Showing posts with label garth jennings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garth jennings. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

No Restaurant At The End Of The Universe

Listen, we've all known for a couple of years that any sequel to Garth Jennings' Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy would be, at best, highly improbable, but now Martin Freeman has reiterated the fact and, here and there across the web, the knives have come out and people have started taking stabs at the film again.

But why? Why don't they like it?

Guide, as I tend to call it to save on tongue, is one of the films I use most frequently in my film classes. Every one of my students has watched it, and a couple of sequences have been quite rigorously dismantled in class. In fact, there's one shot in the film I find quite simply indispensible in teaching mise en scene (if you can work out which shot it is, you can win a gold star). There's some truly brilliant cinema here, and Jennings often displays the grasp of the language and craft of film that marks him out, after only two feature films, as one of the most exciting and talented of modern filmmakers.

Jennings' film is definitely not the TV show, which in turn was not the books, and they were not the radio show. Every new version has taken some pretty sharp turns from the previous, but that kind of goes without saying. What is much less discussed, however, is how the problems are, generally, problems that do stretch back through all of the versions. Houses getting knocked down to make way for bypasses? That's just the biggest and most obvious example of Douglas Adams dated satire and stale view of beauracracy. Where he did manage to hit on something timeless - the improbability drive, the conception of Zaphod as a politician - it has survived and much of this material is better presented by Jennings than we'd ever seen it before.

I think there's a sad nostalgia at fault here. Like the countless hordes that profess Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory is somehow a better film than Tim Burton's Charlie (that's a truly ludicrous position if you just stand back and compare them side to side without emotional fogginess) these Guide bashers are basing their cases on little more than sentiment.

On the one hand, I'm sad that Jennings won't be stepping back behind the camera for The Restaurant at the End of the Universe - but on the other hand, he's got better things to do and I just want to see him do those. Son of Rambow is streets ahead of Guide, certainly in terms of the writing, and it suggests to me that Jennings is better off not shackling himself to fondly remembered, not-as-good-as-you-think dinosaurs that he can't deliver to their full potential without changing but can't update without being punished for it.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Son Of Rambow At The Toronto International Festival

I can't recommend Son of Rambow strongly enough. I've written plenty about it in the past, so leaf through that for more info.

It will be screening at TIFF on September 14th as part of their Contemporary World Cinema program. If you can go, do go.

Friday, May 11, 2007

Son Of Rambow In Seattle

Son of Rambow is the opening night film for the Seattle film festival. Book. Now.

Friday, April 27, 2007

Son Of Rambow Release Dates

It looks like Hammer and Tongs' Son of Rambow will open on July 20th in the US, October 12th in the UK. I'm one of the lucky few to have already seen it - and if I see a better film this year, I'll be even luckier.

The title for the film is still undecided - officially, it is currently Son of Rambow (Working Title) but it may ened up just Son of Rambow or Son of Rambow and the As Yet Unannounced Subtitle (City of Gods, Maybe). I'd prefer Son of Rambow plain and simple, but whatever the decision, you'll still want to see this one on opening night.

Monday, April 16, 2007

The Top Twenty-One British Directors Of All Time

The Telegraph have compiled a list of those they would say are the best 21 British film directors ever. I'll run the list by you, and then tell you what I make of it; then, please, chime in with your own comments too.

1) Alfred Hitchcock 2) Charlie Chaplin 3) Michael Powell 4) David Lean 5) Nicolas Roeg 6) Carol Reed 7) John Boorman 8) Terence Davies 9) Alexander Mackendrick 10) Stephen Frears 11) Ridley Scott 12) Michael Winterbottom 13) John Schlesinger 14) Danny Boyle 15) Lindsay Anderson 16) Bill Douglas 17) Ken Loach 18) Thorald Dickinson 19) Mike Leigh 20) Shane Meadows 21) Ken Russell

Let's delete some of those, first of all. My list would never feature Shane Meadows, Michael Winterbottom, John Boorman or Charlie Chaplin and Powell would be admitted only in the company fo a chaperone - that is, as an adjunt to Emeric Pressberger.

