Sunday 27 November 2016

Movie review: "The Edge of Seventeen" (2016)

BEST NEW FEATURE
dir. by Kelly Fremon Page
High school as a setting has been slowly declining in the world of cinema for years now, the teen demographic such films would normally target increasingly being taken over by YA fantasy adventures. The Edge of Seventeen, arriving in a surprising wide release after a warm reception at TIFF, might not have the rating to necessarily connect with that audience - its depictions of sex and alcohol earned it an R in the United States, although it's saddled with a much broader 14A here in Canada - but its universal depiction of an older teen struggling to find comfort in a world which seems to be set against her provides a fresh, authentic take on the high school genre.

Wednesday 16 November 2016

TV review: "Daredevil" season 2

Showrunners: Douglas Petrie, Marco Ramirez
When Daredevil first premiered on Netflix in 2015, it was a darker, sleeker, and more daring tonic to the increasingly stagnant and bloated Marvel movies. With a compelling villain in Wilson Fisk and an intriguing Catholic morality, the show was more stylish and thoughtful than Marvel's usual fare. When Netflix's second Marvel series, Jessica Jones, turned out even better, it left a lot of promise for Daredevil's second season. And yet, without Fisk, the series had an uphill battle to climb to live up to its own reputation, and in spite of the fascinating introduction of The Punisher, this second season has failed quite dramatically to keep up the pace.

Spoilers for Daredevil season 2 follow.

Sunday 13 November 2016

Movie review: "Arrival" (2016)

BEST NEW FEATURE
dir. by Denis Veilleneuve
Based on Ted Chiang's short story Story of Your Life, Denis Villeneuve's Arrival follows up his 2015 hit Sicario with a different angle. Whereas Sicario was tense and brutal, Arrival is much more heady and idea-driven, but what the two films do have in common is their excellence - at a time when "hard" science fiction is becoming increasingly rare in multiplexes, a film of this quality is a real treat, and regardless of your taste in drama, there's likely to be something for everyone here. If any film is to herald the beginning of this year's awards season, this is about as great a start as could be hoped for.

Sunday 6 November 2016

Doctor Strange movie review


BEST NEW FEATURE
dir. by Scott Derrickson
(tl;dr? skip to the end for a few pros and cons)

The Marvel Cinematic Universe is eight years old now, and it's expanded significantly since its debut in 2008 in just about every imaginable way. Films like Avengers: Age of Ultron and Captain America: Civil War have become sprawling behemoths of a million subplots, the Sokovia Accords have heightened the franchise's thematic ambitions, and the MCU has even lept off the big screen into the realms of Netflix and broadcast television, with cable soon to come. By this point, these movies have developed a recognisable formula, but while Doctor Strange fits all the trappings, it also brings the solid humour, characters, and action which makes these films a hit, and taps into a fresh vein of the source material in the process.