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Do The Rustle

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DIRECTED BY Arthur Penn STARRING Marlon Brando, Jack Nicholson, Harry Dean Stanton Opens May 23, Cert 15, 126 mins The story is, on paper at least, the stuff of traditional westerns. Regulator Robert E Lee Clayton (Brando) is hired to take down Tom Logan (Nicholson) and his band of cattle thieves (Stanton, Randy Quaid and Frederic Forrest). Inevitably, it was originally viewed as Brando versus Nicholson?as if teaming the two great actors of American cinema was some kind of OK Corral in itself, but it resulted in a disappointingly bloodless encounter. Brando himself is wildly, wilfully eccentric?a riot of accents and costumes, including, famously, a dress and bonnet?while Nicholson, one year after winning his Oscar for One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, gives a restrained, sturdy performance as the rustler who wants to settle down. But watching this fine, crisp new print, you realise that the most substantial element of the film is novelist Thomas McGuane's brilliant script. A brief scene in which one of the rustlers is hospitably fed, furtively serviced and killed, transcends its place in the plot through the sheer quality of the writing. His host talks of Thomas Jefferson, his wife is bored, you glimpse the dynamic of the family, the scene building towards it inevitable conclusion. Later, Harry Dean (with a haircut and hat which make him look like he's just stepped out of a Frederic Remington painting) delivers a monologue about the killing of the dog which McGuane invests with quiet devastation. Of course, these were richer times for writers. Meanwhile, Penn directs indulgently, giving everybody time to establish their little patch in Montana. The much anticipated big bout, mano a mano, was never on the cards, though. Nicholson confronts the defenceless, fat Brando in his tub, covered in bubble bath, and can't bring himself to kill him. Both are too supine. That's their big scene together, and it dribbles away. Nicholson's love affair with the rancher's daughter, Kathleen Lloyd, on the other hand, is gloriously and even-handedly erotic, her desperate to lose her virginity, him lecherous yet infinitely considerate. One of the great '70s westerns?occasionally bizarre, frequently brilliant. Damn good to have it back.

DIRECTED BY Arthur Penn

STARRING Marlon Brando, Jack Nicholson, Harry Dean Stanton

Opens May 23, Cert 15, 126 mins

The story is, on paper at least, the stuff of traditional westerns. Regulator Robert E Lee Clayton (Brando) is hired to take down Tom Logan (Nicholson) and his band of cattle thieves (Stanton, Randy Quaid and Frederic Forrest). Inevitably, it was originally viewed as Brando versus Nicholson?as if teaming the two great actors of American cinema was some kind of OK Corral in itself, but it resulted in a disappointingly bloodless encounter. Brando himself is wildly, wilfully eccentric?a riot of accents and costumes, including, famously, a dress and bonnet?while Nicholson, one year after winning his Oscar for One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, gives a restrained, sturdy performance as the rustler who wants to settle down.

But watching this fine, crisp new print, you realise that the most substantial element of the film is novelist Thomas McGuane’s brilliant script. A brief scene in which one of the rustlers is hospitably fed, furtively serviced and killed, transcends its place in the plot through the sheer quality of the writing. His host talks of Thomas Jefferson, his wife is bored, you glimpse the dynamic of the family, the scene building towards it inevitable conclusion. Later, Harry Dean (with a haircut and hat which make him look like he’s just stepped out of a Frederic Remington painting) delivers a monologue about the killing of the dog which McGuane invests with quiet devastation.

Of course, these were richer times for writers. Meanwhile, Penn directs indulgently, giving everybody time to establish their little patch in Montana. The much anticipated big bout, mano a mano, was never on the cards, though. Nicholson confronts the defenceless, fat Brando in his tub, covered in bubble bath, and can’t bring himself to kill him. Both are too supine. That’s their big scene together, and it dribbles away. Nicholson’s love affair with the rancher’s daughter, Kathleen Lloyd, on the other hand, is gloriously and even-handedly erotic, her desperate to lose her virginity, him lecherous yet infinitely considerate.

