Wednesday, 20 December 2023

 December 20th 2023

Leave the World Behind (streaming on Netflix)
Prosecuting Evil - (streaming on iview)
The Royal Hotel (streaming on Foxtel) 
Hurstos top films for 2023


Another year draws to a close. It's been a shocker of a year in so many regards, but aren't we lucky to have films to distract, entertain and enlighten us. As I recover from surgery, I have missed a couple of important films that are just out or will shortly release. Hopefully I'll catch up. That's where I'm lucky to have good streaming services at my fingertips, including free ones like iview and SBS On Demand. So, a couple of streamer reviews, PLUS the all important list of top films for the year with links to my reviews of them. (Remember, all very subjective - some of my faves end up in other critics' worst film lists, and vice versa!) And of course, to all my readers, I wish you a wonderful Christmas and festive season, regardless of what you do or don't celebrate! 

Leave the World Behind
Dir: Sam Esmail
Length: 138 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - intriguing apocalyptic plot with
a great cast
Clay Sandford (Ethan Hawke) and his wife Amanda (Julia Roberts) head to a luxury rented country home for a few days away with their two kids Rose and Archie. Very soon, an apparent cyberattack knocks out all the electronics in the home, and unexpectedly the owner of the property GH (Mahershala Ali) and his daughter Ruth (Myha'la) turn up at the doorstep saying the city is in chaos. More strange things begin to happen - animals behaving in a bizarre manner, ear-splitting noises coming through the air. This is billed as a mystery thriller. It is apocalyptic for sure, and hints at all sorts of impending threats to civilisation that could well be in the realms of possibility. Although there is never a clear resolution, and conspiracy theories abound, as to who has caused the potential end of life as we know it, there are enough allusions to credible scenarios to make the film actually quite scary. The cast is uniformly excellent, the creepy music totally augments the fear, characters are well written and believable, and for lovers of the genre it's a worthwhile watch. 
3.5 - well recommended

Prosecuting Evil
Dir: Barry Avrich
Length: 83 mins
Streaming on Netflix (2018)
© iview - inspiring doco about an
extraordinary man 
Ben Ferencz is a name you may never have heard of, but what an extraordinary man he was.  He only died this year at age 103, and was the last surviving prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials. He dedicated his life to fighting for just causes, and helped establish the International Criminal Court. This wonderful doco traces his whole life, with particular focus upon how he fought to bring perpetrators of the Holocaust atrocities to justice. The doco, short and intense, pays homage to Ben's life and work, and, in this fraught era of world history, there is much we can learn from someone whose lifelong mantra has been "law not war". 
4 - highly recommended

The Royal Hotel
Dir: Kitty Green
Length: 91 mins
Streaming on Foxtel / Binge
© Transmission - the challenge and danger
of working in an outback pub
Hanna (Julia Garner) and Liv (Jessica Henwick) are Canadian backpackers on an adventure downunder. When they run short of cash they take a job as bartenders at an outback hotel, serving a mining community. Testosterone and masculine toxicity run high. The drunken publican Billy (a wonderful Hugo Weaving) and his wife 
Carol (Ursula Yovich) try to keep things under control but a group of men, especially Dolly (Daniel Henshell), becomes increasingly threatening towards the girls. This is such a sobering and disturbing picture of a certain stratum of Aussie society, in parts reminiscent of Wake in Fright. Every last character feels absolutely real, making for a chilling and frightening atmosphere, in which we constatly fear for these two young women. The isolation of the outback is captured visually in all its terror and  beauty, and as a thriller-social commentary, this film works surprisingly well.
4 - highly recommended

Hurstos Top film of 2023

Here we go with that all-important list. Many films this year ranked an 8 out of 10 for me, but those that rose above that score were few, and were  absolutely memorable. Here they are (in no particular order) with links to my reviews. 

