Tag: Drive

  • Best Film and TV Posters of January 2017

    Best Film and TV Posters of January 2017

    It’s the end of the month, so it is time to reflect, relax and rewind our way back through the one-sheets, banners, promotional artwork and posters released in the last calendar month, highlighting some of the ones we though were noteworthy. It’s a little section we like to call Best Posters.

    Happy New Year! After rounding up the Best Film Posters of 2016, it’s time to get cracking on the nominees for 2017. 

    This month we go from the abstract, to the impressionistic, to the psychedelic, and the just plain disturbing. In other words, it’s a perfect start to the year. Also new this month: trends in posters we’ve noticed.

    Let us know in the comments below if we’ve missed your favourite, we got it wrong, or better yet, if we got it very right.

    Poster Trends: Slogans Over People

    Poster Trends - Slogans on People

    Every now and then, we start to notice trends across posters. This one isn’t new, but it popped up a few times this month. Posters that don’t necessarily have the title of the film prominent, but a giant slogan over the face or body of a person. In the case of the Baywatch posters, they published at least half a dozen of them.

    Our favourite posters of January 2017

    After the Storm - Designer: Akiko Stehrenberger

    After the Storm – Designer: Akiko Stehrenberger

    One of the best films of the 2016 festival circuit, the 2017 theatrical release comes with a stunning poster to match. Akiko Stehrenberger takes the central father and son figures of Hirokazu Kore-eda’s film, with the ‘lens’ filtered through the storm that redefines their relationship. Read the full review.

    Axe Murders of Villisca - Designer: InSync Plus

    Axe Murders of Villisca – Designer: InSync Plus

    Another trend we love is ‘things inside shapes of objects’ and this creepy as heck house inside of an axe, with a creepy as heck child inside the house, fits the bill several times over.

    Beauty and the Beast (2017)

    Beauty and the Beast (2017)

    There’s been a few posters released this month for the Disney remake, but this is the only one that captures the delicate beauty of their most enduring story.

    Clinical - Netflix

    Clinical

    Netflix’s original film may tend towards the traditional genre tropes, but the poster stands out for literally deconstructing the psychological thriller theme. Check out our full review here.

    Donald Cried - Designer: Gravillis Inc and Akiko Stehrenberger

    Donald Cried – Designer: Gravillis Inc and Akiko Stehrenberger

    Another one from Stehrenberger, working with Gravillis Inc, Kris Avedisian’s award-winning debut feature (an extension of his 2012 short) comes with eye-catching poster and the hairiest chest of the month.

    Drive - Designer: Rory Kurtz

    Drive – Desinger: Roy Kurtz (for Mondo)

    In hiring Kurtz for this project, Monod referred to him as “a perfect fusion of artist and property.” They aren’t wrong: the artist captures the seediness of the LA background and the iconography of the lead, bathing it all in a neon glow.

    Endless Poetry - Designer: Andrew Bannister (UK)

    Endless Poetry – Designer: Andrew Bannister (UK)

    We would expect that the poster for Alejandro Jodorowsky’s to be a bit batshit crazy, and this psychedelic trip beneath the waters once sailed by a yellow submarine is something we could happily get lost in for hours. Hmmm….where were we?

    Ghost in the Shell - Designer: LA

    Ghost in the Shell – Designer: LA

    The jury is still out on the wisdom of this live action remake of the classic Japanese manga/anime, but this LA designed poster is 100% cool. In particular, we like the way it uses the the triangular motif to frame the placement of the figures in this redder than red print.

    The Handmaid's Tale

    The Handmaid’s Tale

    Even if you’ve never read Atwood’s novel (and you should because it’s terrific), this poster tells you much of what you need to know about the restrictive world of the Handmaids, Econowives and Angels that inhabit a society that is not too distant from our own. Were it not for the folded hands (presumably’s Offred’s), you could almost mistake this for an object – which is very much in keeping with the themes of the work.

    Hidden Figures - Designer: Gravillis Inc

    Hidden Figures – Designer: Gravillis Inc

    A poster of equivalent power to the message behind one of the more inspirational films of the year. Unlike the standard one-sheet, which concentrates on the three figures at the heart of the story, this one gives equal time to their monumental achievements and knowledge. If there’s any sense of style left in the world, this should be the DVD/Blu-ray cover for all time. Check out our full review here

    John Wick Chapter Two - Designer: LA

    John Wick Chapter Two – Designer: LA

    There is a massive cult buzz surrounding this sequel, so much so that it doesn’t even need to prominently display the title of the film. Indeed, our only clear indicator is the small hashtag at the bottom. Let’s hope sad Keanu’s career continues to be as relit as this poster. 

    Killing Ground - Designer: Jeremy Saunders

    Killing Ground – Designer: Jeremy Saunders

    The first of two Jeremy Saunders designs in this month’s selection, the Australian film is about a couple who go camping and discover a bloody toddler wandering the bush. We hope that writer/director Damien Power’s film is half as creepy as this poster.

    La La Land (Japan)

    La La Land (Japan)

    Another month, another LA LA LAND poster. This film seems to lend itself to gorgeous designs, but this one-sheet – part of a series for the Japanese release – depicts Sebastian and Mia dancing on a giant set of piano keys. 

    Little Hours

    The Little Hours

    Jeff Baena (Life After Beth, Joshy) has a comedy coming out about a man hiding out in a convent full of “emotionally unstable nuns” during the middle ages. What better poster to convey that wonderful concept than this one?

    Long Strange Trip

    Long Strange Trip

    Fans of The Grateful Dead, better known as DeadHeads (because Deadites have vexxed Ash for too long), will finally get to see the untold story of their favourite band on Amazon. Then it won’t be untold anymore. Did nobody think this through? Cool poster though.

    Look & See: A Portrait of Wendell Berry

    Look & See: A Portrait of Wendell Berry  – Designer: Wesley W. Bates

    This wood engraving style of poster is a perfect accompaniment to this film concentrating on poet, writer, farmer and environmental activist Wendell Berry. The film is lensed through his works, and this poster is a literal window to what makes him tick. Check out this amazing video 2-hour video of Wesley W. Bates showcasing his meticulous wood engraving process. 

