Showing posts with label Film and Book Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film and Book Reviews. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 October 2009

Fantastic Mr. Fox

As an avid Roald Dahl fan, you can imagine my excitement on hearing there would be a film adaptation of one of my most beloved children's books. Obviously, I was anxious to see how director Wes Anderson would translate the book onto film, and how the voice actors would measure up to how I imagined the characters. And when I finally did get to go see it, for lack of a better word, it was fantastic. It is filmed in stop animation, and you can see the sheer dedication that went into it. For those not familiar with it, stop animation basically means you shoot a frame, stop the camera, move the models, shoot a frame and so on. By no means is it the most modern technique (it was used in the filming of the original King Kong) and is certainly not one of the most popular techniques; off the top of my head I can only think of Tim Burton and the creators of Wallace and Gromit who favour it.

I of course knew that the film would have to be different from the book, which it was, the book afterall was less than a hundred pages long and aimed at small children. The plot became more complex and characters were added and existing characters were given much more depth. This is certainly an achievement for a film about a society of talking animals.

The cast, I felt perfectly captured the essence of the characters. Jason Schwartzmen's Ash Fox (son of Mr. Fox) portrayal of a boy who desperately wants to be like his father and feels inferior to his cousin Kristoferson provided both humour and emotion. I was doubtful about George Clooney for Mr. Fox but his cocky attitude suited the character perfectly. I felt everything was just as Roald Dahl would have wanted it, from Mr. Fox's study based on Dahl's own at Gypsy house, to the recurring 'bandit hat' gag to the three evil farmer's theme song adapted from Dahl's own poem. Anderson had wonderfully adapted the novel whilst adding his own spin on it.

Saturday, 19 September 2009

Book Review: Small Island

This novel by Andrea Levy gives a view into the life of both British and Jamaican people living before, during, and after the second World War. The novel has several different narrators. Queenie Bligh; an English woman who believes her husband to be dead and therefore forced to take Jamaican lodgers to get by(much to the chagrin of her neighbours); her husband Bernard; a banker who finds himself in war torn India; Hortense, a Jamaican woman from a good home and dreams of better things and her husband Airman Gilbert Joseph who both find themselves treated as second class citizens when they travel to England in search of better things.

The novel follows these characters lives, with each chapter being from one of their perspectives. I found it a truly insightful look into the past of Britain and the nature of 'The Empire'. Personally, I found the book improved as it progressed as the events became more dramatic and gripping and the characters became more and more developed. I didn't like each character all of the time, but that only made it all the more real as I saw their faults as well as good qualities and how others view them. For example, I found Bernard's devotion to Queenie and his country very touching, yet his attitude towards Gilbert is far from civilised. I found that characters I felt indifferent towards or disliked I grew to like as the book progressed, the character of Hortense especially. In the beginning I found her pretentious and cruel, yet by the end, after seeing life through her eyes and seeing how she changed I grew to like her.

However, one character I more or less liked consistently was Gilbert. Not only was he was funny and good natured, but he was terrifically observant and in many ways tragic. He had dreams of becoming a lawyer, but was condemned to go through life as a driver, first for his mother's cake business, then in the RAF after being refused the position as a pilot, and finally as a post van driver after being rejected from law school. He gives the reader a magnificent view of life as a Jamaican in Britain and the injustice of their position in society. Gilbert and his fellow Jamaicans know everything there is to know about Britain; what products are made where; famous Britons; famous monuments. Yet when you ask the average man in England at the time 'Where is Jamaica?' He would reply 'Somewhere in Africa isn't it?'. And the more wealthy are no better; they rave about Jamaica's savage jungles and even more savage natives; and, of course, how lucky the natives were that the British were there to 'civilise' them. When we are reading Gilbert's narrative, we are given wonderful metaphors and insightful observations into the world around him, yet to many he is nothing more than a savage, and to the more 'open minded' he is a child to be taught the ways of the 'Mother Country'

I thought that this book was superbly written with vivid descriptions and wonderfully constructed characters. Not only that, but I thought it was an incredibly interesting subject as I knew little about race relations in my own country before and after World War II. I saw life in Jamaica and life in Britain, the plight of a black soldier and the plight of a white one. I saw the terror felt in battle and the terror felt during an air raid. It is clear that Levy has researched her subject well and has a wonderful grasp of what is at it's core. I think this book will appeal to all kinds of people, there is romance, action, sorrow and humour but most importantly it is a book that entertains you but finds you really interested in it's subject matter and very thoughtful about our past as a country.

Friday, 18 September 2009

Film Review - Harry Potter and the Half-blood Prince

Being a self-confessed Harry Potter fanatic, I found the concept of the sixth in a series of gripping films greatly appealing. And, as hoped, the wizards behind the magic of the Harry Potter films failed to disappoint yet again.
Granted, this was not by any stretch of the imagination a film adaptation of the book, missing various storylines and the epic battle at the end of the book. However, this is excusable given the ever-increasing size and complexity of the novels. Nevertheless, there's no denying that this is, in it's own right, a spectacular film. With laugh-out-loud moments at every corner and hormones running at an all-time high within the wondrous walls of Hogwarts, the sixth Harry Potter film sees the development of characters, old and new, reach an entirely new level.
This is the darkest film so far, reflecting the turmoil into which the wizarding community is being thrown and yet, the creators have managed to concoct a perfect potion of dark humour, serious plots, and the entirely clumsy nature of adolescent romances. On the other hand, the core plot is where non-readers are at a loss as the whole storyline behind the hunt for Horcruxes is explained with such brevity that it has a detrimental effect upon the audience's understanding of this particular plot.
There is no doubt in my mind that this captivating film leaves the audience wanting more. "Harry Potter and the Half-blood Prince" has, if anything, confirmed my loyalty towards the series and has left me on the edge of my seat, biting my nails for what's to come next.

peace and love

eilidhbailey.