Tuesday, May 6, 2025
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Review: Kafka’s Dick

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When one mentions the play, Kafka’s Dick, needless to say, it raises a few eyebrows (at least in my experience). Though the title has some relevance to the play, Alan Bennett’s 1986 work also explores fame and its ever-shifting nature, placing Franz Kafka at the centre. Prefontaine’s rendition of this absurd play is fast paced, energetic and hilarious. 

Kafka’s Dick takes place in the 70s, in the living room of an English couple, Sydney (Callum Coghlan) and Linda (Hannah Brock). Sydney, an insurance man, likes to believe that he is enlightened because he knows the nitty-gritty details of the lives of great intellectuals, like W.H Auden and Franz Kakfa, yet in reality he’s never read any of their works. Linda, a nurse turned housewife, tries to engage in meaningful conversations with her husband but is constantly snubbed. Then, out of the blue, Max Brod (Lorcan Cudlip Cook), Franz Kafka’s best friend and publisher of his work, appears, despite the fact that he’s dead. It comes as no surprise then that Kafka (Barney Johnson) himself follows suit, much to the pleasure of Sydney and horror of Linda. This is further complicated by the fact that Kafka doesn’t know that Brod published his work after his death, despite the fact that he made him promise to burn his work, and has consequently become a European literary giant. Once Kafka discovers his fame, one would think that’s where the story ends but audiences are then shocked with the appearance of Kafka’s notorious father, Hermann K (Basil Bowdler).

The actors in this absurd play shine through with their performances, perfectly capturing the essences of their respective characters. Kafka’s self doubting and despairing outlook on life is betrayed through Johnson’s mannerisms and soft, eloquent tone. This sharply contrasts with Kafka’s best friend, Brod, who comes off as ‘rough’ and at times, overbearingly confident. Interestingly enough, all of the actors put on a Northern English accent which not only made it comedic (given the fact that Brod and Kafka were not English) but reflects the era in which the play takes place in. Linda’s performance as the frustrated, snubbed housewife who represses her feelings is demonstrated through her subtle displays of emotion. Sydney played the role of the self important, ignorant husband so well that the audience couldn’t help but get irritated at him, like the other characters in the play. In the case of Hermann K, one could feel his power and influence on Kafka on stage. Though we saw very little of him, Father’s interjections added to the overall chaotic atmosphere and was a hilarious addition to the play.

Lighting and sound were minimal but served to focus attention on the acting, which was incredible. The backlighting drew attention to the props used to capture the essence of a 1970s living room and the spotlights added a dramatic effect to the entrance of certain characters; Hermann K’s entrance at the end of Act 1 was foregrounded by a single cold spotlight, adding to the atmosphere of tension and fear. In regards to the props used, I must say the highlight was the stuffed turtle (I won’t say anything else on the matter, as you have to watch the play to find out…). 

Kafka’s Dick is a comedic and delightful spectacle, with amazing actors and an absurd script, guaranteed to make you laugh. It is a sure-fire way to beat fifth week blues so get on down to the Pilch to watch Kafka’s Dick!

Review: Billie Eilish’s ‘No Time to Die’

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After taking the international music scene by storm, eighteen year old Billie Eilish can now add writing and producing the new Bond theme song, ‘No Time to Die’ to her long list of achievements. 

Billie has joined the likes of Adele, Shirley Bassey and Tom Jones in producing this song for the acclaimed series, providing a refreshing take on the classic theme. Her sombre tone gives it an eerie and lullaby-like feel, which marries beautifully with the simple piano instrumental. As the song continues, the iconic electric guitar riffs, played by former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr who was involved in creating the song’s score, can be heard. At the climax of the song, a full string orchestra conducted by Hans Zimmer joins her, producing the familiar crescendo that we know and love, before reverting back to her single voice and piano for a chilling end.

Releasing her first track, ‘Ocean Eyes,’ produced, written and recorded in her bedroom at fourteen, Billie Eilish has steadily risen to a much deserved level of critical acclaim. Now eighteen, she has become the youngest person to write a James Bond theme tune, take home wins for Best New Artist, Album of the Year, Song Of the Year, and Record of the year at the Grammys, not to mention being named Billboard’s ‘Woman of the Year’ 2019. Her debut album, When we Fall Asleep, Where Do We go? recorded in the same bedroom she grew up in, shot to the top of the charts. Her older brother Finneas is also incredibly talented, and has written and produced many of her hit songs including ‘Bury a Friend.’ 

Billie performed ‘No Time to Die,’ for the first time at the 2020 Brit awards, accompanied by her brother Finneas. The two were joined on stage by a string orchestra as well as an electric guitarist. The dark staging and outfits added to the spine-chilling-meets-sultry ambience of the performance, of which she spent a large proportion of the time seated. This is true of a lot of her performances of her slower songs, enticing the audience with the simplicity of the production – her talent speaking for itself.

The singer-songwriter is constantly being commended for being a breath of fresh air within the industry. Billie disrupted the pop music scene with her intensely personal and dark sound – there is no doubt that we will see many other artists replicating her at times disturbing, yet relatable and stunning style. The painful candour of her music has connected with many, as she’s championed a shift from the repetitive sounds which have filled the pop scene for years. In a recent interview with her on The Tonight Show, Jimmy Fallon gushed about how her music has changed the pop landscape forever, and this individuality does not go amiss in ‘No Time to Die’. Billie has done a brilliant job of bringing her own dark but beautiful style together with such a classic, and left us all more than excited for the film’s release in April. 