    The Lure

    The Lure

    One of the more interesting films of the last 12 months, to say the least, was this lesbian-vampire-mermaid-musical from Poland. You can check out our full review here, but you should really see it for yourself.

    Monster Trucks - Designer: BLT Communications and Steven Chorney

    Monster Trucks – Designer: BLT Communications and Steven Chorney

    This epic retro poster seems to be for a movie entirely different to the one that actually hit cinemas. While this poster offers us the possibility of a Spielbergian flight of fantasy, the actual film was trucks with monsters in them driving in circles really fast.

    One Thousand Ropes - Designer: Jeremy Saunders

    One Thousand Ropes – Designer: Jeremy Saunders

    A film and poster that we are particularly excited about. Samoan New Zealander Tusi Tamasese, who we interviewed back in 2011 for his debut The Orator, is following it up with this deeply personal film about family connections. Saunders stunning poster shows some of that connection in a single image, literally framed in the traditional trappings of the island environment.

    Pieles - Designer: Barfutura

    Pieles – Designer: Barfutura

    There are no words.

    The Quacky Slasher

    The Quacky Slasher – Designer: NeonGoreUk

    We rarely include short films on here, but this is an exception for obvious reasons. Apart from having the best horror title since The Greasy Strangler, the grim visage of a duck with a bloody knife is enough to turn anybody vegetarian. Even if we hadn’t already been sans meat since 1999.

    Split - Designer: LA

    Split – Designer: LA

    Audiences are divided over M. Night Shyamalan’s latest, but not as much as the head filled with little people in this poster. Now we want to see the entire film animated in this style.

  • British Academy Announce 2012 BAFTA Nominations

    British Academy Announce 2012 BAFTA Nominations

    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy poster - SmileyWith the Golden Globes done and dusted, the awards season is in full swing. The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) have announced its nominations for the best films of 2011.

    Unsurprisingly, the unstoppable goliath that is The Artist has earned the most nominations with 12, with the homegrown British product Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy getting 11 nods.

    In fact, with a few notable exceptions such as Joe Cornish’s Attack the Block, Richard Ayoade’s Submarine and Paddy Considine’s Tyrannosaur – all included in the Brit-specific categories – these awards ceremonies are beginning to look a little cut and paste. It now seems very little will stop the critic favourite The Artist from taking out everything, although it is interesting that Hugo missed out on all of the major nominations barring Best Director for Martin Scorsese.

    The 2012 Orange British Academy Film Awards ceremony will take place on 17 February 2012..

    Best Film

    Outstanding British Film:

    Outstanding debut by a British writer, director or producer:

    • Attack the Block – Joe Cornish (director/writer)
    • Black Pond – Will Sharpe (director/writer), Tom Kingsley (director), Sarah Brocklehurst (producer)
    • Coriolanus – Ralph Fiennes (director)
    • Submarine – Richard Ayoade (director/writer)
    • Tyrannosaur – Paddy Considine (director), Diarmid Scrimshaw (producer)

    Foreign language film:

    Director:

    Leading actor:

    Leading actress:

    Supporting actor:

    Supporting actress:

    Documentary:

    Animated film:

    Original screenplay:

    Adapted screenplay:

    Original music:

    Cinematography:

    Editing:

    Production design:

    Costume design:

    Make up & hair:

    Sound:

    Special visual effects:

    Short animation:

    • Abuelas
    • Bobby Yeah
    • A Morning Stroll

    Short film:

    • Chalk
    • Mwansa The Great
    • Only Sound Remains
    • Pitch Black Heist
    • Two And Two

    The Orange Wednesdays Rising Star Award (previously announced, and voted by the public)

    • Adam Deacon
    • Chris Hemsworth
    • Chris O’Dowd
    • Eddie Redmayne
    • Tom Hiddleston
  • Orange BAFTA Longlist led by Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and My Week with Marilyn

    Orange BAFTA Longlist led by Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and My Week with Marilyn

    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy poster - SmileyThe longlist of nominees for the 2012 Orange British Academy Film Awards, better known as the BAFTAs, have been announced. The awards are always significant as an indicator of what will possibly end up on the 84th Academy Awards.

    There were no major surprises in terms of the films nominated, with Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and My Week with Marilyn leading the pack with 16 mentions each. The Artist, which has been the favourite in almost every other awards ceremony to date, still received 13 mentions. Of course, this won’t mean they get that many nominations when the final list is released on 17 January 2012.

    The longlist was arrived upon from Round One voting of the Orange British Academy, and they note that Documentary, Outstanding British Film and Film Not in the English Language are Chapter votes in Rounds One and Two of voting. The asterisks below indicate that there was a tie in the Chapter vote in Supporting Actress, six individuals are flagged in this category.

    The BAFTA ceremony will take place on 17 February 2012.

    Best Film
    The Artist
    The Descendants
    Drive
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    The Help
    Hugo
    The Ides of March
    The Iron Lady
    Midnight in Paris
    Moneyball
    My Week with Marilyn
    Senna
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    War Horse
    We Need to Talk About Kevin

    Film Not in the English Language
    Abel
    As If I Am Not There
    The Boy Mir – Ten Years in Afghanistan
    Calvet
    Dhobi Ghat (Mumbai Diaries)
    Incendies
    Little White Lies
    Pina
    Post Mortem
    Potiche
    Le Quattro Volte
    A Separation
    The Skin I Live In
    Tomboy
    The Troll Hunter

    Outstanding British Film
    Arthur Christmas
    Attack the Block
    Coriolanus
    The Guard
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2
    The Iron Lady
    Jane Eyre
    My Week with Marilyn
    Senna
    Shame
    Submarine
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    Tyrannosaur
    War Horse
    We Need to Talk About Kevin

    Director
    The Artist*
    The Descendants
    Drive*
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    The Help
    Hugo*
    The Ides of March
    The Iron Lady
    J. Edgar
    Midnight in Paris
    Moneyball
    My Week with Marilyn
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy*
    War Horse
    We Need to Talk About Kevin*

    Original Screenplay
    50/50
    Anonymous
    Arthur Christmas
    The Artist*
    Beginners
    Bridesmaids*
    The Guard*
    The Iron Lady
    J. Edgar
    Midnight in Paris*
    Senna
    Shame
    Super 8
    Tyrannosaur
    Young Adult*

