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20/20 Filmsight - February 2010

Absolute Beginners

February 26th 2010 06:14
by Matt Shea
Absolute Beginners David Bowie

Panned by critics of the time, 1986’s infamous musical, Absolute Beginners, went on to be regarded as one of the great failures of the decade, criticised for simply being a glitzy, overlong pop promo.

While the sentiment is understandable, it’s also a touch unfair. Full of energy and campy humour, Absolute Beginners is also thematically strong and possessed of a delightfully vivid ambience. Still, flaws in characterisation and a limp collection of musical numbers hamper this from ever being an enthralling experience, the picture instead best viewed as a curio of flash 80s filmmaking.

Set around the burgeoning art scene of late 1950s London, Colin (Eddie O’Connell) is a brazen photographer with his finger on the pulse of the sometimes dangerous, always outrageous Soho streets. Colin makes a meagre living out of his art and when his beautiful aspiring fashion designer girlfriend Crepe Suzette, (Patsy Kensit) tires of their lower class life, he finds it hard to hold her affection.

Soon the older, richer Henley of Mayfair (James Fox, stiffening his lip as only he can do) has swept Crepe Suzette off her feet, leaving Colin devastated but determined to win her back any way he can, even if it means selling himself out and teaming up with scheming advertising executive, Vendice Partners (David Bowie).

One of the major problems with Absolute Beginners is perhaps already obvious: Crepe Suzette is about as unsympathetic as they come and one of the more disappointing female characters to grace the silver screen; it’s never really understandable why Colin would pursue this vacuous gold digger. Unfortunately, Colin isn’t much better. The almost forgotten Eddie O’Connell is actually quite a charismatic presence, but his performance is flattened by the paper-thin designs of his character.

Compunding matters is the fact that Colin and Crepe Suzette are tied to a ramshackle plot that careens all over the place. There’s a nice subtext about the racial tensions of the time that explodes to the forefront of proceedings in the film’s second half, but it’s not tied to the central plot very convincingly.

All this might be forgivable if the music was up to the task, but it’s not.

With one or two notable exceptions – including the engaging title track – Absolute Beginners is a shaggy dog when it comes to musical numbers. Contributors such as Sade and The Style Council turn in smack-jacking songs that not only bore the audience but also stamp the film as being distinctly of the 1980s. Not even Ray Davies can help right the ship, The Kinks frontman sleepwalking through his early number.

Yet despite this catalogue of faults, Absolute Beginners has a few compensations that make it worth a look for those with an appetite for cult curios.

Oliver Stapleton’s photography is something else, consisting of sweeping cranes and a clever use of lenses to help push across the film’s otherworldly feel. It’s best exemplified by an opening sequence often compared to Touch of Evil and The Player for its skill and precision. In these moments, director Julien Temple also deserves credit for expertly handling the ambitious setups and throngs of bit players and extras.

Dominating everything, however, is John Beard’s production design. It’s frequently over-the-top and heading towards the lurid but forever stimulating, helping push the film through its more tiresome segments. Absolute Beginners is also in possession of some fine subtext, its comments on racial tension and in particular the exploitation of teenage culture by older generations ringing true in modern times.

Not really the shocker it’s frequently touted to be, Absolute Beginners was simply an ambitious exercise that failed to realise its goals. The filmmakers fell into the common trap of figuring that musicals are in little need of character, before throwing at the audience some of the most uninspiring songs in cinema history. Still, you’d be hard-pressed to find a film that better busies the visual cortex.


I say: A musical that dabbles in the twin sins of poor character and ordinary tunes.

See it for: Bruce ‘Checkmate’ Payne as a ruthless, slick-haired bovver boy.



'Absolute Beginners' is now available on DVD from Umbrella Entertainment


Take a look at a sequence from the film below:



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Shutter Island

February 24th 2010 04:39
by Matt Shea
Leonardo DiCaprio in Shutter Island

It’s difficult to know what Martin Scorsese is up to these days. Once the toast of New Hollywood, Scorsese was responsible for a series of blistering films based around vivid characters.

Not so much, anymore, it seems. Scorsese is now a veteran filmmaker, and maybe it shows in his choice or projects over the past few years: gone are the highly visceral character studies and in their place we find slick but often bloated genre pics. The Departed was a sub par remake of a flawed but effective Hong Kong police thriller, and now there’s Shutter Island, which plays like Scorsese’s turn at making The Shining.

