Eavesdropping at the Movies: 457 – One Battle After Another

By far Paul Thomas Anderson’s most expensive film, with a budget some four or five times what he’s used to, and probably his most accessible, One Battle After Another entertains us enormously and effortlessly without sacrificing the complexity and nuance for which his work is known. Set in an alternate America oppressed by Christofascism, the alternate part is that there’s a very active militant revolutionary group, the French 75, setting bombs off and freeing detained minorities. Leonardo DiCaprio is part of it, and sixteen years after the conclusion of his group’s activities, their work has entered countercultural legend, but he’s become a drug-addicted, paranoid burnout, trying to raise a teenage daughter. When the powers that be come looking for them, they’re separated, all hell breaks loose, and he has to step up.

José finds One Battle After Another to be the film of the moment, the state of the nation film that Eddington could only dream of being, a powerful, invigorating expression of what ails America and what it means to resist. Mike is more cynical, seeing an element of mockery in the revolution that has no apparent intention to end and is carried out over generations. We love the easygoing style of filmmaking that Anderson seems to have grown into, comparing it to the rigid formality of his early work, and finding that he has a talent for action cinema that’s never quite come out before. We also discuss the film’s themes of youth and ageing, parenting, the Christian right and more.

One Battle After Another is an unmissable film, the kind that fifty years ago would have defined America’s national conversation. Cinema no longer holds that level of cultural cachet, sadly, but One Battle After Another is a powerful, energetic, and very funny reminder of what film can do at its best.

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

A NOTE ON DOG DAY AFTERNOON

I woke this morning still thinking about DOG DAY AFTERNOON. A man who has loved no other woman more than his wife, who loves his two children, and his mother, yet who robs a bank so that –to use the film’s own language — his other wife, a man named Leon, a man he’s loved like no man has ever loved another, can have a sex-change operation, is constantly crushed by all the obligations he feels towards those he loves ‘I’m dying here!’…and fails. That is the premise of the film, a courageous one. That man, Sonny (AlPacino) is not only the protagonist of the film, but its hero. The film’s achievement is to get the audience to empathise with that man, which it succeeded in doing then — the film was a big hit – and it still works today. It’s a New York film. To much of America, probably a story that could only take place in New York. But I see New York itself as a protagonist in the film. The helicopter shots that begin it, the buildings, the people, the talk, the attitude, the energy, the humour, the grit. There are actors that I still can’t name but recognise from TV as New York actors (Carol Kane, in a small early role, is one I can). The performances of John Cazale and Chris Sarandon are justly praised. But I’d forgotten that Charles Durning, James Broderick, and Lance Hernriksen are also in the cast and excellent. Lumet is justly celebrated for his work with actors and each of the kidnapped secretaries is rendered an individuals, often with bits of business. But here Lumet also uses a mobile camera to bring energy and urgency to the heist. He uses the inside and outside symbolically, bringing in the crowds as commentary on America and the media. People remember ‘Attica’ and the gay rights moment. I at least had forgotten the can-throwing and the bile directed at Sonny. It’s a truly great film, and Pacino as the man with the weight of the world on his shoulders, doing wrong so that he can do right by everyone is tender, sweet, brave, angry, violent, caring, funny and ultimately very moving. The whole gamut. One of the greatest performances in American film history and a truly great film.

José Arroyo

A note on Claudia Cardinale

I mourn the death of Claudia Cardinale. I’ve seen a lot of her lesser-known work this year (LA RAGAZZA DI BUBE/ THE GIRL WITH THE SUITCASE, IL GIORNO DELLA CIVETTA/ THE DAY OF THE OWL, IL PREFETTO DI FERRO/ I AM THE LAW) and only learned to love her more. She was one of those rare performers whose smile lit up a screen and sparked some kind of opening or expansion in the hearts of spectators (Goldie Hawn, Audrey Hepburn, and Julia Roberts are others). Like Carmen Sevilla, who was dubbed ‘The Girlfriend of Spain’ Cardinale was publicised as ‘The girlfriend of Italy’, which I found interesting because they’re both very beautiful, and very sexy but in a non-threatening way (think of Ava Garden or Linda Fiorentino as opposites.); they both radiate positivity instead of danger. Like with Sophia Loren and Gina Lollobrigida, the other Italian superstars of her era, she could move from playing rural peasants to aristocrats with ease. She was a great actress, with a calm demeanour and a liveliness behind the eyes that audiences worldwide found easy to identify with. I learned from the Spanish obituaries that LES PÉTROLEUSES/ THE LEGEND OF FRENCHIE KING (Christian Jacques, 1972), a gunslinging Western in which she starred with Brigitte Bardot, a contemporary whose evocation of freedom had been an inspiration, played for years in Spain, an enormous hit, and was advertised as ‘BB contra CC’. A great star and a great actress whose filmography is a legacy that extends beyond the obvious works from Fellini, Visconti, Monicelli, Leone, Herzog, etc: it’s interesting to see the different works obits from diff countries highlight, depending on what traces they left on those particular cultures.