    Adapted Screenplay
    The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn
    Coriolanus
    The Descendants*
    Drive
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2
    The Help*
    Hugo
    The Ides of March*
    Jane Eyre
    Moneyball*
    My Week with Marilyn
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy*
    War Horse
    We Need to Talk About Kevin

    Cinematography
    The Artist*
    The Descendants
    Drive*
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo*
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2
    Hugo*
    The Ides of March
    J. Edgar
    Jane Eyre
    Midnight in Paris
    My Week with Marilyn
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy*
    The Tree of Life
    War Horse
    We Need to Talk About Kevin

    Editing
    The Artist*
    The Descendants
    Drive*
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2
    Hugo*
    The Ides of March
    The Iron Lady
    Midnight in Paris
    Moneyball
    My Week with Marilyn
    Senna*
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy*
    War Horse
    We Need to Talk About Kevin

    Production Design
    Anonymous
    The Artist*
    Coriolanus
    Drive
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2*
    The Help
    Hugo*
    The Iron Lady
    J. Edgar
    Jane Eyre
    Midnight in Paris
    My Week with Marilyn
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy*
    War Horse*

    Make Up & Hair
    Anonymous
    The Artist*
    Bridesmaids
    Coriolanus
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2*
    The Help
    Hugo*
    The Iron Lady*
    J. Edgar
    Jane Eyre
    Midnight in Paris
    My Week with Marilyn*
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    War Horse

    Costume Design
    Anonymous*
    The Artist*
    Coriolanus
    A Dangerous Method
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2
    The Help
    Hugo*
    The Iron Lady
    J. Edgar
    Jane Eyre*
    Midnight in Paris
    My Week with Marilyn*
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    War Horse

    Special Visual Effects
    The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn*
    The Artist
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2*
    Hugo*
    Midnight in Paris
    Mission: Impossible Ghost Protocol
    Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
    Rise of the Planet of the Apes*
    Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
    Super 8
    Transformers: Dark of the Moon*
    War Horse
    X-Men: First Class

    Documentary
    George Harrison: Living in the Material World
    Life in a Day
    Pina
    Project Nim
    Senna

    Sound
    The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn*
    The Artist
    Drive
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2*
    Hugo*
    The Iron Lady
    Midnight in Paris
    Moneyball
    My Week with Marilyn
    Senna
    Super 8
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy*
    War Horse*
    We Need to Talk About Kevin

    Original Music
    The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn*
    The Artist*
    Drive
    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2
    The Help
    Hugo*
    The Ides of March
    The Iron Lady
    Jane Eyre
    Moneyball
    My Week with Marilyn
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy*
    War Horse*
    We Need to Talk About Kevin

    Animated Film
    The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn*
    Arthur Christmas*
    Gnomeo and Juliet
    Puss in Boots
    Rango*

    Leading Actor
    Antonio Banderas (Robert Ledgard) – The Skin I Live In
    Brad Pitt (Billy Beane) – Moneyball*
    Brendan Gleeson (Gerry Boyle) – The Guard
    Daniel Craig (Mikael Blomkvist) – The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Eddie Redmayne (Colin Clark) – My Week with Marilyn
    Gary Oldman (George Smiley) – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy*
    George Clooney (Matt King) – The Descendants*
    Jean Dujardin (George Valentin) – The Artist*
    Leonardo DiCaprio (J. Edgar Hoover) – J. Edgar
    Michael Fassbender (Brandon) – Shame*
    Owen Wilson (Gil) – Midnight in Paris
    Peter Mullan (Joseph) – Tyrannosaur
    Ralph Fiennes (Caius Martius Coriolanus) – Coriolanus
    Ryan Gosling (Driver) – Drive
    Ryan Gosling (Stephen Meyers) – The Ides of March

    Leading Actress
    Bérénice Bejo (Peppy Miller) – The Artist*
    Carey Mulligan (Sissy) – Shame
    Charlize Theron (Mavis Gary) – Young Adult
    Emma Stone (Skeeter Phelan) – The Help
    Helen Mirren (Rachel Singer) – The Debt
    Jodie Foster (Penelope Longstreet) – Carnage
    Kate Winslet (Nancy Cowan) – Carnage
    Kristen Wiig (Annie) – Bridesmaids
    Meryl Streep (Margaret Thatcher) – The Iron Lady*
    Mia Wasikowska (Jane Eyre) – Jane Eyre
    Michelle Williams (Marilyn Monroe) – My Week with Marilyn*
    Olivia Colman (Hannah) – Tyrannosaur
    Rooney Mara (Lisbeth Salander) – The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    Tilda Swinton (Eva) – We Need to Talk About Kevin*
    Viola Davis (Aibileen Clark) – The Help*

    Supporting Actor
    Alan Rickman (Prof. Severus Snape) – Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2
    Albert Brooks (Bernie Rose) – Drive
    Ben Kingsley (George Méliès) – Hugo
    Benedict Cumberbatch (Peter Guillam) – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    Christopher Plummer (Hal) – Beginners*
    Colin Firth (Bill Haydon) – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    Eddie Marsan (James) – Tyrannosaur*
    Ezra Miller (Kevin – Teenager) – We Need to Talk About Kevin
    George Clooney (Mike Morris) – The Ides of March
    Jim Broadbent (Denis Thatcher) – The Iron Lady
    John Hurt (Control) – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    Jonah Hill (Peter Brand) – Moneyball*
    Kenneth Branagh (Sir Laurence Olivier) – My Week with Marilyn*
    Paul Giamatti (Tom Duffy) – The Ides of March
    Philip Seymour Hoffman (Paul Zara) – The Ides of March*

    Supporting Actress †
    Alexandra Roach (Young Margaret Thatcher) – The Iron Lady
    Bryce Dallas Howard (Hilly Holbrook) – The Help*
    Carey Mulligan (Irene) – Drive
    Emily Watson (Rosie Narracott) – War Horse
    Evan Rachel Wood (Molly Steams) – The Ides of March
    Jessica Chastain (Celia Foote) – The Help*
    Judi Dench (Dame Sybil Thorndike) – My Week with Marilyn*
    Kathy Bates (Gertrude Stein) – Midnight in Paris
    Kathy Burke (Connie Sachs) – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    Marion Cotillard (Adriana) – Midnight in Paris
    Melissa McCarthy (Megan) – Bridesmaids*
    Octavia Spencer (Minny Jackson) – The Help*
    Olivia Colman (Carol Thatcher) – The Iron Lady
    Shailene Woodley (Alexandra King) – The Descendants
    Zoe Wanamaker (Paula Strasberg) – My Week with Marilyn*

    Note: Documentary, Outstanding British Film and Film Not in the English Language are Chapter votes in Rounds One and Two of voting.