The Old Oak
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/11/november-30th-2023-old-oak-eight.html

Oppenheimer
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/07/july-21st-2023-oppenheimer-sugar-and.html

Barbie
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/08/august-18th-2023-godland-sanctuary.html

Killers of the Flower Moon 
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/10/october-26th-2023-killers-of-flower.html

Caravaggio's Shadow
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/11/november-9th-2023-damage-caravaggios.html

Close
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/03/march-2nd-2023-empire-of-light-close.html

Past Lives
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/09/september-1st-2023-past-lives-ego.html

All Quiet on the Western Front
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/02/february-2nd-2023-knock-at-cabin-all.html

Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/01/january-19th-2023-guillermo-del-toros.html

The Blue Caftan
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/05/may-18th-2023-blue-kaftan-limbo-quant.html

Aftersun
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/02/

Eight Mountains
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/11/november-30th-2023-old-oak-eight.html

One Fine Morning
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/06/june-9th-2023-one-fine-morning-after.html

The Lines that Define Me (from the Japanese Film Festival) https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/10/october-19th-2023-its-wonderful-week.html

Can't leave the Aussie films out of the mix. Only one feature film made the cut, and the other three are documentaries. 

Shayda
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/10/october-13th-2023-shayda-crime-is-mine.html

Ego: The Michael  Gudinski Story
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/09/september-1st-2023-past-lives-ego.html

The Giants
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/04/april-19th-2023-giants-releasing.html

John Farnham: Finding the Voice 
https://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2023/06/june-3rd-2023-bank-of-dave-john-farnham.html



Wednesday, 6 December 2023

December 7th 2023

Master Gardener
Two Tickets to Greece (opens Boxing Day - previews 10th December)
Coup de Chance (opens Boxing Day) 
Paradise (streaming on Netflix)
Sly (streaming on Netflix)
The Pope's Exorcist (streaming on Netflix)
Farha (streaming on Netflix)
The Present (short film streaming on Netflix)


Here's a mixed grab bag of films. Two are slated for Boxing Day, with one previewing this weekend. Another is out in cinemas today, and I've added a few very brief reviews of films I've snapped up streaming on Netflix. 

Master Gardener
Dir: Paul Schrader
Length: 111 mins
© Transmission - a gardener with a past - 
two women in his orbit!
Narvel Roth (Joel Edgerton) is chief horticulturist for the sprawling gardens of the estate of wealthy old dowager Mrs Haverhill (Sigourney Weaver). He pays fanatical attention to detail in his job, as well as fulfilling a few other dubious duties for his boss. Mrs Haverhill decides Roth should take on her great-niece Maya (Quintessa Swindell) as an apprentice, to give the wayward disturbed young woman some direction in life. But as Maya's involvement in her new craft blossoms, so does a romance with Roth, inciting Haverhill's jealousy. Both Roth and Maya have a dodgy history, his involving hate crimes with a white supremacist group (all in the past - he since turned informant), and hers with deceased parents and drugs. Can the pair move forward to make a worthwhile life? This is an odd little film, uneven in its tone, full of strong points and some weaknesses. It starts off well with a grand and formal feel, almost like a Southern period piece, evoking wonderful images of gardens, especially as healing tools. With the appearance of Maya, and Haverhill's jealousy, disdain and disapproval, the tone takes another turn and it becomes a different type of story. Finally, as we discover through flashbacks Roth's past (as evidenced by disturbing tattoos on his body), and as Maya's drug connections enter the story, the tone turns yet again with a more contemporary (and less interesting) sensibility. But the three lead performances are excellent. Edgerton is suitably tense as a man constantly doing battle with his demons and seeking redemption. Weaver is a past-master at doing imperious and cold. And of course any film that has gardens (both actual and used metaphorically) is going to be intrisically pleasing to me.
3 - recommended