So who would I add? Alan Clarke, without a shadow of a doubt. How he was left off in the first place I could never suppose. Lynn Ramsey - even if she'd only ever made shorts and her career was curtailed before
Ratcatcher, she'd deserve a spot in the top twenty. Jonathan Glazer too - he'd be notable if he'd never 'graduated' to features from promos and adds. For the more mainstream-friendly picks, I'd go for Edgar Wright and Garth Jennings, directors of the second-best and best film I've seen this year so far this year (those being Hot Fuzz and Son of Rambow).

Notable mentions in no particular order - some of these would make it into the twenty one and I guess some wouldn't, though they're better choices, I believe than the 'delete list' above: John and Roy Boulting, Paul Greenaway, Mike Hodges, Iain Softley, Bruce Robinson, Derek Jarman, Nick Park, Chris Menges, John Hough, Richard Eyre, Michael Reeves and Lewin Fitzhamon.

Definitely Lewin Fitzhamon.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Son Of Rambow To Open Sundance Season At Brooklyn Academy Of Music

Every year, the Brooklyn Academy of Music parneters with Sundance to screen a selection of the films from that year's festival. This year, the series begins on May 31st with Garth Jennings' truly wonderful Son of Rambow. Tickets aren't on sale at time of writing, but they will be imminently. If you're in New York, I strongly suggest you make the effort.

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Dreamachine

Hanway Films - financiers of the best film of 2006, Terry Gilliam's Tideland - and Celluloid Dreams - financiers of the best film of 2007 so far, Garth Jennings' Son of Rambow - have merged.

Variety announce that the new company will be called Dreamachine and have a library of 500 films. It will be run by Hengameh Panahi and Jeremy Thomas. Thomas will continue to produce films independently through The Recorded Picture Company, but these will then be handle by Dreamachine.

Upcoming films from the new super sales entity include Tom Kalin's Savage Grace, Ringo Lam, Tsui Hark and Johnnie To's Triangle, Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis and Todd Haynes' I'm Not There. Hopefully there'll be even more of this calibre to come now they've pooled dollars.

Looks like Cannes this year is going to be dominated by this wonderful new beast.

Saturday, March 31, 2007

A Pub Shoe, Innit?

Tonight's Culture Show on BBC2 featured Mark Kermode playing pool with Danny Boyle, and a trailer for next week when he's going to play darts with Shane Meadows. I hope Michael Winner's getting better, they'll needing him at the fruit machine the week after, I expect.

Why are so many British filmmakers so bad? As fars as true greats go, wll, we've got Edgar Wright and Lynn Ramsey and... Garth Jennings... (of course, how could I forget Garth Jennings... doh!)...

Er... Um... there's always Richard Curtis. How many of you are going to agree with that? I love Curtis, but I know he's not a popular choice amongst bloggers and blog readers.

Some of the greatest directors of all time came from the UK: Alfred Hitchcock, Alexander Mackendrick and Alan Clarke (The Three Als) are amongst the very best from anyplace, at any time. And now?

I suppose there's Terry Gilliam. He's forfeit his US citizenship, so I think we can claim him now.

Maybe the fact that there's almost no film industry in the UK is part of the problem; maybe the fact that the prevailing British film culture is one of imitation is another.

Monday, February 12, 2007

Director's Label To End With One More Disc Of Gondry Goodness

A couple of weeks ago, after being privileged enough to see a very early screening of Son of Rambow, I was lucky to be able to share a few words with Garth Jennings, the film's director. As one half of Hammer and Tongs he has been responsible for many of the best music videos of the last ten years, and their work was slated to be the subject of the next Directors Label DVD.

Jennings didn't seem to think it was going to happen. He admitted that he didn't know, but did indicate that things had gone very quiet.

Now it's clearer. The second wave of discs - Mark Romanek, Jonathan Glazer, Stephane Sednaoui and Anton Corbijn - did not acheive anything like the sales of wave one - Michel Gondry, Spike Jonze and Chris Cunningham. Sadly, this has pretty much rang the death knell for the whole project.