    * As there was a tie in the Chapter vote in Supporting Actress, six individuals are flagged in this category.

  • 2012 Art Directors Guild Awards nominees announced

    2012 Art Directors Guild Awards nominees announced

    Hugo in 3D posterHow many guilds do they have anyway? The Art Directors Guild has now announced its list of nominees for best film of the year, from the point of view of art direction of course, and it is great to see a few names listed that would normally come up in a more generalised list.

    The Artist and Hugo are still at the top of that list, but there’s some love for Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, the very underrated Anonymous and Cowboys & Aliens and the comic book perfection of Captain America: The First Avenger. Of course, Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides turns up in one of the few non-Razzie Awards it is likely to receive.

    A full list of nominees, including television, can be found at the official ADG site.

    Period Film

    Fantasy Film

    Contemporary Film

  • The Bitsy Awards: Best Films of 2011

    The Bitsy Awards: Best Films of 2011

    Tree of Life posterIt’s Bitsy’s Best in Show! Another year, another 300-odd films infused into our brains. Some were forgettable and some were joyous, some were painful to watch and others gave us great pleasure spiked with pain. Yet the world loves a list, and lest the void not be filled with our own opinions on the stuff we liked in the last 12 months, we present our Best 10 Films for 2011.

    Every list has rules, and ours is no exception. Unlike the list we provided for Matt Ravier’s Sydney Film Critics: Best of 2011 list, which is simply those films that had an Australian release date in 2011, we are responding to the fact that this Internet thing is a global phenomenon, and we often get early peeks of the 2011 films that will not come out in our native Australian until early 2012. This makes it a little different to our Top 10 in 2010. So by this token, this list will not include otherwise essential entries of True Grit, 13 Assassins, Tangled, Meek’s Cutoff and Black Swan, all released early-to-mid 2011 here. By the same token, we are yet to see films like The Artist and Hugo, which will be covered here accordingly. Basically, our list is based on films released somewhere in the world in 2011 that we managed to see in the calendar year. We could have just said that.

    So without any further ado, here’s our Top 10 and a few honourable mentions:

    The Tree of Life

    1. The Tree of Life (US, Terrence Malick)

    Few filmmakers can make claim to the word ‘enigmatic’ as much as Terrence Malick. Malick’s most challenging work to date may defy conventional description. The narrative elements of The Tree of Life come from the 1950s O’Brien family sequences, with a powerful and often frightening turn from Pitt and the opposite emotive qualities coming from rising star Jessica Chastain. Yet to think of The Tree of Life as a period drama would be tantamount to calling Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, to which there are some parallels, “just a science-fiction film”. Stunning and provoking, it is sure to divide audiences in its unabashedly pretentious examination of the meaning of existence. Beautiful and haunting, The Tree of Life is what cinema was created for.

    Melancholia

    2. Melancholia (Denmark, Lars Von Trier)

    Lars Von Trier is a like him or hate him prospect for audiences and critics alike. After pushing the boundaries of tolerance with Antichrist, this film offers an interesting mirror image to Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life which also debuted around the same time as Melancholia. If Malick was recreating the origins of everything, Von Trier’s visually arresting opening sequence and final moments are the end of all things. “Melancholia is just going to pass right in front of us,” predicts Sutherland’s character. “And it is going to be the most beautiful sight”. This could just as easily be a capsule review for the film. A film like no other, with Von Trier realising the potential he has exhibited throughout his career to date. Visually arresting and emotionally engaging, Melancholia is undoubtedly one of the best films of the year.

    The Muppets (2011)

    3. The Muppets (US, James Bobbin)

    Absent from our cinemas screens for over 12 years, we didn’t know how much we were missing the Muppets until this film came along. Sensational, inspirational, celebrational and most definitely Muppetational. This is how you make a Muppet show. Jason Segel and Nick Stoller’s screenplay is a tribute to all things Muppets and is well versed in Muppet lore. The songs, mostly written by Flight of the Conchords‘ Brett McKenzie, are one of the strongest elements of the film, and are the best example of this balance between new and old. Throwbacks to the golden era of musicals but also thoroughly Conchords in sensibility at other times, the tunes swing from joyous, to heartbreaking and just plain rob-tickling. Certainly the best comedy of the year, but also a warming film that the whole family can enjoy for years to come.

    Super 8

    4. Super 8 (US, J.J. Abrams)

    We were quoted in one of the TV spots for this film as saying it was “easily the best of the year”, so we should put our money where our mouth is. In fact, the three films that beat this film out in our list all came out after Super 8, so we were technically right at the time. Equal parts Steven Spielberg, who served as producer on the film, it is a film that doesn’t hit you over the head with its cinematic references and extensive film knowledge, but rather weaves them into the whole to create something nostalgic yet completely original as well. J.J. Abrams’ unique brand of storytelling,  Super 8 is the kind of rollicking adventure we’ve not seen in years. With its winning combination of high-adventure, a pitch-perfect period perspective and likeable cast of characters, Abrams and Spielberg return some magic to the cinema. A genre conquering Goliath that is easily…the best of its kind this year.

    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - Gary Oldman

    5. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (UK, Tomas Alfredson)

    For a film that is based on a novel that has already been made into a successful British mini-series with none other than Sir Alec Guinness in the lead, Let the Right One In helmer Alfredson had some pretty big shoes to fill. Thankfully, for a film that the director felt should be the “colour of an old man’s foreskin”, this is a flawless example of how to make a thriller thrilling. The fact that this is a film that treats the audience as adults has been bandied around quite a bit, but perhaps it is because it is so refreshing to finally see a film that doesn’t over-explain every twist and turn. In fact, if you aren’t paying attention in this complex spy thriller, it will be very easy to get lost in the obfuscations that make up this very smart script from the late Bridget O’Connor and Peter Straughan (The Debt).