Two Tickets to Greece
Dir: Marc Fitoussi
Length: 110mins
Opens Boxing Day with advance screenings Sunday December 10
© Palace - a total delight - friends and
Greek islands - what more could you want?
Reuniting childhood friends after years apart can be fun or fraught. Blandine (Olivier Cote) and Margalie (Laure Calamy) are chalk and cheese, the former serious, grieving a divorce from her husband who is with a new, younger wife. Margalie is a good-time gal, always up for a bit of a dance, a laugh and a scam (like trying to rip off the Greek ferry operators!) Blandine's son Benjamin sees his mother's depression and engineers a reunion of the two friends, then pulls out of a trip he promised to go on, and suggests Margalie go in his place. After all, as teens, the pair always wanted to visit the Greek island of Amorgos. Nothing goes quite as planned, the pair fret and quarrel, thanks to mishaps end up on islands not on the schedule, and finally connect with Magalie's friend Bijou (Kristin Scott Thomas), a Bohemian jewellery maker who lives on idyllic Mykonos with her artist partner Dimitris (Panos Koronis). This is pretty much a road movie and a odd-couple buddy movie, refreshingly starring women instead of blokes. And it's a sweet, fun, gentle and delightful story of  finding the good in life, overcoming the obstacles, and holding tight to friendships and support along the way. Calamy is a powerhouse, whipping up a storm of vibrant enthusiasm, and yet when the time comes for hidden secrets or serious confrontations to emerge, her range of acting talents are totally up to the job. Scott-Thomas and Cote are equally convincing in their very different roles. Each of the women has their own baggage but nothing in the plot or its small revelations is ever laboured; everything in the script is kept nicely understated, keeping it real. And of course the settings are simply to die for. What's not to love in this film, perfect for the holiday season?
4 - highly recommended 

Coup de Chance
Dir: Woody Allen
Length: 113 mins
Coup de Chance will be in cinemas Boxing Day
© Sharmill - Woody takes his story-telling to
Paris in a fun love story
Not to be outdone by fellow oldies Ken Loach and Martin Scorsese, (their latest fabulous films recently reviewed), 88-year-old Woody Allen comes up with his 50th feature film.  Fanny Fournier (Lou le Laage) is married to wealthy businessman Jean (Melvin Poupard). They live and work in Paris. Sometimes Fanny fears that she is a bit of a trophy wife, uncomfortable in the circles in which Jean moves, but she has everything her heart could desire and the couple seem very much in love. One day, by chance, she meets Alain (Niels Schneider) an old schoolmate who is not backward in coming forward to tell Fanny what a crush he had on her when they were kids. They meet for lunch and one things leads to another. Set in Paris, all in French, this is Woody territory to a tee. Bright throwaway lines and telling conversations, tense relationship dynamics, plenty of subterfuge and of course much humour. There's a delicious subplot with Fanny's cheery mother Camille (Valerie Lemercier) deciding to do some snooping into Jean's deceased business partner, all of which leads to a wonderfully unexpected and farcical ending. All in all, light breezy story-telling, in a glorious setting, with a wonderful cast and Woody's ever-assured directorial hand. (Brave man making a film in a language he doesn't speak!)
3.5 - well recommended

Paradise
Dir: Boris Kunz
Length: 117 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - seriously freaky premise in
a strong futuristic tale
This German sci-fi is a winner, but somewhat disturbing. A company called AEON develops a technique to transfer years of one's life to another human. The exchange is of course monetary, and the person who sells their years ages proportionately, and fairly instantly. Unsettling already! One of AEON's top salesmen, Max, discovers, when his apartment burns down, that his wife Elena put 40 years of her life up as security against a housing loan. Now, that debt is being called in. This gripping thriller raises many ethical questions, and of course they all have to do with greed, fear of aging, and that old chestnut of how the rich in society get all the benefits and opportunites while the poor are often forced to make invidious choices. Well acted with a chilling and tense plot this is a beauty for sci-fi lovers. 
4 - highly recommended

Sly
Dir: Thom Zimny
Length: 95 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - the man will surprise you. He's 
neither Rambo nor Rocky. 
This short and sweet look at the life of Sylvester "Sly" Stallone is nothing like you would have imagined. Firstly he is not the rough and tough Rocky or Rambo that he plays. He comes across as a more insecure man, coming from a traumatised childhood with a brutal father, and determined to make something of his life. He speaks openly, without  much ego, and what he has to say is interesting and useful in a life sense. With terrific clips from his films, and surprising insights into his deeper psyche, Sly makes for good watching.   
Worth seeing!

