Return to Oz (1985)

Recommended
USA/UK
Feature Film
Director: Walter Murch
Writers: Gill Dennis, Walter Murch, L. Frank Baum
Cinematographer: David Watkin
Composer: David Shire
Cast: Fairuza Balk, Nicol Williamson, Jean Marsh, Piper Laurie, Matt Clark, Sean Barrett, Denise Bryer, Brian Henson, Lyle Conway, Emma Ridley

Based on Baum’s novels The Land of Oz (1904) and Ozma of Oz (1907), which follow on from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900), which was loosely adapted as The Wizard of Oz (1939), this well-crafted, creepy, and downbeat film follows Dorothy’s unhappy return to Oz, which in her absense has been taken over by Princess Mombi and The Nome King, with all of her old friends now turned to stone. Iain.Stott

I Am Slave (2010)

Cautiously Recommended
UK
Television Film
Director: Gabriel Range
Writer: Jeremy Brock
Cinematographer: Robbie Ryan
Composers: Harry Escott, Molly Nyman
Cast: Wunmi Mosaku, Isaach De Bankolé, Lubna Azabal, Igal Naor, Natalie Mgmoi, Hiam Abbass

A Sudanese princess, abducted from her small village during the civil war, spends six years living as a slave in North Africa, before being sent to London, where her misery continues; all the while, her devoted father searches tirelessly for her, in this strikingly photographed and well-acted though rather sketchy look at modern day slavery. Iain.Stott

Dead Man (1995)

Highly Recommended
USA/Germany/Japan
Feature Film
Writer/Director: Jim Jarmusch
Cinematographer: Robby Müller
Composer: Neil Young
Cast: Johnny Depp, Gary Farmer, Lance Henriksen, Michael Wincott, Eugene Byrd, Robert Mitchum, John Hurt, Mili Avital

An unassuming accountant from Cleveland kills a man in self-defence, and goes on the run, accompanied by a poetry loving Indian named Nobody, when he is accused of murder by the deceased's powerful industrialist father, who puts up a large reward for his capture, in Jarmusch’s unhurried, stylish, and frequently hilarious existential comedy-western. Iain.Stott

Boudu Saved from Drowning (1932)

Highly Recommended
France
Feature Film
Original Title: Boudu sauvé des eaux
Director: Jean Renoir
Writer: Jean Renoir, Albert Valentin, René Fauchois
Cinematographers: Georges Asselin, Marcel Lucien
Cast: Michel Simon, Charles Granval, Marcelle Hainia, Sévérine Lerczinska, Jean Gehret, Max Dalban, Jean Dasté

After losing his dog, Boudu, an innocent vagrant, jumps suicidally into the Seine, but is saved by a well-meaning bookseller, who, feeling responsible for his life, takes him into his home and becomes his benefactor… chaos subsequently ensues, in Renoir’s hilarious adaptation of Fauchois’s play, filled with excellent comic performances and delicious social commentary. Iain.Stott

René Fauchois's 1919 play was subsequently adapted as Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986).

King of the Hill (2007)

Not Recommended
Spain
Feature Film
Original Title: El rey de la montaña
Director: Gonzalo López-Gallego
Writers: Javier Gullón, Gonzalo López-Gallego
Cinematographer: José David Montero
Composer: David Crespo
Cast: Leonardo Sbaraglia, María Valverde, Thomas Riordan, Andrés Juste, Pablo Menasanch, Francisco Olmo, Manuel Sánchez Ramos

A man and a woman, who have just met at a country a petrol station, find themselves running for their lives through a leafy wilderness, when a trio of video game enthusiasts start taking pot-shots at them, in López-Gallego’s genuinely unpredictable but generally implausible and illogical thriller. Iain.Stott

Love + Hate (2005)

Cautiously Recommended
UK
Feature Film
Writer/Director: Dominic Savage
Cinematographer: Barry Ackroyd
Composer: Rupert Gregson-Williams
Cast: Samina Awan, Tom Hudson, Nichola Burley, Was Zakir, Dean Andrews, Aliya Bhatti, Peter O'Connor, Ryan Leslie

Despite being overly reliant on coincidence, and containing one or two rather trite musical choices, television director Savage’s handsomely photographed big screen debut – a tale of illicit teenaged romance, set against a backdrop of racism and sexism, in a drab northern English town – is surprisingly affecting, mainly due to the assured performances of its attractive young cast. Iain.Stott

Peppermint Candy (1999)

Recommended
South Korean
Feature Film
Original Title: 박하사탕
Writer/Director: Lee Chang-dong
Cinematographer: Kim Hyeong-Ku
Composer: Lee Jae-Jin
Cast: Sol Kyung-Koo, Kim Yeo-jin, Mun So-Ri, Jung Suh, Park Ji-yeon, Park Se-beom, Lee Dae-yeon, Kim Kyoung-ik