One of the great ’70s westerns?occasionally bizarre, frequently brilliant. Damn good to have it back.

Ghosts Of The Abyss

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OPENED APRIL 18, CERT U, 59 MINS A known technophile, Cameron gets his mitts on the very latest kit for this 3D IMAX mini feature, and shows just how eye-popping this technology can be. Effectively a supplement to Titanic, the film?which will run at UK IMAX cinemas across the summer?sees Cameron and the affable Bill Paxton sailing to the North Atlantic with a cadre of scientists. Descending in mini submarines armed with camera-equipped robots to explore what remains of the luxury liner, Cameron and co compare the rusting but still elegant hulk with computer simulations and footage from his more famous film. The 'ghosts' of the title are costumed extras playing crew and passengers, superimposed on the ship's remains. The 3D IMAX technology makes you feel as if you're actually aboard the ship, and one of the biggest thrills is simply a mechanical claw looming at the camera, as if about to pinch your nose. All in all, a film that points the way forward to the IMAX movies to come.

OPENED APRIL 18, CERT U, 59 MINS

A known technophile, Cameron gets his mitts on the very latest kit for this 3D IMAX mini feature, and shows just how eye-popping this technology can be. Effectively a supplement to Titanic, the film?which will run at UK IMAX cinemas across the summer?sees Cameron and the affable Bill Paxton sailing to the North Atlantic with a cadre of scientists. Descending in mini submarines armed with camera-equipped robots to explore what remains of the luxury liner, Cameron and co compare the rusting but still elegant hulk with computer simulations and footage from his more famous film. The ‘ghosts’ of the title are costumed extras playing crew and passengers, superimposed on the ship’s remains. The 3D IMAX technology makes you feel as if you’re actually aboard the ship, and one of the biggest thrills is simply a mechanical claw looming at the camera, as if about to pinch your nose. All in all, a film that points the way forward to the IMAX movies to come.

Old School

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OPENS MAY 9, CERT 15, 90 MINS Todd Phillips directed the dumb-but-fun Road Trip but this is better, flinging grown men into the standard frat-com mix of beer bongs, hooters and revenge on the dean. Careerist Luke Wilson walks in on a gang-bang starring his wife, and moves out, winding up in the grounds of the local college. This inspires best mate Vince Vaughn (playing the same as in Swingers and Made) to set up their own fraternity. Sounds lame, and with early scenes involving breezeblocks tied to the knackers, Old School is at first nothing more than Animal House with hair loss. But as the mayhem goes on, it highlights the sadness in being a thirty something suddenly mugged by divorce and thrown back to square one?essentially a freshman with a beer gut. New face Will Ferrell comes to the fore here. All the bad things happen to him but he takes it on the chin in the hangdog style that until now was copyright of Bill Macy. For bringing Nick Hornby-style pathos to a tired genre, this is well worth bunking off for.

OPENS MAY 9, CERT 15, 90 MINS

Todd Phillips directed the dumb-but-fun Road Trip but this is better, flinging grown men into the standard frat-com mix of beer bongs, hooters and revenge on the dean.

Careerist Luke Wilson walks in on a gang-bang starring his wife, and moves out, winding up in the grounds of the local college. This inspires best mate Vince Vaughn (playing the same as in Swingers and Made) to set up their own fraternity. Sounds lame, and with early scenes involving breezeblocks tied to the knackers, Old School is at first nothing more than Animal House with hair loss.

But as the mayhem goes on, it highlights the sadness in being a thirty something suddenly mugged by divorce and thrown back to square one?essentially a freshman with a beer gut. New face Will Ferrell comes to the fore here. All the bad things happen to him but he takes it on the chin in the hangdog style that until now was copyright of Bill Macy. For bringing Nick Hornby-style pathos to a tired genre, this is well worth bunking off for.

