cinderella' in 1965 and subsequent feature films including 'Young Doctors in Love' in 1982, 'Star 80' in 1983, 'Silent Assassins' in 1988, 'Chairman of the Board' in 1998 with 'Rain from Stars' in 2013 being his final screen role. Over the years in between, there were both single and multiple episodes on the likes of 'Man in a Suitcase', 'The Saint', 'Department S', then on thirty of perhaps his best known role as Craig Stirling on 'The Champions' between 1968 and 1969, 'UFO', 'Space : 1999', on thirteen of 'Yanks Go Home', 'Fantasy Island', on eighty-three episodes of 'Port Charles', 'Days of Our Lives', on twenty of 'As the World Turns' and then on 381 of his equally renowned role on 'General Hospital' between 1977 and 2013. Damon won three awards and was nominated a further twelve times - all for his role on 'General Hospital' for which he won the Daytime Emmy Award in 1999.

Twenty deaths reported this month from the film and television community at large, and that community is just a little bit poorer as a result. As some governments the world over are easing up on their COVID-19 restrictions, others are enforcing further stages of lockdowns, and in some cases are going through the ravages of a third and fourth outbreak. Remember the basic principles that continue to be advocated - maintain a safe distance, hand hygiene and wear a mask if you are unable to maintain a safe distance especially, and get vaccinated - together we can all beat this thing. Stay safe, remain healthy and wherever you are in the world, if you're in lock down, as we are in Sydney right now - watch a movie on your favoured streaming service from the comfort of your own home. 

-Steve, at Odeon Online-