    Drive (2011)

    6. Drive (US, Nicolas Winding Refn)

    Like many a pimped out ride that has come before it, Danish director Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive pulled up alongside the curb as if towed by vehicle fueled purely by hype. Yet it delivered on all of its promises, and solidified the reputation of the ubiquitous Ryan Gosling as the stand-out actor of the year as well. The film is brutally violent in places, and Drive wants to shock you. Yet there is a retro coolness to the film that even the most bloody of face-stompings can’t deny, drawing as much from Bullit and its kin as the artier pieces the lengthy close-ups often indicate. A cracking soundtrack, largely by Cliff Martinez (The Lincoln LawyerContagion) and peppered with pop pieces such as Kavinsky’s distinctive “Nightcall” and Desire’s “Under Your Spell”, helps shape Refn’s distinctive vision into the singular experience that it is. An amazing cast and a distinctive aesthetic elevates the pulp fiction of Drive to one of the undeniable classics of 2011, and sure to be a favourite for years to come.

    Rango (2011)

    7. Rango (US, Gore Verbinski)

    It wasn’t a terrific year for animation, despite the groundbreaking work in The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn and the unexpectedly good franchise films Puss in Boots and Kung Fu Panda 2. Then there’s Rango, a newcomer that completely took us by surprise. Inspired by the filmed history of the Old West, and in particular Sergio Leone’s so-called spaghetti westerns of the 1960s, Rango may just mark a turning point in the marketing of animation to adult audiences. Rango is an instant classic, not just as a piece of animation, but as one of the best westerns in years. Drawing on the traditions of over a century of westerns, coupled with the outstanding voice talents (including Johnny Depp and Isla Fisher) and gorgeous cinematic animation.

    RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES

    8. Rise of the Planet of the Apes (US, Rupert Wyatt)

    The biggest pleasant surprise of the year, and one that managed to erase any visions of Tim Burton from our heads. Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver’s screenplay is not only suggested by Boulle’s novel, but as one can probably tell from the plot summary, the Bible and the story of Moses. It clearly had bigger ambitions than any of us expected, and lives up to most of those self-set goals. The special effects and motion capture work, from Joe Letteri’s team at the incomparable WETA Digital (The Lord of the Rings Trilogy, Avatar, King Kong) are groundbreaking. If Andy Serkis doesn’t get recognition for this role, then there is no justice in the awards world. Rise of the Planet of the Apes is not only an amazing special effects achievement, but a gripping and emotionally engaging blockbuster to boot.

    Midnight in Paris

    9. Midnight in Paris (US/France, Woody Allen)

    Nobody wanted Woody Allen’s latest film to succeed more than us, although his last few films hadn’t given us much cause for joy. You Will Meet A Tall Dark Stranger is still yet to emerge on any format in Australia. With this love letter to Paris, Allen reaches back to his ‘golden era’ of Manhattan, in a musically-driven opening sequence that recalls that Oscar-winning film. Indeed, Midnight in Paris is the kind of high-concept comedy that Allen would have made in the 1970s, and here he does so with all the cocksure confidence and audacity that the younger filmmaker consistently brought to the table. When we reviewed this back in October, we said that it was “Not simply the best Woody Allen film of the year, but a contender for one of the best films of the year”. So sure enough, it wound up in our picks for one of the best 10 films of the year. A romantic comedy that lives up to both words in the moniker, Midnight in Paris is a trip worth taking.

    Red Dog (2011)

    10. Red Dog (Australia, Kriv Stenders)

    Australian films have a reputation for being a bit of a downer, and Kriv Stenders’ Red Dog is noticeably absent of suburban angst, gangland shootings and incestuous narratives. In its place is a heartwarming tale that completely captures the Australian spirit that was still well and truly alive during the 1970s period in which the film is set. Like the best Australian films before it, from Crocodile Dundee to Dirty DeedsRed Dog is filled with the kind of eccentric retro-charm and inevitable sadness all rolled into one singular cultural ball that is sure to please audiences of all ages. Designed to be enjoyed by anyone with a pulse.

    Honourable mentions (aka The Best of the Rest):

    Guilty Of Romance posterIt was actually an amazing year for cinema, despite lamentations that the quality and quantity was in decline this year. So much so that our shortlist was double the final number represented in the list above. So in order to ensure that all bases are covered, here’s a few that didn’t make the cut. After all, we really wanted to include The Lion King 3D, but it was tough to justify a remastered film that is 17 years old.

    Action films improved steadily this year, as indicated by the two in our Top 10, but Captain America: The First Avenger deserves a special mention. Not only is it a rousing adventure story, but a timely reminder of why we love comic book heroes and the perfect penultimate piece to the Marvel cinematic universe. The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn gave us back the Steven Spileberg of old, outdoing most live action films with its phenomenal set-pieces and beautiful scenery. Speaking of surprises, did anyone see Roland Emmerich making a film as good as Anonymous?

    International cinema made a real impact at the festivals and, we are happy to say, the cinemas of Australia with more foreign language films getting a release than previous years. In particular, Asian and Indian cinema had dedicated programs at both Hoyts and Event Cinemas, which pleased us no end. From this, Takashi Miike’s phenomenal (and technically 2010) 13 Assassins finally made its way to Australia, and Pedro Almodóvar’s The Skin I Live In narrowly missed out on a place in our Top 10. Yet we still relied upon festivals to give us such wonderful gems as Iran’s A Separation, Hungary’s The Turin Horse, South Korea’s End of Animal, and Japan’s Guilty of Romance.

    Drama is where all of the kudos is at awards-wise, and there was plenty to choose from this year. Paddy Considine’s Tyrannosaur, is a forceful and confronting drama signals the arrival of Considine as a filmmaker, commanding weighty performances and difficult subject matter with the skill of a seasoned pro. Speaking of Considine, Richard Ayode’s debut feature Submarine was a rare gem of a comedy-drama that is equal parts hilarious and touching, with phenomenal performances from the young cast. Take Shelter signalled Michael Shannon as a powerful leading man, while Vera Farmiga made her directorial debut and starred in Higher Ground, a beautifully drawn and emotional musing on faith. As character studies, Moneyball and The Descendants are wonderfully crafted showcases for Brad Pitt and George Clooney respectively.