José Arroyo

A thought on Kip Nolan’s Mulholland Meat

I couldn’t afford the vintage pulp novels that I wanted but saw that there were new equivalents in the same vein, so I tried one: MULHOLLAND MEAT. It’s about a young sexually abused boy who leaves home and is picked up at the bus station by an agent based on Henry Wilson (Tab Hunter, Rock Hudson, Troy Donahue), also the subject of Michael McKeever’s play, THE CODE, currently on in London. It’s the evening of the premiere of THE ROBE in 1953 and by the end of the year the young man will find love and become a star, but not before having to put out to all kinds of creeps, famous and not, up and down Mulholland Drive. It’s badly written soft-core porn with Golden Age Hollywood lore as context. It’s heavily based on Scotty Bowers’ FULL SERVICE: MY ADVENTURES IN HOLLYWOOD AND THE SECRET SEX LIVES OF THE STARS (which was also the case with Ryan Murphy’s HOLLYWOOD TV series). What bothered me most was seeing all the internet gossip being offered up as fact, so representative of this age of digital disinformation. And worst of all to me was the representation of Katharine Hepburn as a sexually rapacious lesbian. And I began to ask why did it bother me? Is it some form of internalised homophobia? After all it’s quite likely that Hepburn did have some same-sex experiences, particularly with her close friend Laura Harding. We’ll never know. What we do have is concrete evidence of marriage and several important affairs with men, heavily documented in all kinds of ways including testimony from all her friends. But be that as it may, I suppose what upset me is that what I suspect drives the re-iteration of this account of her nicked from Scotty Bowers is misogyny, an attempt to reduce one of the great figures of 20th century cinema, all that she meant to people then and now, all that she accomplished and created, to a nasty stereotype: closety, repressed but rapacious, something gay men of today could look down on sneer at, knowingly (but knowing nothing). And this goes for the rest of the real life figures mentioned in the book (Cary Grant and Randolph Scott, Richard Burton etc). And perhaps all of this may be more excusable in a pulp novel than in London play or a tony Netflix mini-series. Perhaps.

José Arroyo

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 456 – Together

Commitment is scary. It’s especially scary when you drink water from a cursed puddle that wants to make a hybrid of you and your partner. Together tells the story of a couple moving to a new home during a questionable period in their relationship: she has a new job and is responsible for the move away; he’s emotionally distant since the death of his parents and relies on her for transportation and financial security. They love each other, but will they last?

First-time director Michael Shanks demonstrates a good instinct for tone, effectively combining comedy and horror – that Alison Brie and Dave Franco (married in real life) are both experienced comic actors helps the film draw out the absurdity of the events it depicts. What quibbles we might have with details of its supernatural basis are easily ignored because its focus always remains on the central couple. It doesn’t matter that some specific detail might not be explained to our satisfaction: the question is always, how do the couple respond to their predicament? Together never loses sight of what’s most important, and that makes it one of the best horrors – maybe one of the best films full stop – that we’ve seen in a while.

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

 

 

 

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 454 – Weapons

One of the most hotly-anticipated horror films in recent memory, Weapons begins with seventeen third-grade children in a Pennsylvania town mysteriously waking up at 2:17am one Wednesday and running from their homes into the darkness. The shocking, unexplained disappearance and imagery of an empty classroom alone suggest an allegory of school shootings, and we ask what else can be read into the film, and discuss the depth with which it handles its themes. We have our issues with Weapons but enjoy it very much all the same, and find a lot to like. It’s probably just a little overpraised.