As well as Hammer and Tongs, Shynola were due a disc too, alongside Jean Baptiste-Mondino. Instead, it looks like there is going to be only one more title, a second volume of Gondry's work. Without a doubt, Gondry was the biggest draw in the whole series so far - though I do love my Romanek collection in particular. Despite featuring most of his most famous promos, Gondry's first disc barely scratched the surface of his full ouevre so rest assured that there's plenty more good stuff to fill out another installment.

It's good news that there's more Michel to come, but I only hope collections from Hammer and Tongs and Shynola can find their way out through some other means. Any entrepeneurs out there willing to take a punt?

A brief footnote. Visitors to the official Hammer and Tongs website may have noticed the text (working title) popping up everytime the words Son of Rambow are used. I feared that there may be a problem - either with the use of the Rambo copyright, or with the film's distributor Paramount Vantage finding this title unusable in marketing terms - so I e-mailed Hammer and Tongs to find out what is going on. Here's Garth's reply:

"
It is still a working title because we might add a sub-title. We're not sure yet. Nothing sinister though."

The film does have a subtitle on imdb, where it is referred to as Son of Rambow: A Home Movie. I prefer the shorter version, for sure.

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Son Of Rambow Review

I know this post has only just begun but let's get down to business. Literally.

The worldwide distribution rights to Son of Rambow were sold in the biggest deal brokered at Sundance this year. After a reportedly rather heated bidding war, Paramount Vantage emerged victorious, their wallets some 8 million dollars lighter. What they already know, and what I'm about to illustrate to you, is that they scored a genuine bargain. 8 million for a film this good? A film this imaginative, witty, charming, effortlessly engaging, original and thoroughly satisfying? It even takes the shine off of Fox Searchlight's 10 million down for Little Miss Sunshine. This is a Sundance fairy tale with a happy ending for all involved - particularly audiences.

Son of Rambow is set in the 1980s, at a time when video camcorders were becoming accessible to the more privileged end of the consumer market. This was the time when Francis Ford Copolla predicted the next great filmmaker would not be a film school student, as per his generation, but just 'a kid' making films 'in his garage'. It was also a time when home video viewing was eating into cinema audiences, and when video piracy was beginning to flourish. It was a time when budding filmmakers with actual wares to show were somewhat fewer and farther between than today, and wanting to be a movie maker somehow seemed more special. It was also the time when playground chatter was filled with hideous recollections of video nasties, both seen and imagined, accurately reported or lavishly embellished. This was my childhood, it may well have been yours, and
now it is the backdrop to Son of Rambow.

Here's an excerpt from the official synopsis:

We see the story through the eyes of Will, the eldest son of a fatherless Plymouth Brethren family. The Brethren regard themselves as God’s ‘chosen ones’ and their strict moral code means that Will has never been allowed to mix with the other ‘worldlies,’ listen to music or watch TV, until he finds himself caught up in the extraordinary world of Lee Carter, the school terror and maker of bizarre home movies. Carter exposes Will to a pirate copy of Rambo: First Blood and from that moment Will’s mind is blown wide open and he’s easily convinced to be the stuntman in Lee Carters’ diabolical home movie. Will’s imaginative little brain is not only given chance to flourish in the world of film making, but is also very handy when it comes to dreaming up elaborate schemes to keep his partnership with Lee Carter a secret from the Brethen community.

Will is played by Bill Milner, Lee by Will Poulter (try saying all of that three times fast) and each is free of the typical child actor's shortcomings, never cloying, never too keen to please. Milner is soulful, quietly thoughtful, strong inside while Poulter is stronger outside, sometimes raging, cocky. They seem to have been found this way and plugged in as perfect matches for the roles as written. The younger supporting cast sometimes threaten to steal the show, and occaisonally do, with any appearance by Jules Sitruk as Didier Revol - the French foreign exchange student who comes on as too cool for school - guaranteeing a true gem of comedy, always cut with the squirm factor of his hilarious New Wave fashions.