Ignoring the International

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Parasite must surely be one of the most remarkable films of this year’s awards season. Director Bong Joon Ho’s anti-capitalist satire and thriller has raked in award after award, and deservedly so. His speech at the recent Golden Globes ceremony, as Parasite picked up yet another award for Best Foreign Language Film, demonstrated a true optimism for the future of international film, promising ‘once you overcome the one-inch tall barrier of subtitles, you will be introduced to so many more amazing films’. The Academy has also shown its appreciation, recognising  Parasite with nominations across six categories, including Best Director, Best Original Screenplay and, of course, Best Picture. It is this final nomination which is truly weighty, as the film now becomes the fourth international film since 2000 to be nominated in this category. Yet of these four, none have won. It’s an astounding fact, especially when you consider the “good but not outstanding” quality of many of the biopics and regurgitated war films that are stuffed in the Oscar nomination categories. However, when it comes to the Oscars, the shock factor is limited. It’s hardly surprising foreign films are often alienated in the “Best Picture” category; it’s really just a reflection of the ceremony’s antiquity.

At least this year the Academy has shown some awareness of the dire need for it to change its outlook and treatment of international films. It’s latest quick fix for this particular issue has been a hollow PR revamp. The previous Best Foreign Language Film category has been renamed to now hold the title of Best International Feature. Larry Karaszewski and Diane Wyermann, co-chairs of the International Film Committee, issued a statement expressing their understanding of how the title of “Foreign” could create notions of othering, and saying of the new title, “We believe that International Feature Film better represents this category, and promotes a positive and inclusive view of filmmaking, and the art of film as a universal experience.”

These sentiments are all well and good, but a new title and expressions of good intentions does little to actually change the way in which international films and film-makers are represented by the Academy. The rules of Best Foreign Language Film and Best International Feature remain exactly the same. Under this new heading, Academy rules continue to dictate that in order to qualify for nomination within the category, more than fifty percent of the film must be in a non-English language. Countries may also enter only one film, which must be selected by an approved board – a regulation that prevented highly lauded films, such as South Korea’s The Handmaiden, from being nominated for an Oscar in 2016. The name change of the international film category is nothing but a lazy afterthought, and only serves to highlight the Academy’s inability to thoughtfully tackle the implicit issues of its historical treatment of foreign films.

At the current centre of the debate surrounding the Oscar’s international precedent is Lionheart, a Nigerian film that was submitted as the country’s first ever entry to the category. Yet it was disqualified by the Academy for the reason that, whilst characters in the film occasionally conversed in Igbo, the majority of the film’s dialogue took place in English (Nigeria’s official language). The notable hypocrisy in the decision and in the very rules of the Academy in its definition of “International” was pointed out by American director and film-maker Ava Du Vernay, who took to twitter to pointedly ask the committee “Are you barring this country from ever competing for an Oscar in its official language?”. She asked an important question, and one the Academy has clearly failed to consider in their empty re-evaluation of foreign films. Under the current criteria for the International Feature category, Barbados, Singapore, Ghana, Jamaica and the Solomon Islands would all be similarly disqualified from nominations if they were to submit a film in their official language. Lionheart’s own director and star, Genevive Nnaji, also spoke out against the disqualification of the film, pointing to the national unity the film embodied through its use of the English language: “This movie represents the way we speak as Nigerians. This includes English which acts as a bridge between the 500+ languages spoken in our country; thereby making us #OneNigeria.”

This year’s snubbing of Lionheart feels particularly important, especially in light of the way in which the Academy has historically tended to laud predominantly western films. This year’s nominations for the Best International Feature are no different; Poland, North Macedonia, France and Spain are all nominated to take home the trophy, with Parasite being the only non-European film to make the category this year. This highly Eurocentric list is no different to much of the award’s past. Out of the seventy foreign films that have been awarded in this category, only fourteen of them came from non-European countries. If Lionheart had been nominated by the committee, it would have faced an unwelcome precedent as historically African countries have only won the award three times in the award’s history (1969, 1976 and 2005). Evidently the Academy’s current regulations for judging international films are insufficient, and they operate in a manner which both alienates and penalises non-Western film-makers.

Amongst this controversy and blind-sightedness, there is a real sense that people are becoming irredeemably exhausted with the Oscars. Once again they have opted for ceremonious and self-serving quick fixes that do little to actually solve the issues at the heart of the organisation. Their inability to fully represent the International Film community is yet another example of the severe need for change across the Academy in general, alongside its failures to engage with gender and race diversity in its nominations. Issa Rae’s targeted quip “congratulations to all these men” upon announcing the nominations for best director embodies a collective fatigue with the continuous stagnation of the Oscars. The International film argument requires nuance and thoughtfulness, something the Academy board has shown a reluctance to do in previous years. Language and nationhood operate in complex ways, and there is a dire need to rethink the previous system of judging how “international” a film may be with such a static framework. Their current mechanism is simply not fit for purpose anymore.

Once Upon A Time in Hollywood Review

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If you were to ask someone familiar with Quentin Tarantino to name the defining features of his films, they would probably mention the dialogue, the unique storytelling, the close ups of bare feet and his irresistible tendency to resolve narratives with copious amounts of bloody violence that some might deem excessive. It is to his credit then that Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (his ninth and rumour has it, penultimate film) manages to subvert these distinctive tropes and deliver what is undeniably his most human film yet. 