Shiri

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OPENS MAY 2, CERT 18, 125 MINS Handily broken down into a formula which comprises '51 per cent action, 49 per cent romance', this 1999 production made history in South Korea by breaking the box-office record set by Titanic. With anxiety about North Korea currently running at a new high, the film's release here couldn't be more timely, even if what's on show is a fairly routine political action-thriller. A long-dormant North Korean female assassin (Kim Yun-Jin) comes out of hiding to spearhead a move to thwart potential rapprochement between North and South, hijacking a lethal weapon called CTX and plotting to use it at a football match between the two regions. Once a pair of intelligence agents set off in pursuit, the film becomes virtually one long, flamboyant action set-piece, although the romantic plot that underpins the story does provide respite. It's all efficiently relentless but not particularly inspired; considering the pace at which the Asian action genre evolves, dedicated fans will find it very tame.

OPENS MAY 2, CERT 18, 125 MINS

Handily broken down into a formula which comprises ’51 per cent action, 49 per cent romance’, this 1999 production made history in South Korea by breaking the box-office record set by Titanic. With anxiety about North Korea currently running at a new high, the film’s release here couldn’t be more timely, even if what’s on show is a fairly routine political action-thriller. A long-dormant North Korean female assassin (Kim Yun-Jin) comes out of hiding to spearhead a move to thwart potential rapprochement between North and South, hijacking a lethal weapon called CTX and plotting to use it at a football match between the two regions. Once a pair of intelligence agents set off in pursuit, the film becomes virtually one long, flamboyant action set-piece, although the romantic plot that underpins the story does provide respite. It’s all efficiently relentless but not particularly inspired; considering the pace at which the Asian action genre evolves, dedicated fans will find it very tame.

The Actors

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OPENS MAY 18, CERT 15, 93 MINS Ham actor Anthony O'Malley (Michael Caine) is starring in a truly awful production of Richard III in Dublin and drinking with one-time gangster Barreller (Michael Gambon) in his spare time. Learning of a scenario where Party A owes Party B money?but where the Parties ...

OPENS MAY 18, CERT 15, 93 MINS

Ham actor Anthony O’Malley (Michael Caine) is starring in a truly awful production of Richard III in Dublin and drinking with one-time gangster Barreller (Michael Gambon) in his spare time. Learning of a scenario where Party A owes Party B money?but where the Parties have never met?O’Malley persuades his prot

To Kill A King

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OPENS MAY 16, CERT 12A, 102 MINS Set following the Roundheads' victory in the English Civil War, To Kill A King centres on the under-regarded figure of Sir Thomas Fairfax (Dougray Scott), the brilliant general of the parliamentary army to whom Oliver Cromwell (Tim Roth) was deputy. But as Cromwell rises to pre-eminence, dissolving parliament and pressing for the execution of Charles I (Rupert Everett?no, don't laugh, he's rather good), Fairfax finds himself, as an aristocrat, torn between loyalty to the republican cause and his own class. To Kill A King is handsomely produced, and Roth is initially excellent as the dimly fearsome Cromwell. But the dialogue's rather stiff?you fear someone's going to start dropping in the odd "verily" any minute. The story of Cromwell's ascension is bowdlerised, and Roth ends up caricaturing him as a Napoleonic figure, while too much Mills And Boon-style sympathy is asked of us for Lord and Lady Fairfax. To Kill A King is, literally, a tad too cavalier with historical truth.

OPENS MAY 16, CERT 12A, 102 MINS

Set following the Roundheads’ victory in the English Civil War, To Kill A King centres on the under-regarded figure of Sir Thomas Fairfax (Dougray Scott), the brilliant general of the parliamentary army to whom Oliver Cromwell (Tim Roth) was deputy. But as Cromwell rises to pre-eminence, dissolving parliament and pressing for the execution of Charles I (Rupert Everett?no, don’t laugh, he’s rather good), Fairfax finds himself, as an aristocrat, torn between loyalty to the republican cause and his own class.

