Tag: Tom Pelphrey

  • 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: Marvel’s Iron Fist – Season 1 (Episodes 1 – 6)

    Review: Marvel’s Iron Fist – Season 1 (Episodes 1 – 6)

    MARVEL’S IRON FIST has some of the heaviest lifting to do of all the Netflix series so far. Not coming with the existing popular cache of Daredevil, or the backdoor pilot that Jessica Jones gave Luke Cage, IRON FIST is the final offering from this world before they come together as The Defenders later this year. In the first half of the season, the show often struggles to find the right balance between ‘origin story’ and universe lynchpin. 

    Billionaire heir Danny Rand (Finn Jones) returns to New York after disappearing with his family in a plane crash 15 years earlier. Trying to restore his name and legacy, he must not only prove himself to his former friends but also fight a creeping evil that is seeping into his home. Now equipped with the skills of a kung-fu master, he has the ability to tap into a mystical power that marks him as the Immortal Iron Fist.

    Iron Fist - Colleen Wing

    What makes Danny Rand immediately distinct is that the show begins with the character already able to access his powers, but a series of obstacles prevent him from doing so. The strongest comparison that IRON FIST will have to overcome is that of Batman Begins, with a thematically (and narratively) similar arc to that of Christopher Nolan’s Bruce Wayne. However, unlike the immediacy of Crime Alley tragedy, IRON FIST sets up a false barrier of Rand trying to regain his fortune, going so far as to lock him away in an asylum for two episodes in order to suppress his birthright. 

    Indeed, inner city dojo owner Colleen Wing (Jessica Henwick)  has a far more engaging storyline, one that mirrors Danny’s own. Her steel cage fights show a character caught between money and honour, something Rand is also struggling with, but at least Wing’s storyline maintains the street-level grittiness of the other Marvel series.

    Yet Jones is a likeable enough lead, even if his character is the most removed from the audience to date. There’s a childlike innocence to his outlook in these early episodes, and it’s a refreshing change of pace to the darkened brush that’s tarred Matt Murdock, Jessica Jones and Luke Cage. When we do get martial arts scenes, and hints of Danny’s true potential, they are lightning fast and reminiscent of old-school action. A hotel fight that spills into an elevator, bathed in red light, is almost as intense and exciting as Daredevil’s infamous corridor scene.

    Luke Cage began to show the limitations of the 13 episode format, stretching a story over six times the length of a feature film. IRON FIST suffers from some of the same problems, compounded by a first-season storyline (that is, a billionaire regaining his fortune) that strays from the core of the character. These episodes set up a lot of great potential, including the ultimate villains and the battle for New York that is to come, but you may need the patience of K’un-Lun to get there.

    NB: Netflix graciously provided us with advance copies of the first six episodes of IRON FIST for review purposes. A review of the full season will follow in due course.

    [stextbox id=”grey” bgcolor=”F2F2F2″ mleft=”5″ mright=”5″ image=”null”]2017 | US | Developed by: Scott Buck | Cast: Finn Jones, Jessica Henwick, David Wenham, Jessica Stroup, Tom Pelphrey, Rosario Dawson | Distributor: Netflix | Episodes: 6 (of 13)[/stextbox]