Staged against the backdrop of 60s and 70s Hollywood, Tarantino navigates the film with a subtle duality. It is both fantasy and elegy for a time long since past, both celebration and lament, both riveting and utterly uneventful, and this duality even extends to the film’s two protagonists, where Leonardo Dicaprio’s Rick Dalton struggles with the incessant need for recognition and validation in a changing industry, while Brad Pitt’s Cliff Booth remains liberated from the burdens of the world around him, anchoring the film with a carefree charm. With this juxtaposition, Tarantino infuses Once Upon a Time in Hollywood with a realism rarely seen in his previous films, treating the insecurities of his characters as simultaneously sympathetic and laughable. At lot has been made of Margot Robbie’s Sharon Tate as a result of her historical significance to the story, but she is deliberately sidelined, a character who remarkably has minimal impact on the central narrative. And yet despite this, her presence is undoubtedly essential. Her frequent but brief scenes are dispersed throughout the story, preaching a simplistic love for life that energises the film with a sense of youth, adoration and innocence that neatly contrasts the two ageing lead males. 

There really isn’t much more to the film than that, so it’s a testament to Tarantino’s writing and passion for a nostalgic era of filmmaking that Once Upon a Time in Hollywood never grows stale. It is undeniably self aware in its slow pace, traversing the narrative landscape without any fear of the runtime exceeding the viewer’s capacity for attention, instead letting us cruise around the dusk streets of Hollywood with Cliff Booth or sit with Rick Dalton as he comically accepts criticism and schooling from a child actor. The plot seems to meander, when in retrospect there really isn’t anything to meander away from, making it lavishly unpredictable as the film never really achieves a clear direction. Instead, events simply transpire, replicating life’s tendency to unfold in spontaneous and unplanned ways. I really wasn’t sure which route this film would take, or indeed, what it was all building towards, if anything. But following the successful formula of Inglourious Basterds, which saw Tarantino’s merry band of Nazi hunters change the course of history by gunning down Hitler, Tarantino again decides to dismiss historical fact for the purpose of providing fictional closure to the Manson Murders that saw Tate and her unborn child stabbed to death in their Hollywood home. 

In an ingenious and oftentimes hilarious third act, Tarantino will have you on the edge of your seat as a drunk Dalton and drugged up Booth encounter the notorious Manson hippies in glorious, blood soaked tradition, marking a clear tonal shift as Tarantino’s signature style is restored for the film’s finale. Much of the director’s comedic timing is established by the obliviousness of the protagonists to the severity of the situations they find themselves in, and this makes the film’s violence attain both a heightened level of comedic value that is sure to garner some audible laughs, as well as genuine suspense that makes you realise just how much you want these characters to survive. It’s a tough finale to describe, and many viewers 

in the cinema on my first viewing failed to appreciate Tarantino’s artistic depiction of violence, but there is an irresistible satisfaction that occurs when both Dalton and Booth are no longer facing the internal issues of relevance and professional sustainability, but actual life-threatening encounters. 

While the film detours into routinely Tarantino Esque destruction at the end, the film’s constant is it’s soundtrack. The nostalgic hits combined with the cinematography create a suave synergy, oozing a coolness that makes Brad Pitt’s many driving scenes seem like a ride we never want to end. Culminating on a much quieter and nuanced idealism, Tarantino uses his violence sparingly to personify the inner conquering of his characters’ demons, leading to a satisfying tweaking of history that may just be the most rewarding conclusion we’ve ever had to a Quentin Tarantino narrative. While it may lack the sharp storytelling of Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction or the diverse experimentation of Kill Bill, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood triumphs for feeling real, settling for an authenticity that evokes a melancholic but optimistic portrayal of life.

Awards Season Fatigue

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It’s been five years since the #OscarsSoWhite campaign and yet the line-up for this year’s nominations is once again a homogenous playing field dominated, unsurprisingly, by white, male contenders. Only one of twenty actors nominated this year was a person of colour, whilst there was no recognition for any female directors from the Academy.

In 2016 the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences pledged to double the number of diverse members by 2020 after an outrage over the lack of Oscar nominees who were female or POC, with names such as Spike Lee and Will Smith threatening to boycott the awards ceremony. Nevertheless, as 2020 makes its entrance these big promises seem to be filled with much smaller intentions.

Greta Gerwig was notably snubbed as Little Women was left out of the best picture category, bringing the total of female director nominations up to a grand zero across the Oscars, the Golden Globes and the Baftas, and making Gerwig’s nomination for Lady Bird in 2018 the only nomination for a female director in the last decade. Amongst those overlooked were Melina Matsouka’s Queen and Slim, Lulu Wang’s The Farewell and Lorene Scafaira’s Hustlers.

Racial diversity didn’t fare much better. The British-Nigerian actress Cynthia Erivo picked up the only acting nomination for a person of colour, whilst the South Korean film Parasite was the only nomination featuring a predominantly non-white cast in the line-up. Despite Awkafina’s Golden Globe winning performance in The Farewell and Lupita Nyong’o’s thrilling dual characterisation in Us, neither actress was recognised. This of course will come as no surprise considering that out of 200 nominations for the best acting categories there have been 26 non-white nominations, with only seven winning, in the past ten years.