Lee’s visceral, highly affecting little gem, told in reverse order, follows a broken-down, failed businessman (Sol, outstanding) from his booze-sodden, rail track suicide, back through twenty years of pain and suffering filled personal and national history, to his romantic, optimistic (and short-lived) youth. Iain.Stott

Chéri (2009)

Not Recommended
UK/Cayman Islands/France/Germany
Feature Film
Director/Narrator: Stephen Frears
Writers: Christopher Hampton, Colette
Cinematographer: Darius Khondji
Composer: Alexandre Desplat
Cast: Michelle Pfeiffer, Rupert Friend, Kathy Bates, Felicity Jones

In Frears’s mildly diverting (in a continental lager advert sort of way) though half-baked and curiously undramatic film, a very wealthy middle-aged prostitute struggles to come to terms with the loss of her young lover, Chéri, the 25-year-old son of a work colleague and friend, who has recently been married off to a beautiful 18-year-old girl. Iain.Stott

Spiral (2007)

Recommended
USA
Feature Film
Directors: Adam Green, Joel David Moore
Writers: Jeremy Danial Boreing, Joel David Moore
Cinematographer: Will Barratt
Composers: Todd Caldwell, Michael 'Fish' Herring
Cast: Joel David Moore, Amber Tamblyn, Zachary Levi

After disposing of his current muse (possibly messily), Mason, a shy telesalesman with a passion for jazz and painting, strikes up an unlikely friendship with the bubbly new girl at work, who agrees to be his new model; but his increasingly irrational behaviour ensures that things will end anything but well, in Green and Moore’s painfully convincingly acted and deceptively unpredictable psychological drama-cum-thriller (the incongruous use of Alex Lloyd’s Sometimes on the otherwise jazz filled soundtrack is a curious misstep, though). Iain.Stott

The Disappearance of Alice Creed (2009)

Cautiously Recommended
UK
Feature Film
Writer/Director: J Blakeson
Cinematographer: Philipp Blaubach
Composer: Marc Canham
Cast: Gemma Arterton, Martin Compston, Eddie Marsan

A pair of n’er-do-wells kidnap the daughter of a multi-millionaire, and keep her strapped to a bed in a soundproofed flat, whilst they wait for her father to pay the two million pound ransom; but, as hidden motivations are revealed, things begin to go horribly wrong, in Blakeson’s predictably unpredictable and well-acted if vaguely illogical feature debut. Iain.Stott

Convict 99 (1938)

Highly Recommended
UK
Feature Film
Director: Marcel Varnel
Writers: Jack Davis Jr., Ralph Smart, Marriott Edgar, Val Guest, Cyril Campion
Cinematographer: Arthur Crabtree
Cast: Will Hay, Moore Marriott, Graham Moffatt, Googie Withers, Peter Gawthorne, Basil Radford, Dennis Wyndham, Wilfred Walter, Alf Goddard, Basil McGrail

After being relieved of his post at St. Michael’s, Dr. Benjamin Twist, an unscrupulous, incompetent headmaster, stumbles into the post of governor of a maximum security prison (thanks to a case of mistaken identity), which, after a period spent as an inmate (mistaken identity again), he, along with a committee of convicts, turns into something akin to a holiday camp, in this generally hilarious and delightfully subversive sequel to Good Morning, Boys (1937), which is (compared to other Gainsborough-Hay efforts) a great deal more tightly plotted and well-thought out. Iain.Stott

Ask a Policeman (1939)

Recommended
UK
Feature Film
Director: Marcel Varnel
Writers: Marriott Edgar, Val Guest, Sidney Gilliat, J.O.C. Orton
Cinematographer: Derick Williams
Composer: Clive Richardson
Cast: Will Hay, Graham Moffatt, Moore Marriott, Glennis Lorimer, Peter Gawthorne, Charles Oliver, Herbert Lomas

For the duration of its delightful first 45 minutes or so, this Will Hay comedy is as close to perfection as you are likely to get, as it concentrates on his hilarious verbal sparring matches with his regular stooges, Marriott & Moffatt, but once the plot kicks in – involving smugglers, headless horsemen, and a poorly timed bus chase (which is as near as damn it a straight remake of Oh, Mr. Porter!) – it soon begins to lose its appeal; never the less, it is still essential viewing. Iain.Stott

Champagne Charlie (1944)

Not Recommended
UK
Feature Film
Director: Alberto Cavalcanti
Writers: John Dighton, Angus MacPhail, Austin Melford
Cinematographer: Wilkie Cooper
Composers: Una Bart, T.E.B. Clarke, Frank Eyton, Noel Gay, Ernest Irving, Billy Mayerl, Lord Berners
Cast: Tommy Trinder, Stanley Holloway, Betty Warren, Jean Kent, Austin Trevor, Peter De Greef, Leslie Clarke, Eddie Phillips