The adult cast is splendid, too, though Jessica Stevenson has certainly had showier roles in the past and Adam Godley is hardly there to be seen in his brief appearance as a leader in the Brethren. But they're all good: National treasure Eric Sykes is rooted to the spot for a handful of winning cameos, Anna Wing's final close-up simply couldn't be bettered. But best of all is the roster of school teachers - blink and you'll miss a curious cameo from Hot Fuzz director Edgar Wright in the metal work lesson while Adam Buxton suffers for our amusement once more and Paul Ritter is just about the funniest thing in a very funny film. His delivery of a wonderful joke about flood planes and silt is, without a doubt, my favourite piece of acting I've seen so far this year. Ben Stein and Ray Walston's days as the most quoted of movie teachers may well be coming to an end.

As the story progresses, the Son of Rambow film-within-the film develops scene by scene from something simple, if explosive and stunt-packed, to a more floridly imagined affair. More characters are recruited, set-pieces become bigger and better, the plot's logic becomes far more fanciful, and perhaps naive, but also more truthful. Eventually, a few sharp turns in plot, cast and crew take the film somewhere very different than initially imagined. It becomes the perfect expression of Will and Lee, and an incredible record of the journey they took in making the film. All the while, it remains believably the work of the characters we see shooting it, never once becoming a vessel for Garth Jennings to show off, doodle indulgently or simply goof around. In a very real sense, Son of Rambow offers two heartfelt epics of unrestrained creativity for the price of one.

Jennings' chops as a director were never in question, but I'm sure this is the film that will make his name. He has the gusto and sincerity of his little fictional filmmakers and the perfect timing, incredible eye, good taste, sensitivity and technical integrity Will and Lee don't even notice they're missing.

The worst I can say for Son of Rambow is that some of its beats seem a little conventional, back there in the mechanics behind the constant invention exploding up front. The story is more than solid, however, and is very well structured, and there are enough pleasantly offbeat developments to keep you hopping foot-to-foot if you're trying to predict exactly where everything is going.

Son of Rambow is about a lot of things, not all of them obvious - certainly not from the standard synopsis. You'll appreciate taking the time to unravel them all for yourself.

The cast and crew screening of the film took place today, and though I was neither, I was lucky enough to be invited along. This was the first screening since the finished film was first unveiled at Sundance, and the atmosphere was suitably electric. Despite my elevated expectations and the atmosphere of eager anticipation, the film still delivered - trust me, I don't normally find this to be the case, I normally have to manage my expectations harshly to keep disappointment in check. There was one notable downside to attending this very early screening, however: I have no idea how long it will be before I can see Son of Rambow again, before I can take my friends along, before I can give it an honest-to-goodness solid-gold plug here on film ick to try and drive you all out to it on opening night, and I know I'm going to be itching all over long before that day finally comes.

...and I'm trying hard to not to even think about getting my hands on a copy of some kind of special-features laden DVD.

Of the films of 2007 I've seen so far, Son of Rambow and Hot Fuzz undoubtedly comprise my top two.

Friday, February 02, 2007

Hammer And Tongs Interview

ComingSoon have posted a nice, long interview with Hammer and Tongs: Garth Jennings and Nick Goldsmith, writer-director and producer of Son of Rambow. They discuss that film's inspiration, production and reception, a little about Hitchhiker's Guide and it's sequels, and their plans for what Hammer and Tongs will be doing next.

There's plenty more on Hammer and Tongs dotted film ick. Use the tags below to explore it all.

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Not On A Hill

From the Basement is a web-hawked music show originally conceived by Nigel Godrich, Adam Buxton (of Adam and Joe and, latterly, Hot Fuzz), Garth Jennings and Sophie Muller. The title was Jennings' idea, Buxton was at some point to present (though now, there is no presenter and everything focuses very closely on the artists and the music ) and Muller has directed.