The Pope's Exorcist
Dir: Julius Avery
Length: 103 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - die-hard horror fans could
get a kick out of this one
I don't usually go for this sort of horror film, but Russell Crowe drew me in, starring as Gabriele Amorth, a real-life exorcist who wrote many books about the thousands of exorcisms he performed. This particular demonic episode begins in Italy in the late 1980s, where we meet a cheery joke cracking, motorcycle-riding Amorth who performs an exorcism which he declares seems to be more a case of psychological disturbance. But then he is called to Spain, where Julia, a widow, has inherited an old abbey that was in her husband's family; she has gone there to renovate and sell.  Her two kids Henry and Amy don't care for the place, even less when it seems Henry has been possessed by a particularly strong demon. Enter Fr. Amorth. Though there is a lot of gore and foul language, a couple of things impressed me: Rusty's skill with the Italian language and his subsequent Italian-accented English, and the intriguing story of what was really under the abbey, connected somehow to the Spanish Inquisition (and a few theories about the Devil's role in it). Although some parts of the film border on silly, there is enough scariness to warrant a look for die-hard horror worshippers (and Rusty fans). 
Possibly worth seeing

And now a couple of films that are disturbingly relevant for what is going on in the world today . . . 

Farha
Dir: Darrin J Sallam
Length: 92 mins
Streaming on Netflix (2021)
© Netflix - a young girl's aspiration for
an education cut short
Winner of a number of recent awards, this timely film is the true story of a young Palestinian girl Farha (Karam Taher), who, much to her delight, is accepted into higher study. But the year is 1948 and the country is Palestine. The state of Israel has just been created and all hell breaks loose between Arabs and Jews. Farha's father hides her in a locked pantry, from which she cannot escape, and from where she witnesses all manner of atrocities perpetrated by Israeli fighters on Arabs who they believe to be in the resistance. Regardless of your stance on this never-ending Middle-eastern nightmare, with its  rights and wrongs, a film of this nature is well worth watching as it shows ultimately the destruction enmity wreaks on people's lives.  
4 - highly recommended

The Present
Dir: Farah Nabulsi
Length: 24 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - a touching and salutary short drama
Nominated in 2021 for Best Live Action Short Film at the Oscars, this is a tiny gem of a film. (Thank you ol' buddy Elly Z for alerting me to it!) It is a perfect companion piece to Farha, and to the current situation in Israel/Palestine. Although part of a complex geopolitical disaster, the film is a small, gentle and utterly human story of a father taking his little girl shopping to get a present for his wife. The indignities and dehumanising treatment they must endure give an insight into one of the factors causing so much tension in the region today. But it is the family and its relationships depicted that reinforce for us that most ordinary people are similar the world over, and are  unfortunate victims of the warring, power-mongering few. A great opportunity to see the small films that vie for Oscars and are often so hard to get to view.  
4 - highly recommended

Wednesday, 29 November 2023

 November 30th 2023

The Old Oak
The Eight Mountains
Christmess
Uproar

This week sees one of my rare "Unmisssable" recommendations. Films from Britain, Italy, Australia and New Zealand round out another week of fine movie offerings.  

The Old Oak
Dir: Ken Loach
Length: 113 mins
© The Reset Collective - film-making on another level:
gets to the heart of the mattter, and the people
in the community
TJ Ballantyne (Dave Turner) runs a pub in an impoverished mining town in the north-east of England. The pits have closed, people are leaving, and cheap housing makes it an ideal location for refugees to be housed. When a group of Syrian refugees arrives, TJ does a kindness for a young woman Yara (Ebla Mari). But the locals, who cling desperately to their old ways, harbor deep resentments of the newcomers. TJ initially wants to stay neutral and keep in good with his few remaining patrons, but gradually he sees a way to bring together two struggling communities, each grieving for different, but harrowing, losses in their lives. 
Ken Loach has had more than 60 years in film, many of them dealing with social issues and the trials and tribulations of the British working class. Now that he's 87 years old, this may be his final film. And what a film to go out on! There is so much depth of emotion, so much relevance, and ultimately plenty of hope in this powerful and moving story. Turner, who barely sees himself as a "real" actor, is simply sublime in this role, while Mari brings an openness, charm and grace to her Yara, a brave woman who knows how to bridge the cultural divide. All the characters, from the locals to the Syrian refugees feel totally real, and the tentative friendships that gradually form and deepen could serve as an inspiration to us all in this troubled world. The settings of the sad, beaten down town and the warm welcoming pub are just perfect. Nominee for the Palme D'or at Cannes and winner of many other awards, The Old Oak is one of those richly rewarding, deeply humane films, that stays with you long after it's over.
5 - unmissable