This beautifully crafted if generally lacklustre Ealing musical-comedy provides a highly fictionalised portrait of the mid-Victorian music halls performer, George Leybourne – who is perhaps best remembered for his writing of the popular song, The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze – which, though containing a few amusing comic moments, is little more than an excuse to film several old musical numbers of varying appeal and quality. Iain.Stott

Micmacs (2009)

Not Recommended
France
Feature Film
Original Title: Mic macs à tire-larigot
Director: Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Writers: Jean-Pierre Jeunet, Guillaume Laurant
Cinematographer: Nagata Tetsuo
Composer: Raphaël Beau
Cast: Dany Boon, André Dussollier, Nicolas Marié, Jean-Pierre Marielle, Yolande Moreau, Julie Ferrier, Omar Sy, Dominique Pinon

A man with a bullet lodged in his brain, with the help of his band of misfit, oddball friends, attempts to gain vengeance upon two unscrupulous arms dealers, who have forever altered his life, in Jeunet’s blandly exuberant, wafer-thin romp, which, but for its delicious final act, would be quite forgettable. Iain.Stott

The Lavender Hill Mob (1951)

Highly Recommended
UK
Feature Film
Director: Charles Crichton
Writer: T.E.B. Clarke
Cinematographer: Douglas Slocombe
Composer: Georges Auric
Cast: Alec Guinness, Stanley Holloway, Sidney James, Alfie Bass, Edie Martin, John Gregson

A meek, fastidious, and seemingly honest bank clerk spends 20 years forming a plan to rob the gold bullion that he escorts from the refinery to the bank each day – a plan that comes to fruition when he meets a manufacturer of tourist knickknacks, who gives him the idea of how to smuggle their ill-gotten gains out of the country, but all does not run smoothly in this beautifully drawn, perfectly paced, and decidedly English Ealing comedy. Iain.Stott

Life During Wartime (2009)

Cautiously Recommended
USA
Feature Film
Writer/Director: Todd Solondz
Cinematographer: Edward Lachman
Cast: Shirley Henderson, Allison Janney, Ally Sheedy, Renée Taylor, Ciarán Hinds, Michael Kenneth Williams, Dylan Riley Snyder, Paul Reubens, Michael Lerner, Rich Pecci

Solondz’s diverting but relatively disappointing film reacquaints us with the Jordans and Maplewoods from Happiness (1999) and the Wieners from Welcome to the Dollhouse (1995), as he weaves together another ensemble comedy-drama of the deeply discontented, this time set in a Jewish, Floridian wasteland of entropy and paranoia. Iain.Stott

Happiness (1998)

Highly Recommended
USA
Feature Film
Writer/Director: Todd Solondz
Cinematographer: Maryse Alberti
Composer: Robbie Kondor
Cast: Jane Adams, Cynthia Stevenson, Lara Flynn Boyle, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Dylan Baker, Louise Lasser, Ben Gazzara, Camryn Manheim, Jared Harris, Rufus Read

With its deliciously ironically romantic score, brave, wholehearted performances, and pitch-black, razor-sharp script, Solondz’s pathos-dripping portrait of three middle-class New Jerseyan sisters is a remarkable work, which is simultaneously hilarious, repellent, and bizarrely moving, and which even manages to imbue the vilest of child molesters (amongst other various pervs & sickos) with a number of qualities with which we can empathise. Iain.Stott

The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985)

Highly Recommended
USA
Feature Film
Writer/Director: Woody Allen
Cinematographer: Gordon Willis
Composer: Dick Hyman
Cast: Mia Farrow, Jeff Daniels, Danny Aiello, Irving Metzman, Edward Herrmann, Dianne Wiest, Alexander Cohen

When a supporting character in a Hollywood film steps down off the screen, declaring his love for a sad-eyed patron, and stating his intention to not return, in the process terrifying his studio and the actor who played him, the object of his affection, Cecilia, a deeply unhappily married waitress, finds herself having to make the most unlikely of choices, in Allen’s charming and thoughtful depression era doomed romance. Iain.Stott

The Killer Inside Me (2010)

Cautiously Recommended
UK/Canada/USA
Feature Film
Director: Michael Winterbottom
Writers: John Curran, Michael Winterbottom, Jim Thompson
Cinematographer: Marcel Zyskind
Composer: Melissa Parmenter
Cast: Casey Affleck, Kate Hudson, Jessica Alba, Ned Beatty, Elias Koteas, Tom Bower, Simon Baker, Bill Pullman, Brent Briscoe, Matthew Maher, Liam Aiken, Jay R. Ferguson

Those not familiar with Jim Thompson’s 1952 novel may well find themselves struggling to understand the motivation of the central character in Winterbottom’s (rightly) sickeningly violent portrait of a meek small town deputy sheriff who commits a series of brutal murders, which, though generally well crafted, really struggles to get beneath the skin of its killer. Iain.Stott

