Tuesday, 20 January 2026

The Mastermind (2025)


 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆

The Mastermind (2025) – K. Reichardt

I guess I lost track of director Kelly Reichardt since the pandemic but I have enjoyed all of her films that I’ve seen (particularly Old Joy, 2006, and First Cow, 2019). With The Mastermind, Reichardt has brought her technique and themes to the heist drama. (It is always hard to know whether these arthouse directors choose to make genre films to attract a wider audience, for commercial prospects, or because, like many of us, they are truly fond of the genres). The setting is Framingham, Massachusetts, circa 1970. Reichardt and her team (including longtime cinematographer Christopher Blauvelt) use film stock and camera techniques to evoke films shot in this period (gauzy, washed-out colour) alongside pitch-perfect art design and set-decoration and costumes (furniture, cars, buildings, shirts, dresses, etc.).  The plaintive jazz soundtrack by Rob Mazurek lends an emotional note to the proceedings even when some scenes are scored only by extended drum solos. The plot centres on Josh O’Connor’s failing carpenter/architect/art-school graduate, married (to Alana Haim) with two young sons, who concocts a plan to steal some abstract paintings from the local art gallery with a couple of local guys/friends. Reichardt takes us step-by-step through the caper and its aftermath in true slow-cinema style, allowing viewers’ awareness of the genre to fill in some of the gaps in the plot as she hones in on a character study of O’Connor’s “mastermind”. Rather than using other characters to psychoanalyse him, Reichardt allows O’Connor’s actions (and the little bit of context we glean about him and his past) to help viewers to draw their own conclusions. The film concludes, with Vietnam War protests on TV and on the streets, with a sort of sudden ironic joke and no denouement (possibly one could see 2/3 of the film as a long long denouement, I guess!).  Slow but always absorbing.


Weapons (2025)


 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆

Weapons (2025) – Z. Creggar

Ostensibly narrated by a primary school girl from whatever small town in America the film takes place, lending a fable-like quality to the proceedings, we begin the tale with the key mystery to be solved: on one particular school day, all of the students in one classroom (save one) fail to turn up to school (in fact, they each left their houses at 2:17 AM and disappeared). Distressed parents focus their anger on the class teacher, played by Julia Garner. The film is divided into three parts: Justine’s story (the classroom teacher), Archer’s story (one of the parents, played by Josh Brolin), and Alex’s story (the one boy who did show up for school, played by Cary Christopher). Everyone is desperate to understand what happened to the missing children – and, of course, to find them. Amy Madigan, playing Alex’s Aunt Gladys, was nominated for a Golden Globe for best supporting actress for this film but did not win. To say any more would be criminal but I left the film thinking about the Brothers Grimm (and although I was hoping for a strictly supernatural film, I did wince on a few occasions that involved some violence and gore). Worth a look (if you dare)!


The Phoenician Scheme (2025)


 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ½

The Phoenician Scheme (2025) – W. Anderson

I will have to watch this one again, having only seen it on my trans-Pacific flight to the USA on the tiny back-of-the-seat screen (possibly with an airline crash edited out).  However, even with these conditions, I’m confident that this is director Wes Anderson’s best feature since The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014). Although I enjoyed them well enough at the time, Asteroid City (2023) and The French Dispatch (2021) felt like a letdown. Here, Benicio del Toro stars as businessman Zsa-Zsa Korda, who may have a shady past and also the target of various attempts at his life (possibly leading to multiple airplane crashes, all survived). He is trying to put together the financing for one last engineering feat, which involves visiting a series of former business partners around the globe. Along with him are Mia Threapleton playing his daughter Liesl, now a nun, to whom he plans to bequeath his estate, and Michael Cera playing Bjorn, a tutor hired to teach him about insects. The characterisations (including from the many, often familiar bit players) are sublimely eccentric. Although not scaling the droll comedic peak that Grand Budapest conquered, Phoenician Scheme offers many amusing moments as Korda seeks to eliminate “the gap” in his financing. As could be expected, the art design, set decoration, and music (Alexandre Desplat, plus curated classical and jazz selections), are highly stylized and exquisite.  Recommended, particularly if you’ve more or less given up on Wes recently.

