Chris Peckover's witty, deceptive suburban nightmare Better Watch Out (which I saw under its original title, the more prosaic Safe Neighbourhood) is both a Home Alone / Funny Games / Scream mashup and a rather interesting take on the state of US maleness.
Luke (Levi Miller) is a 12 going on 13 year old living a somewhat privileged life. While his well to do parents attend a Christmas party, babysitter Ashley (Olivia de Jonge), who is five years older and on whom Luke has a crush, comes over to watch him. But it seems that everyone's interested in Ashley, including a couple of older boys, and she's made plans to leave town for a while; Luke only has eyes for Ashley, but when his attempts to impress his babysitter by rescuing her from a gun toting home invader fail - a bit of staging involving his friend Garrett as the masked housebreaker - it all threatens to get difficult for the boys. But then the tables are turned.
Part of the twisted pleasure of watching Better Watch Out unfold is that it functions both in a rather meta way but also as an effective thriller in its own right. There's an amorality on display which clashes with the squeaky clean visuals and clean cut cast - very Wes Craven. There's also some clever genre nods (at one point one of the victims gets a paint bucket swung into his face, while another comments that he's been "Home Aloned" and indeed the movie plays like a more sinister version of Chris Columbus's 1990 film, which of course includes that very scene).
But there's something more than simple homage at work. Better Watch Out gradually transforms, after the first half hour of homely snow scenes (although it was actually filmed in Australia) and light comedy, into something increasingly and insidiously darker. While it's difficult to go into more specifics without spoiling the plot (and yes it is a film that you are best knowing nothing about before seeing it) the nastiness of later events is tempered by consistently good acting and a whip smart script; also having the violence occur mostly off screen (surely a nod to movies like Funny Games) makes it a more unsettling watch than I expected.
Levi Miller and Olivia de Jonge make a great cat and mouse pairing; Miller is creepy, chilling but not unlikeable, and de Jonge, with her unattainable girl next door beauty, transforms well into the film's 'final girl.' There are fine supports too from Virginia Madsen and Patrick Warburton as Luke's parents, and from Ed Oxenbould as the gullible Garrett.
For only a second movie, Chris Peckover's directing is assured and never misses a beat. This is a director to watch and one who has delivered a very cool addition to the Christmas fright flick canon. Go see.
Wednesday, 20 December 2017
Sunday, 17 December 2017
Top 10 Films of 2017
In no particular order, here are my 10 favourite films of 2017:
1. Voodoo (Dir Tommy Costabile) - one of the first films I saw in 2017, and it knocked me for six. Costabile's shot on DV story of a southern party girl who, through no fault of her own ends up stuck in Hades, channeled the DIY spirits of Ray Dennis Steckler and Jose Mojica Marins. Audacious, outrageous and a whole lot of fun, it showed what can be done with just a few dollars in the bank, a rich imagination and some friends who run a haunted house setup. Oh and Ron Jeremy's in it.
2. Jackie (Dir Pablo Larrain) - an extended study of grief, this was/is Natalie Portman's finest hour. Larrain's film, about the period following the assassination of John F Kennedy in 1963, excels at saying a lot with just a few filmic brushstrokes, and has (another) stunning soundtrack by Mica Levi. Jackie conveys loss and shock in a way rarely seen in the cinema, and the sense of the world needing to move on while she remains stuck in the moment is heartbreaking.
3. Lilith's Awakening (Dir Monica Demes) - technically a 2016 film, but as I was partly responsible for the movie getting its first UK screening this year, I claim the right to include it as a 2017 best. A beautiful, sinister movie, made under the auspices of the David Lynch Transcendental Meditation MFA in film, this story of vampirism in the mid west of the USA was all about Hoppereque shadows, brooding night shots, and a frightening soundtrack of the natural world. A film that reminds us of the power of black and white cinema. Brooding, dreamlike and very dangerous.
4. War of Words: Battle Rap in the UK (Dir Craig Tuohy, Tom Worth) - this short but very punchy documentary delves into UK's battle rap scene. Filmed over a number of years, it's a very personal account of a truly underground scene that captured the danger and exclusivity of my punk rock days. Funny, very rude and hugely exciting, it deserves a wider distribution.