CFB's Top 30 Obscure Films of 1939 (2010)


  1. Ask a Policeman (1939)
  2. Union Pacific (1939)
  3. Peace on Earth (1939)
  4. Ugly Duckling (1939)
  5. The Cat and the Canary (1939)
  6. You Can’t Cheat an Honest Man (1939)
  7. The Rains Came (1939)
  8. Juarez (1939)
  9. Charlie Chan at Treasure Island (1939)
  10. On Borrowed Time (1939)
  11. The Spy in Black (1939)
  12. Stanley and Livingstone (1939)
  13. They Made Me a Criminal (1939)
  14. Miracles For Sale (1939)
  15. It’s a Wonderful World (1939)
  16. The Man in the Iron Mask (1939)
  17. Magokoro (1939)
  18. Pieges (1939)
    Confessions of a Nazi Spy (1939)
  19. The Frozen Limits (1939)
  20. In Name Only (1939)
  21. The End of the Day (1939)
    Spook Sport (1939)
    Nine Bachelors (1939)
  22. Fric – Frac (1939)
  23. Gjest Baardsen (1939)
  24. Buck Rogers (1939)
    Tower of London (1939)
  25. Babes in Arms (1939)
  26. 5th Ave. Girl (1939)

CFB's Top 30 Films of 1939 (2010)


  1. The Wizard of Oz (1939)
  2. Gone with the Wind (1939)
  3. Stagecoach (1939)
  4. La Règle du Jeu (1939)
  5. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)
  6. Only Angles Have Wings (1939)
    Wuthering Heights (1939)
  7. Ninotchka (1939)
  8. The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939)
  9. Midnight (1939)
  10. Destry Rides Again (1939)
  11. Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939)
  12. The Roaring Twenties (1939)
  13. Le Jour se Lève (1939)
  14. The Women (1939)
  15. Beau Geste (1939)
  16. The Four Feathers (1939)
  17. Gunga Din (1939)
  18. The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939)
  19. Young Mr. Lincoln (1939)
  20. Love Affair (1939)
  21. Drums Along the Mohawk (1939)
  22. Of Mice and Men (1939)
  23. The Story of the Last Chrysanthemums (1939)
  24. Dark Victory (1939)
  25. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1939)
  26. Five Came Back (1939)
  27. Son of Frankenstein (1939)

White Lightnin' (2009)

Recommended
UK/Croatia
Feature Film
Director: Dominic Murphy
Writers: Eddy Moretti, Shane Smith
Cinematographer: Tim Maurice-Jones
Cast: Edward Hogg, Carrie Fisher, Owen Campbell, Muse Watson

Murphy’s exhaustingly wholehearted feature debut provides a highly fictionalised account of the life of The Outlaw Dancer Jesco White, detailing his upbringing in the Appalachian Mountains of West Virginia, where, between spells of imprisonment and commitment, he indulged in a life of booze, drugs, petrol fumes, violence, and the odd spot of dancing. Iain.Stott

Rage (2009)

Cautiously Recommended
UK/USA
Feature Film
Writer/Director: Sally Potter
Cinematographer: Steven Fierberg
Composers: Fred Frith, Sally Potter
Cast: Simon Abkarian, Patrick J. Adams, Riz Ahmed, Bob Balaban, Adriana Barraza, Steve Buscemi, Jakob Cedergren, Lily Cole, Judi Dench, Eddie Izzard, Jude Law, John Leguizamo, David Oyelowo, Dianne Wiest

Presented as a series of monologues filmed against an ever changing brightly coloured backdrop, Potter’s typically adventurous and innovative if only partly successful experimental satire documents, in the words of its various participants, a particularly disastrous New York fashion show which is beset by tragedy. Iain.Stott

Nightwatching (2007)

Recommended
UK/Canada/The Netherlands/Poland
Feature Film
Writer/Director: Peter Greenaway
Cinematographer: Reinier van Brummelen
Composer: Wlodzimierz Pawlik
Cast: Martin Freeman, Emily Holmes, Eva Birthistle, Jodhi May, Natalie Press

As much an examination of a painting and its creation as it is a portrait of its creator (Dutch master Rembrandt, a surprisingly excellent Freeman) and the women in his life (Holmes, Birthistle, May, and Press), Greenaway’s belatedly released (sort-of) biopic proves to be both a delightfully accomplished work of art & art history and an affecting piece of human drama. Iain.Stott

No One Knows About Persian Cats (2009)

Cautiously Recommended
Iran
Feature Film
Original Title: کسی از گربه های ایرانی خبر نداره
Director: Bahman Ghobadi
Writers: Bahman Ghobadi, Hossein Mortezaeiyan, Roxana Saberi
Cinematographer: Turaj Mansuri
Composers: Mahdyar Aghajani, Ash Koosha
Cast: Negar Shaghaghi, Ashkan Koshanejad, Hamed Behdad, Take It Easy Hospital, Rana Farhan, Hichkas, The Yellow Dogs Band