The Eight Mountains
Dir: Felix van Groeningen & Charlotte Vandermeersch
Length: 147 mins
© Palace - gentle and understated story
of a lifelong friendship
Winner of the Cannes Jury Prize (2022) and many more prestigious Italian and international awards, this beautiful film is a story of friendship over many years. Bruno (Cristiano Sassella) lives in the remote mountan village of Grana in northwest Italy, while Pietro
(Lupo Barbiero) who hails from the city of Turin,  is visiting his parents' holiday home. The two boys connect instantly and spend a glorious summer together.  After some convoluted family conflicts, the boys' paths diverge but 15 years later, now men, they reconnect. Another intimate period of time is spent while renovating an old rundown mountain cabin that Pietro's father left to Bruno. But despite their deep bond, the men have different ideas of where they belong in life. This film is so simple on one level, yet so complex emotionally.  It has a long runtime and one needs to surrender oneself to it - the glorious sweeping mountain landscapes, the gentle enduring quality of the friendship, and the heartaches, happiness and loss that the vicissitudes of life deliver. There is an underlying deep philosophy about one's place in life, and what is most important to each individual. With glorious music and cinematography, it is a most worthy journey to share with the two friends.
4.5 - wholeheartedly recommended 

Christmess
Dir: Heath Davis
Length: 100 mins
© Bonsai - surprisingly fun - and tuching- 
Aussie story of struggle, friendship
and recovery
Chris Flint (Steve le Marquand) is an actor whose career has taken a downturn, thanks to his having been in rehab for alcohol and drug problems. But now he's out, and staying at a support house with his sponsor Nick (Darren Gilshenan), and another recovering addict Joy (Hannah Joy), who is an aspiring singer-songwriter. Chris takes a job at a shopping centre, playing Santa, where he runs into his long-estranged daughter, and finds he has a grandson, which really throws him, but also encourages him to remain sober so he can reconnect with his only family. La Marquand has the perfect hang-dog sad face for the character he plays. We cannot help but feel for him, as he tries so hard, yet not necessarily with the desired outcomes. Nick, Joy and Chris are like a small family, and although not a lot happens here, there is a gentle and touching domestic narrative, in which we learn  about Chris's housemates, and come to genuinely like them. The singer/actor who plays Joy is especially notable for a lovely and lively performance, while Gilshenan, who just appeared in Savage Christmas, gives a nuanced performance as a man with a deep sad secret. A small but charming Australian film
.
3.5 - well recommended 

Uproar
Dir: Paul Middleditch & Hamish Bennett
Length: 110 mins
© Kismet - likeable story of a boy finding
his place in the world and in his culture
Dunedin, New Zealand, 1981 is in turmoil as the Sth African rugby team, the Springboks, is arriving, and crowds take to the streets to protest the apartheid-based nation visiting. Josh Waaka (Julian Dennison) is very much an outsider, the only Maori boy in a British style private school, and being no good at rugby makes him even more ostracised. When his teacher Madigan (Rhys Darby) discovers Josh has a talent for acting, he encourages the boy to apply for a place at NIDA acting school in Sydney. Meanwhile Josh's mum (Minnie Driver) pushes her reluctant son into the rugby team where his brother coaches, while Josh aligns himself with local Maori girl Samantha and the protests. Gradually events will conspire to lead Josh and his family to a place of acceptance and belonging. This is a sweet, low-key and likeable film, marked by a terrific performance from Dennison (remember him from Hunt for the Wilderpeople?)  Some strong scenes of the Haka and Maori solidarity keep the indigenous theme relevant and visible. 
3 - recommended 

 

Wednesday, 22 November 2023

 November 23rd 2023

The Musical Mind: A Portrait in Process
Docplay
The Other Film Festival
Brolllie - a new Aussie content FREE streaming site 

Although a couple of high profile films release this week, (Napoleon, and Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes) I haven't yet been able to catch them, so I've reviewed a wonderful new cinema-released doco about creative musicians, and bring your attention again to the excellent doco platform Docplay, plus two free-of-charge streaming opportunities. 