It is as if diversity was merely a fad for the Oscars; after Steve McQueen’s resounding success with 12 Years A Slave the industry seems to think that enough recognition has been given, the diversity problem is now solved. In an interview with the Guardian, McQueen commented that award ceremonies like the Baftas and the Oscars risk becoming ‘irrelevant, redundant and of no interest or importance unless they undergo reform to avoid a repeat of this year’s nominations.’

The crux of the problem lies in the make-up of the voting panel. As of 2020 only 32% of voters are women and only 16% are people of colour. It seems that the white boy centric line up is ultimately a reflection of those in power feeling threatened by recent pushes to hire more women and POC.

The marketing scene seems just as much to blame. Films made by white, male directors starring predominantly white, male casts have been splashed across billboards and buses, whilst films such as Blue Story only came into the wider public eye when it found itself at the centre of a gang violence controversy.

That’s not to say, however, that there isn’t a demand for more diverse films. Crazy Rich Asians smashed box office records, becoming the highest grossing romantic comedy from a major Hollywood studio in a decade. Meanwhile, the Marvel blockbuster Black Panther garnered $1.34 billion at the global box office during its 2018 run.

Women have also been at the forefront of cinema this decade, with films like Wonder Woman, Frozen, and Pitch Perfect all brought to life by female directors. Yet despite the billions of dollars worth of revenue these women have created, only five women have ever been nominated for best director and only 13 female-directed films have ever been nominated for best picture. 

So what can we look forward to in the years to come? Will there be a shift in the faces and films up for awards in 2021? A panel discussion at the Sundance Film Festival instigated the ‘4% challenge’, urging producers to make a commitment to working with female directors, especially women of colour, within the next 18 months. Meanwhile, a tweet from the CEO of the Walt Disney Company, Robert Iger, gave hope for the future of female directors, claiming: ‘Many have contacted us about accepting the 4% challenge, but I’m proud to say that 40% of @DisneyStudios’ upcoming movie slate is being directed by women and we are striving for more!’

 Franklin Leonard and The Black List have also partnered with Latinx Organisations, The Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment and the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD). Like the Black List, these three organisations work to create a list of the “most liked” screenplays centered around Latinx, Asian and LGBTQIA characters, experiences and narratives. 

Lashana Lynch will make history as the first ever female, and non-white, 007 in the upcoming Bond film No Time to Die, with screenplay from the hit TV-series Fleabag’s creator, Phoebe Waller-Bridge.

Likewise, the Latinx community will get a much needed boost of representation this year with the film adaptation of Lin Manuel Miranda’s musical In the Heights, whilst Steven Spielberg is due to release a new iteration of West Side Story, starring Tony Award winners David Alvarez and Ariana DeBose.

In response to this article there will no doubt be the people who cry, ‘Why does it always have to be about race and gender? Can’t we just focus on the merit of the film?’. The response to this is simple. It is always about race and gender, because Hollywood refuses to properly acknowledge its unconscious bias.

With all of the upcoming projects and initiatives being set in place, there is hope that 2020 will better reflect the diverse selection of stories and faces that Hollywood has to offer. There is no lack of talent out there. There is merely a lack of opportunity and recognition.

The scene of Hollywood is changing and, while it still has much to do, there has certainly been a shift for the better since 2010. I look forward to seeing what the next decade holds. 

What to Watch this Valentine’s Day : The Before Trilogy

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In a world where romance on screen is sold to us from a young age, we are rarely offered anything but a mix of well-known clichés. A movie that escapes this pattern can teach us a lot more about relationships than dozens of Disney films, rom-coms, and melodramas. Richard Linklater’s Before trilogy stands apart because it is not only a story about falling in love – it is a story about loving.

It all starts in Before Sunrise (the first installment of the trilogy) with a young American (Ethan Hawke) spotting an alluring Frenchwoman (Julie Delpy) on a train. They enjoy their conversation so much that when the train stops in Vienna, they get off together so that they can continue it. Then every nine years (by way of a new Before film) we get another glimpse of their lives and observe how this conversation has evolved. As Roger Ebert put it, these movies prove that our minds are our most erotic organs. 

Before Sunrise (1995) delights us with its authenticity. The story of Jesse and Celine is romantic primarily because it feels real. When they stand in a music booth, casting uncertain glances at each other, we feel their nervousness as if we were there with our crush. When they talk about parents, death, their first time, God, or gender roles, we relate to them because we are reminded about our own ‘deep’ conversations. Their hesitant gestures of affection seem as if they had butterflies in their belly, partly wanting to have a try, partly being afraid of rejection. And when Celine and Jesse make their goodbyes, the intensity of the moment is tremendously overwhelming. As a simply shot film, Before Sunrise proves that ‘normal’ movies with no excessive means of expression can have much more profound impact than even the greatest melodramas. 

Before Sunset (2004) is just like its predecessor, but better. Jesse and Celine are no longer young, full of hope and naïvety, and their relationship is more psychologically complex. They meet in Paris during the promotion of Jesse’s book, which is about a night spent in Vienna with a pretty Frenchwoman (sound familiar?), nine years after they last saw each other. The pressure of their approaching farewell is even more tangible this time around because Jesse needs to catch a flight back to America in an hour. There is an underlying sense of bitterness and disappointment that colors their discussions of life experience, a sentiment which is reinforced when they realize that Celine studied in New York at the same time Jesse lived there. How many times could they have run into each other? The thing is, they didn’t– a fact that makes us painfully aware that, on the most basic level, our lives are ruled by coincidences. That’s why when you meet a person on a train with whom you have an instinctive connection, you’d better take a full advantage of it, because such things don’t happen often. 

