Review: Summer/Autumn Update

Our cinema going over the Summer and Autumn dwindled considerably but with good reason. We bought our first house after years of renting and the process was long and stressful leaving little time for films. Hopefully we will return to our nearly weekly habit in the New Year. I’m going to give you a quick round up of the films we saw since June when we went to the excellent F1 film.

  • Jurassic World. I really enjoyed this. I wasn’t a fan of the franchise and this was probably the first time I’d seen a JP film since the earliest film. It has an engaging plot, nothing too brain taxing but the special effects were excellent. The sea creatures circling the boats were particularly thrilling for me. 7/10
  • Superman. Another film seen without much knowledge of prior films for me. This was an average film, made better by the slight flaw in the main character – he didn’t seem to be the “Superman” of legend, he was vulnerable and ultimately needed help to triumph. 6/10.
  • The Fantastic Four. Another average superhero romp for me. The acting felt a little wooden and I didn’t really warm to any of the characters. 6/10.
  • The Bad Boys 2. Just silly and funny. Nice animation. 7/10.
  • Taylor Swift | The Release Party of a Showgirl. Not really a film, more of an experience. I was with friends and we had a lot of fun. Selfies at the cinema, lots of other Swifties around us, an all around feel good night out. The filming of the video for The Fate Of Ophelia was the main theme of the film, interspersed with Taylor Swift talking about all the other tracks on the album. Fascinating to see the video process from the storyline to the choreography to the filming. 9/10.
  • Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere. I’m not a huge Springsteen fan, so this was never going to be a must see film for me but I’m glad I saw it. It was a deeply personal side of an artist I know very little about as a man. It would have worked as a biopic of a fictional artist just as well, the Springsteen element wasn’t the most interesting thing – the torment of not being understood as an artist, battling with everyone to deliver the masterpiece you know is inside you – that’s the story of the film and it was moving to watch. 7/10.
  • Nuremberg. Almost the film of the year for me. Definitely in my top three. I’ve subsequently read a couple of reviews criticising the performance of Rami Malek in the film but I enjoyed it, a slightly fragile, uncertain portrayal of a man battling with the monster he’s confronted with but reluctantly finding the human being oddly fascinating. I didn’t know a lot about this period of history so it was sobering and informative as a film. 9/10.
  • Park Avenue. I saw this alone and I think there was only three people in the cinema which is sad because it was a very enjoyable film. Plot wise it was slow and meandering but that was important, it embodied the whole theme of the story for me – Fiona Shaw’s character is slowly dying whilst trying to hide this from the people around her. The sets and costumes were beautiful – Kit’s wardrobe was wonderful. The storyline probably needed another strand to inject a counter point to the film, I think probably the daughter’s dalliance with an old flame was supposed to be that but it kind of got lost in the heaviness of the mother/daughter relationship. 7/10.
  • Wicked: For Good. Alongside everyone else I’d been waiting for the second part of the Wicked story for a year. I did well to avoid reading about the likely plot and similarities or otherwise to the stage show (which I haven’t seen) so the plot twist was a surprise. The film was wonderful – admittedly all the great songs seem to be in the first movie, but For Good was enough! The animation of the animals is beautiful and all the special effects were flawless. The most important thing is the story, you almost don’t notice the other things while you’re watching, just remember them when you reflect on the film later. The relationships and the story are wonderful and perfectly portrayed. I laughed, gasped, shed a little tear and rejoiced alongside everyone else in the cinema. 10/10

So that’s my whistle stop round of up our summer/autumn films. Hopefully the weekly review service will be resumed in January.

Review: F1 26 June 2025

Two things before I start this review. I don’t like Brad Pitt and I used to be an obsessive motor sport fan, but that was over 10 years ago.

I wasn’t sure if I was going to like this film – my love of Formula 1 was immense but it’s faded in recent years and I haven’t seen a full race in a long time. I was concerned that simulated/staged racing might annoy me. I was also a little concerned my distaste for pretty boy Pitt would sour my view of the film too.

I was wrong on both counts. This film was incredible. The racing scenes were impeccable. I felt like I was watching a real race, I gasped and covered my eyes several times through the film. The commentary provided of course by Martin Brundle and David Croft was a little bit hammy but it wasn’t distracting. The footage, filmed at real Grand Prix during 2023 and 2024, was seamless. The cameos of drivers and team members were not gratuitous, just enough to keep F1 fans happy to see their favourite drivers, but not too much to detract from the story telling.

The plot wasn’t anything ground breaking – washed up former driver comes back to rescue team, trials and tribulations and a happy ending all round as you’d expect but there was an unexpected human side to this story. Cleverly woven between the racing were the friendships – developing and growing with the plot. All very obvious but still well drawn and believable. The cast draws you into their whirl wind life and also into the bonds that hold the team together.

Pitt was excellent, as much as I was expecting an average performance from him – I was wrong. As Sonny Hayes, he charms everyone, including the audience. I believed in the character. I believed in his belief he could turn the team around if they’d just give him and his maverick ideas a chance. Even the glaringly obvious love interest plot line didn’t feel horrible. Its resolution was also pleasingly handled.

Damson Idris, playing Joshua Pearce, was leaning hard into his Lewis Hamilton vibe. Hamilton produced the film and appeared as a rival to Pearce in the last race of the season. Idris was just the right amount of cocky and confident, but revealing the inevitable good team spirit performance that we all knew was coming.

I really enjoyed this film. It was a great mix of action and emotion – balancing the two very well. The plot was standard, no twists or surprises but it didn’t need them. A good story, well told. With a lot of amazing racing. What more do you need?

One of my favourite films this year. 9/10.

Review: Thunderbolts* 2 May 2025

The latest Marvel film landed this week. We’re not Marvel die hards but we do love the films and seeing them in the cinema in the iSense rooms at our local Odeon is the best way to experience them in my opinion.

Thunderbolts* is everything you expect from a Marvel offering – big budget, incredible special effects, a great storyline, good guys, bad guys and lots of puny humans that need saving. It’s a tried and tested formula that never gets old. This time however there is a little twist – our good guys are former bad guys twisted round to the side of good by a diabolical politician. Some of the characters I recognised (Bucky, John Walker), most I didn’t and assume are new to the story. Like I said – I don’t have a great knowledge of Marvel canon I just enjoy the films.

The fight sequences in this film are excellent and the special effects are amazing. I particularly liked the darkness of The Void and how it crept through the city. Obviously it’s a metaphor for evil but as we learn as the film progresses, it is also more subtly a symbol of depression and loneliness and the insidious nature of that condition. Our descent into Bob’s trauma through Yelena is key to the whole film and is very moving.

Our band of intrepid heroes of course save the day and New York is restored (with a lot of cleaning up needed!) and there’s a comeuppance for the dodgy politician (played brilliantly by Julia Louis-Dreyfus) which is surely going to feature in future episodes.

As with all Marvel films I’ve seen, we were rewarded for sitting though the credits with a couple of extra minutes of the story, which I won’t go into but I’m looking forward to the next instalment already. 9/10