25th Apr2020

Moffie (Film)

by timbaros

moffie-selects-5It’s 1981 South Africa, a time when the country was still at the height of apartheid, and blacks were not the only class of people who were discriminated against, homosexuals didn’t have it easy either.

In the new amazing film ‘Moffie’ – based on an autobiographical novel by Andre Carl van der Merwe – beautifully tells the story of a young man called Nicholas (Kai Luke Brummer – wonderful), a teenager, who, with no choice, is sent to complete his compulsory military service. But Nicholas is not your boy next door – he’s gay, and not at all out of the closet. So he has to endure two years of military service in a system that spits up and chews out young men and turns them into hardened soldiers, hardened men. It’s a culture full of testosterone and machismo. And while Nicholas doesn’t let his secret out, he falls in love with another young soldier Dylan (Ryan de Villiers). In fact it was Dylan who initiates, and Nicholas, while a bit nervous during their first encounter, soon finds being with Nicholas very natural. But some soldiers do no adjust very well to army life (one soldier shoots himself in the head), while Dylan is sent away for unknown reasons, leaving Nicholas to endure his remaining time in the service, while still pining for Dylan, and still a moffie (faggot in the Afrikaans language). 
 
Moffie’ – which was called a masterpiece by Variety Magazine – is indeed an excellent film. Director Oliver Hermanus hits all the right notes, from Nicholas’ family life prior to going into the army (his father gives him a stack of straight porno magazines), to the daily brutality he and his fellow recruits get from their major, to the barracks scenes where the tension is palpable and tense, which is what you have when a couple dozen young men are all bunking down in the same room. But the scene when Nicholas, as a young boy, is with his parents at a public swimming pool, and he looks longingly at an older boy in the showers but is then exposed and scolded by an adult shower attendant in one amazing long shot will have you holding your breathe – it’s quite a very dramatic scene and excellently done. And at 104 minutes, ‘Moffie’ is quite a movie. Don’t miss it.
Off
19th Apr2020

The Host – Film

by timbaros

AMS SecretsDSC01294_editedWhy spend your evening on a boring Zoom chat when you can watch a film that is thrilling, dramatic and sexy!

The film is “The Host’ – and it is being released on April 17th on iTunes, Amazon Video, Google Play, Apple TV and all major VoD platforms. London banker Robert Atkinson (Mike Beckingham) has a good job, good looks, good everything, but wants more. When an opportunity arises for him to come into a lot of cash, via a Chinese cartel, he grabs it, but this leaves to unintended consequences that takes him to Amsterdam, where he winds up as guest in a very large house that has more secrets than you can count. The lady of the house, Vera (Maryam Hassouni), is mysterious yet alluring, domestic yet spidery, and she lures Robert into her web-like presence to a point of no return. Eventually, Robert’s brother Steve (Dougie Poynter) goes to Amsterdam to look for him, along with two detectives (Nigel Barber and Suan-Li Ong) who are investigating a crime they believe Robert is involved in. Mystery, drama and a good looking cast should be enough for a evening’s entertainment – yes? And even Sir Derek Jacobi makes an appearance!
“The Host’ is produced by Pearl Pictures Productions, who recently sponsored the Critics’ Circle Film Awards back in January (it feels like a long long time ago). Made by Pearl Pictures Productions, produced by Pearl’s Zachary Weckstein, and directed by Andrew Newberry, ’The Host’ was filmed in the heart of Amsterdam and London and has a great appearance by singer and actress Ruby Turner.
For more information on the film, please go to:
Instagram: @TheHost_Movie
Facebook: @TheHost2020
Twitter: @TheHost_Movie
#TheHostMovie2020
Off
19th Apr2020

