Film Reviews
Santa has ended up in prison, his reindeers have fled and it looks like Christmas is going to be cancelled, unless he can rely on the help of young Tom (Kit Connor) and his dad, the recently released from prison Steve (Rafe Spall). Wanting only a Christmas with his son, who he has been apart from whilst locked away for two years, Steve finds himself going to extreme lengths to help save festive cheer, not only for his son but soon for everyone else that relies on Santa too. Christmas family films often use Christmas time as a barometer for life – in It’s a Wonderful Life George’s bad Christmas is an example of just how bad his life is and in Get Santa it takes saving Christmas for the entire planet to properly reunite Steve and his son. This sentiment is one of the best things the film has going for it, and could play well with the parents taking their kids to see a film like this. However it’s let down by the poor character writing, and the odd choice of casting Rafe Spall as an ex-convict and getaway driver – it’s so unbelievable even in a...
Benedict Cumberbatch shines in this biopic about the life of Alan Turing, the British genius who helped defeat Nazi Germany through his breaking of the enigma code. Helped by a group of the country’s top mathematicians, Turing must battle not only the enemy across the ocean but also the one society casts him as, due to his secret homosexuality and his inability to deal with those minds he views as inferior. Films about this period of history often look back with nostalgia at the way the Brits rallied together, the triumph of beating the German rotters and end with a pat on the back for the Allies. But The Imitation Game, directed by Morten Tyldum and based on the book by Andrew Hodges, strikes a rather different chord. Instead of being a film about British pride at winning the war, this film leaves a much sourer taste in the mouth – a feeling of shame at allowing Alan Turing and others like him to be forced to live their lives in secret as they did, a brave choice from a storytelling point of view and one that seems right for the story that is being told. With a narrative...
Pride tells the true story of L.G.S.M. (Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners), a group formed in 1984, and the work it carried out to support the families of the striking miners. Standing on the streets and asking for spare change proves to only be half the battle for the London based group of LGBT friends however, as it soon becomes clear that even those seemingly in need of help are afraid of those that they view as different. A tiny welsh village in South Wales becomes the groups only way to support the families of those fighting battles that they recognise, against the press, government and police force. Pride is one of the most wonderfully uplifting and inspiring films I’ve ever come across. Every single performance manages to be both funny and moving, with a cast boasting the likes of Bill Nighy, Dominic West and Imelda Staunton, as well as the cream of up and coming talent from the likes of George Mackay and Faye Marsay – it’s a real who’s who of great British actors. There have been stories of audiences breaking into applause as the film ends, a testament to how well the important message of...
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