Buzz Magazine October 2013 | Page 28

film by Keiron Self CAPTAIN PHILLIPS **** THOR: THE DARK WORLD **** Dir: Paul Greengrass (12A, 134 mins) Director Paul Greengrass specialises in raw, frenetic camerawork and storytelling, from the nailbiting Bourne movies to the gruelling docu-dramas Bloody Sunday, United 93, and Green Zone. Captain Phillips is another story based on fact, a pulsing drama about the hijacking of an American cargo ship, the Alabama, by Somali pirates in 2009. Tom Hanks plays Captain Richard Phillips. At first the Captain repels the small skiffs of the pirates, but with no real security their boarding is inevitable. Barkhad Abdi, making his film debut, is hypnotic as the pirate leader enjoying his moment of power and aiming to make millions from his captives. The scenes where he and Hanks face off are spellbindingly tense. This is only heightened when the pirates leave the ship in a small lifeboat, with Phillips their sole bargaining chip. The sweaty claustrophobia escalates before a fateful run in with a US Naval destroyer. Hanks is solid as ever as the everyman caught up in events beyond his control but it is Abdi that steals the film. Greengrass ratchets up the tension, the initial boarding of the ship is a superb sequence of suspense, and his trademark handheld kineticism places the viewer in the heart of events. Muscular, edge of seat film making. Opens Oct 18 Dir: Alan Taylor (12A, 123 mins) The Marvel domination continues. Following Iron Man 3, the next superhero sequel belongs to the hammer-wielding Asgardian Thor, who returns to his homeland to find it in danger from a new threat. Tom Hiddleston’s mischievous mewling quim of a brother Loki will be needed to help Chris Hemsworth’s blonde man beefcake to repel Christopher Eccleston’s Dark Elf Malekith. The former Doctor Who star has returned from exile, having lost everything that was dear to him, and wants revenge on Anthony Hopkins’ Odin and all the nine realms. Caught up in it all is Natalie Portman as Jane Foster, Thor’s squeeze, who is cross at being abandoned by the thunder-god at the end of the first film but is soon transported to Asgard to witness even more mayhem. Other returning humans Stellan Skarsgard and Kat Dennings mostly gawp open-mouthed as Greenwich is destroyed. Epic smackdowns happen on the Gherkin and Elves unleash some serious dark magic. Grander and grittier with Game of Thrones director Alan Taylor at the helm, this second instalment will hopefully entertain as much as Tony Stark’s third outing. Thunder Thunder Thunder God Go!!! Opens Oct 30 MACHETE KILLS ** PRINCE AVALANCHE *** THE SELFISH GIANT **** Dir: Robert Rodriguez (18, 100 mins) The first Machete film spiralled out of an amusing trailer made by director Rodriguez as part of his and Quentin Tarantino’s Grindhouse film experiment. As a trailer that lovingly embraced the kitsch and gore of 70’s exploitation films Machete works, the expansion to feature film proved that it didn’t really have severed legs despite a classy/cheesy cast. It made money though, hence the sequel. Danny Trejo returns, again cutting people open and beheading left, right and centre with another classy/ cheesy cast. This time Machete is given orders by Charlie Sheen’s President to take down Mel Gibson’s arms dealer, who is about to launch a weapon into outer space. Aided by various scantily clad women, including Michelle Rodriguez and Jessica Alba, who in turn fight other scantily clad women, Amber Heard, Sofia Vergara and Lady Gaga. Very violent, loud and silly, with few redeeming qualities. This is unedifying cartoon cinema, which is the point. Machete don’t tweet. Opens Oct 11 Dir: David Gordon Green (15, 94 mins) A character-driven comedy drama set in 1988 that ably demonstrates the acting chops of its central duo, Paul Rudd and Emile Hirsch, as mismatched highway repair men in a quirky slice of Americana. Rudd plays loner Alvin, a shy type who likes solitude but takes on his girlfriend’s brother Lance (Hirsch) to help him out in his very lonely job. They squabble and bond occasionally as they go about menial tasks and share world views, encountering only two other people a truck driver, played the former TV A-Team’s nemesis Lance LeGault, and a woman whose house has been destroyed in a fire. There’s not a lot of plot but there’s a great deal of winning observation amidst the languid pacing and beautiful cinematography. Director Gordon Green has gone back to his quiet indie roots, after the noisy excesses of Pineapple Express and Your Highness, to satisfying, big hearted effect. Opens Oct 18 Dir: Clio Barnard (15, 91 mins) Oscar Wilde’s charming short story gets a Ken Loach like makeover in this superb social realist drama. Connor Chapman and Shaun Thomas play Arbor and Swifty, two misfit boys with paternal problems who start stealing metal and selling it to dodgy local dealer Kitten, played by Sean Gilder. Kitten organises illegal horse and cart races and the boys want desperately to be involved. Swifty, easily led but with a love of horses, looks set to be a jockey much to Arbor’s dismay. Inevitably this leads to a tragic and heart-wrenching conclusion, bereft of Wilde’s original comforting religious allegory, and all the more brutal for it. Director Barnard gets superb performances from the young Chapman and Thomas and stages the horse and cart races with suspenseful aplomb. A more straightforward drama than Barnard’s innovative debut, The Arbor, The Selfish Giant is a touching, gritty film, beautifully photographed and deeply human. Opens Oct 25 ALSO RELEASED: THE CRASH REEL (12A) Fantastic documentary about extreme snowboarder Kevin Pearce, from Lucy Walker. EMPEROR (12A) Historical war drama following a General trying to ascertain if Emperor Hirohito of Japan will be hanged for war crimes. Tommy Lee Jones stars. FOR THOSE IN PERIL (12A) Scottish drama set amidst a small fishing community. A youngster is blamed for the deaths of his fellow fishermen in an accident at sea, he sets out to prove them wrong. Engrossing. HOW I LIVE NOW (15) Great drama with teen angst heightened