A pair of underground indie rock musicians, who have been booked to play a gig in London, trawl the streets of Tehran with an effervescent wheeler-dealer in search of musicians, exit visas, and passports, so that they can follow their illicit dream, in Ghobadi’s charming and eye-opening though dramatically lacking and perhaps a tad flashy look at this little glimpsed facet of Iranian society. Iain.Stott

Next Stop Wonderland (1998)

Highly Recommended
USA
Feature Film
Director: Brad Anderson
Writers: Brad Anderson, Lyn Vaus
Cinematographer: Uta Briesewitz
Composer: Claudio Ragazzi
Cast: Hope Davis, Alan Gelfant, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Callie Thorne, Sam Seder, Cara Buono, Ken Cheeseman, Holland Taylor, Robert Klein

In Anderson’s small and whimsical yet beautifully human look at the capricious nature of love and coupling, which is as delightful and romantic as its Bossa Nova soundtrack, a pair of well-drawn Bostonians, seemingly destined to be together, almost but not quite (until the end, at least) meet as they go about their daily, lovelorn lives. Iain.Stott

Truly Human (2001)

Highly Recommended
Denmark/Finland
Feature Film
Original Title: Et rigtigt menneske
Series Title: Dogme #18
Writer/Writer: Åke Sandgren
Cinematographer: Dirk Brüel
Cast: Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Peter Mygind, Susan A Olsen, Troels II Munk, Line Kruse, Søren Hauch-Fausbøll, Clara Nepper Winther

Sandgren’s laugh-out-loud funny, pathos drenched social satire-cum-urban fantasy-cum-humanist fable depicts the misadventures of a doomed innocent, conjured up out the walls of a dead 7-year-old’s bedroom walls, and unleashed onto the world, where, as he is abused and misunderstood, he holds up a mirror to all of our corrupted lives. Iain.Stott

Welcome (2009)

Cautiously Recommended
France/Belgium/UK
Feature Film
Director: Philippe Lioret
Writers: Philippe Lioret, Olivier Adam, Emmanuel Courcol, Serge Frydman
Cinematographer: Laurent Dailland
Composer: Nicola Piovani
Cast: Vincent Lindon, Firat Ayverdi, Audrey Dana, Derya Ayverdi, Thierry Godard, Selim Akgül, Firat Celik, Murat Subasi

In Lioret’s compelling and moving though vaguely implausible film, a middle-aged swimming instructor, in the midst of an amicable divorce, befriends (in the hopes of impressing his compassionate soon-to-be ex) a 17-year-old Iraqi-Kurd illegal immigrant, who foolhardily but romantically wishes to learn how to swim in order to cross the Channel to be with his soon-to-be-married-to-her-cousin girlfriend in London. Iain.Stott

The Market: A Tale of Trade (2008)

Recommended
Turkey/Germany/Kazakhstan/UK
Feature Film
Original Title: Pazar: Bir ticaret masali
Writer/ Director: Ben Hopkins
Cinematographer: Konstantin Kröning
Composer: Cihan Sezer
Cast: Tayanç Ayaydin, Genco Erkal, Senay Aydin, Hakan Sahin, Rojîn Ulker

A struggling market trader with gambling and alcohol problems, who deals in items that have fallen off the back of lorries, aspires to corning the emerging mobile phone market in his small provincial town; but, in order to raise the necessary start-up capital, he finally abandons his few remaining morals, in Hopkins’s blackly comic allegorical 1994-set comedy-drama. Iain.Stott

Krapp's Last Tape (2000)

Essential Viewing
Ireland/UK
Television Film
Series Title: Beckett on Film (2000-2001)
Director: Atom Egoyan
Writer: Samuel Beckett
Cinematographers: Paul Sarossy
Cast: John Hurt

On his 69th birthday, in preparation for the recording of his annual self-address, the wizened, banana chomping Krapp listens to the tape he recorded on his 39th, and comes to regard it with a mixture of embarrassment, regret, and sentiment, in Egoyan’s strikingly photographed and terribly moving adaptation of Beckett’s play, which features an outstanding performance from a never better Hurt. Iain.Stott

O'Horten (2007)

Norway/Denmark/France/Germany
Feature Film
Original Title: O' Horten
Writer/Director: Bent Hamer
Cinematographer: John Christian Rosenlund
Composer: John Erik Kaada
Cast: Bård Owe, Espen Skjønberg, Ghita Nørby, Henny Moan, Bjørn Floberg, Kai Remlov, Per Jansen, Bjarte Hjelmeland

In Hamer’s gently moving, deadpan gem, a 67-year-old retiring train driver, in the days leading up to and following his final day, somehow manages to get himself into some bizarre moonlit adventures, involving inadvertent breaking and entering, illicit midnight swims, blind-folded city driving, and 90-year-old mother pleasing ski jumps. Iain.Stott

