Tuesday, 8 March 2016

Win a double pass to see A BIGGER SPLASH

Win a double pass to see A BIGGER SPLASH


From the director of the Academy Award® nominated I AM LOVE comes a psychological suspense drama that will invite audiences into the fragile and dangerous world of relationships.

When a glamorous couple decide to vacation on a remote Italian island, their rest is disrupted by the sudden visit of an old friend and his luscious daughter. Suddenly, what was supposed to be a perfect romantic getaway turns into a whirlwind of jealousy, passion and danger, sparking some flames that should not necessarily be ignited.

Starring Tilda Swinton, Ralph Fiennes, Dakota Johnson, Matthias Schoenaerts.

A Bigger Splash is in cinemas from March 10th



To enter simply email to this address: darrensworldofentertainment@gmail.com  and in the subject line put A BIGGER SPLASH

Please include your name and address! 

Monday, 7 March 2016

Quantum Break - Interview with Thomas Puha of Remedy Entertainment

Quantum Break - Interview with Thomas Puha of Remedy Entertainment


I was lucky enough to get some time with Thomas Puha of Remedy Entertainment, when he visited New Zealand today to discuss the imminent release of Quantum Break, an XBox One exclusive set to drop on April 5th.

In the interview, Thomas discusses the game, the way it's changing the genre a little and the occasional fanboy moment the Remedy Entertainment gang had when working with the likes of X-Men Shawn Ashmore, The Wire and Fringe star Lance Reddick and Game of Thrones star Aiden Gillen.

Crimson Peak: DVD Review

Crimson Peak: DVD Review


Rating: M
Released by Universal Home Ent

Gothic and ghastly in equal measure, Guillermo del Toro's Victorian-soaked Crimson Peakaims for scary chamber piece but ends up more as atmospheric attempt and in its final scenes, derivative and slasher silly.

Period piece go to actress du jour Wasikowksa stars as wannabe novelist Edith Cushing (reference number 1) who ends up falling for society man Thomas Sharpe (Hiddleston), much to the consternation of long time friend and potential love interest, Doctor Alan McMichael (Sons of Anarchy star Charlie Hunnam). 

When her father dies brutally, Edith marries Sharpe, and moves to his somewhat spooky mansion in a remote part of England, where Thomas lives with his sister. But upon arrival, Edith's plagued by visions and begins to realise something's not quite right...

While The Frighteners-esque visuals and general atmosphere deserve to be richly commended as nothing short of a pre-Hallowe'en feast for audiences seeking their spooks, the high society melodrama elements of the story are lost in the mix as the maestro tries to weave a seductive tapestry but ultimately, ends up muddying some of the threads.

The haunted house vibe works superbly with del Toro's detailed eye, delivering the perfect mix of creepy corridors and moody mansion as well as throwing in some blink and miss it gruesome shocks from yesteryear. But, as the cameras pan down the long nightmarish corridors destined to haunt your darker nights by way of suggestion, it appears the cinematic cupboard is bare of real scares, preferring to let the chamber piece melodrama of icy and aloof Chastain, swarthy and sinister Hiddleston and stuck-between-worlds Wasikowska take centre stage. (Something which may surprise those looking for a things-that-go-bump-in-the-night thrill ride).



As the inherent mystery of the house, its inhabitants and its past all threaten to collide with hints of delicious promise, the coming together never delivers the coup de grace you are expecting. It's mainly due to the emphasis on the love triangle and the time taken to craft that section of the story, which doesn't quite hit the mark. There's no disputing del Toro's delivery of a magnificently moody atmosphere, but the prosecution weighs heavily against his would be "love makes monsters of us all" raison d'ĂȘtre. 


And quite simply, the mystery of the siblings' bond is anything but original to anyone who's seen a horror film in the last 10 years.

Nods to Cushing and Mary Shelley as well as other inspirations are dispatched with ease early on and seem destined to play Del Toro's influence hand, but the script lacks a depth and retains an aloofness which will prove fatal to some audiences as it plays long and languorously out over its extended two hour run time. 