Maybe it’s the choice of source material, which I haven’t read, but Shutter Island is a film fat with ideas, themes, red herrings and premises, but short on character and therefore satisfaction for the viewer.

It’s 1954 with Leonardo DiCaprio playing the role of Teddy Daniels, a federal marshal struggling to reconcile himself with the recent death of his wife and also his part in the liberation of Dachau nine years earlier. Daniels has been assigned to investigate the disappearance of a patient from Ashecliffe Hospital, a clinic for the criminally insane located on the ominous Shutter Island, 11 miles off the coast from Boston.

Joining Daniels is his new partner, Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo), and together the men attempt to tackle what seems to be an extraordinary disappearance: the patient in question, Rachel Solano, has escaped from her locked and barred cell almost as if by an illusion.

As the two agents dig for information, they begin to feel the hospital’s director, Doctor Cawley (Ben Kingsley) and his legion of staff are chicaning their progress. And when it is revealed that the hospital is funded by the House Un-American Activities Committee, both the mystery and Daniels’s erratic behaviour threaten to spiral beyond comprehension.

It’s an intriguing idea and the opening 20 minutes underline Scorsese’s skill as a filmmaker. The initial premise is quickly set up and DiCaprio and Ruffalo given some solid ground from which to build their characters: they make for an engaging pair, DiCaprio’s Daniels is aggressively confrontational, his approach tempered by Aule’s more considered approach.

These establishing scenes are framed by some jaw-dropping photography from Robert Richardson and given extra kick by Robbie Robertson’s musical direction, which throughout the film samples classical music (eventually, a little tiresomely) much like Scorsese has in the past used rock and borrowed movie compositions.

But as Shutter Island moves into its middle act it begins to suffer a serious slowing in momentum. The premise shifts awkwardly a couple of times, red herrings are introduced, and the film becomes weighed down with large tracts of exposition. Before you have a strong grip on Daniels's character, the nefarious island is slowly pulling him apart and it’s hard to care too much. By the end of this very long experience you’re well prepared for the final reveal, one that is once again detailed in laborious long form.

Perhaps screenwriter Laeta Kalogridis hewed a little too closely to the source material: There’s at least one instance where two characters should have been combined into one, for example, and you’re left with the feeling that an easy 20 minutes could have been culled from the running time.



Still, this is a Scorsese picture: as such there were perhaps always going to be virtues scattered about the rocky terrain of Shutter Island, and other than the slick technical credits the film features some strong performances from its impressive cast.

DiCaprio initially seems a little out of place as Daniels – a fat-faced boy in a man’s clothing – but Scorsese’s modern muse delivers a determined performance in a role that’s rather demanding. Ruffalo, an under recognised talent who comes across in Shutter Island’s trailer as a mute sidekick, is also excellent as Daniels's more thoughtful partner. In the smaller roles, Kingsley underplays beautifully as the pleasant but slightly off Doctor Cawley, while rent-a-baddie John Carroll Lynch turns in a typically sinister performance as the facility’s deputy warden.

Ultimately this is a genre pic turned inside out. Where genre should be lean and efficient, Shutter Island is bloated, flawed and lacking in character, a desk piled high with ideas and paper weighted with a variety of themes and premises. Make no mistake: this is better than your average Multiplex experience and comes loaded with memorable elements, but you can’t help but leave the theatre wondering if Shutter Island could have been a lot better.


I say: A flawed film that won’t be remembered as one of Scorsese’s best.

See it for: One of the most unintentionally hilarious uses of a whiteboard ever.


*This picture is from IGN
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The Boys in the Band

February 23rd 2010 07:43
by Matt Shea
The Boys in the Band

In the time following its release in 1970, the feature film adaptation of The Boys in the Band became something of a critical and social football. Originally praised for a faithful but dark reproduction of gay life, the film soon came to be seen as a relic of a time when self-loathing and guilt were the acknowledged norms for a homosexual person and was eventually buried by the Stonewall riots of 1969 and a movement within the homosexual community towards gay pride


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a recollection,
by mountain fog