 

Tuesday, 6 January 2026

Aliens (1986)

 

☆ ☆ ☆ ☆

Aliens (1986) – J. Cameron

In preparation for a family visit to the Deep Space escape room at Ukiyo.com.au (courtesy of Nanna & Vaari) – and because I recently played Alien: Isolation (the survival horror videogame) – I rewatched this sequel to the original Ridley Scott 1979 horror sci-fi classic.  This time with James Cameron at the helm (fresh off his success with The Terminator, 1984), the franchise takes a distinct turn to the action film, as a group of marines (including Bill Paxon, Michael Biehn, Jenette Goldstein, and synthetic Lance Henriksen) are sent to THAT planet, where a human colony has now disappeared, approximately 57 years after the first film. Ellen Ripley (played again by Sigourney Weaver) has been on ice in hibernation all this time on the Nostromo’s escape pod but, ultimately, is encouraged to join the rescue mission (by slimy corporate shill Paul Reiser) after a traumatic recovery period on Earth. When they arrive on LV-426, they find only 9-year-old Newt whose parents and brother have been killed, along with all of the colonists (except those used for incubating offspring), by the swarm of aliens that has infested their base.  And with that premise in place, the rest of the film is one long fight between the space marines, Ripley, and the aliens (including their queen), with a few subplots for character development along the way.  Cameron ups the tension and plays up the “maternal instinct” angle by mirroring Ripley (with Newt standing in for her now dead real daughter) and the alien queen.  It’s a relentless ride, although not quite up to the spooky-scary benchmark set by its predecessor.  If I recall correctly, none of the subsequent films in the franchise are as good as the first two.


Sunday, 21 December 2025

The Terminator (1984)







































☆ ☆ ☆ ☆

The Terminator (1984) – J. Cameron

One of those movies that I couldn’t remember whether I had actually watched it or not, with T2 probably overshadowing any earlier memories. It turns out that this first film in the series is a cracking good time, with raw gritty action that retains a link to low budget masterworks like John Carpenter’s Assault on Precinct 13 (1976), even as it points toward the big budget spectacles of the future (of which director James Cameron would play a key role). This film took Arnold Schwarzenegger from his previous beefcake roles (e.g., Conan the Barbarian, 1982) into something even more iconic and weird – a futuristic cyborg time-travelling to the past to kill the mother of the resistance hero fighting the A. I. machines who have taken over the Earth.  Suffice it to say that Arnold’s Teutonic accent is perfect (and he does say “I’ll Be Back”). Although the special effects do dominate before the film concludes (whetting Cameron’s appetite, I guess), Linda Hamilton (as the target) and Michael Biehn (as a futuristic human pursuing the Terminator) maintain their sense of purpose, using every possible means to escape the unrelenting robot revealed under Arnold’s skin. Having caught lightning in a bottle, I guess no one could resist a sequel (or three).



Saturday, 1 November 2025

Pavements (2024)


