A review of the 2022 film “Aftersun”
February 17th, 2024 by Roger Darlington
By the time that I caught up with this film, it had received 121 nominations and 33 awards, so the critics clearly adored it, and I wanted very much to do so too. I love to see new talent and this is the feature film debut of Scottish director, writer and producer Charlotte Wells.
The story is the holiday in a Turkish holiday resort of 11-year old Sophie (played by an amazing Franki Corio) and her 31-year old father (wonderfully portrayed by Paul Mescal) who is divorced from her mother. It is beautifully acted but, for me, it is too slow, too little happens, and what is really happening is too opaque.
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Three quotes from three US presidents
February 13th, 2024 by Roger Darlington
“Ich bin ein Berliner.”
— President John F. Kennedy, June 26, 1963
“Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!”
— President Ronald Reagan, June 12, 1987
“I would encourage [the Russians] to do whatever the hell they want.”
— Donald Trump, February 10, 2024
Posted in American current affairs | Comments (0)
A review of the inspirational new film “Nyad”
February 12th, 2024 by Roger Darlington
How would anybody even think of swimming nonstop from Cuba to Florida? This is a 110-mile stretch of ocean bedevilled by powerful currents, sharks and jelly fish. American long-distance swimmer Diana Nyad knew better than anyone what would be involved and how impossible it would be. After all, when she was 28, she had tried and failed. But, aged 60, she decided that she wanted another go. It sounds crazy, but this true story makes for a compelling movie.
It is directed by wife and husband team Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin, previously known for excellent documentaries and here making their feature film directorial debut. The work has a documentary feel to it which draws in the viewer. But it is the casting that makes the movie. Annette Bening, as you’ve never seen her before, is “the swimmer” and Jodie Foster is her former partner, best friend and coach Bonnie Stoll. Both give outstanding performances which understandably have attracted award nominations.
Of course, all heroes are flawed and Nyad has been challenged over details of her record but, as a film, “Nyad”is a considerable success – gripping and inspirational. You can find it on Netflix.
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A review the new film “The Zone Of Interest”
February 11th, 2024 by Roger Darlington
This is a really disturbing film about the greatest crime against humanity: the Holocaust of the Second World War. It is loosely based on the novel of the same name by British writer Martin Amis and it is both written and directed by Jonathan Glazer who is both British and Jewish. It is largely set at Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp in German-occupied Poland where over a million, mainly – but not exclusively – Jews, were murdered.
I spent a day at the site in the Winter of 1993 and I will be forever haunted by what I saw.
What is so astonishing about this work is what you do not see but what you hear. The narrative is set largely in the family home of the commandant Rudolf Höss (Christian Friedel), his wife Hedwig (Sandra Hüller), and their five children, which is located against one of the high walls of the camp, and much of what we see is the enjoyment of their domesticity.
But, all the time that we are at their home, we hear in the background the unmistakable sounds of the machinery of genocide – the trains, the shouting, the shooting, the screaming – and, at the very beginning and the very end of the film, there is discordant orchestral music which bookends this tale of horror.
The lead actors and most of the dialogue are German; the support actors and the location shooting are Polish; and the funding was American, British and Polish. It has been nominated for five Academy Awards, three Golden Globes and nine BAFTAs. It is a chilling film that you will never forget.
Posted in Cultural issues | Comments (0)
I always like to have a project
February 10th, 2024 by Roger Darlington
Last year, my project was to write a memoir in time for circulation at my 75th birthday on 25 June 2023. I did it. It’s called “Roger And (Not) Out” and you can find it in Amazon.
This year, my project is to curate a series of interviews of staff and residents at the apartment unit where I live. I plan to launch it at an event on 19 June 2024. It’ll be titled “Rennie & River: Tales From Two Courts” and will be available on Amazon.
In fact, I’ve been been working on my latest project for eight months and I’m approaching the end of the actual interviewing and writing. I’ve done 34 interviews and written almost 50,000 words.