Special mention must go to the lavish costuming and the beautifully bedecked mansion. Equally, the eerie score by The Orphanage's Fernando Velazquez is incredible (seriously, stay for the start of the end credits to see del Toro's vision perfectly embodied), drenching this cinematic Victoriana in a richness which is hard to shake.


The build-up and the extended tease is perfectly executed, but the ultimate reveal and overplaying of the Gothic elements of the story leave more questions than answers and frustrate, rather than thrill and electrify. 

Ultimately, Crimson Peak is a masterclass in atmospheric execution and in influence, a sign that Del Toro's lost no sight of what makes a great film visually soar (some of the background detail over butterflies and insects really stand out); but a little more crafting of the love story and other elements could have made this haunted house drama a more enticing check-in prospect.

Rating:

Sunday, 6 March 2016

Zootopia: Film Review

Zootopia: Film Review


Cast: Ginnifer Goodwin, Jason Bateman, Idris Elba, Jenny Slate, JK Simmons, Nate Torrence
Director: Byron Howard, Rich Moore

Mixing anti-racism, anti-segregation, self-worth and belief, and horror into a family friendly mismatched buddy / cop film while keeping it entertaining may sound like a tall order, but Zootopia manages it with ease.

It's the story of Judy Hopps (a likeable Goodwin), a plucky and tenacious bunny who never stops believing in her dream of becoming a cop, despite coming from the hick town of BunnyBurrow.  Even with her father urging her to give up on her dreams and never try anything so you don't fail, Hopps makes it through police academy and is dispatched to Zootopia, a city where predators like tigers, lions live alongside their prey in peace.

But Hopps faces discrimination in the Hill Street Blues style precinct and is given parking permit duty, rather than the chance to help the investigation into 14 missing predators. However, when she discovers a lead that's connected a to street-smart sly fox Nick (brilliantly realised by Jason Bateman), she's like a rabbit with a carrot and won't let go - no matter how wide ranging the conspiracy appears to be.

The key to a great animation is a cross-generational appeal.

On the one hand, it should keep the kids engaged with bright animation, the simple relay of various messages and keep it short to ensure their attention spans don't wander. Equally, the adults in the audience have to be satiated too.

Zootopia over-delivers on both fronts, weaving a story that's as smart and earnest as it is brilliantly executed.

With knowing pop culture nods (Breaking Bad, The Godfather) and a superbly realised world that feels alive, natural and over-flowing with life, Zootopia is an intelligent joy from beginning to end.

From a savvy script that plays on words to a sequence in a sloth-manned DMV, the whole thing is anchored in animated love and slathered with an under-the-surface political message that rings true with its You can do it ethos to galvanise the kiddies.

There's an idea of the shattering of innocence too, with Hopps discovering the world isn't quite as chipper as she thought it would be and how small town mentality can be ground down by big city cynicism. Not to mention brief didactic moments surrounding inclusiveness as well as segregation (one sequence in a cafe reeks of the societal perceptions that swept the No Coloureds ethos of America), and of stereotyping and dismissing others.

These are weighty political mentions and ideas in this utopian paradise, but all of which sit alongside a film that's as colourfully and breathlessly executed as Zootopia is. Never once does it lose sight of the fact that it's there to entertain.

Goodwin and Bateman are the perfect foils, with Goodwin's eternally optimistic Hopps sitting in clever juxtaposition to Nick's dismissively cynical, yet relatably human fox. Their anthropomorphic mismatched buddy schtick is cleverly realised and add to the three dimensional feel of the Zootopia universe (one which practically demands further examination).

Smart enough to not talk down to the kids, and wise enough to appeal to the adults, Zootopia is nothing short of an animated delight, a cracker of a Disney family film that's as smart about tackling prejudice and ignorance as it is determined to mete out its moral message without ever distancing itself from delivering entertainment of the highest quality.

Rating:




Saturday, 5 March 2016

Newstalk ZB Review - Hail, Caesar!, Mahana and Bridge of Spies

Newstalk ZB Review - Hail, Caesar!, Mahana and Bridge of Spies


This week on the Jack Tame Show, the reviews were the Coen Brothers Hail, Caesar!, Mahana and Bridge of Spies.