The Musical Mind: A Portrait in Process
Dir: Scott Hicks
Length: 94 mins
© Bonsai Films - David Helfgott and Daniel
Johns share a special bond
In 1997 a movie called Shine won a Best Actor Oscar for Geoffrey Rush. He played an Australian musician named David Helfgott, a neurodiverse man with an incredible talent for playing piano. Now, a quarter of a century later, Hicks returns to familiar territory, but this time in a fascinating doco exploring the minds of four musicians and what leads them to create and perform. Daniel Johns, singer and guitarist from the band Silverchair, classical pianist Simon Tedeschi, singer songwriter Ben Folds and Helfgott, (now 76 years old and much-adored since Shine) let the audience into their lives and their creative process. It's eye-opening to hear of Johns' desire for musical chaos, Folds' obsession with a song he wrote as a child, and how it has colored all his music, and Tedeschi's life-long drivenness. And of course Helfgott, a genius who is also so childlike and sweet-natured in his total way of being. All are men with brains possibly wired differently; all with the touch of the genius brush. An especially touching and beautiful part of this doco is the relationship Helfgott has with children in the Bellingen Youth Orchestra, as he inspires and encourages them. Two women also feature: Helfgott's totally supportive wife Gillian, and Tedeschi's artist partner Loribelle Spirovski, who paints endless portraits of her man. This is a doco all music lovers should see.
3.5 - well recommended 

DocPlay
And speaking of documentaries, for those who are new to my site, or have maybe forgotten about this excellent streaming platform, I want to again alert docophiles to the best site in town for just about any documentary you are after. For less than $8 per month you can access more than 1000 films. With inflation, that's not even two cups of coffee per month!
Several films you may have missed that I've reviewed in the last few months are now available - all came highly recommended from me:
The Giants: Brilliant doco on Bob Brown 
Navalny: Russian dissident extraordinaire
Merkel: get to know the German Chancellor
The Lost City of Melbourne
© DocPlay
Though never yet reviewed by me, I caught this film some months ago at the end of its theatrical run. This is a movie to bring you to tears. See how the architectural heritage of our city was trashed by Whelan the Wrecker back in the 60s, discover what glories existed, and what little is left of our magnificent buldings.  

And who doesn't love a freebie?
Two great new opportunities for catching some excellent movie action for free. 
The Other Film Festival
Streaming free from now until December 10th, The Other Film Festival presents Resistance - streaming Deaf and Disability-led international feature documentaries and Australian shorts. The festival, going since 2004, is a leader in the global disability screen advocacy movement and centres on authentic storytelling and representation. 

Brollie - new streaming platform featuring Aussie content
A new platform from Umbrella Entertainment, Brollie brings you more than 300 titles, including such gems from independent Aussie cinema as Babadook, Two Hands, The Last Wave, Erskineville Kings, Walkabout, Road Games, Razorback, Mad Dog Morgan, Aznavour, House of Cardin and heaps more. What's not to love here? 




Wednesday, 15 November 2023

November 16th 2023

Saltburn
A Savage Christmas
Pain Hustlers (streaming on Netflix)
Vengeance: A Love Story (streaming on Netflix)

This week from me sees two strong mainstream releases, plus two not so strong Netflix streamers. 

Saltburn
Dir: Emerald Fennell
Length: 127 mins
© Universal - the upper class get worked over
by a fellow who is not what he seems

On a scholarship, and coming from a dubious background, Oliver Quick (Barry Keoghan) seems like an outsider at Oxford University. Overly eager to make friends and gain acceptance, he befriends handsome, popular, posh party boy Felix (Jacob Elordi), son of a wealthy family which owns a 12th century sprawling mansion called Saltburn. When Oliver does Felix a favour, the kind-hearted rich boy invites Oliver to spend the summer with him and his family at Saltburn. The family are a motley crew, ex-model mother, Elspeth, (Rosamund Pike), father and archetypical toff  Sir James (Richard E Grant) preside over the mansion, with their sexually loose daughter Venetia (Alison Oliver) and Cousin Farleigh (Archie Madekwe). What transpires over that summer is, to say the least, unexpected. Keoghan seems physically perfectly cast for the role. Having a slightly shifty look matches his character's personality, seemingly polite, almost self-effacing, but with quite a different persona lurking under the surface. The parents are so quintessentially upper crust Brits, they almost seem like caricatures and are, to me, not totally believable, but this is no doubt part of the intended sending up of a "certain class" of Pom: rich, entitled, overly extravagant, and definitely stiff upper lip. With overtones of The Incredible Mr Ripley, the film's narrative gets darker as it progresses. Each character seems to fit some psychoanalytical textbook "type", and the discernible sexual and homoerotic overtones are deliciously handled, with a near-final scene in which Oliver prances naked quite something to behold! With its sumptuous look, plot twists and intriguing characters, Saltburn is a fun and fascinating watch.
3.5 - well recommended

