Sunday Mar 14
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

Summer Scars (2007)

Theatrical

If you go down to the woods today...

SS-JonesyHunted2Oh, to be a teenager again. Standing on the cusp of adulthood, with all the opportunities it promises, but still able to rely on mum washing your clothes and cooking your tea. But not even good old mum can help the kids at the centre of Julian Richards’ low budget thriller, whose devil-may-care push for independence ends up costing them dearly.

SS-PeterBenMugsGun1Fourteen year old Bingo (Ciaran Joyce) and his mates decide to skip school to hang out in the woods. Soon a day of skiving, smoking and snogging is interrupted by the arrival of Peter (Kevin Howarth), an unkempt drifter who, after winning the group’s trust, soon begins to reveal his true nature. Peter’s knockabout jibes soon turn into violent bullying, but it’s he reveals what he’s got in store for lone girl Leanne (Amy Harvey) that things really get out of hand. And, by the time the dust settles, nothing can ever be the same.

SS-LEANNE3That Richards’ film starts out as a run-of-the-mill teen drama and ends up a chilling allegory about the fragile innocence of youth is more to do with his spirited young cast than the story itself. The narrative is flimsy, on paper a one-note horror that doesn’t promise much, but in the hands of its cast it turns into a short, sharp shocker. Howarth brings an unstable intensity to Peter, the fact that he’s ex-military hints at post-traumatic stress that lingers, unexplored, in his every move. And, as the kids run the gamut of emotion from swaggering bravado to disbelief to sheer terror, Summer Scars develops into something altogether more disturbing, with a climax as brutal as any Hollywood slasher. It may well be an exercise in low-budget simplicity, but it's a neat little chiller that doesn't outstay its welcome. 3 stars

(This review has also been published on Little White Lies )

ROLL CREDITS...
Stars
Ciaran Joyce, Kevin Howarth, Amy Harvey
Director Julian Richard
Screenplay Al Wilson
Certficate 15
Distributor Jinga Films
Running Time 1hr 8mins
Opens June 6 (showing as part of the ICA's New British Cinema Season, and in key UK cities)


Highlights

Alice in Wonderland

alicefeat2_thumbWe chat to Alice in Wonderland director Tim Burton and stars Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham-Carter, Michael Sheen, Anne Hathaway and Jemma Powell

READ MORE: Alice in Wonderland


Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans

badltfeat_thumbNicolas Cage tells us all about harnessing his demons to play a troubled cop in Werner Herzog's Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans

READ MORE: Bad Lieutenant


Percy Jackson

percyfeat_thumb

In an exclusive interview, director Chris Columbus tells us how he's updated Greek mythology with Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief...

READ MORE:Percy Jackson

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

Like it? Share it!