"A critic's job is to be interesting about why he or she likes or dislikes something." Sir Peter Hall. This is what I aspire to achieve here.
Friday, March 16, 2012
Departures: The 2012 Qantas Spirit of Youth Awards
Update: As per Krissie's comment below, the revised closing dates are now updated.
The Qantas Spirit of Youth Awards (SOYA) is Australia’s leading grants program for emerging, young creative talent. Talented Australians aged 30 and under across eleven creative fields – fashion, interactive content and gaming, written word, visual design and communications, film and video, photography, visual arts, craft and object design, music, architecture and interior design and animation – are invited to submit their work for a chance to receive financial support in the form of $5,000 in cash, as well as a rare 12-month mentorship opportunity with leading luminaries from the international creative community.
Celebrating its eighth year, SOYA has been instrumental in unearthing and nurturing young artists, designer, and creatives, helping them expand their horizons, build up their business and learn the ropes from some of the greatest creative minds in the world. This year, winners will also be sent on the trip-of-a-lifetime to premiere industry only events at the forefront of their fields.
All submissions can be made here.
Monday, March 12, 2012
Film Review: Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close. Rated PG (mild themes and coarse language). 129 minutes. Directed by Stephen Daldry. Screenplay by Eric Roth. Based on the novel by Jonathan Safran Foer.
Verdict: Lovers of great drama will be richly-rewarded by this compelling exploration of grief, hope and the power of imagination.
One of the major issues involved with making a film about the events of September 11 is the fact that the attacks on New York’s World Trade Center were so widely broadcast – and witnessed by people around the world – in real time. Most of us remember where we were and how we felt – and the analogy at the time (an attempt, perhaps, to make sense of the incomprehensible horror), was that it was like watching a movie.
The challenge, then, for filmmakers taking on “the worst day” is as simple as it is complicated: what are you going to tell us about this preposterous act of terrorism against a country’s civilians that we haven’t already been told? How, ten years later, are you going to further illuminate the events and/or the lasting legacy of what happened on September 11?
Monday, March 5, 2012
Film Review: The Artist

The Artist. Rated PG (mild themes). 100 minutes. Written and directed by Michel Hazanavicius.
Verdict: This little film’s Oscar haul is totally deserved as the rules of contemporary motion picture production are rewritten.
With the release of Warner Bros.’ The Jazz Singer (1927) starring Al Jolson and Lights of New York (1928), the era of silent film in Hollywood began an irreversible decline. Honoured, respectively, as the first feature-length ‘part-talkie’ and ‘talkie’, these two films heralded the arrival of synchronised dialogue and images – and by 1929, Hollywood was no longer producing silent films.
Any reservations about the extent to which a black and white, almost entirely silent film would rate against the kind of movies we are more used to seeing these days, instantly vanished. With his affectionate pastiche on the end of Hollywood’s celebrated silent era, Mr Hazanavicius delivers an extraordinarily involving, richly rewarding and complete cinematic experience.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Film Review: The Grey

The Grey. Rated MA 15+ (strong violence, survival themes and coarse language). 117 minutes. Directed by Joe Carnahan. Screenplay by Joe Carnahan and Ian Mackenzie Jeffers.
Verdict: A gripping, psychological thriller about the fear of death. Not recommended for anyone about to fly somewhere on a plane.
Hostile, remote, snow-bound environments have contributed to a number of memorable films about fear. Alive (1993) is the cinematic adaptation of Piers Paul Read’s best-seller about the survivors of a plane crash in the Andes who reluctantly resort to cannibalism in order to survive their ordeal. John Carpenter’s terrific The Thing (1982) pits scientists working in an Antarctic research station against an alien lifeform to thrilling effect.
In The Grey (based on a short story by Mr Mackenzie Jeffers), a group of Alaskan-based oil drilling workers are returning home to Anchorage from their isolated base when their plane crashes in a blizzard. Lead by John Ottway (Liam Neeson), the small number of survivors must conquer not only the perilous conditions, but a ferociously territorial wolf pack into whose hunting territory the plane has crashed.
Monday, February 20, 2012
Film Review: This Means War

This Means War. Rated M (sexual references, action violence and coarse language). 98 minutes. Directed by McG. Screenplay by Timothy Dowling and Simon Kinberg.
Verdict: A slick, classy, charisma zone. Just don’t expect too much.
With his screenplay for Mr and Mrs Smith (2005), Mr Kinberg created an ideal vehicle for Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie who polished off the roles of married assassins who had been hired to kill each other. As one of the three writers credited with the screenplay for Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes (2009), he also shared responsibility for the forensically researched blueprint that ensured this film had the potential to reach the cinematic heights it did. Add Mr Dowling, whose light, breezy and entirely predictable screenplay for Just Go with It (2011) ticked all the rom-com boxes, and you end up with a satisfying explanation of all that is good about This Means War.
Saturday, February 11, 2012
Film Review: The Vow