To Kill A King is handsomely produced, and Roth is initially excellent as the dimly fearsome Cromwell. But the dialogue’s rather stiff?you fear someone’s going to start dropping in the odd “verily” any minute. The story of Cromwell’s ascension is bowdlerised, and Roth ends up caricaturing him as a Napoleonic figure, while too much Mills And Boon-style sympathy is asked of us for Lord and Lady Fairfax. To Kill A King is, literally, a tad too cavalier with historical truth.

Romeo Is Bleeding

Gary Oldman, miscast but blowing hard in Peter Medak's 1993 thriller, is a sleazy cop who takes bribes to spend on his wife (Annabella Sciorra) and mistress (Juliette Lewis). As if that wasn't enough girlie action, he lusts after hot hitwoman Lena Olin, but his dick leads him into a world of violent trouble. Wilfully sexist and almost camp, but hey, you can't say it's dull.

Gary Oldman, miscast but blowing hard in Peter Medak’s 1993 thriller, is a sleazy cop who takes bribes to spend on his wife (Annabella Sciorra) and mistress (Juliette Lewis). As if that wasn’t enough girlie action, he lusts after hot hitwoman Lena Olin, but his dick leads him into a world of violent trouble. Wilfully sexist and almost camp, but hey, you can’t say it’s dull.

Anita And Me

Director Metin H...

Director Metin H

Novocaine

Steve Martin darkens his usual screwball comic persona for Novocaine, playing a suburban dentist implicated in drugs and murder charges in a noir-tinged comedy thriller which turns increasingly Hitchcockian as it unfolds. Helena Bonham Carter's femme fatale, Laura Dern's dental assistant and Kevin Bacon's hilarious cameo appearance lend extra clout to a patchy but commendably accomplished feature debut from writer-director David Atkins.

Steve Martin darkens his usual screwball comic persona for Novocaine, playing a suburban dentist implicated in drugs and murder charges in a noir-tinged comedy thriller which turns increasingly Hitchcockian as it unfolds. Helena Bonham Carter’s femme fatale, Laura Dern’s dental assistant and Kevin Bacon’s hilarious cameo appearance lend extra clout to a patchy but commendably accomplished feature debut from writer-director David Atkins.

Road Rage

Wild At Heart is more than just a road movie. More than just a professional apogee for director David Lynch, here transformed from surrealist auteur into postmodern colossus. And it's more than just a proudly generic 'lovers on the lam' tale that follows Nicolas Cage's mercurial and frankly 'otherworldly' Sailor Ripley, together with Laura Dern's eccentric firecracker Lula Fortune (both career-high turns), as they dodge all manner of toothless, helium-squeaking, voodoo-obsessed assassins including Willem Dafoe and Harry Dean Stanton, on their way to sunny California. No, with its breathless, almost aggressively confident conflation of The Wizard of Oz, Greek tragedy, Tennessee Williams, Raymond Chandler, Freud, black comedy, exploitation horror, stylized performances, extreme close-ups, random cut-aways, musical interludes and straight-faced tender romance, Wild At Heart is a tantalizing glimpse of the road that cinema was not brave enough to take. The further we move away from it, the more precious it becomes.

Wild At Heart is more than just a road movie. More than just a professional apogee for director David Lynch, here transformed from surrealist auteur into postmodern colossus. And it’s more than just a proudly generic ‘lovers on the lam’ tale that follows Nicolas Cage’s mercurial and frankly ‘otherworldly’ Sailor Ripley, together with Laura Dern’s eccentric firecracker Lula Fortune (both career-high turns), as they dodge all manner of toothless, helium-squeaking, voodoo-obsessed assassins including Willem Dafoe and Harry Dean Stanton, on their way to sunny California. No, with its breathless, almost aggressively confident conflation of The Wizard of Oz, Greek tragedy, Tennessee Williams, Raymond Chandler, Freud, black comedy, exploitation horror, stylized performances, extreme close-ups, random cut-aways, musical interludes and straight-faced tender romance, Wild At Heart is a tantalizing glimpse of the road that cinema was not brave enough to take. The further we move away from it, the more precious it becomes.

