FANFARE July 2016 | Page 36

R E VI E WS **** Director: Tom McCarthy Actors: Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams, Live Schreiber, John Slattery, Brian d’Arcy James, Stanley Tucci Production: Anonymous Content, First Look Media, Participant Media, Rocklin/Faust By Naomi Tukker Huntsman * Director: Cedric Nicolas-Troyan Starring: Charlize Theron, Chris Hemsworth, Emily Blunt, Jessica Chastain Studio: Universal Pictures Rating: PG–13 Runtime: 1hr 54min By Tomi Olugbemi Once upon a time, there was a mediocre film about a princess-cum-warrior called Snow White and the Huntsman that needed no sequel. And then, along came this film, doubling as a pseudo-prequel as well, but with no Snow White! You couldn’t make this sort of thing up, but Hollywood had a go: the princess was without screen time and an evil, thoughtto-be-dead villain queen named Ravenna re-emerges from an ominous, magical mirror. The villain queen’s younger sister, Freya, wielded ice-bending powers similar to those of Elsa in Disney’s Frozen, and the Huntsman’s wife reappeared from the throes of death. It was a risible attempt at squeezing a plot from an already-exhausted story. This unhinged confection of CGI porn and deranged scriptwriting, shouldn’t have been allowed to escape from the studio. The star-studded ensemble cast of Theron, Blunt, Chastain and Hemsworth, helmed by first-time director, Cedric Nicolas-Troyan, did little to make up for Kristen Stewart’s absence as Snow White. The plotline is far more scandalous, a half-baked mash-up of Tolkien, Game of Thrones and the brothers Grimm. Freya’s (Blunt) child dies and a lover’s betrayal sparks her latent magic ice powers. She flees to a new kingdom, freeze killing her enemies. She abducts hapless children and turns them into the most fearless warriors in the realm: the Huntsmen. Permafrosted with indignation, she builds an ice wall to separate the lovers and banishes Sara to the dungeons while Eric escapes. Many winters and springs later, Eric and Sara reunite in the company of four dwarfs, what else! The Huntsman is truly the film that got away, that escaped with just enough sentimentality and usual tropes to pull an audience. Apart from the wit of the dwarves, who brought much needed humour to an otherwise clichéd story of teenage-like squabbles and formulaic war themes, this film is a real gawdforsaken turkey. 34 Following its Best Picture Oscar, the movie was privately screened by the Catholic Church’s special commission on clerical abuse, and Vatican Radio reported that clerics in Rome had been recommending the film to each other. And it is a measure of the movie’s scrupulous portrayal of one of the biggest sexual abuse scandals to hit the Roman Catholic Church, that the Vatican’s own Newspaper L’ Observatore Romano described it as “not anti-Catholic”. This scintillating movie tells the true story how journalists unravelled the Catholic Church’s darkest secret, that there was worldwide systematic child abuse by priests from as early as the 1950s. Named after the Boston Globe’s elite investigative team responsible for the Pulitzer Prize-winning probe into clerical sexual abuse in 2003, the film follows steely editor Walter “Robby” Robinson (Michael Keaton) and his team on their biggest story. It is the outsider, the new editor-in-chief Marty Baron (Liev Schreiber), who rekindles the flame of a story published and buried decades earlier. Sealed Church documents, put forward by a lawyer provide a new insight on abuse accusations against a single priest. Deputy managing editor Ben Bradlee Jr. (John Slattery) and Robinson both respond with scepticism over the idea of pursuing the Boston Archdiocese. “You wanna sue the Church?”(Bradlee Jr). Initially, only one lone priest was the subject of the investigation but the team begin to uncover a widening pattern of sexual abuse by Catholic priests in the Massachusetts Archdiocese. Tenacious reporter Michael Rezendes (Mark Rufallo) drags you around town chasing the elusive lawyer and the key documents. The sympathetic yet acute Sacha Pfeiffer (Rachel McAdams) fields harrowing testimony of the victims. The Boston Archdiocese where the film is set attempted a cover-up which eventually led to the resignation of Cardinal Archbishop Bernard Law. Superbly written by John Slattery and directed by Tom McCarthy, the double Oscar-wining drama dives deeper, reveals the emotional impact of the findings on the journalists involved. The combination of first-rate acting, and a gripping orchestral score, courtesy of Lord of the Rings trilogy composer Howard Shore, delivers a film that has you holding your breath until the credits roll. The kids weren’t all right: and it was only the Boston Globe’s blistering exposé that shone the light of justice into the unholy corridors of the Archdiocese of Boston Archbishop Law was subsequently promoted to the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome, one of the biggest churches in the world.