The Vow. Rated PG (mild themes, coarse language, nudity and sexual references). 104 minutes. Directed by Michael Sucsy. Screenplay by Jason Katims, Abby Kohn, Marc Silverstein and Michael Sucsy.
Verdict: Perfect Valentine’s fare. Just remember to keep your seat-belt fastened at all times.
Inspired by events in the life of Kim and Krickitt Carpenter, The Vow is a romantic drama that is as solid as a rock. And almost as interesting as one.
It all starts promisingly enough as we are introduced to two love birds – Paige (Rachel McAdams) and Leo (Channing Tatum, pictured) who leave a cinema and drive off into the wintery night. Moments later, after Paige takes off her seat-belt to have sex with Leo in the car, a truck slams into the back of their randomly parked vehicle, sending her flying head-first through the windscreen.
As an Insurance Commission of WA commercial about the importance of wearing a seat-belt, it might have all ended there successfully enough. But no. There’s another 100 infuriating minutes as poor old Leo desperately tries to remind his now-amnesic wife of how wonderful their pre-accident life together was. Standing in his way are Paige’s selfish parents Bill (Sam Neill) and Rita (Jessica Lange), and her smarmy lawyer ex-boyfriend Jeremy (Scott Speedman, of Underworld fame), who each prefer the Paige they remembered, manipulated and controlled in the years before she met the free-spirited Leo.
To their unending credit, Ms McAdams (Mean Girls, Sherlock Holmes) and Mr Tatum (Dear John) invest everything they have into the laboured, cliché-ridden script – and their devotion to the tasks at hand (and their charming and engaging onscreen chemistry) works entirely in the film’s favour. Ms Lange (Frances, Crimes of the Heart, American Horror Story) takes all of a few minutes in her brief scene in the garden to give the cast an acting master-class, while Mr Neill gives the impression of never feeling entirely comfortable with the fact that he’s in a scene at all.
Even though Mr Sucsy (Grey Gardens) directs with a fine sense of respectable intimacy, nothing can mask the film’s fatal flaw – which comes when Paige earnestly (and somewhat self-defeatingly) declares that she hopes, one day, to love someone as much as Leo loves her. The temptation to scream out of sheer frustration might be all too difficult to resist.
This review was commissioned by the Geraldton Newspaper Group
Monday, February 6, 2012
Film Review: Chronicle
Chronicle. Rated M (violence). 84 minutes. Directed by Josh Trank. Screenplay by Max Landis.
With their punchy, too-cool-for-school big screen debut, twenty-six year old filmmakers Josh Trank and Max Landis have found themselves riding a huge wave of popularity – and deservedly so. While it owes a considerable debt to the grand-daddies of the ‘hand-held camera/found footage/documentary-making nerd’ sub-genre Cloverfield (2008) and Blair Witch Project (1999), Chronicle wins points for the strength of the three excellent lead performances, its grand flights (quite literally) of imagination, and some impressive visual effects.
Andrew (Dane DeHaan, pictured) is living a claustrophobic existence at home with his parents – his mother who is slowly dying and his father who is a violent and abusive alcoholic. When his mates Steve (Michael B Jordan) and Matt (Alex Russell) discover a large crater with a hole in the middle of it, Andrew (who is documenting the extremes of his life with a video camera) is called upon to capture it on film. What the trio discover when they explore where the hole leads, changes their lives forever. Returning to the surface with supernatural powers, the trio – at first –use their new abilities playfully and to improve their popularity stakes amongst their peers. But as their combined powers to alter reality take a stronger hold, the battle becomes about how they will resist the dark side of extraordinary new possibilities.
True Blood cinematographer Matthew Jensen brings a generous (and recognisable) amount of that series’ visual flair to the screen, while editor Elliot Greenberg (Devil, Quarantine) works wonders with the rough and ready jump cuts – ensuring that the tension is mostly terrifically taut.
The dominant skill in this sub-genre is to never let us, or the camera, feel too comfortable or relaxed about where the story is taking us – and the spectacular climatic sequences in which good battles evil for the soul of one of the trio, are certainly worth the restless, edgy wait.
This review was commissioned by the Geraldton Newspaper Group.
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