Two weeks later, with the film still on his mind, Mike opens up further discussion and proposes that maybe there’s more to it than he gave it credit for – or that you have to be American to properly get it.

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

 

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 453 – The Shrouds

A psychosexual thriller that’s neither psychosexual nor thrilling enough, The Shrouds is a disappointment. There’s great promise to businessman Vincent Cassel’s invention of a technologically advanced shroud that creates a 3D model of the decaying body it houses, when we’re shown the lust with which he observes his deceased wife’s corpse. The film is peppered with recurrent imagery of her disfigured body, and its importance to Cassel’s character is constantly reinforced, but the film is too talky, its imagery too bland, and its plot too convoluted to make the most of it. A shame.

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

 

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 452 – The Ballad of Wallis Island

Mike loves Tim Key. This much has been true for some time, and he’s thrilled to discover that the comic poet’s unique approach to wordplay and social interactions finds a natural place on the cinema screen, in the character of an eccentric lottery winner who lures his favourite folk duo, long since broken-up, to the lonely island on which he lives for a private gig. Tom Basden’s singer-songwriter finds the forced reunion an unwelcome intrusion from his past, and so begins a comedy about grief, loss, loneliness, and rice.

The plot is easily predicted, the visual nous close to absent, but it has a good heart and, in Key, an irresistably energetic, unusual central performance. It filled the Mockingbird with laughter and left us all feeling warm and cuddly and sad and happy. The Ballad of Wallis Island is a charming film, well worth watching.

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 455 – Eddington

Most film and TV has quietly agreed to pretend that the Covid pandemic never happened. Perhaps it’s too awkward to discuss it. Perhaps it’ll date your work. Writer-director Ari Aster doesn’t share these worries, telling a story about the days of lockdowns, mask mandates and conspiracy theories – days of particular hostility and division in the USA, in which individual freedom does constant battle with the greater good.

Eddington is an ambitious attempt at the state-of-the-nation film: a darkly comic thriller with wild tonal shifts, a mass of interwoven themes, uneven pacing, and an eventual climb out of reality into absurdity. José finds much to dislike, particularly its dismissive attitude towards the young people it depicts supporting the Black Lives Matter movement; Mike is surprised at how much he likes it, given how let down he felt by HereditaryEddington is certainly a mixed bag, but we’re glad to have seen it.

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

 

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 451 – Friendship

We talk adult male friendships, stress and surreality in our discussion of Friendship, in which oddball everyman Tim Robinson finds himself enamoured with effortlessly cool new neighbour Paul Rudd, but lacks any of the social nous to naturally bond with him. The film gets huge laughs from meaningful subject matter, a far cry from our experience with The Naked Gun. Its tone is idiosyncratic and its observations on human nature ring true in their exaggerated way, and Robinson is a fascinating and hilarious presence on the cinema screen. Friendship won’t be for everyone, but we highly recommend it.

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

Thinking Aloud About Film: Maskerade (Willi Forst, 1934)

The MASKS AND MUSIC: THE FILMS OF WILLI FORST strand of last year’s Il Cinema Ritrovato, curated by Lukas Foerster, was so popular that I was unable to see any of them. Richard is more organised and came out raving about two: MASQUERADE/ MASKERADE (1934) and TOMFOOLERY/ ALLOTRIA, (1936). Luckily for us The Internet Archive has a very good copy of Maskerade which enabled us to see it (or in Richard’s case, to see it again). In the podcast below we talk about the film in relation to the Wiener Genre, Authorship, Anton Walbrook’s career (he is here billed as Adolf Walbrook), the difficulties of dealing with works from authoritarian regimes, how it was the most popular film of its year in the German-speaking world. More specifically we discuss the rhythms of the opening scene, Anton Walbrook’s introduction, the narrative invention of the narration of the publication of the muff drawing, the mise-en-scéne, the influence of vaudeville and the film’s intent on pleasing. We relate the film to Lubitsch’s work and comment on how a particular shot of a camera seeming to float through a window  might have influenced Minnelli (in Meet Me in St. Louis) and, according to Mark Fuller, Powell & Pressburger (The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp). All this and much more may be listened to in the podcast below:

The podcast may be listened to below:

he podcast may also be listened to on: Spotify here: https://open.spotify.com/show/2zWZ7Egdy6xPCwHPHlOOaT

and on itunes here: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/first-impressions-thinking-aloud-about-film/id1548559546

