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

Year One (2009)

Theatrical

The devolution of comedy...

Year-One-2On paper, it must have looked like a hit. Directed by the legendary Harold Ramis (Ghostbusters, Groundhog Day), produced by modern comedy wunderkind Judd Apatow (Knocked Up) and starring box office golden boys Jack Black (School of Rock) and Michael Cera (Superbad) – along with a host of familiar genre faces – Year One has enough talent behind it to fuel a blockbuster. Throw in a simple story of the adventures of two primitive hunter-gatherers that seemingly leaves plenty of room for Black and Cera to clown around, and you’ve got the formula for a comedy classic, right?

Oh, so wrong.

Because, despite the sheer weight of people involved both in front of and behind the camera, Year One buckles at the first bad gag and it’s downhill from there. In fact, watching it could make you wonder whether comedy has evolved beyond toilet humour and fake vomit.

Year_One_4The premise is promising, in a 'scope for laughs’ kind of way. When the accident prone Zed (Black) and Oh (Cera) are banished from their village, they embark on a journey of discovery that leads them out into the wider world. Along they way they meet a host of familiar characters, including feuding brothers Cain (David Cross) and Abel (Paul Rudd), God-fearing Hebrew Abraham (Hank Azaria) and a sadistic Roman army general (played to predictably wooden effect by Vinnie Jones). The pair finally reach the legendary ‘devil’s playground’ of Soddom, where they take on the might of the King (Xander Berkeley) and kinky High Priest (Oliver Platt) in order to save their enslaved friends.

Year_One_7It’s hard to know what’s more difficult to stomach. Is it watching Jack Black eat some poo and realising that somebody, somewhere thought this was what constituted comedy? Or is it realising that such a multitude of talent – and a great deal of time, money and effort - has been squandered on a film that’s slapdash, lazy and deeply unfunny. It’s not even offensive as, despite the profanity, gross-out jokes and bible bashing, it just feels like watching a group of kids trying to shock their parents with bad words and jokes about excrement. And it’s not just boring, it’s also confusing, throwing biblical and historical references into the same melting pot of crass stupidity; any attempts at religious satire, however lowbrow they were intended to be, fall way, way short of Monty Python’s Life of Brian.

Year_One_5It’s clear that all those involved had a great deal of fun making the movie, and working with each other. But it seems that – with the exception of Michael Cera, whose wonderfully self-depricating performance earns Year One its only star - they forgot that they also had a whole audience to entertain.

1 star

Watch Year One Trailer

ROLL CREDITS...
Stars Jack Black, Michael Cera, Oliver Platt
Director Harold Ramis
Screenplay Harold Ramis, Gene Stupnitsky & Lee Eisenberg
Certificate 12A
Distributor Columbia Pictures
Running Time 1hr 37mins
Opens June 26


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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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