Friday Mar 12
TheatricalShutter Island (2010)
09/02/2010 | Nikki Baughan

Mind games
It's 1954, and on an isolated island off the coast of Boston lies the notorious Ashecliffe psychiatric hospital. Housing some of the century's most dangerous criminals, it is normally completely off-limits to outsiders but, when one of the patients mysteriously vanish [ ... ]


TheatricalThe Road (2009)
10/01/2010 | Nikki Baughan

Long day's journey... The works of novelist Cormac McCarthy are proving to be something of a gold-mine for modern filmmakers. Back in 2000, actor-turned-director Billy Bob Thornton took on McCarthy's Western All the Pretty Horses, and in 2007 the Coen Brothers found Oscar glory  [ ... ]


More Theatrical Reviews

Fireflies in the Garden (2009)

Theatrical

Home is where the hurt is...

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Romance novelist Michael Taylor (Ryan Reynolds) is on his way back to his Midwestern hometown for a family celebration, a prospect that fills him with abject dread. He has no wish to share the news that his marriage to Kelly (Carrie Ann Moss) is crumbling, and is concerned about having another run-in with his father Charles (Willem Dafoe), with whom he has never enjoyed an easy relationship. On Michael’s arrival, however, everything changes; an accident has taken the life of his mother (Julia Roberts) and the whole family is in mourning. As Michael attempts to cop with his grief, he reconnects with his favourite Aunt Jane (Emily Watson), who, being only a little older than him, was his childhood confidante, and struggles to break through a decades-old emotional barrier that keeps him distant from his father.

 

JR_CB_WD_bdayAs family drama in the purest sense, Fireflies in the Garden marks a solid debut for writer/director Dennis Lee and one of which he should be justly proud. The story alone is pretty straightforward stuff, standard dysfunctional family fare, but it’s lifted way above usual genre constraints by a truly outstanding ensemble cast. That a new film-maker could assemble such an array of talent obviously speaks to the strength of his material, but it’s the performances, rather than the script (adapted from a poem by Robert Frost), that shine.

WD_RRReynolds is excellent as Michael, a man torn apart by his various crumbling relationships but not reduced to angsty, self-pitying caricature. He is a strong man, despite the difficulties he faces, and his internalizing of his emotions makes him a complex, interesting character. Interesting too is his relationship with his aunt, played in flashback by Heroes star Hayden Panettiere, which pins the past and present together and helps flesh out Michael’s difficult father, who was equally as harsh with the young Jane as he was with his own son.

JR_sunglassesThe rest of the cast are also great to watch, with Watson bringing in some humour as the no-nonsense grown-up Jane who receives a timely reminder of her own childhood, and Dafoe being intense yet vulnerable as a father realising he may be to blame for the estrangement of his son. And it’s good to see the ever-solid Julia Roberts back on screen again, even if to believe that she is old enough to be Ryan Reynolds mother takes a serious leap of faith.

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The strength of Fireflies in the Garden undoubtedly lies in its casting, although Lee directs his starry cast with confidence and flair and this should lead on to bigger and better things for the young film-maker. Indeed, that Julia Roberts is to produce his next film Jesus Henry Christ is proof that some of Hollywood’s A-list believe they have found a true talent.

3 stars


ROLL CREDITS...
Stars Ryan Reynolds, Julia Roberts, Willem Dafoe
Director & Screenplay Dennis Lee
Certificate 15
Distributor The Works
Running Time 1hr 39mins
Opening Date May 29



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Movie Highlight

Shutter Island

Mind games

It's 1954, and on an isolated island off the coast of Boston lies the notorious Ashecliffe psychiatric hospital. When one of the patients mysteriously vanishes, Detective Teddy Daniels (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his new partner Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo) arrive to solve the disappearance. Coming up against a secretive and tight-lipped staff, headed by Dr Cawley (Ben Kingsley), Teddy finds his investigation hampered at every turn. When he finally discovers what's been happening in the heavily-guarded lighthouse, Teddy thinks he's well on the way to cracking the case. But, as he begins having powerful dreams about his time spent liberating German concentration camps during WWII, and vivid hallucinations of his dead wife (Michelle Williams), can Teddy leave Shutter Island before it claims his sanity?

READ FULL REVIEW: Shutter Island

DVD Highlight

An Education

Directed by Danish film-maker Lone Scherfig, An Education is a coming of age drama is set in early 1960s Twickenham. Adapted by Nick Hornby from Lynn Barber’s memoir, the story revolves around intelligent teenage schoolgirl Jenny (Carey Mulligan) who has her head turned by the much older David (Peter Sarsgaard). As her burgeoning romance with David sweeps her along in a whirlwind of expensive presents, foreign trips and increasingly adult pursuits, Jenny is forced to decide between continuing her education and following her feelings.

READ FULL REVIEW: An Education

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