Before Sunset teaches us that relationships aren’t perfect, but are rather full of hidden emotions, unspoken words, moments of uneasiness, and disappointments. It is only in Before Midnight (2013) that this message takes on a whole meaning. In Before Sunset, Jesse wasn’t satisfied with his marriage and Celine was deeply resigned when it came to her own romantic relations. At the end of the film, when Celine says, “Baby, you are gonna miss that plane”, and Jesse acknowledges it with a simple “I know”, audiences were left with a smile on their faces as wide as Jesse’s own. But by the end of Before Midnight, we question if there is such a thing as ‘the right person’. The ultimate point of the movie is that a relationship is not like a supermarket where you can find everything that you need to satisfy your needs. No matter how amazing the other person is and whatever you do, there will always be problems, and resentment, and tears. 

Although each part is an excellent piece on its own, Before Sunrise, Before Sunset, and Before Midnight work best as a whole. There is an elaborate interplay between the three films, and subtle cues take on  new meanings when examined through the lens of the entire trilogy. The story of Jesse and Celine touches us deeply because it makes us realize that even love stories that begin as wonderfully as theirs are subject to the wear and tear of daily life. Linklater pays tribute to a reality in which there is no ‘happily ever after’ only a hard continuous struggle to make things right. 

At this point, you might be wondering how someone could argue that this story is among the most romantic in existence. The trilogy doesn’t sell us another idealized fairytale about love– it offers us something better instead: raw emotions, authenticity, and relatable troubles. It challenges delusional images of love to show that a relationship is a living organism that needs attention and work. “If you want true love, then this is it,” Jesse tells Celine, “This is real life. It’s not perfect but it’s real, and if you can’t see it then you’re blind.” As demonstrated in all three movies, conversation is the key to building a true relationship, and conflict – its inescapable element – can serve as a means for reassessment and  betterment. The Before trilogy is romantic because Linklater reaffirms our belief in true feeling and makes the case that real love is worth the effort. The three movies are embodiments of three different components of love – passion, intimacy, and commitment – and they ultimately show us that love is a constant process, as changeable as evolution.

Student Short Film Review: “unlucky.”

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“unlucky.”, by Thalia Kent-Egan, is a film that, in the span of 20 minutes or so, and in the confines of a single room, carries the viewer on a melodramatic and absurd journey – escalating slowly, and then all at once. I myself, after only having watched the first half of the film, had assumed that I’d gotten the gist of it and could predict what would happen next; I was tragically wrong. Although employing sparse dialogue and one main actress (with a few small appearances from others towards the end), “unlucky.” left me feeling unsettled and unnerved, which I suppose was the intention.

In conversation with Kent-Egan, who is a fourth year student at Queens College, she told me that this is in fact her debut film; her interest in filmmaking grew after having worked in film production companies in Paris and Berlin while studying abroad last year, and she adds that she is now applying to film schools. She noted that the actors in the film are all students, found via auditions. “It was quite funny,” she added, “because we had loads of people message us saying ‘Oh we want to audition’, and we had this long list … and over the course of a week, like 3 people got ill, one girl got hit by a car, and the other girl just didn’t turn up.” Although one may take this as a bad omen, it does fit quite well with the themes of luck and misfortune explored throughout the film.

Produced by Eddie Tolmie, with cinematography by Cai Richards, the film centers on the seemingly typical morning of Cassandra Jones (played by Hannah Taylor), which veers horribly off course. It begins with Jones waking up to her phone alarm going off; picking up her phone, she declares to nobody in particular: “It will be fine. I promise.” Upon first watch, the viewer may be confused as to whom she is speaking, or what exactly she is promising; but as Kent-Egan explains, “It’s just the idea that she’s really alone and it’s quite funny how alone she is.” One must assume that Jones is making a voice memo of sorts; a stand-in for the support that she is lacking.

Jones eventually rises out of bed, opening the blinds to reveal the daylight outside, and viewers find themselves privy to her small room, sparsely decorated save for a few posters on the wall, Bowie and Ranier Werner Fassbinder (a hint towards Kent-Egan’s favorite director). As Jones lays her outfit for the day out on the ground, the viewer may suppose that the narrative portrayed here is no more than a young girl’s morning routine. And indeed it may seem so, as we watch Jones perform such quotidian tasks as getting dressed and putting cream on her face.

A turning point in the film comes when Jones rips open a pack of apples and they tumble to the floor inadvertently killing a spider. Filmed from the level of the spider itself, we see Jones poke at the dead insect with an almost gruesome delight; from this angle, other details come to light as well, such as the hole in her socks from which her toes peek through. Discarding the spider out the window, Jones hurriedly makes her bed and sits at her desk in front of her laptop, appearing nervous and twitchy.

When a video call comes through, we realize that there is some sort of Skype interview happening; Jones, startled by the incoming call, chokes on her water – a foreshadowing of sorts.

The interviewer, a Ms. Josephine Jacobi (played by Emilka Cieslak), looks eerily proper and stiff, sporting a blue cardigan. She apologizes for her cough, stating that she is a bit ill. Her exchange with Jones is exceedingly awkward, with Jacobi waiting just a moment too long to pose her questions to Jones while she takes bites of a croissant. At a certain point, Jacobi begins coughing, choking on her croissant – one cannot help but laugh at the absurdity of the moment as Jones struggles with how to help this figure who is at once proximate and impossibly far, trapped in a computer screen; “Just breath, take it slow!” she stutters. 

