Sunday 14 September 2014

TV

Crimes of Passion
1x03 No More Murders
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Films

Braveheart (1995)
[#87 in 100 Films in a Year 2014]

What Do You Mean You Haven't Seen...? 2014 #9

Seemed an appropriate choice this week.

this week on 100 Films

Three brand-new reviews were published to 100 Films in a Year this week, and they were...


Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971)
Disney attempted to replicate the success of Mary Poppins with this, another musical adaptation of a fantastical British novel set in Britain with British people in it — including some kids who, based on their accents, must be from the same part of London as Dick Van Dyke’s Bert.
Read more here.


Idiocracy (2006)
The creator of Beavis and Butthead imagines a future America in which, essentially, everyone has become his once-famous animated creations. I think — I never watched it. Basically, everyone’s a moron.
Read more here.


Monsters vs Aliens (2009)
it’s The Avengers with ’50s B-movie monsters. If that doesn’t sound like a fun concept, you’re probably already on a hiding to nothing. It has a love and understanding of B-movies that should keep many a genre fan happy, suggesting it was created for them almost as much as its true audience [i.e. kids]
Read more here.


Plus four were new to the new blog...


Be Kind Rewind (2008)
The work of Michel Gondry and the comedy of Jack Black are both, shall we say, acquired tastes, and not ones you would necessarily expect to overlap. Yet here they do — at least to an extent — but while Black is again doing his usual schtick as the Ker-Azy Best Mate, it’s the writer-director who is perhaps offering some surprises.
Read more here.


It Happened Here (1966)
Alternate histories are always fun, and nothing seems to have provoked more than the Second World War. Which, as a defining event in modern history for a good chunk of the world, is understandable. It Happened Here is perhaps one of the earliest examples, depicting a 1940s Britain under Nazi occupation.
Read more here.


Murder on the Orient Express (1974)
arguably Agatha Christie’s most famous novel, perhaps because of its widely-known twist ending, or perhaps because it’s inspired in part by a high-profile true story, or perhaps because of this multi-Oscar-nominated all-star adaptation.
Read more here.


Over the Hedge (2006)
CGI movies are far too common these days, meaning that the quality is dropping... Over the Hedge is certainly derivative — its character arc is almost directly lifted from Toy Story, for example — but it is beautifully animated
Read more here.


More next Sunday.