5. Dunkirk (Dir Christopher Nolan) - after the saccharine excesses of Interstellar, Nolan's stripped down, very personal take on one of the defining moments of the second World War is a bleak delight. From its visceral opening to the soaring, elegiac finale, it's a film that rivals Jackie for conveying shock and desperation. Hans Zimmer's soundtrack becomes another emotional layer in the movie. Sure Nolan gets a bit carried away with himself at times, but there are scenes on Dunkirk which linger in the memory like vivid melancholic dreams.
6. The Big Sick (Dir Michael Showalter) - despite the (fair) comment that the Pakistani women in the film get a pretty raw deal in the character department, this is still a great film, with Kumail Nanjiani and Zoe Kazan turning in winning performances. The story of a culture clash couple facing girlfriend-in-an-induced-coma problems, this is consistently funny, life affirming filmmaking. A joy to watch and rewatch.
7. mother! (Dir Darren Aronofsky) - ok Marmite time. Plenty of people dislike this film (it prompted more than a few walkouts at the screening I attended) but for me this was Aronofsky's return to form, a back of a fag packet designed tour de force, a begging letter to the planet to stop fucking over Mother Nature's bounty, and Aronofsky's this-is-how-we-do-things-round-here love letter to new beau Jennifer Lawrence. Insane and intense; dream logic enigmatically captured on film.
8. Bushwick (Dir Cary Murnion, Jonathan Milott) - sadly I saw this on a rather poor quality on line screener, and kick myself for not catching it on its brief big screen run, but this is a terrific faux single shot action movie which recalls the heady days of 80s straight to VHS exploitationers, but without the tracking problems. Perhaps the first Trumpocalypse (and you can have that one for free) movie, it's the story of southern state secessionists waging war on the streets of New York. Breathtaking on a very limited budget, Bushwick starts as it means to go on. Loud, exciting, and very inventive.
9. Battle of the Sexes (Dir Jonathan Dayton, Valerie Faris) - The most 'straightforward' of my choices, this is superb film making. Brilliantly paced with nuanced performances from Emma Stone as Billie Jean King and Steve Carell as Bobby Riggs, Battle of the Sexes balances its intersecting storylines expertly (with a great and typically is-that-her? Andrea Riseborough as King's hard won partner) and some great comic set pieces. Mining a similar stylistic seam to Ron Howard's 2008 movie Frost/Nixon, a very satisfying film.
10. Get Out (Dir Jordan Peele) - writer and actor Peele's directorial debut may slightly unravel towards the end, but this is a smart film, tipping its hat to several genre apple carts while also upsetting them, and having enough elan to succeed in its own right. The story of Chris, an African American guy (Daniel Kaluuya) being introduced to the decidedly odd family (and hired help) of his white girlfriend Rose (Allison Williams) starts casually but tightens the knot extremely effectively. It's both funny and unsettling. I screened it to a very racially diverse audience at a recent film festival, and it was the highlight of the weekend.
Honorable mentions: God's Own Country (Dir Francis Lee), Loving (Dir Jeff Nichols), Capture Kill Release (Dir Nick McAnulty), The Belko Experiment (Dir Greg McLean) and Hounds of Love (Dir Ben Young).
1. Voodoo (Dir Tommy Costabile) - one of the first films I saw in 2017, and it knocked me for six. Costabile's shot on DV story of a southern party girl who, through no fault of her own ends up stuck in Hades, channeled the DIY spirits of Ray Dennis Steckler and Jose Mojica Marins. Audacious, outrageous and a whole lot of fun, it showed what can be done with just a few dollars in the bank, a rich imagination and some friends who run a haunted house setup. Oh and Ron Jeremy's in it.
2. Jackie (Dir Pablo Larrain) - an extended study of grief, this was/is Natalie Portman's finest hour. Larrain's film, about the period following the assassination of John F Kennedy in 1963, excels at saying a lot with just a few filmic brushstrokes, and has (another) stunning soundtrack by Mica Levi. Jackie conveys loss and shock in a way rarely seen in the cinema, and the sense of the world needing to move on while she remains stuck in the moment is heartbreaking.