    Last, but definitely not least, comedy is always a subjective issue, and while The Hangover – Part II disappointed on just about every level, Bridesmaids proved that the girls do it better anyway.

    Bring on 2012!

  • 32nd London Critics’ Circle Film Awards nominations announced

    32nd London Critics’ Circle Film Awards nominations announced

    London Critics' Circle LogoThe London Critics’ Circle has announced the nominations for its 2011 film awards yesterday morning, as voted by over 120 UK film critics.

    In a slight departure from The Artist-centric awards so far, it is Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive and Tomas Alfredson Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy that lead the pack with 6 nominations each. Lynne Ramsay’s We Need to Talk About Kevin and Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation followed closely on 5 nominations a piece, with the ubiquitous The Artist and Steve McQueen’s Shame on 4 nominations.

    Another big win goes to Studio Canal, who you will see listed no less than 20 times below! Nicolas Roeg, who won best director at the first Critics’ Circle Awards in 1980 for Bad Timing, is honoured this year with the Dilys Powell Award.

    The full list of nominees, along with their UK distributor, is listed below. The winners will be announced on 19 January 2012 at BFI Southbank, London.

    FILM OF THE YEAR

    The Artist (Entertainment)
    Drive (Icon)
    A Separation (Artificial Eye)
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)
    The Tree of Life (Fox)

    The Attenborough Award:

    BRITISH FILM OF THE YEAR

    The Guard (StudioCanal)
    Kill List (StudioCanal)
    Shame (Momentum)
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)
    We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

    FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM OF THE YEAR

    Mysteries of Lisbon (New Wave)
    Poetry (Arrow)
    Le Quattro Volte (New Wave)
    A Separation (Artificial Eye)
    The Skin I Live In (Fox/Pathé)

    DOCUMENTARY OF THE YEAR

    Cave of Forgotten Dreams (Picturehouse)
    Dreams of a Life (Dogwoof)
    Pina (Artificial Eye)
    Project Nim (Icon)
    Senna (Universal)

    DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR

    Asghar Farhadi – A Separation (Artificial Eye)
    Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist (Entertainment)
    Terrence Malick – The Tree of Life (Fox)
    Lynne Ramsay – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)
    Nicolas Winding Refn – Drive (Icon)

    SCREENWRITER OF THE YEAR

    Asghar Farhadi – A Separation (Artificial Eye)
    Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist (Entertainment)
    Kenneth Lonergan – Margaret (Fox)
    Bridget O’Connor & Peter Straughan – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)
    Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon & Jim Rash – The Descendants (Fox)

    The Virgin Atlantic Award:

    BREAKTHROUGH BRITISH FILM-MAKER

    Richard Ayoade – Submarine (StudioCanal)
    Paddy Considine – Tyrannosaur (StudioCanal)
    Joe Cornish – Attack the Block (StudioCanal)
    Andrew Haigh – Weekend (Peccadillo)
    John Michael McDonagh – The Guard (StudioCanal)

    ACTOR OF THE YEAR

    George Clooney – The Descendants (Fox)
    Jean Dujardin – The Artist (Entertainment)
    Michael Fassbender – Shame (Momentum)
    Ryan Gosling – Drive (Icon)
    Gary Oldman – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

    ACTRESS OF THE YEAR

    Kirsten Dunst – Melancholia (Artificial Eye)
    Anna Paquin – Margaret (Fox)
    Meryl Streep – The Iron Lady (Fox/Pathé)
    Tilda Swinton – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)
    Michelle Williams – My Week With Marilyn (Entertainment)

    SUPPORTING ACTOR OF THE YEAR

    Simon Russell Beale – The Deep Blue Sea (Artificial Eye)
    Kenneth Branagh – My Week With Marilyn (Entertainment)
    Albert Brooks – Drive (Icon)
    Christopher Plummer – Beginners (Universal)
    Michael Smiley – Kill List (StudioCanal)

    SUPPORTING ACTRESS OF THE YEAR

    Sareh Bayat – A Separation (Artificial Eye)
    Jessica Chastain – The Help (Disney)
    Vanessa Redgrave – Coriolanus (Lionsgate)
    Octavia Spencer – The Help (Disney)
    Jacki Weaver – Animal Kingdom (StudioCanal)

    BRITISH ACTOR OF THE YEAR

    Tom Cullen – Weekend (Peccadillo)
    Michael Fassbender – A Dangerous Method (Lionsgate), Shame (Momentum)
    Brendan Gleeson – The Guard (StudioCanal)
    Peter Mullan – Tyrannosaur (StudioCanal), War Horse (Disney)
    Gary Oldman – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

    The Moët & Chandon Award:

    BRITISH ACTRESS OF THE YEAR

    Olivia Colman – The Iron Lady (Fox/Pathé), Tyrannosaur (StudioCanal)
    Carey Mulligan – Drive (Icon), Shame (Momentum)
    Vanessa Redgrave – Anonymous (Sony), Coriolanus (Lionsgate)
    Tilda Swinton – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)
    Rachel Weisz – The Deep Blue Sea (Artificial Eye)

    YOUNG BRITISH PERFORMER OF THE YEAR

    John Boyega – Attack the Block (StudioCanal)
    Jeremy Irvine – War Horse (Disney)
    Yasmin Paige – Submarine (StudioCanal)
    Craig Roberts – Submarine (StudioCanal)
    Saoirse Ronan – Hanna (Universal)

    The Sky 3D Award:

    TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT

    Manuel Alberto Claro, cinematography – Melancholia (Artificial Eye)
    Paul Davies, sound design – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)
    Maria Djurkovic, production design – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)
    Dante Ferretti, production design – Hugo (Entertainment)
    Alberto Iglesias, original score – The Skin I Live In (Fox/Pathé)
    Chris King & Gregers Sall, editing – Senna (Universal)
    Joe Letteri, visual effects – Rise of the Planet of the Apes (Fox)
    Cliff Martinez, original score – Drive (Icon)
    Robert Richardson, cinematography – Hugo (Entertainment)
    Robbie Ryan, cinematography – Wuthering Heights (Artificial Eye)

    The Dilys Powell Award:

    EXCELLENCE IN FILM

    Nicolas Roeg

  • 2012 Film Independent Spirit Award nominations

    2012 Film Independent Spirit Award nominations

    The Descendants posterThe awards season is now in full swing, with the nominees for the 2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards announced by Film Independent this morning.