Locarno, 2010

Golden Leopard
Winter Vacation (2010)

Special Jury Prize
Morgen (2010)

Best Director
Denis Côté, Curling (2010)

Leopard for Best Actress
Jasna Duricic, White White World (2010)

Leopard for Best Actor
Emmanuel Bilodeau, Curling (2010)


In Competition

  • At Ellen’s Age (2010)
  • Bas-fonds (2010)
  • Beyond the Steppes (2010)
  • Cold Weather (2010)
  • Curling (2010)
  • Hair (2010)
  • Karamay (2010)
  • L.A. Zombie (2010)
  • Light in Darkness: The Return of Red Light Bandit (2010)
  • Man at Bath (2010)
  • Morgen (2010)
  • Periferic (2010)
  • La Petite Chambre (2010)
  • Pietro (2010)
  • Songs of Love and Hate (2010)
  • White White World (2010)
  • Winter Vacation (2010)
  • Womb (2010)

My Last Five Girlfriends (2009)

Cautiously Recommended
UK
Feature Film
Director: Julian Kemp
Writers: Julian Kemp, Alain de Botton
Cinematographer: Dave Miller
Composers: Andy Blythe, Marten Joustra
Cast: Brendan Patricks, Naomie Harris, Kelly Adams, Cécile Cassel, Jane March, Edith Bukovics, Daniel Hoffmann-Gill

A neurotic and (sort-of) suicidal young man (Patricks) recalls his last five relationships, from their meet-cute beginnings through their inevitable declines to their acrimonious terminations, with extra emphasis on his last girlfriend (Harris, charming as ever), as he struggles (and fails) to understand what love is, in Kemp’s witty and inventive if occasionally overly whimsical and not particularly emotionally involving Annie Hall like rom-com. Iain.Stott

Top Hat (1935)

Highly Recommended
USA
Feature Film
Director: Mark Sandrich
Writers: Allan Scott, Dwight Taylor
Cinematographer: David Abel
Composer: Max Steiner
Cast: Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Edward Everett Horton, Erik Rhodes, Eric Blore, Helen Broderick

A musical star appearing in a show in London falls for the woman staying in the swanky hotel room below his, but, because she mistakenly believes him to be the new husband of a friend of hers, her seemingly strange reactions to his advances confuse him greatly (though certainly don’t deter his interest), in this delightful, exuberant romantic musical farce. Iain.Stott

Salt (2010)

Cautiously Recommended
USA
Feature Film
Director: Phillip Noyce
Writer: Kurt Wimmer
Cinematographer: Robert Elswit
Composer: James Newton Howard
Cast: Angelina Jolie, Liev Schreiber, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Daniel Olbrychski, August Diehl, Daniel Pearce, Hunt Block, Andre Braugher, Olek Krupa

In Noyce’s fast-paced, action-packed, and (pleasingly) rather silly thriller – which makes good use of cartoon logic in its attempt at a Bourne-Alias-like hybrid – a CIA agent goes on the run, when a Russian walk-in accuses her of being a Russian spy who is about to assassinate the president of Russia at the US vice president’s funeral, leading everyone to assume that the accusation is true: but what other explanation could there be? Iain.Stott

Awaydays (2009)

Best Avoided
UK
Feature Film
Director: Pat Holden
Writer: Kevin Sampson
Cinematographer: Tony Mitchell
Composer: David A. Hughes
Cast: Nicky Bell, Liam Boyle, Holly Grainger, Stephen Graham, Oliver Lee, Ian Puleston-Davies, Sacha Parkinson, Rebecca Atkinson

In Holden’s painfully unconvincing and rather risible coming-of-age movie, an angry young man from a lower middle class family, who dreams of being accepted by a gang of Birkenheadian football hooligans, who spend their Saturday afternoons knocking seven shades of shite out of complete strangers, makes friends with one of their number, a troubled young man who dreams of escaping his miserable existence. Iain.Stott

Florence Nightingale (2008)

Not Recommended
UK
Short Television Film
Writer/Director: Norman Stone
Cinematographer: Mike Fox
Composer: Jeremy Soule
Cast: Laura Fraser, Michael Pennington, Andrew Harrison, Barbara Marten, Ian Bartholomew, Catherine Tyldesley, Roy Hudd

This handsome though strangely uninvolving BBC production, which has an unnecessarily fractured narrative and strange, ungainly musical interludes, paints a portrait of nursing pioneer Florence Nightingale, from her calling to nursing by God, through her involvement in the Crimean war, to her impassioned campaigning for medical and military reform. Iain.Stott

Colin (2008)

