01st Nov2020

Summer of ’85 (Film)

by timbaros

ETE_85_Photo_3©2020_MANDARIN PRODUCTION_FOZ_France 2 CINEMA_PLAYTIME PRODUCTION_SCOPE PICTURES copyRemember your first romance? It probably took place during the summer. The new film ’Summer of ’85’ beautifully tells the story of one young man who experiences his first romance – in the summer of 1985.

The opening song ‘In Between Days’ by The Cure sets the era for the film (yes, you know it if you were around then). ‘Summer of 85’ is set in a Normandy, France, seaside town where Alexis Robin (a memorable Félix Lefebvre) lives with his parents and is in the gap period between school and college. Alexis enjoys being the near the water, so much so that one day he takes a small boat out to sea but gets caught in a storm. He is rescued by the all too dashing Benjamin Voisin (David Gorman). Benjamin makes sure Félix is fine and takes him to his home to take care of him, where his mom (a very good Valeria Bruni Tedeschi) undresses Félix for a hot bath, and admires his manhood). This leads to a quick relationship where Alexis has his first real crush (and love) with Benjamin. But it’s all too fast and furious, and when Benjamin’s mom (who was recently widowed) asks Félix to work in their nautical shop full time, it’s might be too much too soon for the perfect pair. And when Brit Kate (Philippine Velge) enters the picture the boys relationship is put to the test. Will it pass or fail? And then an unseen tragedy, typical in French films, dramatically changes the tone of the film.
 
Directed and co-written by the master François Ozon – the creator of so many great and memorable films (recent films include ‘By the Grace of God’ and L’Amant Double’) scores another winner here with a superb choice of actors, location, and songs (’Sailing’ by Rod Steward and Bananarama’s ‘Cruel Summer’ tells the story in their titles). Though the film goes a bit off the charts by having Félix dress up as a young woman in one silly scene (reminiscent of ’The New Girlfriend’), ’Summer of ’85’ is still a very memorable and charming film about young love. It’s a film that will take you back to your first summer love.
Summer of 85 is in cinemas and on Curzon Home Cinema
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01st Nov2020

Buyer & Cellar (Theatre)

by timbaros

Image 19-10-2020 at 00.06Take a tour through Barbra Streisand’s underground shopping center – in her home – in the new play ‘Buyer & Cellar.’

Is the shopping center real? That’s for you to decide, but in this brilliant production you’ll get a bit of insight into the woman who is the most talented, respected and perhaps loneliest biggest celebrity in the world.
Now playing at the Above the Stag theatre (until November 8th) in a show that never had it’s premiere as it was scheduled to open in mid-March, ‘Buyer & Cellar’ is now here and it’s your chance to go see it in a socially distanced theatre which is perhaps one of the cleanest around!
And Aaron Sidwell is brilliant as Alex More, an out of work actor who gets hired for a mysterious job, it’s a job that no one knew ever existed – to run the shops beneath Barbra Streisand’s Malibu home, shops that are full of her memorabilia. But when Alex encounters La Streisand when she enters the basement, he treats her like any other customer in shops where there will be only one customer – HER. And when she wants to buy a doll, Sidwell cleverly and quickly jumps inter her character, and he effortlessly does her throughout the show. Eventually Alex feels like he and Streisand are forming a bond each time she comes to the shops, and he yearns to know whether she sees him as a friend or just another employee. As the lines get blurred Alex maintains his composure until he’s invited upstairs to see the house, and he’s hoping this will be the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
In this 100 minutes plus show, Sidwell who holds your attention and masters the dialogue, and draws us in to his world – and Barbra’s basement shopping mall. It’s a one-man show – with a larger than life celebrity at its center, but Sidwell getting the applause.

 

Now at https://abovethestag.org.uk
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