Posted in My life & thoughts | Comments (0)
A review of the new film “Society Of The Snow”
February 7th, 2024 by Roger Darlington
Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 was the chartered flight of a Fairchild FH-227D from Montevideo, Uruguay, to Santiago, Chile, that crashed in the Andes mountains on 13 October 1972. The flight was carrying 45 passengers and crew, including 19 members of the Old Christians Club rugby union team, along with their families, supporters and friends. Three crew members and nine passengers died immediately and several more died soon after due to the frigid temperatures and the severity of their injuries.
During the 72 days following the crash, the survivors suffered from extreme hardships, including sub-zero temperatures, exposure, starvation, and an avalanche, which led to the deaths of 13 more passengers. The remaining passengers resorted to cannibalism to survive. Eventually two survivors, Nando Parrado and Roberto Canessa, made a 10-day trek to find help. On 22 and 23 December 1972, two and a half months after the crash, the 14 remaining survivors were rescued.
This utterly astonishing story of human survival has been told in film before: the 1993 American production “Alive”. It was shot in British Colombia with an American cast led by Ethan Hawke. I never saw that film, but I wanted to see “Society Of The Snow”, the 2023 Spanish version of the story.
The photography is stunning: much of the film was shot in the Sierra Nevada in Spain but other shooting was in Uruguay, Chile and Argentina including the actual crash site in the Andes. Three replicas of the fuselage wreckage were deployed to considerable effect. A deliberate choice was made to use unknown actors for the Spanish-speaking cast and clearly great efforts were made to consult with the survivors and their families. Spanish director J. A. Bayona has managed to make a film that makes you feel that you are in the action while demonstrating sensitivity to the real characters portrayed and the agonising decisions that they had to make.
The scale and impact of this work cry out for it to be seen on the big screen, but the film has only had a very limited theatrical release in a few countries, so you’ll have to see it – as I did – on Netflix. It has been nominated for Best International Feature Film at the 2024 Academy Awards.
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A review of the new film “American Fiction”
February 4th, 2024 by Roger Darlington
This is an African-American work in the sense that the source material (the novel “Erasure” by Percival Everett), the writer and director (Cord Jefferson in a feature-film debut), almost all the actors, and the subject material are all African-American.
But this is not “The Color Purple”; instead the message of the movie is that most white people only encompass black narratives if they are stereotypically about slavery, poverty or gangsterism. So the lead character, Thelonious ‘Monk’ Ellison, is an African-American professor of English who struggles to have his fiction work sold because it is insufficiently stereotypically black. In this role, Jeffrey Wright (whom, I confess, I only know from recent James Bond films where he played CIA agent Felix Leiter), is wonderful and, in an impressive support cast, watch out for Sterling K Brown as ‘Monk”s gay bother.
“American Fiction” is part social satire (the fiction in writing) and part family drama (the roles we play and the secrets we keep). In the former capacity, the film asks us to rethink how people of colour are presented in storytelling media. In the latter sense, we look at the different ways in which we reveal ourselves to family and friends and the benefits of openness and trust. So there is a lot going on here, but the style is light and enjoyable and the ending deliciously multi-choice.
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A review of the new film “All Of Us Strangers”
February 2nd, 2024 by Roger Darlington
Adam (Andrew Scott) and Harry (Paul Mescal) appear to be the only occupants of a new London tower block and, hesitantly at first, become lovers. But both, in their different ways, are troubled individuals. Adam wants to reconnect with the parents he lost in a car accident 30 years ago and, finds that when he visits what used to be the family home, his father (Jamie Bell) and mother (Claire Foy) are there and the three of them are ready to talk in ways that they were unable to do in the past.
This is clearly a deeply personal film for writer and director Andrew Haigh and lead actor Andrew Scott, both of whom are gay men, and the semi-autobiographical nature of the narrative is underlined by the use of Haigh’s real childhood home, just outside Croydon, being used as the location of scenes in the home of Adam’s parents. The direction is assured and the acting achingly powerful in a film that packs an emotional punch as it explores universal themes about the need to love and be loved.