    Nominees for Best Feature include 50/50, Beginners, Drive, Take Shelter, The Artist and The Descendants. Indeed, The Artist and The Descendants scored the biggest number of nods with five each. The already certified cult hit Drive has also nabbed four nominations, as did Take Shelter and Gotham Award winner Beginners.

    Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris failed to receive a nomination for Best Feature, but did receive nominations for Best Supporting Male Lead (Corey Stoll) and Best Cinematography. Judd Apatow’s 50/50 also scored big with nods for Best Feature, Best Supporting Female (Angelica Huston) and Best First Screenplay.

    The 2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards will be announced on 25 February 2012.

    Best Feature

    Best Director

    Best First Feature

    Best Male Lead

    • Demian Bichir – A Better Life
    • Jean Dujardin – The Artist
    • Ryan Gosling – Drive
    • Woody Harrelson – Rampart
    • Michael Shannon – Take Shelter

    Best Female Lead

    Best Supporting Male Lead

    Best Supporting Female

    John Cassavetes Award (for films made under $500,000)

    • Bellflower
    • Circumstance
    • Hello Lonesome
    • Pariah
    • The Dynamiter

    Best Documentary

    Best Cinematography

    • Joel Hodge – Bellflower
    • Benjamin Kasulke – The Off Hours
    • Darius Khondji – Midnight in Paris
    • Guillame Shiffman – The Artist
    • Jeffrey Waldron – The Dynamiter

    Best First Screenplay

    • Mike Cahill & Brit Marling – Another Earth
    • J.C. Chandor – Margin Call
    • Patrick DeWitt – Terri
    • Phil Johnston – Cedar Rapids
    • Will Reiser – 50/50

    Best Screenplay

    Best Foreign Film

    Robert Altman Award for Ensemble

    • Margin Call
  • Film Actually Ep 62 – Drive

    Film Actually Ep 62 – Drive

    Hosts: David McVay, Josh Philpott & Richard Gray

    This week David, Josh and Richard review “Drive”. Plus they discuss a little entertainment news including Joss Whedon’s new film “Much Ado About Nothing”, Spielberg talks “Indy 5″ & “Jurassic Park 4″ and the new trailers for “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol”, “Piranha 3DD” and the final parody trailer for the “The Muppets”. All this plus Youtubers who have cracked the big time and a brand new Lists of Five – Five of our Favourite Movie Vehicles. Film Actually is the official movie podcast of geekactually.com.

    If you are an iTunes user, please leave a review. Your comments help us improve the show.

    This show carries an explicit tag due to infrequent coarse language.

    Listen or download it here or subscribe to it on iTunes

    Make sure you check out our other fine podcast Geek Actually for all your tech and geek culture needs.

    Watch us record Film Actually live every Saturday starting at approximately 1.30pm (AEDST UTC+11) at geekactually.com/live. Your show notes follow:

    What We’ve Been Watching

    A collection of other things we’ve been watching this week. Josh has been completely immersed in computer games. Richard watched “Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark”, “Licence to Drive” and “The Debt”. David watched “Police Academy”, “Beastly” and “Tucker & Dale vs. Evil”. Richard and David also got a chance to see “Warrior” and share a few words on that film.

    Feature Film Review

    ‘Drive’ directed by Nicolas Winding Refn and written by Hossein Amini based on the book by James Sallis. It stars Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan, Bryan Cranston, Albert Brooks, Christina Hendricks and Ron Perlman.

    Ryan Gosling stars as a wheelman for hire, stunt driving for movie productions by day and steering getaway vehicles for armed heists by night. Though a loner by nature, Driver can’t help falling in love with his beautiful neighbor Irene. After a heist intended to pay off Irene’s ex-husband’s protection money spins unpredictably out of control, Driver finds himself driving defense for the girl he loves, tailgated by a syndicate of deadly serious criminals. Source: FilmDistrict (abridged by David).

    Our Verdict: Josh and Richard absolutely loved the film and believe it may be a contender for film of the year. David liked the film but was not as overwhelmed as Josh and Richard and felt it was a good film that had some problems with pace and relationships. Worth seeing though.

    Watch the trailer here: http://trailers.apple.com/trailers/independent/drive/

    Entertainment Buzz

    Just because, here is the “Piranha 3DD” trailer
    https://www.thereelbits.com/2011/10/25/revised-teaser-for-piranha-3dd-is-here/

    Spielberg talks Jurassic Park 4 and Indy 5. We love the man, he has a sense of humour.
    http://www.empireonline.com/news/story.asp?NID=32315

    And now the final parody trailer for “The Muppets” – classic
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsPz51_M3fI

    Joss Whedon somehow found time to shoot another film while making “The Avengers”
    http://muchadothemovie.com/

    The new trailer for “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol”.
    http://geekactually.com/2011/10/30/new-trailer-mission-impossible-ghost-protocol/

    This is just heartwarming

    Never give up on your dreams. First, Dan Trachtenberg, director of Portal: No Escape has been signed to direct a sci-fi feature called Crime of the Century for Universal and now James Curran, who animated a little Tintin credits sequence for fun, has now been offered a job by Spielberg. Links to these little tidbits:
    http://www.slashfilm.com/portal-escape-helmer-dan-trachtenberg-direct-scifi-heist-movie-crime-century-universal/
    http://www.slashfilm.com/animator-unofficial-tintin-credits-meets-spielberg-offered-job/

    Lists of Five

    This week our Lists of Five: Five of Our Favourite Movie Vehicles. Whether it be a car, plane or spaceship, the vehicles that our favourite characters drive can be just as much a character as the main star. Here are our favourites.

    Just a reminder, because we never like to just make things easy on ourselves, our lists are not necessarily top five lists, they are more or a less a list of film recommendations within the theme of the list.

    Feedback

    Tristan wanted us to know about a casting idea for Robocop.
    http://www.beyondhollywood.com/padilhas-favors-fassbender-for-upcoming-robocop-remake/

    Agree or disagree with us or you just have something to say? send email to feedback@filmactually.com or drop us a voicemail at 02 8011 3167.