 

The Film may be seen through the Internet Archive here:

https://archive.org/details/maskerade-1934

Richard recommends the following SENSES OF CINEMA article on Willi Forst https://www.sensesofcinema.com/2006/great-directors/forst/

 

The book we mention on Anton Walbrook is:

Maskerade won the award for best screenplay at the Venice Film Festival and was remade as a vehicle for William Powell and Louise Rainer in Hollywood as ESCAPADE (Robert Z. Leonard, 1935)

José Arroyo

José Arroyo in Conversation with Cinema Mentiré on Maria Luisa Bemberg

I was lucky enough to see Maria Luisa Bemberg’s SEÑORA DE NADIE (NOBODY’S WIFE, 1982)and YO, LA PEOR DE TODAS (I, THE WORST OF ALL, 1990) at this year’s CINEMA REDISCOVERED in Bristol, in gorgeous prints, with an  appreciative and enthusiastic audience. I’m a long-time fan of Bemberg’s but I’d never had the opportunity to see  SEÑORA DE NADIE and I’d never seen YO LA PEOR DE TODAS in such a beautiful version.

 

The films surprised and delighted. But what I was most taken with was the effervescence, energy and brilliance of Amina Ferley Yael and Natalia Christofoletti Barrenha who introduced the two films. They along with Marta Calderon Quiñones are Cinema Mentiré. This podcast is the result of my wanting to know more about Cinema Mentiré, who they are, what they do; and also, of my wanting to publicise the re-circulation of such marvellous films by a legendary female filmmaker in new restorations (which films? What are they about? What are they like? Why are they worth seeing now?), and with new subtitles undertaken by Cinema Mentiré themselves.

Cinema Mentiré was founded in 2023 by Natalia Christofoletti Barrenha, Amina Farley Yael, and Marta Calderon Quiñones with the mission to redress the relative low circulation of Latin American Films in the UK. In the podcast they talk about how even when the films they screen are decades old, they are often still UK premieres. The name  of their group was inspired by  Colombian filmmaker Luis Ospina. Latin American cinema is often associated with the solemn, the serious, the tragic. They wanted to bring out the more playful side, inherent in the title of their group. If for Godard ‘Photography is truth; cinema is truth 24 times a second’; For Ospina cinema is ‘de mentiras’, the way Godard’s phrase is misremembered as ‘cinema is lies 24 frames a second’,  a fiction, a web of inventions and lies that could convey deeper truths, often accompanied by a skewy, questioning stance that acts as a pinprick to pomposity.

It is with this this purpose and spirit of fun that Cinema Mentiré is now providing some of the key works of a Maria Luisa Bemberg, a seminal Latin American filmmaker,  working with an equally seminal female producer, Lita Stantic, on the wings of second-wave feminism , producing works in a popular vein that continue to move, engage, surprise. A lesbian scholar sitting next to me at the screening of YO, LA PEOR DE TODAS turned to me after the screening and said ‘I can’t believe I’d never heard of this filmmaker or this film until now.’ We talk about all of this and more in  podcast below:

The podcast may also be listened to on: Spotify here: https://open.spotify.com/show/2zWZ7Egdy6xPCwHPHlOOaT

and on itunes here: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/first-impressions-thinking-aloud-about-film/id1548559546

 

All the details on Cinema Mentiré may be found on their home page here: https://www.cinemamentire.co.uk/

 

Their programme of screenings of Maria Luisa Bemberg films may be found here: https://www.cinemamentire.co.uk/daring-to-dare-the-films-of-maria-luisa-bemberg

 

Books on Bemberg:

 

Books by Lita Stantic:

On Luis Ospina and Cinema Cali:

Cine Club de Cali

Agarrando Pueblo/ The Vampires of Poverty (Luis Ospina/ Carlos Mayolo, Columbia,1977)

200 – Luis Ospina on MUBI – The Vampires of Poverty, A Paper Tiger, and It All Started at the End

José Arroyo

 

 

José Arroyo in Conversation with Ryan Gilbey on IT USED TO BE WITCHES: UNDER THE SPELL OF QUEER CINEMA