However, all humor is lost when one realizes that things have taken a turn for the grim; the interviewer goes silent and her head falls to the desk. Jones begins to panic, growing visibly hysterical. She phones for help to be sent to the home of Ms. Jacobi, but in her moment of hysteria, trips upon a rogue apple on the floor. As we see the interviewer being aided through the video call on the computer screen, one cannot help but to see the macabre irony in Cassandra’s own demise; and when the video call is cut short, we realize that Cassandra is now truly unreachable, trapped in her own alternate reality, where interviews end in death and apples become weapons of destruction. And although it is an absurd reality, it is gruesome nonetheless. 

“I had the idea for a Skype call going really badly wrong for a long time, actually because of my year abroad,” Kent-Egan explains. “I had lots and lots of Skype interviews for jobs, and some went so badly. And just the whole idea of a Skype interview is quite awkward … It’s really hard to feel like you’re getting the right thing across in a Skype interview because you can only see such a small part of everything.” And perhaps what a Skype interview embodies most is that line between humor and humiliation. Humor, in particular, is something Kent-Egan wanted to make sure came through.

“I did really want to get the humor across, and I still do think it’s quite funny that she dies in the end, in a very cruel way,” says Kent-Egan. Indeed, the film is almost difficult to watch due to the conflicting emotions the viewer holds towards the protagonist: should I be laughing or should I be feeling for this person? However, it is that sense of unsettlement that makes “unlucky.” so compelling. And unlike her Greek mythological namesake, that disregarded prophet of disaster, Cassandra’s life ends in a manner she could never have prophesied; she was just unlucky.

[The film can be viewed at this link: https://vimeo.com/377389480?fbclid=IwAR2nMwGBqKWVe1i2g_P9ouGd3ppCBcbCIeGdOW1L2-_7J8YkyE4NV3plMts]

Review: 1917

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When Lance Corporal Blake (Dean Charles-Chapman) selects his friend of who knows how long, Lance Corporal Schofield (George MacKay), to assist him on a mission to prevent a ‘massacre’ that will take them far into ostensibly abandoned German territory, General Erinmore (Colin Firth) sends them off with some lines from one of British Empire’s most successful writers ringing in their ears: ‘Down to Gehenna or up to the Throne / He travels the fastest who travels alone.’ Rudyard Kipling’s words reverberate across Sam Mendes’ continuous shot film 1917 as the pair are forced to keep moving constantly, maintaining utter solitude – even as they stand alongside one another.

As well as pulling in a host of accolades, including an Oscar’s nomination for best picture, Mendes’ slick creation has also been criticised for what might appear to be a prioritisation of bleak grandeur in a deadened landscape, and for favouring flawlessly blended long takes over forging real emotional intimacy between the individuals we meet. Indeed, a New York Times  reviewer went as far as calling the film a ‘sanitized’ vision, tantamount to ‘an exercise in preening showmanship.’When we recall certain shots, including one in which we, as Schofield, shakily advance towards a red sky – choked with smoke as flames lick and light up the ruins of a 16th century church in the tiny commune of Écoust-Saint-Mein – a sense of steely spectacle is undeniable, but far from sanitary. Indeed, we are forced to inspect the true foulness painfully slowly as Mende’s unflinchingly sharp lens hovers over the countless fly infested corpses.

What does become clear is how very little his relatively unadorned script, combined with a scarcity of close-ups, allows us to discover about the soldiers. This decision has already been slated by another major publication for the lack of interiority it grants to the men who should be the beating heart of this story, which Mendes has revealed was largely inspired by the experience of his paternal Grandfather, Alfred Mendes. Although it is clear that the script does occasionally fall flat, and vague truisms about war are articulated at times when silence would have served just as well, this particular criticism takes for granted that the real lack of intimacy the audience is allowed to develop with the protagonists is entirely unintentional. 

In fact, 1917 brings us into a landscape in which emotion is an unhelpful intrusion into the careful, cerebral forbearance demanded of the viewer as well as the soldier. This could also well be why the somewhat formulaic, sweeping orchestral score from Thomas Newman (who also worked with Mendes on his 1999 debut American Beauty), which works to steer our emotional response, comes across a touch heavy handed. When we do get glimpses of debilitating feeling intrude, as when a discussion arises about returning home for leave, we see Schofield literally turn his back on the camera, obscuring us from gaining further insight. But Mackay’s persuasive performance as a man struggling to reconcile ambivalence with loyal determination is strong enough to support some of the weaker moments of 1917.

We are certainly not told much about who is at home waiting for the pair, but we do not need to be told. Momentary glimpses into the many lives touched by this war are provided by grainy, torn photographs pinned to bunkbeds and scrappy mementos quickly stuffed back into bloodstained pockets. Where Mendes sometimes fails in developing fully fledged characters, he successfully builds a world in which taking the time to find out a name, or a story, cannot even be contemplated. A question is posed: if the soldiers we watch are not able to learn the day of the week – as we hear the sardonic Lieutenant Leslie (played impressively by Andrew Scott) joke – let alone spend their limited physical and emotional resources  learning the story of every drained figure they come across, what makes us, the audience, any different?