 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆

Pavements (2024) – A. R. Perry

One of the reviews on Letterboxd suggests that a viewer at a film festival needed to google Pavement to learn about the band – if this is you, this is not your movie. However, if you’re like me, owning all of their records which were on steady rotation back in the day (and therefore virtually memorised), then Pavements will be something of a trippy experience. Or let’s just say director Alex Ross Perry capitalises on the sense of absurdity and ridiculousness that was an undercurrent in the band’s work (so if that’s also something that brings a smirk to your face, I say go for it). The film has 4 or 5 strands all interwoven but skilfully edited to provide not just an historical narrative of the band but an emotional one which crescendos at the end, celebrating Pavement’s 2022 reunion shows (which I somehow skipped here in Melbourne; but did see Malkmus’s subsequent emergence in The Hard Quartet this year). We see scenes of the band rehearsing for the reunion as well as clips from the past, all the way back to the beginning, but we never get a complete song – everything is excerpts, offering tantalising primes that trigger longer memories and complete versions of unplayed songs as earworms. Everything else in the film is a form of fiction, a staged “meta” take on the “what if” aspect of the Pavement story, as in “what if” they actually became as famous as contemporaries Nirvana.  In that fan-fiction future, there’s a Pavement museum in NYC – we see the gallery opening featuring other Matador bands playing Pavement songs (snippets only, naturally), and an array of celebs (Thurston Moore et al.) mingling with the members of Pavement and the assorted hipsterati, amongst the many (catalogued) artefacts (t-shirts and weirder) from the band’s past. It seems that this event really happened, but how staged it was is hard to say (clearly there is no such museum).  Weirder still, the producers may have really issued a call for auditions for a proposed Pavement stage musical (“Slanted! Enchanted!”) – we see earnest Broadway wannabes singing their hearts out via Gold Soundz and a few dance numbers (cringeworthy, yes, but fitting in some way?). It’s possible to see Stephen Malkmus’s guiding hand behind some of this, as absurdly self-mocking as it seems. The final strand is the hardest to digest and the most distancing (at least for this viewer – is it Brechtian?). To provide more narrative grit to the Pavement story (and align it with the cliches of the music doc?), and again as a kind of fan-fiction, we are treated to a parallel version of the band’s story in which Spiral Stairs (Scott Kannberg, played by Nat Wolff) is bitter about the band’s lack of success, Malkmus (played by Joe Keery) is visibly alienated from the possibility of fame, and there’s a faux climax focused on Lollapalooza’s mud-slinging incident which leads to an intense band discussion (in contrast to the reality of the band laughing in the green room after the incident which is shown in split-screen).  The producers cast actors in the role of band members and relevant record label execs (Tim Heidecker as Gerard Cosloy; Jason Schwarzman as Chris Lombardi; founders of Matador records who also appear as themselves) and we see actors preparing for their roles by emulating historic footage of the band (e.g., using a voice coach to get Malkmus’s vocal fry just right and examining a photo of his tongue) which takes us further into bizarro-world. Ultimately, the film offers an opportunity for an extended (128 minutes) meditation/reverie on the band (with Perry using all the cinematic techniques at his disposal to keep it interesting), if that’s what yer looking for; if you don’t know the band, I suspect the film would be nearly incomprehensible. I haven’t pulled this out for a while but for a straight-up documentary of the band you might try Lance Bangs’ Slow Century (2002). For my part, I enjoyed these moments of (self-)indulgence.


Sunday, 12 October 2025

Quiz Show (1994)


 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆

Quiz Show (1994) – R. Redford

Have I over-rated this film? I think not.  As a morality play, set in the early days of television as a growing mass-medium, it interrogates the psychology of its characters, the contestants’ motivations (and rationalisations) for accepting the offer to cheat (on the game show Twenty-One), as well as the producers’ greed and anti-Semitism.  The tension created by director Robert Redford (rest in peace) is real, as federal investigator Dick Goodwin (Rob Morrow) starts honing in on the deception, aided by a developing relationship with Charlie Van Doren (Ralph Fiennes) supported by their shared Ivy League backgrounds (Harvard for Goodwin – with Morrow sporting a terrible Boston accent; Columbia for Van Doren, son of noted poet Mark Van Doren).  Van Doren famously beat Jewish Herbie Stempel (John Turturro), purportedly because the producers (and sponsor Geritol, headed by Martin Scorsese) wanted a more attractive WASPish winner.  Did Redford take notes while acting in All the President’s Men? This film does not reach the dynamic heights of that thriller but the structure feels similar. Reflecting back on this time in the early ‘90s, it is hard to remember that Fiennes was just fresh from his triumph in Schindler’s List, Morrow was a TV star (Northern Exposure) seeking to make the leap to the big screen (unsuccessfully), and Turturro was already an established character actor (for Spike Lee and the Coen Brothers). It seems like a lifetime ago – and the quiz show scandal seems like ancient history, though I recall watching The Joker’s Wild as a child, not realising it was host Jack Barry’s comeback after a decade in the wilderness following the scandal of Twenty-One.  Engrossing.