The first episode is available now, from the official site as well directly from iTunes, and features Thom Yorke, The White Stripes and Kieran Hebden of Four Tet. Sadly, it's not free like a lot of good stuff online, but it's not desperately overpriced: £9.48 for the whole show or £1.89 for each segment, which I dare say, fans will shell out in the blink of an eye. The trailer might convince some of the rest of us.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Best At The Fest

ComingSoon have published what appears to be the first review of Son of Rambow, calling it their "favorite movie of this year's Sundance Film Festival". They'll also have an interview with Garth Jennings and Nick Goldsmith going live 'shortly', which I'll be sure to link to seeing as, well, this has pretty much become Rambow central.

[EDIT: Annie Frisbie reviews Son of Rambow at Zoom In, and acheives the impossible: she makes me even more keen to see it]

[EDIT: Now Cinematical have their glowing review up too]

[EDIT: Nerve certainly liked the film plenty, but still seem a little cooler than most other folks. No accounting for taste]

[EDIT: Time Out are suitably impressed]

[EDIT: Here's the official press release from Paramount Vantage.

January 23, 2007 - Paramount Vantage is proud to announce that they have acquired worldwide rights (excluding Japan, Germany and French Free TV) to Son of Rambow, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Garth Jennings wrote the script and directs. The film was produced by Hammer & Tongs, the production company Jennings and producing partner Nick Goldsmith created in 1999. Garth Jennings, Nick Goldsmith, Hengameh Panahi, Ben Goldhirsh and Bristol Baughan served as producers.

Set in the 1980’s, Son of Rambow, is a coming of age comedy about two young English boys who are inspired after seeing Rambo: First Blood to make a Rambo movie of their own. Through their hilarious adventures in filmmaking they learn the meaning of true friendship.

John Lesher, President and Nick Myer, Co-President of Paramount Vantage, stated “Son of Rambow is a funny, moving and beautifully crafted tale of friendship and the poignant journey of filmmaking. We are thrilled to be distributing Son of Rambow and welcome director Garth Jennings, and the creative visionaries Hammer & Tongs, to our family.”

“Hammer and Tongs are hard-wired into the essence of childhood. It’s extraordinary!” says Celluloid Dreams President Hengameh Panahi, “We are thrilled to be involved with them and to be partnering with the very talented Paramount Vantage team.”

Congratulations to Hammer and Tongs.
]

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Son Of Rambow Bidding War

What did I tell you? Son of Rambow has ignited one of the biggest bidding wars in Sundance history. Variety have a piece on the ongoing negotiations, placing Paramount Vantage ahead of Fox Searchlight and the already resigned Miramax.

One executive described the film as "Billy Elliot as directed by Tim Burton" while Variety draw parallels with Little Miss Sunshine - today nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars, and deservedly so. Could this be a hint of what is to come for Rambow in the next 12 months?

There's months worth of Son of Rambow coverage here on film ick, including the synopsis, stills, comments from director Garth Jennings, the poster (a premiere!) and much, much more. Use the tags below and the search box to find it all.

Another New Rambow Still


I might be taking my time, but I'm finding more and more Son of Rambow images for your perusal and pleasure. Click this one for a better look at the many wonderful 80s fashions on display.

The Sundance premiere has happened, but no buyer has yet been named for Son of Rambow. Smells like a bidding war.

Monday, January 22, 2007

New Still From Son Of Rambow


Son of Rambow premieres today at Sundance. Click on the above still for a better look.

Hot Ticket

David Poland is singling out Son of Rambow as the hot film up for acquisition at Sundance today. By tonight, we'll likely know who will be distributing the film and, as a result, be able to make some educated guesses as to when they'll release it, on what kind of platform, and with what kind of marketing plan. Fingers crossed.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

I'm Not Going To Sundance, But...

Of course, I'm not going to Sundance. I wish that I could, but I can't. Maybe in 2009, and maybe with a film of my own. Fingers crossed.

