I May Destroy You

I MAY DESTROY YOU ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Creator: Michaela Coel. Cast: Michaela CoelWeruche OpiaPaapa Essiedu, Stephen Wight, Marouane Zotti, Harriet Webb, Aml Ameen, Adam James, Natalie Walter, Karan Gill.

This came highly recommended by a lot of my friends and most of the British press and it can see why.

It is a multi-layered , through-provoking, both rational and emotional, fearless and complex TV series showing not just the many representations of “sexual misconduct” and the results on the people who experience it (the victims, the witnesses, the imposters) but it’s also about race, gender and our over-reliance of social media (says the guy who’s writing a blog advertised on Twitter and Facebook).

Technically it feels a bit cheaper and often a lot less accomplished than many of those US series we are getting these days (also stylistically it’s a bit all over the place), but beyond that, there is some really good writing at play, constantly alternating between funny and devastating, empowering and soul crashing, all made it even more powerful by some raw and fearless performances. 

It’s a very important series and I am glad it exists, however, did it really needed to be 12 episodes? If it has been a lot tighter it would not have lost any of its impact, in fact it would have been even stronger.

I did feel it lost steam more often that it should have: some of the episodes were much too diluted with tangential subplots and indulgent extended sequences; those sex scenes, dance scenes, drinking scenes… (yes, thanks, I get it, move on please now). The tricksy ending is also a little bit too heavy handed and seems to belong to a different series.

But when it kept the focus to the main storyline it was really quite good.

Available on the BBC iPlayer

Nowhere special

Nowhere special ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Director: Uberto Pasolini. Cast: James NortonDaniel LamontEileen O’Higgins 

Nowhere special is based on a true story of thirty-five-year-old window cleaner John who is raising a son on his own (The mother left after giving birth). When is given few months to live he’s not only determined to shield his 4 years old son from the the truth, but also he tries to find the perfect family to raise him after he’s gone.Shown at the Venice Festival in September 2020, “Nowhere special” is a small independent co-production between the UK and Italy (It comes out in the UK in March 2021), which unlike its title actually goes somewhere special.

It is a rather powerful film that’s certain to leave a mark on whoever watches it.Needless to say I found it absolutely heart-breaking and could hardly contain my tears, but despite its harrowing premise director Uberto Pasolini (yes, the same guy who did the Full Monthy) never gets sentimental or melodramatic, preferring a more delicate, subtle and natural approach, aided by two magnificent performances by both father (James Norton recently seen in “Little Women”) and then incredibly cute little boy (Daniel Lamont).

Beyond the moving set-up, this is really a film about the search of what it means to be a good parent.It is a slow but sensitive film made of quiet moments, silent looks and small gesture which all speak louder than any words. It’s not a masterpiece by all means by it really touched me and I know it’ll stay with me for a while. The scene where the father prepares a box full of letters for his son to open when he’ll be older is a little microcosm of the film itself: melancholic, touching, simple and quiet and yet immensely powerful and rather devastating.

Apollo 11

Apollo 11 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Director: Todd Douglas Miller. Cast Neil ArmstrongMichael CollinsBuzz Aldrin 

There are different kind of documentaries. Those where you learn about something or somebody you didn’t know. Those where they expose some sort of scandal, or crime. The historic ones with interviews from experts. And those where are essentially they just “show you” an event… and that’s pretty much it. 

Apollo 11 is one of those latter ones. A lot of care and attention has gone in meticulously collecting more than 11,000 hours of NASA audio recordings (which apparently they didn’t even know they had), painstakingly editing a huge amount of film material, including some never-before-seen 65mm footage recently discovered in National Archives. In fact there is so much stuff that sometime they have to split the screen to show you 2 or 3 shots at the same time.

The footage does indeed look beautifully and if it wasn’t for the technology seen on screen and the 60s clothes it would look like it was filmed yesterday.

As for the film itself, listening to the voices from the control room or from the spaceship (I really had to put up the subtitles because most of it is pretty garbled), seeing all those technicians at work and the general public from the time as they watch the event can be quite a mesmerising experience, but also quite or boring one if I have to be honest.

The lack of interviews or even simply voices from the time telling about their feelings and thoughts makes this a strangely cold experience. Those astronauts remain aloof, just distant figures from whom we learn nothing about themselves and their experience.

I understand this is not what the film set out to be but I can’t help feeling that in those 11,000 hours of recording there must have been something else which would have made this more alive for me. 

So as an act of film preservation, Apollo 11 is one for the history books for sure. Beyond that and the fact that it looks beautiful, there are dozens of other films about the moon landing where you might learn more. I found films like (the delightful) “The Dish” or the documentary “For All Mankind” much more engaging, infinitely more entertaining and dare-I-say… moving.

A Christmas Carol (2020)

A Christmas Carol (2020) ⭐️⭐️

Director: Jacqui Morris. Cast: Thea AchilleaEdd ArnoldSimon Russell Beale, Leslie Caron, Martin Freeman, Daniel Kaluuya. Andy Serkis

I don’t think there’s ever been a version of A Christmas Carol that I haven’t liked to some degree, whether it’s the Disney animated version from the 80s with Mickey Donald and Scrooge (that’s my favourite in fact), or the one with the Muppets or Bill Murray’s Scrooge, I always end up going along with it. There’s clearly something within the actual original Dickensian story itself that makes it not just timeless, warm and magic. Nothing screams more “Christmas” than “A Christmas Carol”.

So when I heard that a new version was being made with Carey Mulligan, Martin Freeman, Andy Serkis, Daniel Kaluuya and Simon Russell Beale,, I just couldn’t wait to see it.

Bizarrely it ended up being the version is the one that left me the coldest. I didn’t mind the theatrical/stagey approach mixed with animation, some that in fact looked really good, but having relatively unknown actors and dancers mining words spoken by off camera the better-known actors I was hoping to watch .made for a very jarring viewing experience (and also made me wish I was watching those actors instead). The very artificial (and constantly distracting) format felt more like an experiment than and actual film and crucially took all the emotions out of the story.It may be an interesting piece of “Art” or “theatre” (and I use the inverted commas not by chance), but as a film it’s a complete failure (and a rather boring one too).

So in the end the two stars are only there for the production design work.

Minari

Minari ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Director: Lee Isaac Chung. Cast: Steven YeunYeri HanYuh-jung Youn 

Beyond the seemingly ordinary rural life depicted here there’s a beautiful, gentle, warm and nuanced portrait of a Korean family in America. Winner of the first prize at the Sundance last February and produced by Brad Pitt, this is a beautifully acted film (Steven Yeun from the “walking Dead” TV series really deserves a mention), which is all about good (though flawed) people struggling do find their place in the “American Dream” and also trying to love each other and find peace within their family. It is touching, tender, empathetic but never sentimental or cheesy. It’s intimate and yet universal. It’s beautiful to look at but without resorting in fake sunsets or grand vistas. It is a very quiet film (in fact really quiet… I have to confess I missed a few lines here and there) and yet so full of life and details that can speak a thousand words even when it looks like it’s not saying anything. It is definitely a slow film, but I loved spending every second with these character and I began feeling very protective towards them and didn’t want anything bad to happen to any of them. Also… you know me… When you put a super-cute little boy in a film… I’ll melt in an instant. How refreshing and uplifting is to find a film where there are no bad people.

Unfortunately if you live in the UK and missed this at the London Film Festival (or if you’re not a Bafta Member) you may have to wait until next April to watch it. But I’m sure we will hear a lot about this at the next Oscars (the film was also on the list of Obama’s favourite films of 2020).