It is a slow work and I wasn’t always sure exactly what was going on, but critics have raved and awards will flow.
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Marking Holocaust Memorial Day
January 27th, 2024 by Roger Darlington
If you know something about history, if you have Jewish friends, if you’ve visited Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, today cannot pass without me remembering the Holocaust.
You can remind yourself of some of the basic facts by reading my review of a book on the subject by a Jewish history teacher whom I met when he was delivering a course about the Holocaust. Never again.
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“Why We Get The Wrong Politicians” by Isabel Hardman (2022)
January 27th, 2024 by Roger Darlington
This analysis of British politicians was first published in 2018 (when it was a winner at the Parliamentary Book Awards) and then revised and updated in 2022. I was given it as a present for Christmas 2023 and therefore read it in a year (2024) when we will have a General Election which is almost certain to return several hundred new Members of Parliament. Hardman is Assistant Editor of “The Spectator” and knows a great deal about Parliament and Parliamentarians. Her book is well-researched and well-written, but ultimately it is dispiriting and – in my view – too critical of individuals and not sufficiently radical in proposing institutional change.
So what does she mean by the wrong politicians? She is right to draw attention to the under-representation, compared to the population as whole, of women and ethnic minorities. In recent years, significant progress – especially by Labour in respect of female MPs – has been achieved, but more needs to be done. I am not sure that it is realistic – or even desirable – to press for more working-class MPs, but certainly it is wrong that such a large proportion of MPS went to a private school (largely a problem for the Conservatives). In a section headed ‘Are they normal?’ Hardman points out that many MPs have had dysfunctional upbringings and exhibit addictive behaviours, but I think that this is true of top achievers in many professions and, in any event, I am not sure how and why selection committees should ‘screen out’ such characteristics.
She explains the incredible pressures of the job: the need to have two homes, the challenges to relationships and parenting, the crazy hours of working, the appalling physical conditions of the Palace of Westminster, the inadequate IT systems, the suffocating control of the whips, the ever-growing volume of constituents’ cases, the vitriol on social media, and even the security risks (MPs were murdered 2016 and 2021). But all of this has nothing to do with MPs being the wrong type of person. We should be thankful that some talented individuals want to endure such hardships.
She is especially critical of MPs behaving ‘wrongly’, notably in their inability adequately to scrutinise legislation and ensure that Bills are likely to achieve what Ministers say they intend. She is right that MPs from the governing party do not challenge Ministers and amendments to Bills proposed by Opposition parties almost never succeed. But this is not the fault of individual MPs; it is a feature of our legislative system. There should be much more scrutiny of draft legislation before it is tabled in the House and much more post-scrutiny of legislation to see whether it has actually worked.
This would require a closer alignment of Bill Committees and Select Committees and more power for the latter. It would also require not just a stronger role for backbench MPs but more involvement of subject experts, think tanks, civil society and – dare one say it – the media (why does the media show more interest in an MP’s sex life than whether a Bill will make poor people even poorer?). And, unpopular as it may be, we need to recognise that MPs need better resources including larger staff in both Parliament and the constituency.
Like so many books on current affairs, Hardman spends much more time describing the problem (which is actually not the wrong politicians but the wrong political processes) and very little time addressing possible remedies. In an informative and enjoyable work of around 340 pages, Hardman devotes just 17 pages to the chapter entitled ‘Can We Get The Right Politicians?’ In particular she avoids the need for constitutional change. On the one hand, she notes “at any one time, over a hundred MPs aren’t actually doing their job as members of the legislature because they are in fact members of the executive” and spends three pages debating the merits of ‘separation of the powers’ before concluding “It isn’t going to happen”. On the other hand, she dismisses much-needed electoral reform in a single sentence.
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