A Savage Christmas
Dir: Madeleine Dyer
Length: 90 mins
© Bonsai Films - family dysfunction loves to
rear its head at Christmas
The Savage family is meeting for its annual Christmas get-together at the family home in Queensland. The dysfunctional family consists of parents James Snr (David Roberts), an ex-footballer, and wife Brenda (Helen Thomson) along with their son Jimmy (Ryan Morgan), daughter Leia (Rekha Ryan) and adopted son David, who is now a trans woman, Davina (Thea Raveneau) and who hasn't seen the family for several years. Davina brings along her trans boyfriend Kane (Max Jahufer). There's also James' brother, loud and crass Uncle Dick (Gary Gilshenan). The Christmas get-together has always been a fraught affair, but this year some heavy-duty family secrets emerge, ratcheting up the tensions. Add into the mix the late arrival of unexpected guest Peter (Gary Sweet) and you have a recipe for an explosive celebration. I haven't laughed out loud so much in a long time as I did with this clever, at times silly, and totally fun film. There's a lot that rings true in the story - the awkwardness, forced bonhomie, back-stabbing and not-so-subtle sniping that pervades many family festive functions. Great to see that the trans couple are played by trans actors, and that theme is handled insightfully, and intelligently. Some of the humour borders on farcical, but for me (remembering humour is so subjective) it really works in a self-deprecating, typically Aussie way, that captures so much we love, hate, and cringe over in our national character and our family dynamics.
4 - highly recommended

Pain Hustlers
Dir: David Yates
Length: 123 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - pharma companies behaving
badly - again! 
Liza (Emily Blunt) is a single mum working in a pole-dancing bar, when she gets a job offer from Pete (Chris Evans) to work for a start-up pharmaceutical company run by Dr Neel (Andy Garcia). The company pushes a cancer drug called Lonafen (fentanyl-
based), claiming it to be non-addictive. Soon business starts to boom, encouraged by speaker programs, and the employment of very pushy, good looking female sales reps. But as things move into the gray world of illegal doings, success cannot last. The film has its basis in a real life pharma scandal and is certainly eye-opening as to the way the industry operates. At times the plot seems a bit too slick and unrealistic, with too much emphasis upon the greed and decadence of the pharma company, and too little on the serious topic of opiate addiction and patients who died. But Blunt is excellent in her role, and the appearance of Schitts Creek favorite Catherine O'Hara as her mother is a welcome cast addition. An OK, moderately pleasing entertainment. 
3 - recommended

Vengeance: A Love Story
Dir: Johnny Martin
Length: 99 mins
2017 - Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - Cage in a relatively
muted role.  
Single mum Teena (Anna Hutchison) is gang raped as she walks home from  a party with her daughter Bethie (Talitha Batman). The four accused scumbags hire lawyer Jay Kirkpatrick (Don Johnson), renowned for getting people off. When justice is not served, local cop and Iraq veteran John Dromoor (Nic Cage) decides to take matters into his own hands. Well, that's 99 minutes of my life I won't get back, but . . . there's something magnetic about Cage regardless of the calibre of the film he's in. (Usually, not so magnetic or rampaging here!) 
The real reason I included this viewing mistake is to alert you to a fabulous site created by film critic Luke Buckmaster. It's called the the Cage Gauge and is an outline and rating system of every Cage movie ever released. Luke says: Celebrating one of cinema's most original and distinctive actors, the core philosophy underlying The Cage Gauge is that every Nicolas Cage movie is worth watching—because every Nicolas Cage movie has Nicolas Cage in it.
Visit the Gauge at: https://www.flicks.com.au/cagegauge/.    
1 - hmmm - unless you're a diehard Cage fan, don't bother! 
PS.  It ranks at no 89 (very low) in the Cage Gauge.