And Then We Danced – Film

by timbaros
And_Then_We_Danced_Still4_TrioGeorgia, where the LGBT population still face challenges, is the setting of the gay love story ‘And Then We Danced,’ which is very good thanks to a great script, and great directing and acting.
Swedish Director Levan Akin’s (he is of Georgian descent) film id about young men of the National Georgian Ensemble where the typical dance routines are more masculine in nature. Levan Gelbakhiania plays Merab. He desperately wants to dance for the main ensemble but is still struggling at the junior level, and is given great support by his partner Mary (Ana Javakhishvili). Merab lives with his mother, grandmother and lazy brother, all in a flat where money is hard to come by and where the electricity gets turned off because the bill is not paid. One day a new dancer, Irakli (Bachi Valishvili) joins the junior ensemble, and soon enough him and Merab are among the few who have been chosen to audition for the main ensemble – both of their dreams. But on a weekend away with other dancers, Mareb and Irakli finally get to act on the chemistry that they had when they first met. But with the audition days away, and bad news from back home which might impact Irakli’s chances, will their new found relationship survive?
When ‘And Then We Danced’ premiered in Georgia, it was met with protests and violence. But it’s an achievement, both in it’s telling of a gay love story in a country where gay love stories don’t exist (its also a story a story about forbidden love), and an achievement in film because the story is beautifully told (written by Akin), and the acting is realistic by two leads who had no acting experience prior to this film. A must film to watch while you pass the time away at home.
Off
19th Apr2020

Vivarium – Film

by timbaros
vivariumImagine being trapped, held against your will, in a house and a neighbourhood that is weird and creepy. Actually that’s our reality right now, but take it one step further and imagine that there is simply no escape – and what you have then is Vivarium.
Vivarium literally means an enclosure, container, or structure adapted or prepared for keeping animals under semi-natural conditions for observation or study or as pets; like an aquarium or a terrarium. In the new scary and disturbing science fiction movie ‘Vivarium,’ Tom and Gemma (Jesse Eisenberg and Imogen Poots) are being observed, studied, but by whom they, nor we, don’t know. Before this they were just a young ordinary couple looking for a house to buy. Gemma was a teacher, while Tom was a DIY man. But one day they walk into a real estate agents office and meet an odd, clean cut and crisp robotic salesman named Martin (Jonathan Aris) who is more than happy to show them a house at a development called Yonder. Once they get there, everything looks and seems perfect; homes all alike in an environment with round clouds and blue skies, while the house Martin shows them is perfect, almost too perfect. But Martin disappears while Gemma and Tom are looking around the home, and they get into their car and realize there is no escaping the neighborhood. It’s then that their young idyllic future turns into a nightmare as they are forced to live in the house in which they can’t escape from, where food, and a baby boy, are delivered right to their doorstep, to create one happy family.
 
‘Vivarium’ shows a young couple right at their most vulnerable, put in a situation they simply just can’t escape from. Director and writer (with Garret Shanley) Lorcan Finnegan has a keen eye for detail, and as the mystery builds, so does the nightmare of the whole situation. Without being bloody and violent, Vivarium, is just downright scary, but more chillingly as perhaps because it seems all too real.
 
Vivarium is available on the following digital platforms:
 
iTunes/Apple TV
Amazon
Sky Store
Virgin
Google Play
Rakuten
BT
Playstation
Microsoft
Curzon Home Cinema
BFI Player
Off
19th Apr2020

The Invisible Man – Film

by timbaros
07-2An unseen stalker is wreaking havoc on the life of a San Francisco woman in the new version of ‘The Invisible Man.’

Elisabeth Moss plays Cecilia – who literally runs away from the her very wealthy tech genius of a husband Adrian (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) because of his mental and emotional abuse. But Cecelia has not completely broken away from trouble – she feels like she is being watched, spied on, and stalked by someone, something. But her sister Alice (Harriet Dyer) informs her that Adrian has committed suicide, and shows Cecelia the news on her smartphone. So her sister reassures her that she is free from Adrian and all the torment that he had caused her. But her unease continues, and racks up even more when strange things start to happen (a blanket pulled off from her bed, footsteps seen on the ground). This invisible stalker becomes more bold and violent, enough so that an unseen force murders her sister in plain sight, framing Cecila for the murder. She is convinced that her ‘dead’ husband is still alive, even after being assured that he’s dead by Adrian’s lawyer brother Tom (Michael Dorman). Writer and Director Leigh Whannel (’Saw’) really ratchets up the scare factor, including in quiet moments in the film when Cecilia is tending to normal activities. Moss is very good as the victim, and as the film creeps up to it’s 2 hour running time, the suspense builds, though there are a couple moments of disbelief. All in all ‘The Invisible Man’ is one scary film that successfully reimagines the very scary HG Wells original.
Now available on DVD:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Invisible-Man-DVD/dp/B084TJ6Y9S
Off