Tag: Charles Dance

  • Review: Mank

    Review: Mank

    Whether Citizen Kane is still the greatest film ever made is a matter of regular debate, one I’ve engaged in from time to time. Yet almost eight decades after its release, it is unquestionably one of the most influential movies in the canon.

    Even more fascinating is the story behind the printed legend. The debut work of talented wunderkind Orson Welles and his war with newspaper magnate William Randolf Hearst has been covered in the documentary The Battle for Citizen Kane, and later fictionalised in RKO 281 (1999). Both acknowledge the importance of screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz, best known at the time as the fixer of other people’s screenplays.

    Now co-credited as the writer of Citizen Kane, Mankiewicz’s life and process serves as the focal point of David Fincher’s MANK, his first feature in six years. Based on the screenplay of his father Jack Fincher (who died in 2003), the film casts Gary Oldman as the titular Mank.

    Amanda Seyfried in Mank (Netflix)

    The writer is introduced as a literally broken man: an alcoholic exiled by Welles (Tom Burke) to a remote house, and his leg in plaster from a hitherto undisclosed accident. Tended to by secretary Rita (Lily Collins) and a German nurse, the writing process unfolds through flashbacks to his tumultuous relationship with Hearst (a magnificent Charles Dance), Marion Davies (Amanda Seyfried) and MGM studio head Louis B. Mayer (Arliss Howard).

    While the Finchers lean a little heavily into Pauline Kael’s (largely debunked) 1971 essay claiming Mank’s sole authorship of Citizen Kane, not to mention Mank’s own contention of sole writing credit, this is a mighty fine piece of filmmaking from Mr. Fincher the younger. Maybe even one of his best.

    On a technical level, Fincher and cinematographer Erik Messerschmidt (Mindhunter, Gone Girl) pay tribute to much of Welles’ style – from the non-linear narrative to the prodigious emphasis on light and shadow. The period accurate Trent Reznor/Atticus Ross score is a revelation from the duo who, let’s face it, have produced some excellent but samey pieces over the years.

    Gary Oldman and Lily Collins in Mank (Netflix)

    It’s a strong portrait of a flawed human, played with characteristic aplomb by Oldman, while Welles and co take a serious backseat to the the Mank/Hearst dichotomy. In a stark contrast with RKO 281, it’s nice to see Seyfried’s Marion Davies given more agency than the Melanie Griffith version. Indeed, Fincher goes in the opposite direction by casting Davies as a self-aware wit and equal to Mank’s own mind.

    Yet she is one of the few women who gets a strong outing though, as most other women in the cast – from Tuppence Middleton as Mank’s wife (‘poor Sarah’) to Collins as a captive audience – are merely background players.

    Instead, there’s an entire sidebar about the political war in Hollywood around the gubernatorial race of socialist Upton Sinclair (Bill Nye). Already slightly discombobulating in its shifting perspectives, the race is a symbolic but arguably extraneous detail, one that only feels like its there to draw parallels with Kane‘s narrative beats.

    Nevertheless, MANK is a constantly compelling portrait. Critic and historian Robert Carringer may have put the authorship debate to bed over 40 years ago, but thanks to Fincher we have a lovingly detailed and vividly realised time capsule of this endlessly intriguing period.

    2020 | US | DIRECTOR: David Fincher | WRITER: Jack Fincher| CAST: Gary Oldman, Amanda Seyfried, Lily Collins, Arliss Howard, Charles Dance, Tom Pelphrey, Sam Troughton, Ferdinand Kingsley, Tuppence Middleton, Tom Burke, Joseph Cross, Jamie McShane, Toby Leonard Moore, Monika Gossmann | DISTRIBUTOR: Netflix| RUNNING TIME: 131 minutes | RELEASE DATE: 19 November 2020 (Limited theatrical), 4 December 2020 (Netflix)

  • Review: Godzilla: King of the Monsters

    Review: Godzilla: King of the Monsters

    The sequel to 2014’s Godzilla has been a long time coming, but Legendary Pictures has been very slowly building a universe in the interim. Together with Kong: Skull Island and the forthcoming Godzilla vs. Kong, the MonsterVerse shows us just how crowded it can be in this first direct sequel.