Fellini’s Roma

Released in 1972, Federico Fellini's extended love letter to his adopted home city is less of a linear drama than an impressionistic anthology of autobiographical memories, sketchy anecdotes and documentary-style snippets. With sumptuous cinematography by Giuseppe Rotunno and a lush Nino Rota score, Roma is a minor Fellini work but a ravishing and innovative visual symphony.

Released in 1972, Federico Fellini’s extended love letter to his adopted home city is less of a linear drama than an impressionistic anthology of autobiographical memories, sketchy anecdotes and documentary-style snippets. With sumptuous cinematography by Giuseppe Rotunno and a lush Nino Rota score, Roma is a minor Fellini work but a ravishing and innovative visual symphony.

Monty Python Box Set

Collecting all four Python movies. And Now For Something Completely Different was a 'greatest hits' retread of sketches from the early TV shows, Holy Grail is worth seeing for Cleese's French knight alone, the wry and occasionally profound Life Of Brian was the best of the bunch, and The Meaning Of Life had some truly wonderful tunes. Did I say "indispensable". yet?

Collecting all four Python movies. And Now For Something Completely Different was a ‘greatest hits’ retread of sketches from the early TV shows, Holy Grail is worth seeing for Cleese’s French knight alone, the wry and occasionally profound Life Of Brian was the best of the bunch, and The Meaning Of Life had some truly wonderful tunes. Did I say “indispensable”. yet?

Dazed And Confused

Richard Linklater's emotionally ambivalent high school homage is a cutting riposte to the rosy teen nostalgia of both American Graffiti and the entire John Hughes canon. Set in Nowhere, Middle America, 1976, during the first day of summer break, it lazily and amiably follows Hollywood freshmen, including Ben Affleck and Matthew McConaughey, as they drink beer, smoke grass, and cultivate the slacker apathy of future generations.

Richard Linklater’s emotionally ambivalent high school homage is a cutting riposte to the rosy teen nostalgia of both American Graffiti and the entire John Hughes canon. Set in Nowhere, Middle America, 1976, during the first day of summer break, it lazily and amiably follows Hollywood freshmen, including Ben Affleck and Matthew McConaughey, as they drink beer, smoke grass, and cultivate the slacker apathy of future generations.

28 Days Later

Though it didn't burn up the box office during its theatrical release, Danny Boyle's jittery zombie flick is actually a far more satisfying small-screen experience. Gone is the distracting texture of large-scale digital video, and gone too is the weight of expectation (will it be better than The Beach?). Instead, the movie simply plays as it is?a brashly original post-apocalyptic B-movie.

Though it didn’t burn up the box office during its theatrical release, Danny Boyle’s jittery zombie flick is actually a far more satisfying small-screen experience. Gone is the distracting texture of large-scale digital video, and gone too is the weight of expectation (will it be better than The Beach?). Instead, the movie simply plays as it is?a brashly original post-apocalyptic B-movie.

Betrayed

When Fed Debra Winger goes undercover in the rural Midwest to investigate a bunch of white supremacists, she makes the mistake of falling in love with vicious, family-loving klansman Tom Berenger. Director Costa-Gavras has made some coruscating political masterpieces, but this overwrought mess is close to idiocy. It defuses its own explosive subject matter. Worth seeing, though, for Berenger's committedly-crazed scenery-chewing.

When Fed Debra Winger goes undercover in the rural Midwest to investigate a bunch of white supremacists, she makes the mistake of falling in love with vicious, family-loving klansman Tom Berenger. Director Costa-Gavras has made some coruscating political masterpieces, but this overwrought mess is close to idiocy. It defuses its own explosive subject matter. Worth seeing, though, for Berenger’s committedly-crazed scenery-chewing.