Highly Recommended
UK
Feature Film
Writer/ Director/Cinematographer: Marc Price
Composers: Jack Elphick, Dan Weekes
Cast: Alastair Kirton, Daisy Aitkens, Kate Alderman, Leanne Pammen, Tat Whalley, Kerry Owen, Leigh Crocombe, Justin Mitchell-Davey

Price’s genuinely horrific, surprisingly moving, and decidedly original existential zombie movie – supposedly made for just £45 – depicts a day in life of a new-born monster, Colin (Kirton), from being turned by his undead roommate until his second untimely demise, as the zombie apocalypse rages around him. Iain.Stott

Lourdes (2009)

Highly Recommended
France/Austria/Germany
Feature Film
Writer/Director: Jessica Hausner
Cinematographer: Martin Gschlacht
Cast: Sylvie Testud, Léa Seydoux, Gilette Barbier, Gerhard Liebmann, Bruno Todeschini, Elina Löwensohn

In Hausner’s beautifully shot, subtly acted, and gently, enigmatically observational film, Christine, a thirty-something French woman paralysed from the neck down by severe multiple sclerosis, makes a pilgrimage (despite an evident lack of faith – she really just wants a trip away, and would have preferred Rome) to Lourdes (remarkably reminiscent of a theme park), and miraculously regains the use of her limbs. Iain.Stott

Rough Aunties (2008)

Recommended
UK
Feature Documentary
Director/Cinematographer: Kim Longinotto

Though some of the conversations feel a little forced, and in at least one scene the camera (and consequently our presence) feels intrusive, Longinotto’s upsetting yet hearteningly optimistic portrait of the women of Operation Bobbi Bear – a South African charity dedicated to helping victims of child abuse through their traumas and aiding the police in bringing their abusers to trial – is a thoroughly and eye-openingly absorbing documentary. Iain.Stott

Hedwig and the Angry Inch (2001)

Recommended
USA
Feature Film
Director: John Cameron Mitchell
Writers: John Cameron Mitchell, Stephen Trask
Cinematographer: Frank G. DeMarco
Composer: Stephen Trask
Cast: John Cameron Mitchell, Miriam Shor, Michael Pitt, Andrea Martin, Ben Mayer-Goodman, Alberta Watson, Maurice Dean Wint

A bitter transsexual singer from East Berlin tours America’s diners with her own unique brand of narcissistic rock, trailing a much more successful former lover, who has become famous on material that they wrote together, hoping to finally achieve her dream of stardom, in Mitchell’s exuberant, wholehearted adaptation of his popular off-Broadway musical. Iain.Stott

Sparkle (2007)

Not Recommended
UK
Feature Film
Writer/Directors: Tom Hunsinger, Neil Hunter
Cinematographer: Sean Van Hales
Composer: Adrian Johnston
Cast: Shaun Evans, Amanda Ryan, Stockard Channing, Lesley Manville, Bob Hoskins, Anthony Head, John Shrapnel, Peter Gordon

Evans is excellent in the central role – a well-drawn part amidst several sketchier ones – in this otherwise lacklustre romantic comedy and disappointing follow-up to Hunsinger and Hunter’s promising effort from 2001, The Lawless Heart, which details the complicated love life of a charmingly charmless Liverpudlian chancer, who has just moved to London with his flighty mother in search of a better life. Iain.Stott

Heist (2008)

Not Recommended
UK
Television Film
Director: Justin Hardy
Writer: Peter Harness
Cinematographer: Douglas Hartington
Cast: Kris Marshall, Geraldine James, Donald Sumpter, Paul Hilton, Tim Plester, Linal Haft, Bennett Warden, Michael Dunning

Narrated from Hell by Dick Puddlecote (Kris Marshall), this decidedly irreverent but only sporadically entertaining BBC film depicts the events that led to his 1305 execution, detailing how he and numerous accomplices, with a blend of brilliance and incompetence, broke into the King’s vault at Westminster Abbey, stealing an estimated £100,000 worth of gold and gems, before their inevitable capture and comeuppance. Iain.Stott

Shaun of the Dead (2004)

Recommended
UK/France/USA
Feature Film
Director: Edgar Wright
Writers: Simon Pegg, Edgar Wright
Cinematographer: David M. Dunlap
Composers: Daniel Mudford, Pete Woodhead
Cast: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Kate Ashfield, Lucy Davis, Dylan Moran, Penelope Wilton, Bill Nighy, Peter Serafinowicz, Rafe Spall

Having just been dumped by his girlfriend of three years, Shaun, a 29-year-old slacker, uses the impending zombie apocalypse as the perfect opportunity to win her back, in Wright and Pegg’s reference-heavy rom-zom-com, which is full of social comment, fart jokes, and even a few surprisingly tender moments. Iain.Stott

Public Enemies (2009)

