Friday 30 September 2016

Thursday 29 September 2016

Wednesday 28 September 2016

Tuesday 27 September 2016

Monday 26 September 2016

Sunday 25 September 2016

TV

Scott & Bailey
5x02 Episode 2
5x03 Episode 3 [series finale]

Films

Mr. Turner (2014)
[#153 in 100 Films in a Year 2016]

this week on 100 Films

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


Badlands (1973)
"He was 25 years old. He combed his hair like James Dean. He was very fastidious. People who littered bothered him. She was 15. She took music lessons and could twirl a baton. She wasn’t very popular at school. For awhile they lived together in a tree house. In 1959, she watched while he killed a lot of people." As 60-word summaries go, that pretty fairly covers the characters, plot, and, to some degree, the film’s tone.
Read more here.


The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 2 (2015)
The artificially-extended Hunger Games trilogy-turned-tetralogy climaxes here. Presumably you’ve seen the first three and so know what you’re into by this point — either you’re invested or you’ve given up. Unless you want to know “does it end well?” before embarking on the whole thing, of course. While Mockingjay Part 2 is not the series’ finest instalment, it brings things to a decent head… eventually.
Read more here.


Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (2014)
the film wasn’t a success, either critically or commercially — despite casting a young, theoretically popular lead in Chris Pine, it didn’t attract the young audience needed to produce blockbuster numbers these days. I guess playing the “thriller” rather than “action” card didn’t pay off... I think the reaction has been unduly harsh, because Shadow Recruit is very effective at what it sets out to do, and is, in my view, easily the most entertaining Jack Ryan movie since at least the first
Read more here.


Magic in the Moonlight (2014)
the film is a romantic confection made up of sunny Côte d’Azur locations, pretty vintage costumes, gently witty dialogue, and quality actors gamely playing along. Colin Firth is hardly stretched as a romantic lead, but Stanley’s pompousness and sarcastic cynicism gives the role a little bite. Emma Stone’s big eyes do half the work for her, though she still gives it her all in a way that makes her character and performance endearing.
Read more here.


Ted 2 (2015)
The plot (about Ted trying to become a legally recognised person) exists to string together comedic set pieces. Perhaps that’s why the pace feels off: individual parts are funny, but it’s slow going.
Read more here.


Also, my 100 Favourites series continued with 2 more posts...


Road to Perdition (2002)
On the surface it’s a revenge thriller, replete with ’30s mob style and Tommy Gun massacres, but under that is a more emotive tale about masculinity as it pertains to the father/son dynamic. It’s all handled with sensitive artistry by director Sam Mendes, supported by first-rate technical merits across the board
Read more here.


The Rock (1996)
While it functions well in Bay’s familiar wheelhouse of adrenaline-pumping action-thriller, it’s elevated by a screenplay that offers dialogue which, at times, can be witty and/or intelligent; and, most importantly, which creates sympathetic characters on both sides of the conflict. There aren’t many actioners where you can say “the writing’s the best bit”, are there?
Read more here.


More next Sunday.

Saturday 24 September 2016

TV

The Great British Bake Off: An Extra Slice
3x05 Episode 5
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Scott & Bailey
5x01 Episode 1

Collection Count

Collection Count tracks my DVD/Blu-ray collection via a number of statistics every week.

A few week's worth of orders coalesced into the last few days, leaving me with my biggest single weekly update in... about a month. Man, I buy too much stuff.

Number of titles in collection: 1,890 [up 4]
Of which DVDs: 1,204 [up 1]
Of which Blu-rays: 688 [up 3]

Number of discs in collection: 4,881 [up 17]
Number of films in collection: 2,084 [up 5]
Number of TV episodes in collection: 7,448 [up 27]
Number of short films in collection: 473 [no change]

See you next week, faithful reader.

Friday 23 September 2016

Thursday 22 September 2016

Wednesday 21 September 2016

Tuesday 20 September 2016

Monday 19 September 2016

Sunday 18 September 2016

TV

Castle
6x08 A Murder is Forever

Duck Quacks Don't Echo
5x03 Episode 3

this week on 100 Films

It's the time of the month for 100 Films in a Year to look back at recent TV...




Also this week, I published 4 brand-new reviews...


American Ultra (2015)
Max Landis’ wish-fulfilment screenplay (by which I mean Max Landis’ screenplay is about fulfilling Max Landis’ wishes) sees Jesse Eisenberg as a laggard stoner who turns out to be a CIA sleeper agent with Bourne-esque abilities, which are revealed when the director of a rival CIA programme (Topher Grace) sets out to kill him and anyone who stands in their way, including girlfriend Kristen Stewart.
Read more here.