Sometimes you read a new book and love it so much you want to speak to its author and find out more. This is what happened to me in relation to Ryan Gilbey’s IT USED TO BE WITCHES: UNDER THE SPELL OF QUEER CINEMA. What I liked most is that I learned a lot from it – all these new films and filmmakers I’d never heard of – and that it was great fun to read: Ryan’s got an enviable turn of phrase. If the narrative is posited as a process of discovery, the book also has an interesting mode of narration: it’s partly personal, sometimes he writes of himself in the third person in a way that reminds me of Èdouard Louis’ novels . This has the effect of delineating events whilst also questioning them and his own perspective on them. It’s a book that interrogates its own mappings, with a loose structure that seems to flow from one filmmaker to another, very inclusive, sensitive to the nuances of race and gender and with a spotlight on trans cinema; with a British perspective but on world –rather than Anglo-American – cinema; and with the big names (Almodóvar, Haynes, Van Sant), not quite absent but playing a supporting role to filmmakers like: Jenni Olson, Jessica Dunn Rovinelli, Elizabeth Purchell, Campbell X, Isabel Sandoval and others. I think it a landmark book, one of interest not only to those wanting to know more about, cinema and/or ‘queer’ but also by anyone interested in the current cultural landscape. It seems to succeed in doing what I previously thought undoable, which is to get enough of a grip on the increasing and seemingly ceaseless stream of new queer works in order to lay out a a constantly changing field of cinema whilst offering multiple, tentative, questioning perspectives on it. A landmark book by a wonderful writer. We discuss all of this and more in the podcast below:

The podcast may also be listened to here:

The podcast may also be listened to on: Spotify here: https://open.spotify.com/show/2zWZ7Egdy6xPCwHPHlOOaT

and on itunes here: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/first-impressions-thinking-aloud-about-film/id1548559546

Ryan Gilbey was named the Independent/ Sight and Sound Young Film Critic of the Year in 1993, won a Press Gazette award for his reviews at the New Statesman, where he was film critic from 2006 until 2023, and he has written for the Guardian since 2002. His books on cinema include:

José Arroyo

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 450 – The Naked Gun (2025)

The Naked Gun is rebooted with Liam Neeson in the part that was once Leslie Nielsen’s, and he shows just how hard comedy can be. We discuss everything the film gets wrong. If only they’d asked us for help.

 

Listen on the players below Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

 

Thinking Aloud About Cinema: Absolute Beginners (Julien Temple, 1986)

A discovery at Cinema Rediscovered. Julien Temple’s marvellous ABSOLUTE BEGINNERS. When the film was first released we both thought it extraordinary but a mess; we still feel the same except the focus is now on the extraordinary. In the accompanying podcast we discuss the film’s relationship to the classic Hollywood musical and to the cinema of Powell and Pressburger. Richard compares it to Colin MacInnes’ novel. We discuss the film’s critical reception and speculate on where all the bile came from. We talk about the opening number in some detail as well as  Ray Davies’ marvellous ‘Quiet Life’, Bowie’s ‘That’s Motivation’, Sade’s ‘Killer Blow’ and much else. The film now seems to us audacious, endlessly inventive, dazzling to look at. It’s no surprise both Janet and Michael Jackson were fans. We also speak of the experience of watching it at Cinema Rediscovered and how Temple himself and producer Stephen Woolley enhanced our experience and understanding of the film. It was an emotion-filled screening; it’s a film that continues to be appreciated and enjoyed forty after its first release; it’s a film that will last long after much of the cinema of that period. It’s a film that deserves to be rediscovered.

The podcast may also be listened to on: Spotify here: https://open.spotify.com/show/2zWZ7Egdy6xPCwHPHlOOaT

and on itunes here: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/first-impressions-thinking-aloud-about-film/id1548559546

Richard recommends the following links:

Interview with Temple about that from the time, talking about his love for old Hollywood musicals

 

Nightclub scene from “Sapphire” (1959) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNxVPm6hFl4

Nightclub scene from Beat Girl (1959) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rhr-zPTP250

Front Row with Temple and Woolley interviewed on Absolute Beginners (28 minutes in) https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m002g37j

These are some images (from a very bad copy) that captured Jose’s attention enough to grab them. Worth thinking about what they reveal about the film’s visual inventiveness:

 

 

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 449 – Bring Her Back

YouTubers-turned-directors Danny and Michael Philippou demonstrate a real eye for visual design and an ability to create imagery to truly disgusting effect in Bring Her Back, in which Sally Hawkins plays a foster parent whose daughter’s death leads her to search for answers in the occult. The filmmaker twins are 32 years old, which, perhaps unfairly, leads us to ascribe the film’s lack of depth and prioritisation of visual shock to their youth. Bring Her Back shows a certain immaturity, but great potential, and we’re interested to see if the pair’s storytelling and sensitivity to theme improves.

