Reviewdle 12 – 1 new release and 2 on-the-way-outs
Star Trek ![]()
The sum total of what I know about Star Trek could fit into something very small. It’s all learned from Galaxy Quest or by cultural osmosis. As such, I had no fixed notions and no expectations going into this film. Mostly I just wanted to cleanse my action movie palate of the bad taste left by Wolverine. Star Trek was fun. It was big, dumb, funny, well made, well paced, Macguffin-riddled fun. Not sure how this will sit with the fans out there, but I thought the films weakest point was Leonard Nimoy’s Spock. Otherwise, it rollicked along following a solid script that was, for the most part, lean, mean and racing-striped. Best not to think about it too much afterwards though – the more you think about it the less it makes sense. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to watch Galaxy Quest.
Easy Virtue ![]()
I’m a sucker for a period film. Not this one though. Although it’s set in the 20s, although it is based on a Noel Coward play, although it has all the right ingredients on paper, it never took off for me. It’s hard to say whether the confusing script or misjudged direction got in the way more. Director Stephan “Priscilla Queen of the Desert” Elliot’s obsession with refracted reflections gets tiresome and he relies too heavily on the (gratingly anachronistic) soundtrack to create a false energy. Messing with Coward’s story does the film no favours, although does create some very interesting opportunities to explore characters further, which sadly it never follows through on. The costumes are great, though, and the excellent cast (including Colin Firth, Kristen Scott Thomas, Ben Barnes and Jessica Biel) really do behave like a family on the verge of implosion, playing crafting and conniving games for loyalty and affection.
A Film With Me In It ![]()
A series of fatal accidents occurs very quickly in Mark’s (Mark Doherty) apartment. He and his mate Pierce (Dylan Moran from Black Books) try to cover up the deaths because they look too suspicious and contrived for anyone to believe they would be accidents. They’re right, they do look contrived. The whole film does really. It outstays its 82-minute running time by a good 20 minutes after escalating quite nicely for the first part. The second half relies too heavily on self-referential writing used to back out of a tight corner in the story and is about as clever as “I woke up and it was all a dream”. I liked that Mark is played (by the screenwriter, Doherty) as a morose and boring man, it’s just a shame that the film turned out that way too.





