Friday Sep 03
TheatricalThe Expendables (2010)
19/08/2010 | Nikki Baughan

On The Sly Eighties action movies will always hold a special place in cinematic history, their glorious excesses a continuing influence. But although it's been hyped as 2010's biggest movie, there was always the possibility that The Expendables would be nothing more than an exe [ ... ]


TheatricalKnight and Day (2010)
10/08/2010 | Paul Spragg

Summer Knights When June Havens (Cameron Diaz) finds herself on a rapidly descending plane with a strange man, she’s pleased to awaken the next day back in her own bed. But the mysterious Roy Miller (Tom Cruise) quickly reappears in her life and tells June she’s in danger, c [ ... ]


More Theatrical Reviews

Moon (2009)

Theatrical

Man in the moon...

16

In the not so distant future, after mankind has ravaged the Earth’s natural resources to the brink of destruction, salvation is found on the far side of the moon. It is home to massive quantities of Helium-3, a fuel that has become essential to mankind’s survival, and so mega-corporation Lunar Industries sends astronauts to oversee the mining of this miracle element and its safe passage back to earth.

Sam Bell (Rockwell) is coming to the end of his solitary two-year stint in the lunar wasteland and, after only having his sardonic super-computer GERTY (voiced by Kevin Spacey) for company, is 4desperate for some human contact from his wife and young daughter. But when Sam’s health begins to deteriorate, and he begins to see things he can’t explain, he starts to question his sanity. And when he meets the person sent to replace him, things go quickly from bad to worse to weird.

9Although Moon, the sci-fi thriller from British writer/director Duncan Jones (son of David Bowie, no less), has echoes of modern masters like Kubrick, Cameron and Scot it follows its own narrative orbit thanks to a subtle yet creepy story, atmospheric visuals and a stellar turn by Rockwell as a man unsure about whether he’s losing his mind or uncovering a painful truth. Despite it’s relatively small scale and 7limited range – Sam’s entire frame of reference consists of the claustrophobic Mining Base and the dusty grey nothingness of the Moon’s surface – the role demands a great deal from Rockwell. And he certainly delivers, grounding the classic sci-fi themes of identity, alienation, technology and that final frontier of space with a performance that runs the gamut of visceral human emotion from euphoria to terror, despair to acceptance. That he also manages to inject some wry humour into the mix adds an increasing sense of poignancy as the film slowly reveals itself.

11As a British sci-fi movie, Moon is something to be proud of; a beautifully-crafted fable about the consequences of human greed and unfettered technological endeavour that’s plausible enough to be genuinely chilling. And the fact that it’s been made at our very own Shepperton Studios, for an amount of money that wouldn’t cover the publicity campaigns of most Hollywood movies, makes the achievement all the more worth celebrating.

4 stars

Play Moon Clip One

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Play Moon Clip Three

Play Moon Clip Four

Play Moon: Director Duncan Jones Featurette

Play Moon Trailer

ROLL CREDITS...
Stars Sam Rockwell, Benedict Wong
Director Duncan Jones
Screenplay
Nathan Parker, from a story by Duncan Jones
Certificate 15
Distributor Sony Pictures
Running Time 1hr 37mins
Opens July 17


Theatrical Reviews Archive

Star Trek (2009)
X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009)
Night at the Museum 2 (2009)
Drag Me To Hell (2009)
Terminator Salvation (2009)
Dorian Gray (2009)
Tormented (2009)
Angels & Demons (2009)
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009)
Coraline (2009)
Summer Scars (2007)
Blind Loves (2008)
The Wrestler (2008)
Helen (2008)
Inglourious Basterds (2009)
Watchmen (2009)
Cherry Blossoms (2008)
Aliens in the Attic (2009)
Paul Blart: Mall Cop (2009)
Fireflies in the Garden (2009)
Jennifer's Body (2009)
GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra (2009)
Synecdoche, New York (2008)
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009)
Bottle Shock (2008)
Public Enemies (2009)
Delta (2008)
Afghan Star (2008)
Moon (2009)
The Taking of Pelham 123 (2009)
Awaydays (2009)
500 Days of Summer
Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009)
Anything For Her (2008)
District 9 (2009)
Gran Torino (2008)
Orphan (2009)
Brüno (2009)
Paranormal Activity (2009)
The Last House on the Left (2009)
New Town Killers (2008)
Frozen River (2008)
Year One (2009)
Just Another Love Story (2007)
Sunshine Cleaning (2009)
Not Quite Hollywood (2008)
The Disappeared (2008)
Zombieland (2009)
Adam (2009)
Fuck (2005)
This Is It (2009)
Coco Before Chanel (2009)
The Unborn (2009)
The Yes Men Fix the World (2009)
Heartless (2009)
2012 (2009)
Sex and the City 2 (2010)
Shutter Island (2010)
The Road (2009)
Iron Man 2 (2010)
The Bad Lieutenant - Port of Call: New Orleans (2009)
Cemetery Junction (2010)
The Scouting Book For Boys (2009)
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (2009): Review & Clips
Robin Hood (2010)
DVD & Blu-ray Reviews: April 26, 2010
Predators (2010)
Lebanon (2009)
Hierro (2009)
Tetro (2009)
Knight and Day (2010)
The Expendables (2010)

FrightFest 2010

Highlights

FrightFest 2010

FrightFeat_thumbThe full line-up for FrightFest 2010 promises enough thrills and chills to please even the most hardened horror fan...

READ MORE: FrightFest 2010


Red

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Action hero Bruce Willis tells us all about new comic book adaptation Red...

 

READ MORE:Red


Machete

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The first international trailer for Robert Rodriguez's crime thriller Machete, starring Danny Trejo, Robert De Niro and Lindsay Lohan.

READ MORE: Machete

Movie Highlight

The Expendables

Eighties action movies will always hold a special place in cinematic history, their glorious excesses a continuing influence. But although it's been hyped as 2010's biggest movie, there was always the possibility that The Expendables would be nothing more than an exercise in nostalgia. Luckily, it's a little more than that.

READ FULL REVIEW:  The Expendables

DVD Highlight

The Scouting Book For Boys

With the likes of An Education and A Single Man dominating awards ceremonies, and films like Philip Ridley's Heartless on the horizon, it's easy to feel upbeat about the current state of British cinema. When something like The Scouting Book For Boys comes along, it' also easy to feel inspired, excited and proud of our home-grown talent...

READ FULL REVIEW: The Scouting Book For Boys

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