What's on Prime Video in July
Here's everything that's streaming on July on Prime Video
Elle (July 1)
At Darren's World of Entertainment - a movie, DVD and game review blog. The latest movie and DVD reviews - plus game reviews as well. And cool stuff thrown in when I see it.
Here's everything that's streaming on July on Prime Video
Elle (July 1)
Cast: Ellie Bamber, Derek Jacobi, Jasmine Blackborow
Director: James Lucas
The story of Kate Moss' notorious 2002 nude painting is brought to light and life in a film executive produced by the hedonistic fashion model herself.
Set over a nine-month period that Kate sat for acclaimed painter Lucian Freud (Derek Jacobi, occasionally spiky, but mostly avuncular), this movie from British-New Zealand filmmaker James Lucas tries to get to the heart of what attracted the pair and what led to an unlikely friendship.
Beginning with scenes of Moss seemingly about to crash while driving wildly down a country road during the middle of a night, it depicts the notoriously guarded fashion model at a crossroads in life. Approached by Bella Freud (Blackborow) with an offer of a painting, Moss gradually decides to give in to the idea, even if it requires months of commitment.
Lucas' film is the kind of gentle, genial take on a mentor/subject relationship and it's less interested in real depth of the characters, preferring instead to paint them in broad strokes.
From montages of Moss at fashion shows and parties to moments which capture the hedonism of a Britain engulfed in Britpop and a wave of cultural jingoism, the film does well to set the scene. And to be fair to Bamber, who was heavily mentored by Moss prior to filming to help capture the character, she turns in a very solid performance as the lost-at-sea model who's looking for her own sense of self.
But Moss & Freud, while offering a distraction for some 90 minutes, never really feels like it's interested in doing anything other than gifting its subject a redemption arc. With comments from Freud about how she never settles down, it depicts the relationship as one which sees her guided through some big life changes, while gifting her moments to declare her hard-work ethos.
The final result seems to neuter both of the spiky characters and ironically flattens them to portraits, rather than the fully fleshed passionate individuals they clearly were.
Ahead of the launch of HBO Max in New Zealand on June 16, the official third season trailer for House of the Dragon has been released.
HBO has released the official trailer for the third season of the original drama series House of the Dragon, debuting Monday, 22 June, only on HBO Max.
The eight-episode season will air new episodes weekly, leading up to the season finale on 10 August. Based on George R.R. Martin’s Fire & Blood, the series, set 200 years before the events of Game of Thrones, tells the story of House Targaryen.
Season three cast includes Matt Smith, Emma D’Arcy, Olivia Cooke, Steve Toussaint, Rhys Ifans, Fabien Frankel, Ewan Mitchell, Tom Glynn-Carney, Sonoya Mizuno, Harry Collett, Bethany Antonia, Phoebe Campbell, Phia Saban, Jefferson Hall, Matthew Needham, James Norton, Tom Bennett, Kieran Bew, Kurt Egyiawan, Freddie Fox, Clinton Liberty, Gayle Rankin, Abubakar Salim, Tom Cullen, Tommy Flanagan, Dan Fogler, Joplin Sibtain and Barry Sloane.
Co-Creator/Showrunner/Executive Producer, Ryan Condal; Co-Creator/Executive Producer, George R.R. Martin; Executive Producers Sara Hess, Melissa Bernstein, Kevin de la Noy, Vince Gerardis, David Hancock, Philippa Goslett. Based on George R.R. Martin’s Fire & Blood.
The weight of responsibility hangs heavy over each of the main protagonists in this second season of Fallout, with every single one of them grappling with the enormity of decisions either facing them or in their past.
For vault-dweller and eternal optimist Lucy McLean (Yellowjackets' Ella Purnell), it's the question of bringing her father Hank (Kyle McLachlan) to justice; for the Ghoul (Walton Goggins, The White Lotus), it's the enormity of what part his wife played in the blasts that wiped out the world and for Brotherhood member Maximus (Aaron Moten), it's about the responsibility to keep the Knights in order as they teeter on Civil War.
But not everything's as clear-cut as they'd hope, thanks to the arrival (in the past) of the mysterious tech entrepreneur Robert House (an enigmatic Justin Theroux) and his RobCo Industries robotics company.
The highly anticipated "Young James Bond" game 007: First Light has now released.
The game, from IO Interactive, the makers of Hitman, gives you the chance to earn the Number.
A thrilling espionage action-adventure game from IO Interactive gives you the chance to follow James Bond as a young, resourceful and sometimes reckless recruit in MI6's training programme, and discover an origin story of the world’s most famous spy.
Cast: Johnny Seqouyah, Troy Kotsur, Jessica Alexnader, Victoria Wyant, Gia Hunter, Benjamin Cheng, Miguel Torres Umba
Director: Johannes Roberts
Primate sets out its stall in its opening moments.
As a vet walks into a chimp enclosure, he's guided to a darkened part of it where an unknown force awaits...
Johannes Roberts' creature horror mixes elements of horror and odd moments of comedy, but in truth, it's a lack of development in the human side of things which proves to be a minor flaw in a largely enjoyable but forgettable ride that leaves it feeling lesser than it could.
As Lucy (Johnny Seqouyah) returns to her Hawaii home after the death of her animal linguistics mother, family tensions are strained. Her deaf father (Troy Kotsur) is obsessed with his book career rather than his family; her sister is distant, and the family ape Ben (yes, really) is about to have a really bad day after a mongoose bite.
Coupled with the fact a group of friends are at their home for the holidays, things go south quickly when it's clear Ben (Umba) has rabies and turns on them all, trapping them and leaving them fighting for their lives...
As the carnage picks up, the director makes great fist of the fact that Ben can't communicate (outside of a device which at one point, he uses to taunt them with the word 'dead' being repeatedly said) and becomes a killing machine that's mute in the vein of the shape from Halloween. (In fact the soundtrack seems to channel that iconic score in parts.)
But as with some horror films, you're not here for the character development and while there are a few moments of the cast doing stupid things, the kills are particularly brutal and viciously executed - even though a lack of depth prevents you directly caring.
However, there's a commitment to the atmosphere and an impressive continuation of a killer that can't be reasoned with or stopped which makes Primate effective in the moment in cinema.
Embracing the horror genre tropes and a terrific scene from a deaf point of view that is chilling in its execution, Primate proves it's not just here to ape around with horror conventions - it's here to deliver some killer blows too.
What's on Prime Video in July Here's everything that's streaming on July on Prime Video Elle (July 1) Season One of Elle follo...