Hobson’s Choice The Sound Barrier

A double header, featuring two of David Lean's finest directorial efforts. Hobson's Choice (1954) sees Charles Laughton's magnificently overbearing Lancastrian patriarch butt heads with his equally stubborn daughter Brenda de Banzie, while John Mills is splendid as her husband, the worm who turns. The Sound Barrier (1952), in which Ralph Richardson attempts to devise the first faster-than-sound plane, sees stiff upper lips wobble as his efforts come to grief. It's also notable for some fine aerial sequences. Bravo, chaps!

A double header, featuring two of David Lean’s finest directorial efforts. Hobson’s Choice (1954) sees Charles Laughton’s magnificently overbearing Lancastrian patriarch butt heads with his equally stubborn daughter Brenda de Banzie, while John Mills is splendid as her husband, the worm who turns. The Sound Barrier (1952), in which Ralph Richardson attempts to devise the first faster-than-sound plane, sees stiff upper lips wobble as his efforts come to grief. It’s also notable for some fine aerial sequences. Bravo, chaps!

Hijack Stories

South African director Oliver Schmitz revisits the same territory as his angry anti-apartheid classic from 1988, Mapantsula, delivering a wry but equally scathing account of his post-Mandela homeland. Researching a role as a street hoodlum, a middle-class black actor (Tony Kgoroge) returns to his childhood township near Johannesburg to learn street cred from his former friend, a car-jacking gangster (Rapulana Seiphemo). A gripping, funny, darkly satirical thriller.

South African director Oliver Schmitz revisits the same territory as his angry anti-apartheid classic from 1988, Mapantsula, delivering a wry but equally scathing account of his post-Mandela homeland. Researching a role as a street hoodlum, a middle-class black actor (Tony Kgoroge) returns to his childhood township near Johannesburg to learn street cred from his former friend, a car-jacking gangster (Rapulana Seiphemo). A gripping, funny, darkly satirical thriller.

The Deli

John Andrew Gallagher's shambling 1997 comedy about an Italian-American storekeeper (Mike Starr) with gambling problems, unwanted mob buddies and endless eccentric customers is a fun idea which never quite takes off. There's shades of Blue In The Face, while various future Sopranos regulars?notably Michael Imperioli?cameo.

John Andrew Gallagher’s shambling 1997 comedy about an Italian-American storekeeper (Mike Starr) with gambling problems, unwanted mob buddies and endless eccentric customers is a fun idea which never quite takes off. There’s shades of Blue In The Face, while various future Sopranos regulars?notably Michael Imperioli?cameo.

Super Troopers

The first screen outing for a post-collegiate comedy team calling themselves Broken Lizard, Super Troopers is a spoof knockabout farce concerning clownish highway patrolmen in small-town Vermont. With Brian Cox as the indulgent police chief presiding over the goofy jokes and motorist-baffling stunts, writer-director-star Jay Chandrasekhar's feature debut is slight but sporadically hilarious.

The first screen outing for a post-collegiate comedy team calling themselves Broken Lizard, Super Troopers is a spoof knockabout farce concerning clownish highway patrolmen in small-town Vermont. With Brian Cox as the indulgent police chief presiding over the goofy jokes and motorist-baffling stunts, writer-director-star Jay Chandrasekhar’s feature debut is slight but sporadically hilarious.

Ma Femme Est Une Actrice

A labour of love?or perhaps of jealousy?for writer/director Yvan Attal, who stars in this French farce as a journalist convinced his movie-star wife's having an affair with Terence Stamp. She's Charlotte Gainsbourg, Attal's real-life wife, so maybe it's all good therapy for him. For the rest of us, it's lively for half an hour, then the frisson fades.

A labour of love?or perhaps of jealousy?for writer/director Yvan Attal, who stars in this French farce as a journalist convinced his movie-star wife’s having an affair with Terence Stamp. She’s Charlotte Gainsbourg, Attal’s real-life wife, so maybe it’s all good therapy for him. For the rest of us, it’s lively for half an hour, then the frisson fades.