Take a listen below!



http://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/on-air/saturday-mornings-with-jack-tame/audio/darren-bevan-hail-ceasar-mahana/

Burnt: Blu Ray Review

Burnt: Blu Ray Review


Rating: M
Released by Roadshow Home Ent


It’s the long path to redemption in Burnt, the latest serving from the cinematic kitchen.

Cooper plays chef Adam Jones, who destroyed his career in Paris, and also wrecked his life with booze, drugs and women. Having paid his penance for his mistakes by shucking a million oysters, he swans back into London and the life of maitre’d Tony (Daniel Bruhl, one of the film’s high points), demanding another chance and trading on his brilliance in a former life.

With Jones determined to get a third Michelin star, he begins setting up a kitchen, but finds the sins of his past are roadblocks to his current behaviour…

Unlike last year’s amiable Chef, Burnt is a traditional road to redemption story, with a diversion into Gordon Ramsay behaviour and tirades.

Opening with a ramshackle “getting back the gang a la Oceans 11/12/13 for one last heist / restaurant Michelin star” push, the film’s got a rag-taggle feel to it, Burnt never really settles for anything ambitious or deep in its treatment of its protagonist, preferring to tread a workmanlike route.


Jones’ narcissistic tendencies and chef based arrogance are deeply alienating, and certainly his relationship with Sienna Miller’s sous chef and potential love interest Helene has all the hallmarks of a classic bully/ victim/ abuse cycle (in fact, it’s deeply disturbing that this is never fully addressed throughout – and is echoed in his relationship with Bruhl’s Tony who comes back time and time again, simply because he’s dazzled by his brilliance).  Despite re-teaming with hisAmerican Sniper colleague, there's never really a sense of plausibility to the relationship - even though one suspects those within the industry may quietly acknowledge the inferred realities of what transpires.

So, Jones' quest back to redemption and acceptance by the critical world is marred by this and also by the fact he never actually shows his talents or the troubles from his past which threaten so catastrophically to derail his plans for gastronomic success. It is merely enough for the script to tell us he's great and continue to ram that point down our throats that it feels like it suffices, like a cinematic amuse bouche that doesn't hit the spot.

Cliched moments mar the journey too as this volatile and cocky chef heads onwards; and while Wells’ eye for frenetic fleeting shots of haute cuisine feel like a slideshow working on double time, his evocation of the culinary perfection and white sheen of the restaurant world is a tantalisingly refreshing treatment and avoids falling into clichĂ©d food porn shots.

But it's the fact that Burnt is a film that flounders without a real identity, seems happy to highlight supporting players and then toss them aside like a discarded starter that irritates more than anything. Emma Thompson, Uma Thurman and Alicia Vikander are treated appallingly, reduced to fleeting cameos in effect and left in the wake of Cooper's character. A deeper interaction with more of them would have been more effective and certainly would have given Burnt the depth that it so desperately needed. (Though one twist is deliciously served up towards the end, adding some much needed spice to this bland concoction)

Ultimately Burnt serves up all the cliches, but with a protagonist who's so unlikeable and who behaves in a manner that's so unworthy of ultimate redemption. It's more a cinematic meal that you'd possibly want to send back, rather than savour every bite of.

Friday, 4 March 2016

Win a double pass to see 10 Cloverfield Lane

Win a double pass to see 10 Cloverfield Lane


To celebrate the release of 10 Cloverfield Lane on March 10th, we're giving you a chance to win a double pass to see the film, thanks to our pals at Paramount Pictures.

About 10 Cloverfield Lane:


A Bad Robot Production

 “10 Cloverfield Lane”
Produced by J.J. Abrams and Lindsey Weber
Story by Josh Campbell & Matt Stuecken
Screenplay by Josh Campbell & Matt Stuecken and Damien Chazelle
Directed by Dan Trachtenberg

Cast:               Starring John Goodman, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, and John Gallagher, Jr, in 10 Cloverfield Lane, Monsters come in many forms....


To enter simply email to this address: darrensworldofentertainment@gmail.com  and in the subject line put 10 CLOVERFIELD LANE. 



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