tv The Film Review BBC News January 28, 2018 11:45pm-12:01am GMT
11:45 pm
some of the churlish dimension? some of the older players anyway, not as old as him, they previously would have been considered in decline because of their age anyway. what is striking is that there just aren't the young players coming through... nick kyrgios was playing... not good enough. i realise that his opponent got injured in the semifinals and could not play and others had magnificent runs and maybe the semifinals wasjust magnificent runs and maybe the semifinals was just one step too far, but i feel hopeful for the future. but i will cry girl tears when a roger federer goes. not mainly tears. are they different?” will cry big girl tears. and i am fine with that. roger federer has shown me it is ok to cry on the public stage. not in here. we might need tissues. it isa it is a bit like a throwback to the
11:46 pm
80s. apparently, you will now be able to pay to book your sunbed when you book your hotel said he will not miss out. we were not quite sure how you would meet the germans who also have the ability to book online... and have had so sometime. but that didn't stop an offensive headline. you can see all of the papers online on our website. and don't forget, if you miss the programme any evening, you miss the programme any evening, you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. always a treat, thank you to come in and thank you for going. coming up next, the film review. hello and a very warm welcome
11:47 pm
to the film review on bbc news. to take us through this week's cinema releases is mark kermode as ever. 50 mark, what do we have this week? interesting week. we've got downsizing. the new movie from alexander payne. earlyman, the latest offering from aardman animations, always a treat. and last flag flying, the not quite sequel to the last detail. it looks intriguing, your first choice, that's what i would say. intriguing is exactly the word. this is something a bit different. the best way to describe it is it takes riffs from the incredible shrinking man and innerspace and combines it
11:48 pm
with a bit of inconvenient truth and the american satire spanglish. really... 0k. the story is the earth's resources have been depleted and process has been discovered to shrink people down to five inches. you can save the planet, you become and use less resources. you produce less stuff to dispose of. everyone has agreed it is a good idea. but the reason people are doing it is because the lifestyle you get offered if you agree to become small is more extravagant than you can get in the big world. here's a clip. so the decision... downsizing takes pressure off, especially money pressure. it must be a good to know you are making a difference. all that crap about saving the planet? yes. downsizing is about saving yourself. we live like kings. i'm still in the same house i grew up in, audrey is dying to move, but we are strapped.
11:49 pm
a lot of small communities are cropping up. don't mess around. you get the best houses, best appliances, best doctors, the great restaurants. the kids love cheesecake factory. we've got three of them. can you back up a little? they might be too much garlic in the sauce. it is an interesting setup and it looks like the beginning of a great movie. then matt damon's character decides he is going to downsize and when he does, he discovers he's isolated, alone and discontent like he was in the bigger world, but only smaller. then the film loses its direction. for a start, once you get into the small community there's very little of interacting with the large one. most movies dealing with the miniaturisation have them interacting. here you can forget that you are in the small world, which is the point. more troublesome is the fact it has
11:50 pm
a number of threads it is trying to deal with, the eco—crisis, the personal crisis, the commentary on consumerism, staff about general middle—aged malaise, and somehow those elements don't only not come together, they start completely fracturing. the film is not short. it is two and a quarter hours long and it could have done with some downsizing in its running time, frankly. after the initial setup and promise, after what looked like being a good use of a science fiction premise, it falls apart. it's a shame because there are lots of interesting ideas and it's always good to see a director aiming big even if it does not come together. but i have to say there was a good half of it i find frustrating. having given you all these ideas, it then does not know what to do with them. it does not know whether it wants to be funny, satirical, sombre about the fate of the planet or whether it wants to concentrate
11:51 pm
on a marriage falling apart. it ends up not satisfying any of them. unfortunately, it is terribly unsatisfying, despite the fact it starts so well. very disappointing. i was a big fan of sideways. me, too. and i am a very big fan of wallace and gromit. and no disappointment for earlyman. a stone age clanis driven out of its valley by the arrival of lord knuth who says the stone age is over and long live the age of bronze. what then happens is the young hero, dug, agrees to have a football match for ownership of the valley. it turns out that way back in his heritage, football is deep in his genes. however, all his tribesmen can't play football, so they have to recruit a young
11:52 pm
woman to teach them to get the match ready. firstly, the visuals are incredible. they use some computer graphics to get a sense of stadium size, but all the primary animation has that aardman feel, it is physical, and i can see you looking at these images. it is fantastic. it is wonderful. and it is properly funny. it has great slapstickjokes that referred to harold lloyd and buster keaton. there is a homage at the very beginning, but it is also not about straightforward end of the pier, innuendo humour. i started laughing right from the very beginning. i never lost it, i laughed all the way through. in the screening there was only me and one other person. i became embarrassed by how much i was laughing. were they enjoying it too? they were enjoying it
11:53 pm
but not as much as i was. you see so many comedies with insufficient laughter. all the way through this i chuckled and i was delighted by the visuals. the story was charming. and i can go on my own, i don't need to find a child? everybody understands it. they make genuine family films for people of all ages. i would happily go back and see it again, not least because they were so many fleeting sight gags that i did not catch the first time round. i want to see it again. i love nick park, he does a greatjob. a genius. your third choice? last flag flying. it is adapted from a novel and the last detail was adapted into a film and this is the novel sequel to his novel. it is an adaptation of a novel that is not a sequel. we are going to test people on that. the story is three former marines are reunited decades later when one of their sons dies in iraq
11:54 pm
and they go on a road trip together. one of them has taken holy orders. they go on a road trip together and they bicker and the bond and they talk about the past and the present. here is a clip. what if i don't like it? we get stuck with a contract for two years? two years. what if you fall down? have you thought of that? with your legs that is a possibility. you cannot get up and nobody can see you? but with your mobile phone you can get it out and if you could see the numbers, your glasses, i can't see, help me, i cannot get up. 911 calls do not count against minutes either. come on! if i say yes, will you shut the hell up? the joy of it is the performances.
11:55 pm
laurence fishburne is really good. steve carrell is the person facing up to grief. i think he does that really brilliantly. if you go there looking for a film that is as cutting edge as the last detail, you will be disappointed. if you see it as a film in its own right and you are able to enjoy the ensemble performances, it is a film about their relationship, it is melancholic, it is sad and nostalgic. it is often laughed out loud funny. it will not change the world. rather than saying it is the sequel, it is more of a footnote, but a rather charming footnote, largely because the three central performances carry it through. you were enjoying that clip. yes. it is a film that stands on its own. oddly enough, the problem becomes if you try and put it next to others and it is a different
11:56 pm
kettle of fish. it is a not sequel to the movie. is that clear? i think so. and the best dvd? coco came out last week and i love three billboards. it is great that pixar animation is finally back at the top of its game. deals with some really complicated subjects. life, death, grief, loss, memory, but it does it in a way that children and adults alike can watch it. it looks beautiful. if you see it and you love it, get the book of life on dvd. it is a film that prefigures many themes and is also a very good movie. and dvd. ifelt ignorant when i read lots about this because of your forthcoming recommendation, and it sounds fascinating. ifelt bad i did not
11:57 pm
know very much about it. in between is a story about three women living in tel aviv, each fighting their own personal battle for freedom against political, religious and social repression. it is beautifully observed, fantastic performances, really, really well written. it deals with difficult subject matter, often very light—hearted and funny. it has a beautifully enigmatic ending and the best way of describing it is you have seen the graduate? yes! at the end is that incredible sense of ambiguity, i think it has that. it is really well worth seeing. it didn't get a huge theatrical release, but i have yet to meet anyone who has seen it who has not loved it. no greater recommendation than that. thank you very much, mark. an interesting week.
11:58 pm
we are now creeping up towards awards season as well. right in the middle of it. lots to talk about in the coming weeks. a quick reminder before we go that you'll find more film news and reviews from across the bbc online at bbc.co.uk/markkermode. and you can find all our previous programmes on the bbc iplayer. that's it for this week. enjoy your cinema going. see you next time. goodbye. 15 degrees today in some sunshine but it is turning colder in the next few days and it comes behind the band of rain. it can be quite heavy in scotland and northern ireland, sinking down the northern england. rain in the north—west and later in north wales. last three winds. to the north of that band of rain, the
11:59 pm
air getting chillier and there will be showers following on. the rain band continuing to push southwards. getting into southern parts of england during monday afternoon. behind that, the colder air digs down. sunshine eventually in wales and the midlands. cold start on tuesday. the haves are frost towards the south and south—east. a bright start with sunshine. cloud increasing through the day and later rain in the north and west. welcome to newsday. the headlines: a crisis for cryptocurrencies? one of japan's biggest exchanges refunds half a billion dollars after a major hacking attack. translation: my total losses are about i translation: my total losses are abouti million translation: my total losses are about i million yen. translation: my total losses are abouti million yen. i am finding it difficult to trust a virtual
12:00 am
currencies at the moment. navalny, navalny! a russian opposition leader alexei navalny was among hundreds to be arrested during country—wide protests. he's been urging voters to boycott the country's presidential election in march. i'm babita sharma in london. also in the programme: thousands take to the streets in hong kong to back a pro—democracy activist barred from a forthcoming by—election. the issue of sexual harassment will take centre stage at the grammy awards. we're live in new york with the latest.
49 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
BBC NewsUploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=503477932)