We also discuss child actors in horror, as the film drives Mike to question the ethics of using children as Jonah Wren Phillips is here, both in terms of the desired effect on the audience and the potential unintended effect on the child. Not all unease is good unease, and Bring Her Back makes us ask: what cost is too high for such entertainment?

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

THINKING ALOUD ABOUT CINEMA: CINEMA REDISCOVERED 2025 WRAP-UP

If a week ago we podcast on what we were looking forward to at the CINEMA REDISCOVERED festival, this is the bookend reflecting on what we actually saw. We are once again full of praise for the organisers, the friendliness of the staff at the Watershed, the originality and diversity of the programme, the community aspect, the educational component and the way that it trains young people up to programme and curate and then gives them an opportunity to exercise those skills.

Emotional highlights included a reunion of Stephen Frears, Hanif Kureishi and Gordon Warnecke at the MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE screening and Stephen Woolley and Julian Temple getting back together to reminisce about Palace Pictures and ABSOLUTE BEGINNERS, which we liked so much we plan a separate podcast on it.

We appreciated the mini programs scheduled on single days (Carlos Saura, Maria Luisa Bemberg, Anna Mae Wong) and the longer ones (the AGAINST THE GRAIN: 1980s BRITISH CINEMA, MASUMURA x WAKAO). It was fantastic to be able to see some films at the BRISTOL MEGASCREEN (THE FALL OF OTRAR, DIVA, THE BEAST TO DIE, MANJI). We talk at some length on individual films as well (ROSA LA ROSE, FILLE PUBLIQUE; THEMROC, DESERT HEARTS, ONE POTATO TWO POTATO and others. In such a full program, there are also films we both missed, such as the great HANDSWORTH SONGS.

We praise the way Sheldon Hall designed his talk on films on Channel 4 for this particular audience, including broadcast dates on every film at the festival and under which strand; for Stephen Horne’s fantastic, multi-instrument accompaniment to the Anna Mae Wong programme; and the care in curating the introductions to the films, with most speakers understanding that the intro is not about them or their interests but about enhancing the audience’s experience and appreciation.

The festival left us wishing for a fuller programme the last evening but being left wishing for more is not a bad thing.

 

The podcast may be listened to here:

The podcast may also be listened to on: Spotify here: https://open.spotify.com/show/2zWZ7Egdy6xPCwHPHlOOaT

and on itunes here: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/first-impressions-thinking-aloud-about-film/id1548559546

 

José Arroyo

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 448 – Jurassic World Rebirth

The seventh instalment in the Jurassic Park (now Jurassic World) series, Jurassic World Rebirth might be the first of the sequels to really come close to capturing the kind of wonder, excitement and horror that the 1993 original offered. That might be in part because it cribs liberally from it, with both moments and entire sequences closely evocative of their 32-year-old counterparts. But there’s plenty else that’s new here, and Rebirth is a characterful expansion to the Jurassic Park story.

Thoughts of containment have finally been totally discarded – dinosaurs have now been roaming the Earth for some time, to the point that they’re dying out everywhere other than a narrow band around the equator, which is illegal for human travel. So that’s where we’re headed, of course, as a pharmecutical exec seeking to make a fortune from dino-sourced drugs hires a team of mercenaries to extract blood from three creatures: one that swims, one that walks, and one that flies. It’s a decent structure that tells you what to expect and allows for a variety of settings and action, into which are placed such charismatic stars as Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali, Jonathan Bailey and Rupert Friend. Director Gareth Edwards builds the world beautifully, exploiting it for that sense of scale that so defines his aesthetic, and reminding Mike in particular of his feature debut Monsters; and although in simple terms – this is, ultimately, a blockbuster sequel – the film has a moral message worth expressing.

Jurassic World Rebirth is easily the best of the Jurassic sequels and equally easy to recommend. Just try not to focus too much on how it reminds you of a better film from 1993.

