Well received at the 2014 London Film Festival and other international festivals late last year, the striking A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night arrives in cinemas this week. When his beloved car is taken by a local drug dealer as payment for his father's increasing debt, Arash seeks to regain what is rightfully his and keep his father out of trouble. But when he encounters a mysterious girl dressed in black leaving the dealer's apartment, his priorities quickly shift to learning more about her.
Showing posts with label cinema review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cinema review. Show all posts
Sunday, 24 May 2015
Saturday, 6 April 2013
SPRING BREAKERS review
Starring Selena Gomez and Vanessa Hudgens as bikini clad bandits and James Franco as a gangster rapping drug lord, Harmony Korine's Spring Breakers is now in cinemas.
Sunday, 30 September 2012
KILLING THEM SOFTLY review
After learning some insider information, a local crime boss and his two hired hands turn over a mob poker game, placing the blame on Markie (Ray Liotta), the organiser of the game. A representative with a guarded interest hires Jackie Cogan (Brad Pitt) to sort through the mess and restore order to the area.
Sunday, 15 April 2012
INTO THE ABYSS - Curzon On Demand review

If you're like me and live in the wilderness known as 'outside of London', sometimes it can be a hard life being a fan of independent film, having to wait an age for these smaller titles to make their way to your local art house cinema. Thankfully, the Curzon group of cinemas have launched an online streaming service that might save me having to wait for the circuit to reach my location or even the (often quicker) DVD release. To set itself apart from Netflix and Lovefilm, they offer an "In Cinemas - On Curzon" service of streaming high definition films the same day as their theatrical release, meaning Curzon On Demand might just change the way we get to experience independent film.
Promising a "virtual passport to the very best in independent film", Curzon On Demand certainly has an impressive roster of films to choose from. With a catalogue that includes films that are on screen at Curzon Cinema now such as Werner Herzog's Into The Abyss (the film I chose as my maiden voyage with the service), recent art house hits like We Need to Talk About Kevin, Wuthering Heights and The Deep Blue Sea and hard to find indie films like Aki Kaurismaki's Lights in the Dusk, there's a great choice for those who missed the films on their first run, or just want to revisit them from the comfort on their own home.
Well, actually, wanting to be "more than just a home cinema experience", now you can access the service on mobile devices like iPads and iPhones, so you can have your own personal independent cinema wherever you want, really. Although it's a service that's open to everyone, if you are a frequent visitor to a Curzon Cinema and already a member, you do get a nice little discount off the film's rental price too. A brilliant resource for those, like me, who don't want to wait for the circuit to reach them, Curzon On Demand is available to all independent film lovers now. Head over to the site to check out their selection.
Werner Herzog's Into The Abyss tells the story of how, back in Texas in 2001, Michael Perry and a group of friends tried to steal a car and ended up killing three people before being arrested after a police shoot out, Herzog holds conversations with the killers and picks over the finer points of an unglamourous and very small town murder.
It's fair to say that Werner Herzog is a master documentarian, and one who's not afraid to lay his cards on the table from the start. In conversation with the incarcerated Michael Perry 8 days before his execution date he states early on, "when I talk to you, it does not mean I have to like you. But you are a human being and human beings should not be executed". It's refreshing to hear such frank honesty from a filmmaker from the outset, but then Werner Herzog was never one to sit on the fence.
There's something unnervingly comforting about Herzog's voice. With his gentle Germanic tones he's able to ask some incredibly upfront questions to his subjects and get real, honest answers out of them without them being in the least bit offended. When he asks a prison inmate who was taken to his new facility along with his child "how does it feel like to be handcuffed to your own son?", Herzog manages to draw out the mans sadness and feelings of history repeating itself. Although Herzog remains off screen throughout the film, his presence and influence over his subjects is obvious.
Tragic, haunting and downright sad, Into The Abyss captures the futility of death and the lives of the mixed-up young men who were involved in this case. Clear about its pro-life stand point, it's a powerful film that fleshes out the details of a case that would probably not even make national news under normal circumstances, but by showing the us the lives it has affected, is undoubtably moving.

Into The Abyss is now in cinemas and available on the Curzon On Demand streaming service.
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Labels:
cinema review,
Curzon Cinema,
Into The Abyss,
On Demand,
Werner Herzog
Monday, 2 April 2012
THE ISLAND PRESIDENT review
Charting the efforts of the Maldivian President to alter views on climate change before his islands disappear into the ocean, the moving documentary The Island President is now in cinemas.
Wednesday, 21 March 2012
21 JUMP STREET review
Failing at their jobs as bicycle cops, Schmidt and Jenko (Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum) get assigned to an undercover mission at a local high school. Whilst trying to pass for students, they must infiltrate a drug gang operating from within the school, all the while making sure that they don't cause any trouble, take any drugs or sleep with any of the teachers.
Thursday, 23 February 2012
THE MUPPETS review
Have you ever asked yourself the question, am I a man or am I a Muppet? Well thanks to Jason Segel we finally we have a film that can answer that very question.
Saturday, 14 January 2012
THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO review
Released a mere two years after the Swedish original, David Fincher's take on Stieg Larsson's The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo is out now in cinemas. Watch the trailer and read my review, next...
Monday, 24 October 2011
PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 3 review
Building on the mythology of the Paranormal Activity franchise by taking us back to 1988 and the origins of the demon, the third installment is out now. Watch the trailer and read my review, next...
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