But... let's pretned that I am about to pack my bags and head off to Sundance. Which films do I most want to see? Let's keep this to three films. My top three picks of the Sundance line-up in ascending order - based purely on the films' pedigrees, pre-release promotional materials and any clips or trailers I may have been able to find.

Third position goes to Craig Brewer's Black Snake Moan. Elisabeth has already reviewed the film for this blog, and she certainly did a good job of fanning the flames of anticipation, but I've been counting down to this film ever since the opening credits of Hustle and Flow. That's when I was first convinved that Brewer not only knew what he was doing, he cared deeply about it too.

Terence Howard pretty much nailed a tricky part in Flow, but the roles dished out to Samuel L. Jackson and Christina Ricci in Black Snake Moan appear to require an even more precarious tightrope walk. By all accounts, however, at least one of them has pulled it off, and with flair. It's going to be good to see Jackson take on a solid, complex part again after a few years playing in the actors' sandbox.

Overall, this one gives me the impression of a sweatier Holy Smoke, dressed up in trampy, stained clothes and raging like a manic street preacher.

Second position goes to Fay Grim, Hal Hartley's sequel to Henry Fool. Critics who have been lucky enough to see the film already - it premiered in Toronto - have generally disliked the film, accusing Hartley of treading water and having nothing new to say. If that's their criticism, we have nothing to worry about. It's obvious from some of the stills, and certainly clips of the film, that Hartley has taken a new approach in the cinematography, using digital cameras mixing a little bit of German Expressionism into the mise en scene; and, as regards the content, his irreverent spy caper seems nothing if not timely.



I'm sure Parker Posey, Jeff Goldblum and James Urbaniak haven't had anything so fun to really get their teeth stuck into for quite a while. Here's hoping this film's release reinvigorates press coverage of Hartley and pumps up his profile once again.

And, so, finally, first position.

If you've been paying attention to film ick, this won't surprise you. My number one choice of the Sundance line-up (bearing in mind that I've only seen a handful of the films being screened - and that none of those made this list) is undoubtedly Son of Rambow.

There's been a wave of films about young people and their imagination-saturated inner lives of late, from Mirrormask to Tideland to Pan's Labyrinth, even maybe Little Miss Sunshine (in part, at least). It's fair to say that Son of Rambow follows in this line, but certainly not in the same style. And not only because this time it's a young boy, and a young boy's imagination, in the spotlight.

I first read about Son of Rambow some years ago when it was, I believe, set to be the debut film from Hammer and Tongs - director Garth Jennings and producer Nick Goldsmith - but since then, they've made, released and been criminally underrated in regards to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

Generally brilliant though it was, I'll agree that Guide was an inarguably flawed film - but almost everything wrong with it is also wrong with the source book, TV and radio shows so that can't be pressed hard against Jennings and his collaborators. Looking at how Jennings designed, staged and directed many of the scenes, it was abundantly clear that the wit and imagination that overflowed in his music video and commercial work was intact and married to the necessary subtle craftsmanship. We were obviously dealing filmmaker who thought in genuinely cinematic fashion but had no desire to wow with hollow flash - and they're far too rare a breed.
Son of Rambow comes from a story by Jennings himself, and while it isn't clear just how autobiographical the film might be, the temptation is to assume that the answer is 'quite a bit, actually' - with no foundation for that supposition at all, of course. The lead character is Will, a young lad being brought up in a Plymouth Brethren family during the 1980s. He's denied TV and music as part of his upbringing, so when he meets rabble-rousing classroom-terrorist and bizzaro-mondo home movie maker Lee Carter at school, he's in for quite a culture shock. Before long, they're forging a friendship and collaborating on a video - Lee is directing, Will is the stuntman lead, the movie is Son of Rambow.