It is telling that, after a nod to Rudyard Kipling opens their mission, Schofield later selects lines by an English writer of an utterly different variety, Edward Lear, for whom ‘parody was a vehicle for the renewal of feeling’. He whispers,

‘They went to sea in a Sieve, they did,
 In a Sieve they went to sea,
[…]
Far and few, far and few,
Are the lands where the Jumblies live;
Their heads are green, and their hands are blue,
And they went to sea in a Sieve’

While Kipling offered his share of support to the war he so believed in, by way of public speeches and visits to the wounded,  his reflections were written from a position of relative safety. Perhaps it is in the distressing dissonance between Schofield and General Erinmore’s selection of poets, between one speculating from afar, and another walking a nonsensical landscape punctuated with the ‘blue’ bodies of horses and men, that we feel the real conflict of this film arise. If we are looking for a film about fighting a foreign enemy, this might not be it; here the conflict arises in the struggle for sense and story amongst the rats, the confusion, and the all-consuming mud. 

ON FILMS AND FIRST LOVES

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Romance feels a certain way; but it also looks a certain way. And the certain way that romance looks is, to my mind, filmic. I knew what romance looked like a long time before I knew what it felt like. It looked like long glances and serendipity, it sounded like orchestral score or indie folk rock. I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to uncouple the looking from the feeling — and I’m not sure I want to?

I don’t like writing about love. I find it intimidating. There are so many voices, books, films that get between me and my own feelings. My own words seem occluded by a great cultural shadow — there is a mountain in the shape of two lovers holding hands that blocks out the sun. It has been carved – exquisitely, laboriously – by the long line of romancers that came before. Sometimes, when you crane your neck back and look up at it, you can’t see the peak. You become dizzy, disorientated.

Film is part of this dizziness. 

When I was in Year 8, I asked a girl to the movies. Young men ask young women to the movies — I cannot tell you where this idea came from because it came from everywhere. From classics like Grease, from kid’s TV like the Suite Life of Zac and Cody, from all the American films that blur into one. Rom-coms have an architectural precision. There is a necessary elision required to fit all the facets of meeting someone and falling in love into a 90 minute run time. There is a precise and certain narrative architecture to the rom-com genre. Therefore, rom-com told me that taking a girl to the movies was a precise and certain activity. That’s what a date was; this is what it looked like; this is what I wanted it to look like.

I asked my mum to drop me at the local shopping centre. It echoed with the sound of shoppers walking on generic, white-speckled floors. The food court was crowded with kids buying frozen cokes from Maccas. I looked towards the escalators which lead to the dark, popcorn drenched movie complex. And I checked my phone: my “date” had cancelled. Her dad wouldn’t let her go by herself, and her older sister didn’t want to spend the afternoon babysitting.

A sense of palpable relief flowed through me. I called my mum (who was still in the car park). We got noodles from the Vietnamese deli. It was delicious. I tried (I think) to be a little upset — I was not upset at all. 

And that was the last time I ever tried to go on a date with a girl.

When I think about how culture shapes perception of romance, I think about Year 8 me asking a girl to the movies. I started on a script that I had seen countless times before: all the images looked right (boy meets girl in a park, we had mutual friends, we messaged a lot), and that was all I had to go on. It looked right, so I started to perform the feeling to myself.

I’d spent my burgeoning adolescence dreaming in concert with the narratives around me. Maybe when we store daydreams and idealisations in cultural artefacts like films, those daydreams take on some of the qualities of artefacts themselves: something to be displayed in a glass case, curated alongside a polaroid, and an ivory cameo. Such artefacts can rarely handle the wear and tear of real life — frames crack, parchments tear, polaroids discolour. When “romantic” is a mode of interacting with the world, rather than a feeling, it changes how you experience the things around you.

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Wittgenstein: The limits of my language are the limits of my world. The limits of my movies are the limits of my love?

That little kick in your stomach, the galvanic giddiness. These are feelings I now (indulgently) associate with a good romance plot. But they were missing for a long time. I thought people were overly obsessed with baking a b-plot romance arc into every genre of movie (action, adventure, coming-of-age) — growing up, every film seemed to require a man and a woman put their lips on each other. And I wasn’t convinced.

There’s a passage in EM Forster’s Maurice (written 1913, published 1971) where he talks about how the love between men is new; that it doesn’t have to follow convention; that it’s uncrowded by expectation; that it can be anything. I don’t think this is necessarily true, but to seventeen year-old me, it all started to make sense.

The year after I finished high school, I sent a passage from Maurice to a boy I was close friends with (I know). He became my first boyfriend.

Our relationship was infected with adolescent nostalgia. We knew the whole time that I would soon be moving from Australia to England to start university. We had decided not to do long distance. There was an urgency; we knew we needed to make something of what we had.

There’s that strange alchemical moment when you’re trying to transform your present moment into a memory, when you’re performing it for a future self who is going to look back with a quiet smile at your youthfulness and naivety. Except this time, as we played out the images we’d been handed, we found that some of them worked.

We watched coming of age films and Studio Ghibli together. We drove in my uncle’s second-hand car to the beach. We shared music driving along the highway at night. We sat by the river. And I would say clichés (to show that I thought we were above them). I’d say, faux-seriously, as I stretched out my hands in the wind: Do you ever feel truly infinite?  (Parodying Emma Watson’s character from Perks of Being a Wallflower). But, in some ways, to parody is to try and be close to something. We wanted it to be like a movie, because when you’re in your first relationship, that’s all you have to compare it with.

