FILM: NEW FILMS
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.EYES WIDE SHUT (18)
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Starring: Tom Cruise, Nicole Kidman
Eyes wide open for the two-and-a-half hour death throes of a mighty talent. Because despite the attendant slagging, Kubrick's intriguing psycho- drama contains faint strains of brilliance as it trips alongside Cruise's doctor through a long, dark night of the soul which leads him from a naff Ferrero Rocher-type party to a decadent costume shop to a shady sex orgy in the suburbs. At its best Eyes Wide Shut is a brave and unsettling study of public faces and private sins. At its worst, it's garbled and out of touch, awash with undigested sex philosophies, heart-of-gold hookers and crashing piano keys (signifying drama!). Or to put it another way: daytime soap with a big nipple count.
HHH
A KIND OF HUSH (15)
Director: Brian Sterner
Starring: Harley Smith, Roy Hudd
Played out around the cafes and khazis of shabby King's Cross, A Kind of Hush presents a glumly efficient portrait of the capital's young criminal flotsam. The actors are edgy and untried; the direction gropes for a documentary realism. Some clanking dialogue, plus an abrupt tone-shift towards the end jars the mood a little. Until then, this works just fine.
HHH
VARSITY BLUES (15)
Director: Brian Robbins
Starring: James Van Der Beek, Jon Voight
Taking time out from the Dawson's Creek day job, Van Der Beek squares that heroic chin to play a nonconformist quarterback at a tinpot Texas high-school. Bad move. Varsity Blues is pure frat-house doggerel; its feeble gestures at rebellion soon give way to the usual "be-all-you-can- be" cliche as our heroes gear up for the big game. Even the cheering sounds canned.
HH
RAVENOUS (18)
Director: Antonia Bird
Starring: Robert Carlyle, Guy Pearce
Ravenous views like one of those schlocky horror-comics that Marvel or DC used to put out in the 1970s: all blood and exclamation marks and Day-Glo ink that doesn't quite fit the outlines. Carlyle is the cannibal frontiersman who leaps about terrorising a raggle-taggle troupe of US marshals (Neighbours grad Pearce among them). File under horror-comedy-western with philosophical leanings.
HHH
MOUCHETTE (NC)
Director: Robert Bresson
Starring: Nadine Nortier, Paul Hebert
Bresson's spartan style of film-making gives a kind of false ceiling to his pictures. On the first level, Mouchette offers a stark, meat-and- potatoes tale of a lonesome adolescent (Nortier) in rural France. Push further and it opens up into a soaring, spiritual fable, with its sulky heroine repositioned as a sacrificial saint abandoned by a rigid and mean-spirited community. This is a tough, still, transcendent piece of work. It shakes you to the core.
HHHHH
STOP MAKING SENSE (PG)
Director: Jonathan Demme
Starring: Talking Heads
Demme's Talking Heads showcase welds three concerts into one hermetically sealed unit. Viewed from a 15-year lapse, what once looked state-of-the- art now appears endearingly retro. David Byrne prances on stage like some jerk(y) marionette; the music is all kinetic, thumping funk; the design, your basic primary-coloured power- dressing. Manhattan ad execs on a caffeine rush. Suddenly it all makes sense.
HHH
THE ITALIAN JOB (PG)
Director: Peter Collinson
Starring: Michael Caine, Noel Coward
Take away the Mini Cooper and Collinson's beloved British thriller doesn't seem half so fun. Revolving around a Turin bullion heist, this 1969 timepiece idles in third gear for way too long; gives too much rope to the often self-indulgent performances Neat car chase, though.
HHH
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments