tv The Film Review BBC News August 21, 2020 5:45pm-6:00pm BST
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clive my and viewers —— clive myrie and viewersjoin clive my and viewers —— clive myrie and viewers join us for the news at six. for now, though, time for the film review. hello and welcome to the film review with me, anna smith. i'm filling in for mark kermode to review this week's releases. first up, the one we have all been waiting for — tenet, christopher nolan's action epic which was delayed due to the pandemic. and it's finally, hopefully, coming to cinemas this wednesday the 26th.
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we all believe we'd run into the burning building. but until we feel that heat, we can never know. you do. many multiplex opening dates have been decided by this release. it's the first major blockbuster to debut on the big screen since lockdown, and it's coming out in the uk before the united states. i've been lucky enough to see it in 70 mm imax, and after months of small screen viewing, it felt really special — and a little bit eerie — to be watching this on a huge screen wearing a mask. welcome to the afterlife. tenet starsjohn david washington, son of denzel, as a spy who is recruited to a top—secret mission to prevent a disastrous world event. after a spectacular opening establishing his fabulous skills, he's let in on the secret of inversion, the method of reversing the flow of time that can be harnessed
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by criminals and operatives. his code is tenet, a word that opens doors around the world. you want to crash a plane? well, not from the air. don't be so dramatic. he teams up with robert pattinson‘s debonair spy to infiltrate networks and stage daredevil heists, where they witness the effects of inversion. bullets fly backwards and there's a great deal of discussion around cause and effect. nolan is, of course, already the king of the intelligent blockbuster, and i think this is one of his most ambitious films to date. it's very heavy on verbal exposition and demands your complete concentration. he is effectively asking the audience to play at being spies themselves while providing the vicarious thrills of a slick, globetrotting mission. how would you like to die? old. washington is excellent and handles drama, action and a smattering of comedy with aplomb. he may be american, but this is the closest we've come to having a black bond. he even comes up against a classic bond villain — who's overplayed by kenneth branagh — as well as the man's glamourous, unhappy wife, who is portrayed by an underused
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elizabeth debicki. in many respects, this plays out like an old—school bond film that's both elevated and complicated by a fantasy element. christopher nolan is known to be a bond fan — and if you're in the market for a visually dazzling, big screen spy movie, with fantastic music and gripping action scenes, this certainly delivers. for me, it's not christopher nolan's most involving piece of work, though. i didn't find the concept as fascinating as i did interstellar or memento, but its dense plot should bring rewards for fans keen to decode it over multiple viewings. phone rings buzzer rings the frequent french comedy—drama perfumes stars emmanuelle devos as a former perfumer who now works as what they call a nose. anne's job is to sniff out problems in products and create
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a scent the customers don't turn their noses up at. a scent that customers don't turn their noses up at. from luxury leather handbags to cat litter, corporatejobs keep her busy enough to hire a chauffeur, guillaume, played by gregory montel. as a cash—strapped divorced father, he's reluctantly prepared to put up with a client who's both rude and demanding — which anne certainly is — but guillaume begins to take an interest in anne's work, and an unlikely understanding develops. cut from the same cloth as driving miss daisy and green book, perfumes pits two opposite characters against each other on journeys, making humourous work of their differences and tugging on the old heartstrings as they change each other‘s lives. there are moments of sharp comic timing. i definitely laughed out loud more than once. but generally, the film isn't quite witty or emotive enough to merit the leisurely pace. still, ifound it interesting insight into the job of a perfumer,
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which is a fabulously french job if ever i saw one, and it definitely doesn't stink. perfumes, or les parfums, is in cinemas and is on curzon home cinema now. god created sex with boundaries and for a purpose. does anyone want to take a stab at what that boundary is? yes, wade. marriage. very good. and does anybody know the purpose? to have children. perfecto. onto the american midwest and yes, god, yes, a comedy set in a catholic retreat starring natalia dyer from stranger things. just as i suspected. over two and a half inches above the knee. dean's office. it's the early noughties, and 16—year—old catholic alice is browsing the nascent internet when a chance encounter in a chat room turns her on. alice? dinner! meanwhile, there's a false rumour going around that she "tossed someone‘s salad" at a party. both episodes fuel her confusion and curiosity about sex.
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do you think she thinks that i actually tasted wade's salad or whatever? i don't know. when alice attends a residential religious retreat, she's the focus ofjudgemental gossip, which is very painful for her. secretly using the priest's computer to find out what salad tossing really is only makes things worse. awesome! this is a funny, entertaining satire that highlights the blatant hypocrisy of its sanctimonious characters. it's a classic case of those in authority preaching abstinence while secretly indulging, and it's also a warm, nonjudgmental portrait of a smart young girl with raging hormones. while it doesn't tackle lg btq+ themes directly, this reminded me of two great films set in christian gay conversion centres — the comedy—drama the miseducation of cameron post and the more outrageous but i'm a cheerleader. like both of those films, yes, god, yes has a female director, karen maine, and you sense that this come from a very personal place. and as someone who went to several
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catholic retreat as a teenager, i've got to say, it rang true for me. now to a young woman struggling with a more oppressive regime. ava is the story of a schoolgirl living in tehran. sadaf foroughi's film stars mahourjabbari as ava, a bright, characterful student who bets her friends that she can land a date with her male violin partner, nima. she begins finding ways for them to be alone together — something that's strictly forbidden. but nima is very much
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in the background of this story. most of the action takes place at home or in the girls' school, as ava continues her rebellion with a series of infractions. these might seem minor to western eyes, but they really worry her parents and they enrage her imperious head teacher, a universally recognisable character played with relish by leili rashidi. in terms of visual style, foroughi takes a painterly approach, often using fixed frames that show portions of her actors as they move around a room. she refers to the cinematographic aesthetic of a country in which there are restrictions on portraying women, which is a very interesting idea, and she's also clearly influenced by ingmar bergman. in some respects, the cinematography keeps the audience at arm's length, but there are rewards for patient viewers and thought—provoking insights into the intensity of teenage emotion and a society determined to quell it. ava is on curzon home cinema now.
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finally, back to the states, where krystal sutherland's young adult novel our chemical hearts has been adapted for the screen. you are never more alive than when you're a teenager. your brain is flush with chemicals that can turn your life into a story of epic proportions. and yet by the start of my senior year, nothing interesting had ever happened to me. then, something finally happened. hi, guys! come on in. simply called chemical hearts, the film stars austin abrams as henry, a 17—year—old romantic who longs to fall passionately in love and to be a writer. both his dreams mightjust come true when he's asked to co—edit at the school paper with a transfer student, grace, played by lili reinhart. ijust couldn't find the words. it's funny. because i can't find the words when i talk and you can't find the words when you write. grace is troubled but straight—talking, intelligent and far better—read than henry. he's instantly smitten. the pair's teenage angst is fairly by—the—book,
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though. i was much more interested in the supporting characters, personally. henry's friend la, played by kara young, is openly queer and attracted to cora, played by coral pena, who's a new character introduced by screenwriter and director richard tanne. an attraction between two non—white, same—sex characters is still relatively rare in mainstream teen fare, and the fact that it's such a positive depiction makes chemical hearts quietly ground—breaking. it's on amazon prime now. thanks for watching the film review with me, anna smith. i'll be back next week. meantime, i will leave you with a clip from a kitsch ‘90s sci—fi that's coming to 4k and blu—ray on monday, luc besson‘s the fifth element. # the right size, right build, right hair, right on # right on, right on # and he's got something to say to those # 50 billion pairs of ear out there # pop it, d—man! # er. ..hi.
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hello there. the wind is the key feature to the weather so far today. we've seen widespread gale force gusts, so the weather watcher pictures that have been coming in, well, they are more akin to autumn holiday snaps rather than summer holiday snaps, with the strength of the wind whipping up the seas along the welsh and the cornish coastline. now, in fact, we've seen widespread gusts in excess of 60 miles an hour, but so far today, we've also recorded a gust of wind in excess of 70 miles an hour across the needles. the winds will continue to be a feature as well to the weather, particularly to the southern flank of this low, as it continues to drift its way steadily north and east. it's also bringing some rain, some of it heavy and persistent, moving out of northern england into scotland, and those strong winds whipping up some squally, blustery showers, though, elsewhere across england and wales. sunny spells and scattered showers here, but really, the emphasis is on the strength of the winds for the remainder
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of the afternoon. we're still likely to see widespread gusts in excess of 50 to 60 miles an hour widely across england and wales, so the met office have got weather warnings out. that's quite unusual for this time of year and it may well lead to some disruption. in terms of the feel of things, it is relatively warm out there, although it may not feel it, but temperatures should be this afternoon at 2a degrees. now, we'll continue to see some showers through the night as well, driven along by those fresh winds as they pushed their way inland. temperatures will hold up. it's going to stay relatively mild, we're looking at around 11 to 15 degrees. now, tomorrow, the low pressure moves off into scandinavia. this little weather front will enhance the rainfall in scotland. and the isobars tend to open up, so the winds will gradually fall lighter as we go through the weekend. so, we'll see some rain across scotland, northern ireland, eventually into northwest england. sunny spells and scattered showers for england and wales, generally, and the wind strengths probably at around 30, 35 miles an hour gusts
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for the middle of the afternoon. little bit fresher, but we should see highest values of 22 degrees. that's 72 fahrenheit. cooler in the northwest as the wind direction now coming in off the north sea. so, on sunday, it'll be a drier day for scotland, more showers likely across england and wales, with top temperatures expected to peak at 21 degrees. take care.
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more local lockdowns for parts of the north west of england, as coronavirus infection rates go up. from midnight tomorrow, people in 0ldham and parts of blackburn and pendle can't socialise beyond their own households. but other rules, some say, are confusing. when they're coming out with these new restrictions, make it clearer, because either people don't understand it or they find a way around it. and there's growing concern over infection rates in birmingham. we'll have the latest. also on the programme.... another mad dash for british holiday—makers to beat new quarantine rules, this time affecting croatia. we this time affecting croatia. are both key workers in so we are both key workers in england so had to pay an extra £400 for a flight so had to pay an extra £400 for a flight home which leaves into mac hours, so we are heading their
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