    After suffering a family tragedy during the 2014 stompfest, paleobiologist Emma Russell (Vera Farmiga) and animal behaviuoralist Mark Russell are estranged. When Emma andher daughter Madison (Millie Bobby Brown) are kidnapped by environmental extremists for device capable of calming down the “titans,” the embittered Mark joins forces with Monarch scientists and soldiers to help track them down.

    If Godzilla was frequently accused of not showing us enough of the monster, then GODZILLA: KING OF THE MONSTERS goes in the other direction. In an attempt to squeeze in as many of Toho’s famous kaiju as possible, the film’s MacGuffin (the aforementioned device known as the “Orca”) is used to revive and attract the heavy-hitters of the historic franchise: Mothra, Rodan, and Ghidorah.

    Godzilla: King of the Monsters

    To the film’s credit, it at least attempts to expand on the canon and give us a point of difference from the 34 films that preceded it. From alien influences to ancient civilisations and numerous references to Skull Island, here’s a franchise peddling as hard as it can to build an empire. Yet it does so at the expense of the human moments or the slow-building tension of its predecessor.

    When it concentrates on several key characters, not least of which are the handful of beautiful climactic moments with Ken Watanabe’s Dr. Ishirō Serizawa, writers Michael Dougherty and Zach Shields show us what a human-centred monster flick could look like. Beloved characters are dispatched without ceremony, while others are barely developed beyond their introductory scene.

    The film is naturally in its element during the massive monster clashes. Clearly previsualised and planned out to the Nth degree, some of these give us the film’s most visually stunning moments. There’s one moment where a beastie is visualised against a ruby red sky atop a kind of Bald Mountain. You can almost hear the Mussorgsky. In isolation, these digital backdrops are gorgeous.

    Yet they also speak to one of the key issues with the film. Krampus director Dougherty is so intent on matching up as many monsters as possible that it all just becomes a messy and static series of storyboards brought to life. The post-credits show the way towards the future, but we’re not sure there’s anything left standing in Gojira’s wake.

    2019 | US | DIR: Michael Dougherty | WRITER: Michael Dougherty, Zach Shields | CAST: Kyle Chandler, Vera Farmiga, Millie Bobby Brown, Bradley Whitford, Sally Hawkins, Charles Dance, Thomas Middleditch, Aisha Hinds, O’Shea Jackson Jr., David Strathairn, Ken Watanabe, Zhang Ziyi | DISTRIBUTOR: Roadshow Films (AUS) | RUNNING TIME: 132 minutes | RELEASE DATE: 30 May 2019 (AUS)

  • Watch the legacy trailer for ‘Underworld: Blood Wars’

    Watch the legacy trailer for ‘Underworld: Blood Wars’

    The Age of the Sequel continues with the first-look trailer for UNDERWORLD: BLOOD WARS, the follow-up to the 2012 film Underworld: Awakening and the fifth film in the series. Directed by Anna Foerster, in her feature debut, it releases in Australian cinemas on 1 December 2016 from Sony.

    The next installment in the blockbuster franchise follows Vampire death dealer, Selene (Kate Beckinsale) as she fends off brutal attacks from both the Lycan clan and the Vampire faction that betrayed her. With her only allies, David (Theo James) and his father Thomas (Charles Dance), she must stop the eternal war between Lycans and Vampires, even if it means she has to make the ultimate sacrifice.

    Also starring Lara Pulver, Bradley James, James Faulkner, it certainly retains the look and feel of the first four entries in the series, and it will be interesting to see how much executive producer Len Weisman’s hand is felt on the production. Like Resident Evil: The Final Chapter, also due out in the next few months from Sony, we’re perfectly content to abandon all critical reason when it comes to this series. The slick vampires versus werewolves mashup has always contained a rich mythology worth mining, and the German-born director Foerster has a strong history of working on blockbusters, most regularly with Roland Emmerich as a cinematographer, visual artist and second unit director. A film and filmmaker to keep an eye on.

  • Review: Ghostbusters (2016)

    Review: Ghostbusters (2016)

    Ghostbusters poster (Australia)Pitting a new generation of SNL cast members against paranormal threats, the divisive remake is fun, funny and funky in its own right.

