A Grand Quiet

Dispatches from Britain's Cinemas

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  • Looking At: The first Mortal Engines trailer

    Looking At: The first Mortal Engines trailer

    So I pretty much love the Mortal Engines books; have since I was a kid. They are a sorta class-conscious, post-apocalyptic version of steampunk that you don’t see too often. Steampunk as a genre often gets too trapped in the ‘Steam’ to really pay attention to the ‘Punk’.

    E Warren

    December 20, 2017
    Film
    Adaptation, Books, Cinema, Film, Films, Mortal Engines, Movie, Movies, Novel, Peter Jackson, Trailer, Trailers
  • Star Wars: The Last Jedi Review – The totality of it all

    Star Wars: The Last Jedi Review – The totality of it all

    There’s a whole lotta movie in Star Wars: The Last Jedi. It doesn’t all work, it can feel muddled and disparate at times, the wild variety of tones that it tries to capture don’t quite settle into a script that feels far more invested in being funny.

    E Warren

    December 15, 2017
    Film, Review, Uncategorized
    Action, Adam Driver, Andy Serkis, Carrie Fisher, Cinema, Daisy Ridley, Disney, Domhnall Gleeson, Film, Films, Four Stars, Gwendoline Christie, John Boyega, Kelly Marie Tran, Laura Dern, Lucasfilm, Lupita Nyong’o, Mark Hamill, Movie, Movies, Opinion, Oscar Isaac, Review, Rian Johnson, Science Fiction, Star Wars, The Last Jedi
  • The Disaster Artist Review – Outside the room

    The Disaster Artist Review – Outside the room

    Here’s what I’m gonna say. The Room is a godawful movie, it deserves its reputation as one of the best of the worst. But I think in it its own muddled incompetent way it speaks to the absurdity of life, the mostly millennial aged fans of the joint are the ones who have grown into…

    E Warren

    December 12, 2017
    Film, Review
    A24, Cinema, Comedy, Dave Franco, Drama, Film, Films, James Franco, Movie, Movies, Opinion, Point Grey Pictures, Review, Seth Rogen, The Disaster Artist, Two Stars, Warner Bros
  • Wonder Review – Not a single bad bone

    Wonder Review – Not a single bad bone

    There’s a point when watching Wonder that you realise the actual breadth of the movie’s warmth and compassion. I entered ready to be all cynical about it, seems so trite, sick boy overcomes all the odds. But while that’s the hook, the movie grows out from it; giving all its characters time and understanding.

    E Warren

    December 11, 2017
    Film, Review
    Cinema, Drama, Family, Film, Films, Four Stars, Jacob Tremblay, Julia Roberts, Lionsgate, Mandeville Films, Movie, Movies, Opinion, Owen Wilson, Review, Stephen Chbosky, Wonder
  • The Man Who Invented Christmas Review – Obvious humbug pun

    The Man Who Invented Christmas Review – Obvious humbug pun

    This is one distractingly made film. I ain’t sure why it turned out that way, the creatives have a fair deal of prestige behind them. At the very least they’ve been able to make things look convincing in the past.

    E Warren

    December 7, 2017
    Female Filmmakers, Film, POC Filmmakers, Review
    Bharat Nalluri, Bleecker Street, Christopher Plummer, Cinema, Comedy, Dan Stevens, Family, Film, Films, Jonathan Pryce, Movie, Movies, Opinion, Review, Susan Coyne, The Man Who Invented Christmas, Two Stars
  • Battle of the Sexes Review – American independents

    Battle of the Sexes Review – American independents

    I’ve been saying a lot recently that the past few months have been a context killer for movies, but then that’s always a more extreme version of what I been saying ever since Donny got elected. All of a sudden our good intentions count for nothing because they’re being projected into a reality where they…

    E Warren

    December 3, 2017
    Female Filmmakers, Film, Review
    Andrea Riseborough, Battle of the Sexes, Cinema, Comedy, Drama, Emma Stone, Film, Films, Fox Searchlight, Jonathan Dayton, Movie, Movies, Opinion, Review, Steve Carell, Two Stars, Valerie Faris
  • Daddy’s Home 2 Review – Shitty dude, shitty movie

    Daddy’s Home 2 Review – Shitty dude, shitty movie

    Daddy’s Home 2 wants to be a charming inoffensive family Christmas movie. Now, when you’re judging this kinda thing you wanna take intent into account. You wanna hope that the filmmakers know what they be doing, that whatever happened they were just trying to make the best film that they possibly could. The mistakes that…

    E Warren

    December 1, 2017
    Film, Review
    Cinema, Comedy, Daddy’s Home 2, Film, Films, Gary Sanchez Productions, John Lithgow, Linda Cardellini, Mark Wahlberg, Mel Gibson, Movie, Movies, One Star, Opinion, Paramount Pictures, Review, Sean Anders, Will Ferrell
  • Suburbicon Review – Trouble in Paradise

    Suburbicon Review – Trouble in Paradise

    I imagine George Clooney was feeling pretty woke when he filmed this. I’m not sure why he thought he’d be the one to nail a story on the struggles of a black family on the front lines of integration, it’s possible that he didn’t. That at least would explain why this family ain’t given a…

    E Warren

    November 30, 2017
    Film, Review
    Cinema, Comedy, Drama, Film, Films, George Clooney, Julianne Moore, Karimah Westbrook, Leith Burke, Matt Damon, Movie, Movies, Opinion, Oscar Isaac, Paramount Pictures, Review, Smokehouse Pictures, Suburbicon, Two Stars
  • Alive at the Bath Film Festival: King of the Belgians

    Alive at the Bath Film Festival: King of the Belgians

    I had a tutor in university who was a total cunt. Like irredeemable, one of the worst people you could ever meet. Like a total self-absorbed bastard, the sort whose lectures take rough and wild swings into total self-aggrandisement when you’re just trying to get your learning done.

    E Warren

    November 11, 2017
    Bath Film Festival 2017, Female Filmmakers, Film, Review
    Belgium, Bo Films, Bruno Georis, Cinema, Comedy, Film, Films, Jessica Woodworth, King of the Belgians, Lucie Debay, Mockumentary, Movie, Movies, Opinion, Peter Brosens, Peter Van den Begin, Review, Three Stars
  • Alive at the Bath Film Festival: Most Beautiful Island

    Alive at the Bath Film Festival: Most Beautiful Island

    Most Beautiful Island starts promising. About the experience of undocumented immigrants in New York Ciy, it’s a bunch of long lens shots of these women walking about. Picked out of the public, these shots hold for an uncomfortable time, only due to their lengths do you manage to discern the subject. There is this uncanny…

    E Warren

    November 10, 2017
    Bath Film Festival 2017, Female Filmmakers, Review
    Ana Asensio, Bath Film Festival 2017, Bulldog Film, Cinema, Drama, Film, Films, Glass Eye Pix, Most Beautiful Island, Movie, Movies, Natasha Romanova, Opinion, Review, Samuel Goldwyn Films, Three Stars, Thriller
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