USA/Japan
Feature Film
Director: Michael Mann
Writers: Ronan Bennett, Ann Biderman, Michael Mann, Bryan Burrough
Cinematographer: Dante Spinotti
Composer: Elliot Goldenthal
Cast: Johnny Depp, Christian Bale, Marion Cotillard, Billy Crudup, Stephen Dorff, Stephen Lang, Stephen Graham, Channing Tatum, Jason Clarke, David Wenham, Branka Katic

Mann’s handsome, diverting film does a good job of capturing the surface detail of its biographical tale, but does less well when it comes to delving beneath the surface of its protagonists, as it depicts the FBI’s pursuit of the folk hero, bank robber, vicious thug, and public enemy no. 1 John Dillinger through depression hit 1930s America. Iain.Stott

Goodbye Solo (2008)

USA
Feature Film
Original Title Good Bye Solo
Director: Ramin Bahrani
Writers: Bahareh Azimi, Ramin Bahrani
Cinematographer: Michael Simmonds
Composer: M. Lo
Cast: Souleymane Sy Savane, Red West, Diana Franco Galindo, Lane 'Roc' Williams, Mamadou Lam, Carmen Leyva

Featuring a pair of subtly affecting performances, Bahrani’s compassionate and painfully yet beautifully human film follows a vivacious Senegalese taxi driver’s attempts to befriend a regular customer, a grizzled, cantankerous, chain-smoking old man, who he realises is planning to kill himself, in the hopes of changing his mind. Iain.Stott

Kisses (2008)

Recommended
Ireland
Feature Film
Writer/Director/Cinematographer: Lance Daly
Composers: GoBlimpsGo
Cast: Kelly O'Neill, Shane Curry, Paul Roe, Neilí Conroy, Cathy Malone, David Bendito

Let down somewhat by an incongruously upbeat score, Daly’s otherwise convincingly acted and strikingly photographed film follows the misadventures of a pair of young runaways, who flee to the mean streets of multi-cultural Dublin to escape their unhappy home-lives, encountering friendly dredgers, buskers, and prostitutes along the way, as well as a few less reputable characters. Iain.Stott

Bunny and the Bull (2009)

Recommended
UK
Part-Animated Feature Film
Writer/Director: Paul King
Cinematographer: John Sorapure
Composer: Ralfe Band
Cast: Edward Hogg, Simon Farnaby, Verónica Echegui, Noel Fielding, Julian Barratt

Television director King’s visually imaginative and occasionally hilarious if, perhaps, slightly over-long feature debut inventively depicts the internal road trip taken by an obsessive-compulsive agoraphobic young man, as he remembers the fateful European trip he took with his fun-loving but decidedly insensitive best friend a year previously, which resulted in his current anxiety-ridden state. Iain.Stott

Tricks (2007)

Recommended
Poland
Feature Film
Original Title: Sztuczki
Writer/Director: Andrzej Jakimowski
Cinematographer: Adam Bajerski
Composer: Tomasz Gassowski
Cast: Damian Ul, Ewelina Walendziak, Tomasz Sapryk, Rafal Guzniczak, Iwona Fornalczyk

In Jakimowski’s thoroughly delightful and decidedly original film, a young boy does his best to give fate a helping hand (using his little tricks) and reintroduce a man that he believes to be his estranged father into his and his family’s life, much to the chagrin of his unforgiving big sister, who is preoccupied with trying to gain a position at an Italian company. Iain.Stott

Everlasting Moments (2008)

Cautiously Recommended
Sweden/Denmark/Finland/Germany/Norway
Feature Film
Original Title: Maria Larssons eviga ögonblick
Director: Jan Troell
Writers: Niklas Rådström, Jan Troell, Agneta Ulfsäter-Troell, Maja Öman
Cinematographers: Mischa Gavrjusjov, Jan Troell
Composer: Matti Bye
Cast: Maria Heiskanen, Mikael Persbrandt, Jesper Christensen, Callin Öhrvall, Nellie Almgren, Birte Heribertsson, Ghita Nørby, Amanda Ooms, Emil Jensen, Claire Wikholm

Troell’s impeccably crafted and convincingly acted if rather unfocused and generally uninspired adaptation of Maja Öman’s memoirs explores her and her ever expanding family’s impoverished wartime upbringing, living under the shadow of her father’s heavy drinking and bouts of violence, with her long suffering, amateur photographer mother. Iain.Stott

Sweet and Lowdown (1999)

Highly Recommended
USA
Feature Film
Writer/Director: Woody Allen
Cinematographer: Zhao Fei
Cast: Sean Penn, Samantha Morton, Anthony LaPaglia, Uma Thurman, Brian Markinson, Gretchen Mol, James Urbaniak, John Waters, Tony Darrow

Allen’s charming, pathos-laden, picaresque faux documentary lovingly paints a portrait of fictional jazz guitarist Emmet Ray – a Django Reinhardt loving kleptomaniac with a penchant for shooting rats and drinking heavily – as he resists, succumbs to, leaves, and then pines for a mute laundress. Iain.Stott