    It’s impossible to separate Paul Feig’s GHOSTBUSTERS from the 1984 original. It’s not just the name and iconography that connects it to Ivan Reitman’s supernatural comedy, but it’s a comparison that Feig invites by aping its structure and formula. Yet while it is difficult to wholly treat the 2016 paranormal investigators and eliminators as distinct entities, the strength of the cast is certainly is own flavour of Twinkie.

    Mirroring the iconic New York Public Library haunting, Feig opens in a stately manor and a completely absurdist tone to the dialogue, instantly distinguishing it from the sardonic humour of Bill Murray and co. Erin Gilbert (Kristen Wiig) finds her tenure at Columbia University threatened when an old book she wrote with Abby Yates (Melissa McCarthy) on the paranormal resurfaces. Erin’s confrontation of Abby, now working with experimental nuclear engineer Jillian Holtzmann (Kate McKinnon), coincides with the beginning of an invasion of ghosts in the city. Teaming up with subway worker Patty Tolan (Leslie Jones), and their dippy receptionist Kevin (Chris Hemsworth), the team must prove they are not frauds.

    If the first Ghostbusters saw a group of SNL comedians defying expectations, then the GHOSTBUSTERS reboot is a cast at the top of their game laughing in the face of the same burden. Fully aware of its own cultural impact, Feig and co-writer Katie Dippold (Parks and Recreation) work that into the script at every opportunity, commenting on message board snipes (“Ain’t no bitches gonna hunt no ghosts”) that echo the visceral bile spewed by trolls at the very idea of this remake. It’s both a strength and an Achille’s heel for the film, hip enough to be conscious of its audience, but saddled with the need to address them repeatedly.

    The Ghostbusters Holtzmann (Kate McKinnon), Patty (Leslie Jones), Erin (Kristen Wiig), Abby (Melissa McCarthy) with their receptionist Kevin (Chris Hemsworth) in Columbia Pictures' GHOSTBUSTERS.

    GHOSTBUSTERS plays to the strengths of its leads, carefully taking time to give each a backstory, rather that simply transplanting them into existing characters. Wiig and McCarthy share an easy on-screen presence, slipping effortlessly into a straight/funny dichotomy in several seemingly ad-libbed scenes. McKinnon’s comedy is a bit more erratic, and while it may try the patience of some, but her maniacal joy over her various tinker toys is as infectious as it is overwhelming. Hemsworth steals many of the scenes he’s in, a clueless antithesis to Annie Pott’s Janine Melnitz, but no less charming. Hemsworth shows his versatile range of physical comedy as well, proving there’s life beyond the spandex for him. Yet it’s Jones who gets some of the best lines as a counterpoint to the nerdish scientists, and unlike Ernie Hudson’s everyman approach, she adds literal street smarts as a vital part of the team.

    At the same time, the script lacks a strong through-line, absent of the rich mythology than Dan Aykroyd painstakingly wove between the one-liners and marshmallow men. Neil Casey’s Rowan is a weak default villain, never achieveing the same pervading threat of Gozer or a Carpathian’s river of slime. Andy García as the Mayor of New York City, with an assistant in the always terrific Cecily Strong, is mostly perfunctory as the bureaucratic roadblock. Instead, the film follows the modern conventions of origin stories, perhaps giving a little too much breathing room to an often freewheeling plot filled with cameos from all the surviving original cast members.

    GHOSTBUSTERS works best when it is a straight-up joyous 21st century celebration of its own legacy, complete with slime baths, proton blasts, and giant creatures stomping through New York. In the familiar finale, McKinnon’s Holtzmann chaotically rips through a horde of oncoming spectres, gleefully mowing them down with her inventions. It’s the kid let loose in candy store, which is exactly what Feig gets to do with this outing, one that achieves its aim for the most part. If the hints at the end of the credits are any indication, we’re in for more nods to that canon in the near future, and this can only be a good thing.

    2016 | US | DIR: Paul Feig | WRITERS: Katie Dippold, Paul Feig | CAST: Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Kate McKinnon, Leslie Jones, Chris Hemsworth, Charles Dance, Michael Kenneth Williams | DISTRIBUTOR: Sony Pictures | RUNNING TIME: 116 minutes | RATING: ★★★½