I think I’ve become more understanding and kinder to myself about having a desire to aid moments in their creation. It is, perhaps, not inauthentic to try and mould a memory in certain ways. We’ve been given these tropes: maybe we can use them? Maybe, they can push us out of our interiority? Maybe, by occupying a space that is not our “self” we can be less self-conscious? By offering ourselves up to the common ground of the trope or cliché, we are perhaps enacting a form of communion. 

Before I left to the UK, my boyfriend and I drove up a mountain to a lookout. It was a misty, cold night. We climbed over the barrier by the roadside and sat in the bushland, looking at the stars. We gave each other goodbye letters, we kissed. Then, the next day, I got on a plane to England.

It seemed fitting — just like a movie? We made ourselves fit into it: we fit ourselves into the night sky, into the pang of an ending. Sitting there, we were constantly repeating a mantra of this is it, this is it. As if reiteration was a form of inflation. As if we could grow it bigger in our minds.

When you need to mark something, when you need it to feel important, sometimes you don’t need authenticity. You don’t need a pure, individualised self — you need something above. You need ritual, you need to join the long line of romancers, you need to stand on the mountain in the shape of two lovers holding hands, and you need to briefly, beautifully feel that those hands are yours.

Review: The Personal History of David Copperfield

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With his take on The Personal History of David Copperfield, Armando Iannucci seems to relish the opportunity to draw out the inherent absurdism and nearly soap-operatic drama of Dickens’ novels to create a bizarrely funny and riotously entertaining film. To watch David Copperfield is to be made increasingly aware of the novel’s origin as a serialised production, with the transitions between various episodes in the protagonist’s life as exuberantly presented as the events themselves. 

The film is framed around David’s ability to “remember great characters” he encounters, and thanks to the work of a stellar cast, the audience is sure to find them equally memorable. Dev Patel is well-suited to the wide-eyed wonder of the eponymous protagonist, underpinning David’s sense of wonder and infectious zest for life with enough dry wit and genuine pathos to ground the often-convoluted story in real warmth. 

Standout performances from other cast members include Peter Capaldi as the endearingly crooked Mr Micawber, Tilda Swinton as David’s eccentric aunt, and Hugh Laurie playing against type as the gentle and comically spaced-out Mr Dick. Gwendoline Christie is wickedly entertaining and deliciously evil in a whirlwind appearance as Jane Murdstone; equally enjoyable in an otherwise minimal role is Morfydd Clarke’s lovably ditzy Dora Spenlow. 

A special mention must go to Ben Wishaw, who totally sheds the tousle-haired dreamy-eyed romanticism that made him so well suited to play John Keats in 2009’s Bright Star in favour of an impressively awful bowl cut and an oily snivelling demeanour that seems to ooze right off him as he assumes the mantle of Uriah Heep. He seems to delight in the opportunity to be as repulsively obsequious as possible, and scenes that allow Wishaw and Patel to play off one another are enormously fun. In particular, a scene in which David joins Uriah and his mother for tea exhibits the film at its peculiarly twisted comedic best. 

The film is also a pleasure visually speaking. Beautiful animation is interspersed with constantly bold, eclectic sets, loathe to have one boring frame in the film. At times, this is to the detriment of some of the more serious story beats — the sequences in the bottle factory, for example, seem a little trite given the airy spaces and bright lighting framing the supposedly tragic events, and all the destitute homes seem to lean a little closer to ‘shabby chic’ than to ‘abject Victorian poverty’. 

Still, there is never a dull moment aesthetically speaking, and Iannucci weaves a colourful patchwork of period drama visuals turned up to 100 and made a little psychedelic. Zac Nicholson’s cinematography creates a visual embodiment of the winding serial narrative that plays as much a part in bringing the story explosively to life as do any of the performances.

Whilst the comic and absurd elements of Dickens are happily enlarged for the sake of this film, the script is quite content to do away with some of the heavier elements of the novel, so while Patel is still easy to empathise with and cheer on as and when the story calls for it, there is perhaps a slightly uneven skewing of humour to drama. This, in turn, makes some beats of the film’s final act seem almost discordantly out of place.

Aneurin Barnard delivers a convincing enough performance as James Steerforth, David’s rich, frivolous friend with a dark side, but the writing doesn’t quite give his performance strong enough grounding to produce anything really substantive, and the trajectory of his character ends up feeling a little rushed and shoehorned in as a result. The script also underserves Rosalind Eleazar as Agnes Wickfield — she brings a refreshingly down-to-earth, straight-woman to the cast but is a little lost amidst the more ebullient characters, and her storyline feels undeveloped. The tonal imbalance also means the third act drags a little without the comical pyrotechnics of the first half to keep things progressing, with the more dramatic story beats perhaps a little belaboured. 

These are ultimately minor setbacks, however, as the film overall handles itself with such infectious and unbridled gusto that it’s nearly impossible to watch it and not have a good time. The audience I watched it with hardly stopped laughing for a moment, and the cast members are so clearly having the time of their lives on screen it’s easy to catch their buzz. It’s a film that crackles and fizzes as it goes along, bringing the audience with it for the ride. The Personal History of David Copperfield is as affectionate with its source material as it is irreverent, happy to pick and choose and edit what parts it pleases and do so to a largely marvellous effect.