This seems to mix elements you might find War of the Buttons, Be Kind, Rewind, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit and the true story of 'those kids who famously restaged Raiders of the Lost Ark' but under Jennings' direction, it's bound to be something brand new and full of wonder. I asked him about the film being included in the Sundance line-up and here's what he had to say:

I am flattered that Son of Rambow is your choice film for Sundance een though you haven't seen it yet. In fact, I haven't seen it totally finished yet either. I'm sitting in the dubbing theatre mixing the final reel of the film as I write this and despite nearly shattering my ear bones during a big action sequence, it's going extremely well. This time last year no bugger would finance this film so being given a premier slot at Sundance is quite a triumph for us. Nick and I are so proud of the film. I really don't know if we've ever captured so closely what we imagined before. Directors often talk about their films as being their 'baby' and if this is the case, then ours would have all it's fingers and toes, always smile - even at strangers - never need it's nappy changed and would be called Jesus (which would make Nick and I Mary and Joseph. Maybe I should have thought this stupid analogy through first!).

Hopefully, Son of Rambow will secure a nice, big distribution deal at Sundance and be hyped onto screens worldwide in the next few months. I can't wait to see something of it - there's hardly even a still out there so far, let alone a trailer or clips - and as soon as I do, I'll be updating you.

Anybody out there who sees any of these films at Sundance - or any others - please drop me a line and let me know what you thought.

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Sundance Gems

Here are my picks from the non-competitive Sundance 2007 line-up:

Son of Rambow. Garth Jennings new film, oft covered here at film ick and likely to be on of 2007's best films. It's yet another coming of age story, sure, but looks to be a very original one and Jennings is a very gifted filmmaker.

Craig Brewer's Black Snake Moan, with Sam Jackson and Christina Ricci. After Hustle and Flow, Brewer's got a Sundance rep to live up to, but this film seems certain to disappoint. I'm not saying that because I expect it to be bad, mind - just that I expect it to be rather different to Hustle and that's going to be enough to disappoint some people.

The Go-Getter has a great young cast - alumni of Thumbsucker, Contact and Almost Famous.

Written and directed by the late Adrienne Shelly, Waitress also has a great cast - this time featuring alumni of Serenity, May, Schizopolis and... er... Matlock. Actually Matlock from Matlock, too.

Fido is about keeping a zombie as a pet. If only it were a how-to documentary and not fiction, this would rocket to the top of my list.

Its Fine! Everything is Fine! is co-directed by Crispin Glover, and co-written by Glover and Steven C. Stewart. Stewart suffers from the severe cerebal palsy and this autobiographical film will explore how this has effected his relationships with the opposite sex. Countercultural with a capital C, if Glover is to be believed.

Fay Grim is Hal Hartley's semi-sequel to Henry Fool and stars Parker Posey - what more do you need to know?

Bob Shaye's The Last Mimzy was co-written by Bruce Joel Rubin who, until now at least, has written scripts far, far better than the films they became - Ghost, My Life, Jacob's Ladder.

There will also be some films I've already seen, such as Longford, as in Lord Longford, and with the lead played by Jim Broadbent. The film was directed by Tom Hooper from another superb script by Peter Morgan. It screened on Channel 4 here in the UK, and I enjoyed it very much indeed - the script was better, certainly, than The Queen, Morgan's other film this year, but, sadly, Hooper is no Stephen Frears.

Luc Besson's Angel-A is one half of the director's comeback pair and, though I found it a little uneven, it was certainly imaginative and enjoyable enough to give me hope for Arthur and the Invisibles, even in the face of it's dreadful cgi.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

The Son Of Rambow Poster


And there it is, the premiere airing of the Son of Rambow poster as supplied to me by Hammer and Tongs. You can't deny how brilliantly striking it is, can you? And it gets bigger if you click on it, don't you know.

Nick Goldsmith, the film's producer, tells me of the poster "please note it is only temp, but we love it anyway!" Me too.

Not only am I hoping to get the next - and any subsequent versions - of the poster to premiere here at film ick, I'll certainly do my best to get some stills. And an interview with Nick and Garth - fingers crossed. I know they're reading this, I hope they'll oblige.

I'm hearing that Son of Rambow will be released in the UK during March of next year - just in time for my birthday, maybe. Perfect.

For more on the film, check out some of my old Son of Rambow stories.