Fast & Furious 7 (2015)
the action is ridiculous and implausible. Even the stuff that doesn’t seem physically impossible is overblown. But it’s so ludicrous that the film can’t possibly be trying to claim it’s real anymore, and therefore it kind of works — they’ve committed to it. Though anyone who started out enjoying this series for its broadly-realistic car-racing thrills must be pretty disappointed in it by this point.
Read more here.


Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole (2010)
It’s an action-fantasy movie… starring owls. It’s animated, but in a dark, realistic way (think Rango with less cartoonishness and less light). It’s based on a kids’ book series… but directed by Zack Snyder, clearly reining in his R-rated impulses (violence occurs just off screen, leading to “did that happen?” confusion)
Read more here.


Pride and Prejudice (1940)
The first adaptation of Jane Austen’s ever-popular novel, MGM’s film is a compromised endeavour: by executives softening dialogue and rewriting characters; by changing its setting to permit grander costumes; by Gone with the Wind using all the Technicolor stock, forcing the lavish production to shoot in black-and-white.
Read more here.


Finally, my 100 Favourites series continued with 2 huge '80s blockbuster classics...


Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
It’s pretty much a perfect adventure movie: relentlessly paced, packed with action, lightened with humour, full of likeable heroes, who are brave and competent but also a little bit flawed, and hissable villains, with scene after scene of imaginative situations and fabulously staged derring-do.
Read more here.


Return of the Jedi (1983)
These days, the answer to the question “how did they do that?” is “CGI”. Back in the ’80s, however, they had to be a bit more creative... For example, the shot where the Imperial fleet spring their trap on the Rebels was the most complex matte shot ever attempted, with dozens of separate model elements having to be printed in.
Read more here.


More next Sunday.

Saturday 17 September 2016

Films

Magic in the Moonlight (2014)
[#151 in 100 Films in a Year 2016]

The Survivalist (2015)
[#150 in 100 Films in a Year 2016]

Collection Count

Collection Count tracks my DVD/Blu-ray collection via a number of statistics every week.

Number of titles in collection: 1,886 [up 1]
Of which DVDs: 1,203 [down 1]
Of which Blu-rays: 685 [up 2]

Number of discs in collection: 4,864 [up 1]
Number of films in collection: 2,079 [up 3]
Number of TV episodes in collection: 7,421 [no change]
Number of short films in collection: 473 [no change]

See you next week, faithful reader.

Friday 16 September 2016

Thursday 15 September 2016

TV

One of Us
Part 4 Adam and Grace [finale]
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Would I Lie To You?
10x02 Episode 2
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Wednesday 14 September 2016

Monday 12 September 2016

Sunday 11 September 2016

TV

One of Us
Part 2 Beneath the Surface
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Would I Lie To You?
10x01 Episode 1
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

this week on 100 Films

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


Barely Lethal (2015)
if its establishing concept sounds like something you might enjoy, and you go in with suitably lowered expectations, then I think there’s a fair chance you’d find it to be a frequently amusing, occasionally very funny, and sometimes quite sweet high school comedy — with added doses of action comedy for good measure.
Read more here.


Ben-Hur (1959)
the other subtext I alluded to earlier: the possibility that Judah and Messala were once lovers. The claim originates with screenwriter Gore Vidal, who may or may not have written some or all of the screenplay that was used for shooting. According to Vidal, he and Stephen Boyd discussed the idea before shooting began, and then Boyd played the scenes with it in mind. [...] the content of the film makes it easy to believe — the scenes between Messala and Judah, especially when they’re first reunited, absolutely play like there’s a romantic history between them.
Read more here.


Return of the One-Armed Swordsman (1969)
With ten varied adversaries to defeat, Return puts greater emphasis on the action than did its more dramatic forebear. The fighting is solid, with the enemies’ different skills adding some occasional freshness, but the plot underneath is thin.
Read more here.


Steve Jobs (2015)
Sorkin’s writing is awe-inducing, especially to anyone who’s ever dabbled in or dreamed of being a writer. The construction of it all, at every level — from line to line, from scene to scene, from act to act, across the whole piece… And this is a particularly magnificent construction, so precisely structured, rife with mirroring and repetition, and yet done so well that it doesn’t feel locked in to or constrained by an unwavering structure.
Read more here.


Ten Little Indians (1974)
The third English-language screen adaptation of Agatha Christie’s famed mystery, one of the best-selling novels of all time, relocates the action to the middle of a desert but is otherwise a word-for-word remake of the 1965 version [...] It’s interesting, therefore, that this lacks the atmosphere or tension of that version.
Read more here.


Also, my 100 Favourites series continued with 2 more posts...


Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)
an exciting, humorous, creepy, fun movie. That the sequels haven’t lived up to it is disappointing, but the first still stands as a near-perfect example of big-budget swashbuckling entertainment — it’s basically the dictionary definition of a summer blockbuster.
Read more here.


Pulp Fiction (1994)
Most films can be divvied up into heroes and villains one way or another — I’ve certainly managed it for the previous 70 films in this list. Pulp Fiction muddies its waters considerably, with criminals for heroes at the best of times, and the “short story collection” style meaning there’s an abundance of characters anyway, some of whom arguably change sides from one tale to the next. Nonetheless, you’d have to point to hitmen Vincent Vega and Jules Winnfield, and their ever-so-Tarantino rambling conversations about nothing and everything, as the film’s primary duo.
Read more here.


More next Sunday.

Saturday 10 September 2016

TV

Duck Quacks Don't Echo
5x02 Episode 2

Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Dogs
5x02 Episode 2
[Watch it (again) on the ITV Hub.]

Films

Rushmore (1998)
[#146 in 100 Films in a Year 2016]

Collection Count

Collection Count tracks my DVD/Blu-ray collection via a number of statistics every week.

Number of titles in collection: 1,885 [up 1]
Of which DVDs: 1,202 [no change]
Of which Blu-rays: 683 [up 1]

Number of discs in collection: 4,863 [up 1]
Number of films in collection: 2,076 [up 1]
Number of TV episodes in collection: 7,421 [no change]
Number of short films in collection: 473 [no change]

See you next week, faithful reader.

Friday 9 September 2016

Thursday 8 September 2016

Wednesday 7 September 2016

Tuesday 6 September 2016

Monday 5 September 2016

Sunday 4 September 2016

Films

Spotlight (2015)
[#144 in 100 Films in a Year 2016]

this week on 100 Films

2016 entered yet another new month this past week, meaning it was time to look back at August on 100 Films in a Year...




As well as that, only 2 brand-new reviews were published this week... but one of them was an epic...


The Story of Film: An Odyssey (2011)
100 Films in a Year #1000 — Written, directed, and narrated by film journalist/historian/fan Mark Cousins, The Story of Film: An Odyssey is an epic 15-hour account of innovation throughout the history of moviemaking, which began its premiere broadcast five years ago today. It’s an acclaimed work, to be sure, but one that also attracts its fair share of controversy — about films and filmmakers that Cousins chose to leave out, in some cases about those he chose to include, and about how the documentary itself was made: the oddly framed interviews, the artistic shots of baubles, Cousins’ accent and vocal inflections.
Read more here.


Zoolander (2001)
The story of an almost-past-it model who’s brainwashed into being an assassin, it’s essentially a one joke film (“aren’t models dumb?”), but gets surprisingly good mileage out of that. Not relentlessly amusing, nor the best thing on anyone’s CV, but some bits are very funny.
Read more here.


And my 100 Favourites series continued with 2 more posts, too...


One Hour Photo (2002)
“Family photos depict smiling faces… births, weddings, holidays, children’s birthday parties. People take pictures of the happy moments in their lives. Someone looking through our photo album would conclude that we had led a joyous, leisurely existence free of tragedy. No one ever takes a photograph of something they want to forget.”
Read more here.


Phone Booth (2002)
Regular readers will know of my fondness for the single-location thriller, and this is one of the films that helped define that love. And events occur in real-time, which is just a bonus. Colin Farrell and Kiefer Sutherland are both on excellent form as the hostage who maybe has it coming and the hostage taker who maybe has a point.
Read more here.


More next Sunday.

Saturday 3 September 2016

TV

Castle
6x03 Need to Know

Doctor Foster
1x04 Episode 4

Collection Count

Collection Count tracks my DVD/Blu-ray collection via a number of statistics every week.

One new title this week, and a couple of tweaks on numbers that I must've got wrong somewhere. Hey-ho.

On the bright side: running time update! Yay!

Number of titles in collection: 1,884 [up 1]
Of which DVDs: 1,202 [no change]
Of which Blu-rays: 682 [up 1]

Number of discs in collection: 4,862 [up 1]
Number of films in collection: 2,075 [no change]
Number of TV episodes in collection: 7,421 [down 1]
Number of short films in collection: 473 [no change]

Total running time of collection (approx.):
357 days, 19 hours, and 22 minutes.
(Up 4 days, 4 hours, and 53 minutes from last month.)

That's the biggest running time increase in six months, which was also caused by adding a complete TV series -- a slightly longer once, hence being slightly bigger!

See you next week, faithful reader.

Thursday 1 September 2016

TV

Duck Quacks Don't Echo
5x01 Episode 1
Seems I accidentally missed a whole series of this back in April & May. Hey-ho.

The Great British Bake Off
7x02 Biscuit Week
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]