3. Lilith's Awakening (Dir Monica Demes) - technically a 2016 film, but as I was partly responsible for the movie getting its first UK screening this year, I claim the right to include it as a 2017 best. A beautiful, sinister movie, made under the auspices of the David Lynch Transcendental Meditation MFA in film, this story of vampirism in the mid west of the USA was all about Hoppereque shadows, brooding night shots, and a frightening soundtrack of the natural world. A film that reminds us of the power of black and white cinema. Brooding, dreamlike and very dangerous.
4. War of Words: Battle Rap in the UK (Dir Craig Tuohy, Tom Worth) - this short but very punchy documentary delves into UK's battle rap scene. Filmed over a number of years, it's a very personal account of a truly underground scene that captured the danger and exclusivity of my punk rock days. Funny, very rude and hugely exciting, it deserves a wider distribution.
5. Dunkirk (Dir Christopher Nolan) - after the saccharine excesses of Interstellar, Nolan's stripped down, very personal take on one of the defining moments of the second World War is a bleak delight. From its visceral opening to the soaring, elegiac finale, it's a film that rivals Jackie for conveying shock and desperation. Hans Zimmer's soundtrack becomes another emotional layer in the movie. Sure Nolan gets a bit carried away with himself at times, but there are scenes on Dunkirk which linger in the memory like vivid melancholic dreams.
6. The Big Sick (Dir Michael Showalter) - despite the (fair) comment that the Pakistani women in the film get a pretty raw deal in the character department, this is still a great film, with Kumail Nanjiani and Zoe Kazan turning in winning performances. The story of a culture clash couple facing girlfriend-in-an-induced-coma problems, this is consistently funny, life affirming filmmaking. A joy to watch and rewatch.
7. mother! (Dir Darren Aronofsky) - ok Marmite time. Plenty of people dislike this film (it prompted more than a few walkouts at the screening I attended) but for me this was Aronofsky's return to form, a back of a fag packet designed tour de force, a begging letter to the planet to stop fucking over Mother Nature's bounty, and Aronofsky's this-is-how-we-do-things-round-here love letter to new beau Jennifer Lawrence. Insane and intense; dream logic enigmatically captured on film.
8. Bushwick (Dir Cary Murnion, Jonathan Milott) - sadly I saw this on a rather poor quality on line screener, and kick myself for not catching it on its brief big screen run, but this is a terrific faux single shot action movie which recalls the heady days of 80s straight to VHS exploitationers, but without the tracking problems. Perhaps the first Trumpocalypse (and you can have that one for free) movie, it's the story of southern state secessionists waging war on the streets of New York. Breathtaking on a very limited budget, Bushwick starts as it means to go on. Loud, exciting, and very inventive.
9. Battle of the Sexes (Dir Jonathan Dayton, Valerie Faris) - The most 'straightforward' of my choices, this is superb film making. Brilliantly paced with nuanced performances from Emma Stone as Billie Jean King and Steve Carell as Bobby Riggs, Battle of the Sexes balances its intersecting storylines expertly (with a great and typically is-that-her? Andrea Riseborough as King's hard won partner) and some great comic set pieces. Mining a similar stylistic seam to Ron Howard's 2008 movie Frost/Nixon, a very satisfying film.
10. Get Out (Dir Jordan Peele) - writer and actor Peele's directorial debut may slightly unravel towards the end, but this is a smart film, tipping its hat to several genre apple carts while also upsetting them, and having enough elan to succeed in its own right. The story of Chris, an African American guy (Daniel Kaluuya) being introduced to the decidedly odd family (and hired help) of his white girlfriend Rose (Allison Williams) starts casually but tightens the knot extremely effectively. It's both funny and unsettling. I screened it to a very racially diverse audience at a recent film festival, and it was the highlight of the weekend.
Honorable mentions: God's Own Country (Dir Francis Lee), Loving (Dir Jeff Nichols), Capture Kill Release (Dir Nick McAnulty), The Belko Experiment (Dir Greg McLean) and Hounds of Love (Dir Ben Young).