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Somers Town (2008)
8/10
Cute? Hardly - A Powerful Commentary on Contemporary England
26 August 2008
Others have written that this film is a cute coming-of-age platonic love story. Well, that's one way of viewing the film. Another more direct reading is to look at the relationships between the white English and the immigrants (Polish and French). Both sets of people are portrayed somewhat stereotypically. The white English are Del Boy wideboys, lazy, rude, chavlike, selfish, self-centred, always on the scrounge, moaning, violent, loutish and drunk. The immigrants are decent hard-working people with a moral compass, who know what's right and what's wrong. Despite these stereotypical characters, this is an amazingly powerful film.

I'm a white middle-class English man and I've spent a lot of my life living in inner cities (London, Manchester, Birmingham, Wolverhampton and Milton Keynes). You know what? - these stereotypes rang (frighteningly) true to me. The film captured many of my frustrations with the way that the English national culture has changed; less tolerant, less considerate, less welcoming, more something-for-nothing. This is England today. The film made me feel ashamed of what we have become.

I left the cinema saddened; thinking that England could once again become a great country to live in if only we could remove all the bloody English.
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Early Summer (1951)
10/10
Better than Tokyo Story?
29 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I watch a lot of films; it is part of my work. But I only recently stumbled across those of Ozu. I've now seen nine or ten and I've been blown away. Ozu was a genius. He did something that I've not seen any other director do; he captures the most important moments in people's lives in a realistic fashion. There is a real fly-on-the-wall character to his films, yet he does this in such a way that you genuinely feel like you are intruding on private and personal moments. There are none of the acting-up for the camera or false histrionics that we've got so used to in documentaries. In fact, these are peaceful, superficially mundane stories that somehow get to the very core of humanity. Tokyo Story and Late Spring are excellent films, but to my eyes Early Summer is the greatest. I have never seen such a human dilemma (a daughter leaves home leaving her parents both disappointed that they will no longer have her company and yet proud and relieved that she is getting on with her life) so beautifully and poignantly portrayed. If push comes to shove, I might say that this is the greatest film of all-time.
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5/10
Shame they gave the plot away after 35 minutes
11 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this film on DVD last night and almost enjoyed it very much. The problem is that after 35 minutes we see David Gale (Kevin Spacey) arguing with the Governor of Texas about capital punishment on a TV show. This debate completely gives away the plot and ruins the rest of the film (I won't spoil it for you in case you sleep through this section and are oblivious to spot it). I sat through the remaining 90 minutes amazed that Bitsey (Kate Winslet) hadn't worked out how she was being manipulated. The plot giveaway is so blindingly obvious that the film is ruined. Poor storytelling and screenplay; everything else is excellent.
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