    The Rest…

    David’s “My Year With Movies” blog is on Tumbr

    Join us on our Facebook Fan Page: facebook.com/GeekActually or follow Geek Actually on Twitter @geekactually

    Make sure you check out our new range of Geek Actually swag at cafepress.com.au/geekactually

    The Reel Junkies podcast can be found at weekendronin.com

    Brad and Charlie (formerly of “Movie Fan House”) are back, their new site is ReboundRadio.com and their new podcasts are “Good Day Sir!” and “Movie Match Up”

    Rachelle is over at The Funky Film Show, Thursdays on Radio Freemantle 107.9 FM or radiofreemantle.com

    Find out more about Josh’s other stuff by visiting HipHopNetOnline.com or listen to his other show “DLC Live” go to RawDLC.com or follow him on Twitter @DoGM3At

    Find more by Richard Gray by visiting theReelBits.com or follow him on Twitter @DVDbits

    We are closing the show with a track from the score from “Drive” by Cliff Martinez.

    The opening clip is from “Police Academy”

  • Review: Drive

    Review: Drive

    [stextbox id=”grey” caption=”Drive (2011)” float=”true” align=”right” width=”200″]

    Drive - poster (Australia)

    Director: Nicolas Winding Refn

    Runtime: 100 minutes

    Starring: Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan, Albert Brooks, Bryan Cranston, Ron Perlman

    Distributor: Pinnacle

    CountryUS

    Rating: Certified Bitstastic (?)

    More info [/stextbox]

    Like many a pimped out ride that has come before it, Danish director Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive pulls up alongside the curb as if towed by vehicle fueled purely by hype. Since putting himself on the map with his trilogy of Pusher films, Refn has been steadily building a profile as an often brutal yet stylish filmmaker, and his most recent efforts of Bronson and Valhalla Rising have only solidified this reputation. Hitching his testosterone injected motifs to the incredible wave of swooning happening around star Ryan Gosling, the man you wish your man could be, Drive has already won the outspoken Refn the Best Director Award at the Cannes Film Festival, and shows no signs of slowing down by the time it hits our cinema lights.

    The Driver (Ryan Gosling, Crazy, Stupid, Love) works as a mechanic and a stunt driver, eking out a living between professional jobs as a getaway driver. From an early stage, we see the Driver’s skills, not only as a fast and skilled driver, but as a tactical one as well. Shannon (Bryan Cranston, TV’s Breaking Bad) employs the Driver for his repair skills, but banks on his strength behind the wheel when he asks mobster Bernie Rose (Albert Brooks, The Simpsons Movie) and his thuggish business partner Nino (Ron Perlman) for a $300,000 loan to start a racing venture. Meanwhile, the Driver gets to know his neighbour Irene (Carey Mulligan, Never Let Me Go) and her son, spending time with them even after her husband Standard (Oscar Isaac) comes home from prison. However, when a job goes wrong, the Driver’s attempts to put things right lands everyone he knows in jeopardy.

    While it may share some characteristics with the 1978 Walter Hill film The Driver, with Drive Refn has created one of the first truly original crime dramas in decades. Like that film, it unquestionably draws influences from Jean-Pierre Melville’s films, and in particular Le Samouraï. The Driver is a solitary creature, rarely allowing himself the indulgence of possessions or romantic entanglements, for these are the weaknesses that ultimately lead to the troubles he lands himself in. For the first half of the film, few pieces of dialogue escape from the taciturn Gosling, and he remains in the retro-jacketed uniform he has fashioned for himself, much as Alain Delon’s iconic trenchcoat served as a emotional barrier between his actions and their consequences.

    Gosling solidifies his reputation as a master of duality, switching between extremes as he has done before in Blue Valentine, Lars and the Real Girl and even Crazy, Stupid, Love. Mulligan is effortlessly graceful and fragile, and will undoubtedly break any hearts that haven’t already fallen to a massive crush (or man crush) for Gosling himself. The real surprise here, although it shouldn’t be given his veteran status in the industry, is the non-comic turn of Albert Brooks, actually managing to a powerful enough force to intimidate even the bulldozer of a man that is Ron Perlman.

    It would be unreasonable to expect Drive to be a Fast and Furious-style caper, as one litigious Michigan citizen did, but Refn’s sense of style makes this a much slicker affair than his previous efforts. The film is brutally violent in places, and unlike its bigger budget cousins, Drive wants to shock you each and every time, and audiences are never numbed to the visceral outbursts that the Driver has lurking under his skin. Yet there is a retro coolness to the film that even the most bloody of face-stompings can’t deny, drawing as much from Bullit and its kin as the artier pieces the lengthy close-ups often indicate. A cracking soundtrack, largely by Cliff Martinez (The Lincoln Lawyer, Contagion) and peppered with pop pieces such as Kavinsky’s distinctive “Nightcall” and Desire’s “Under Your Spell”, helps shape Refn’s distinctive vision into the singular experience that it is.

    [stextbox id=”custom”]An amazing cast and a distinctive aesthetic elevates the pulp fiction of Drive to one of the undeniable classics of 2011, and sure to be a favourite for years to come.[/stextbox]

    Drive is released in Australia on 27 October 2011 from Pinnacle Films.

  • Cool Drive poster from Hopko Designs

    Cool Drive poster from Hopko Designs

    Our good friend Scott Hopko of Hopko Designs sent us over this concept artwork for Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive.

    Drive is the story of a Hollywood stunt driver-by-day (Gosling), a loner by nature, who moonlights as a top-notch getaway driver-for-hire in the criminal underworld. He finds himself a target for some of LA’s most dangerous men after agreeing to aid the husband of his beautiful neighbour, Irene (Mulligan). When the job goes dangerously awry, the only way he can keep Irene and her son alive is to do what he does best—Drive!

    This is not official artwork, of course, but we just really like the look of this. It reminds us of the Queens of the Stone age music video for “Go With the Flow“!

    Drive poster - Hopko Designs

    You can find more of Hopko’s movie posters over at his Facebook page, and their design work at his website. There’s some more cool art for classic and contemporary films.

    Drive is released on 27 October 2011 in Australia from Pinnacle.