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

 

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

 

Eavesdropping at the Movies: 447 – Superman (2025)

DC, which for the best part of two decades has failed to put together a cinematic universe of comic book adaptations to rival Marvel’s MCU, regroups and goes again with director James Gunn in charge of what will be known as the DCU – and what better superhero to introduce the new brand than the original: Superman.

David Corenswet’s performance and physique are extremely appealing, recalling an era before steroids and dehydration were considered compulsory in order for a man to be thought of as sexy. We appreciate the film’s lightness of tone and sense of humour, although one of us argues that the whole experience is so audiovisually hyperactive and loud that the tone doesn’t support all the jokes, and it’s simply exhausting to endure. We also discuss wokeness, the right wing’s determination to have a culture war, and obvious parallels between Lex Luthor’s villainy and that of Donald Trump; destruction of cities and the concomitant human cost; what made the previous Lex Luthor interesting; and why putting on glasses is an effective method of disguise.

Listen on the players below, Apple PodcastsAudibleSpotify, or YouTube Music.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.

José Arroyo In Conversation with Sam Shahid, director of HIDDEN MASTERS: THE LEGACY OF GEORGE PLATT LYNES

George Platt Lynes is arguably the most significant artist in a long and distinguished line of great 20th Century queer photographers of the male nude which includes George Hoyningen-Huene, Horst P. Horst, Clifford Coffin, Robert Mapplethorpe and Bruce Weber. All in some sense worked in the interstices of fashion, portraiture, art photography and the nude. Yet, though Platt Lynes is at least their equal, he is arguably the least well known, a situation Sam Shahid aims to rectify in his gorgeous new film, HIDDEN MASTERS: THE LEGACY OF GEORGE PLATT LYNES.

Sam Shahid is Creator Director, Principal and president of Shaid/Kraus & Company, a full branding, advertising and design agency founded inn 1993. Before that he was Creative Director of in-house advertising for Calvin Klein in the 1980s, did work for Abercrombie and Fitch in the 90s that still inspires today (some of the catalogues have become much sought-after collectors’ items). In the aughts he worked as Creative Director of INTERVIEW magazine and he’s since edited dozens of books of photographs by the likes of Bruce Weber and Herb Ritts. He knows about images, and he puts that knowledge to use in his first film,  the beautiful HIDDEN MASTERS: THE LEGACY OF GEORGE PLATT LYNES.

In the accompanying podcast, we talk about how Platt Lynes was at the centre of practically every current of modernism in America and how Sam found the only existent film footage of the photographer. We ask why Platt Lynes is relatively so little-known today.  Is it because his greatest work is of the male nude? Is there homophobia involved? Sam talks about how difficult it was to get a hold of the photographs, tensions between controllers of major holdings and the family; the reticence of institutions and individuals to make public such an incredible body of work that feels so contemporary. Isn’t it time that a major museum undertake a retrospective of George Platt Lynes’ work?

What Sam doesn’t say is what a ravishing film he’s made, full of some of the most beautiful black and white images of men ever made. A film to see. It’s currently on release from Picadillo Pics and available on demand from Amazon and other major digital outlets.

 

The podcast may be listened to here:

 

The podcast may also be listened to on: Spotify here: https://open.spotify.com/show/2zWZ7Egdy6xPCwHPHlOOaT

and on itunes here: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/first-impressions-thinking-aloud-about-film/id1548559546

Those of you who are interested in knowing more on George Platt Lynes might be interested in the following links:

On the biography by Alan Ellenzweig’s biography. Ellenzweig is featured in the film:

On Platt Lynes’ famous thrupple with Monroe Wheeler and Glenway Westcott as well as their circle (Paul Cadmus, Pavel Tchelitchev, Jared French, George Tooker ): David Leddick’s INTIMATE COMPANIONS: A TRIOGRAPHY OF GEORGE PLATT LYNES, PAUL CADMUS, LINCOLN KIRSTEIN AND THEIR CIRCLE

On his connection to American Modernism: The Young and the Evil: Queer Modernism in New York, 1930-1955, edited by Jarrett Earnest, David Zwirner Books, 2020

 

 

The film may be seen through Peccadillo films at: https://peccadillo.film/pages/films/hidden-master-the-legacy-of-george-platt-lynes

José Arroyo