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Friday Night

February 19th 2010 04:34
By David O'Connell

David O'Connell writes the website Screen Fanatic as well as contributing to InFilm Australia. He lives in a house weighed down with thousands upon thousands of film scores and VHS tapes slowly dissolving to dust. His favourite directors iclude Billy Wilder, Sidney Lumet, Alfred Hitchcock, Brian De Palma, Martin Scorsese and David Cronenberg. He also greatly admires French and Swedish cinema (even the ones without rude bits).
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by Matt Shea
10 Conditions of Love DVD release

The independent Australian-owned distribution company Umbrella Entertainment yesterday announced the DVD release of the highly controversial documentary, The 10 Conditions of Love
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Perversion Story

February 18th 2010 07:36
by Matt Shea
Perversion Story Marisa Mell stripping

How to provide a definitive review of a film for which there is no definitive cut? Parsing the Internet, there seem to be at least three different versions of Perversion Story (Una Sull’altra, or One on Top of the Other, as it is often translated to


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by Matt Shea
Stormtrooper adidas shoes

And there I was thinking Imperial Stormtroopers were given a pair of Cuban-heeled Wellingtons as standard issue. How wrong could I have been? It seems that while me and my rebel buddies were kicking back in our outer rim bunker, laughing about the crusty fashions back on Coruscant, the Empire was busy updating its combat wear and thus appealing to a whole new generation of incompetent boobs. Good thing Adidas is like a ruthless weapons dealer, selling to anybody as long as the price is right. It means their new range of fancy footwear is available to Rebels, Imperials, smugglers and bounty hunters alike. Head on over to the official Star Wars website to take a look at the complete collection


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Goya's Ghosts

February 16th 2010 06:17
by Matt Shea
Natalie Portman Goya's Ghosts

Promising. Interesting. Boring. Unintentionally funny. Embarrassing. These are the five phases of watching Milos Forman’s Goya’s Ghosts
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Stroszek

February 11th 2010 04:38
by Matt Shea
Stroszek Werner Herzog

Other than Aguirre, the Wrath of God and Fitzcarraldo, perhaps the Werner Herzog film that invites the most discussion is his 1976 feature, Stroszek. There’s so much going on in the Bavarian filmmaker’s bizarre tale – so many metaphors for critics to fuss over and so many theories waiting to be sewn – it could be discussed for months on end


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by Matt Shea
Shutter Island sneak peak scenes released

As February 18 draws closer, the beating of the drums gets ever louder. We’re talking, of course, about the first truly major cinema event of 2010 – the release of Martin Scorsese’s Shutter Island. In an effort to push the excitement up to fever pitch, Paramount Australia has now released three sneak peak scenes that further sell what looks to be a film of intimidating intensity. There’s been a whole raft of psychological thrillers emerging out of the United States in recent times, many of them sub par, so it’s going to be interesting to say the least to see what Scorsese and his team of filmmakers have done to convert Dennis Lehane’s much-admired novel to the big screen. Take a look at the scenes below


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LOL @ the Sydney French Film Festival

February 9th 2010 20:37
LOL Capone Theret on the subway


We have plenty of movies about the trials of being a teenager, and you would think that the film-going population would be weary of it by now. Do we need another Fast Times at Ridgemont High or Dazed and Confused
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In the Loop

February 9th 2010 17:15
by Matt Shea
In the Loop film peter capaldi

For a career in politics, you either have to be a ravenous, power-hungry sociopath, or a cowardly, ineffective dunce. There’s no middle ground for Armando Iannucci, writer-director of the hit BBC television sitcom, The Thick of It and now that series’ feature length spin-off, In the Loop
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Emmanuel Mouret Frederique Bel arguing in bed

The internet is plagued with infinite comparison of French director Emmanuel Mouret to Woody Allen - I'm loathe to add my opinion to the fearsome mix, but it's difficult not to be one of the mob.

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by Matt Shea
Vera Farmiga Sexiest woman in Hollywood

There’s no doubt that Up in the Air has been a hit with both audiences and critics, its success driven primarily by the artistic twin-barrelled brawn of filmmaker Jason Reitman’s effortless skill and George Clooney’s limitless charm


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Break of Day

February 1st 2010 06:31
by Matt Shea
Break of Day film Andrew McFarlane

Given the raft of locally-made period dramas that seemed to flood Australian distribution chains in the late 70s and early 80s, it’s little wonder that among all the classics – Picnic at Hanging rock, Sunday Too Far Away, The Getting of Wisdom – there are a few that have almost been forgotten


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