Showing posts with label critics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label critics. Show all posts

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Boyle's Frankenstein wows critics

24 February 2011 Last updated at 10:54 GMT Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller in their Frankenstein roles (photos by Catherine Ashmore) Cumberbatch (bottom left and top right) alternates roles with Lee Miller (top left and bottom right) in Boyle's production. Photos by Catherine Ashmore Danny Boyle's stage version of Frankenstein has opened at the National Theatre in London with back-to-back press nights.

On Tuesday, Sherlock actor Benedict Cumberbatch played the title role, with Jonny Lee Miller - from Boyle's 1996 film Trainspotting - portraying the Monster he creates.

The roles were alternated the following night, as they will be throughout the play's sold-out run.

But what did critics make of Nick Dear's ambitious adaptation of Mary Shelley's classic Gothic horror novel?

This is no Hollywood/Hammer-style version of the old tale with a grunting giant sporting a bolt through his neck.

This creature, liberated by knowledge, is a sensitive intellectual who recites Milton and only wants true love.

Danny Boyle has returned from films to direct and the result is, for the most part, a mesmerising evening.

Yet, despite the action and power of Lee Miller and Cumberbatch's individual performances, the script often dragged as badly as the Creature's foot.

Read the full review here.

What you get in Danny Boyle's production and Nick Dear's adaptation of Mary Shelley's mythic fable is neither shlock nor satire.

Instead it's a humane, intelligent retelling of the original story in which much of the focus is on the plight of the obsessive scientist's sad creation.

The actors complement each other perfectly rather than provide a contest and Boyle's production is a bravura triumph.

Once or twice the language lapses into bathos. But, on the whole, this a stunning evening.

Read the full review here.

In Danny Boyle's eagerly awaited production of Frankenstein the show's stars are alternating the roles of the scientist and the deformed Creature.

Both versions are well worth seeing. Miller, however, strikes me as the more disturbing and poignant monster, while Cumberbatch undoubtedly has the edge as the scientist.

The Frankenstein story has become so familiar that it might seem an impossible task to make the old story seem fresh.

Yet somehow Boyle does just that, constantly creating shocks, spectacular coups de theatre and scenes that tug at the heart.

Read the full review here.

Danny Boyle's extraordinarily haunting production is predicated on the notion of alternating the two leading actors in the roles of Frankenstein and his galvanised handiwork.

The role-reversal makes deep thematic sense because it highlights the irony whereby the son becomes the father, the slave the master.

Broadly speaking, Cumberbatch emphasises the intellectual edge of both roles; Lee Miller takes us further into the feeling.

Cumberbatch is brilliant at conveying the blackly ridiculous aspects of the hubristic Scientist [and] is more horrifying as Frankenstein's handiwork.

Read the full review here.

It is a hell of a production. This taut, thrilling play runs to its awful conclusion without an interval, indeed with hardly a moment for breath.

Yet it remains, as Mary Shelley intended, basically a work of philosophy, pathos and moral seriousness.

Mark Tildesley's stunning design and Bruno Poet's remarkable lighting effects use the Olivier's vastness with controlled imaginative strength.

I nearly fell out of my seat at the shock bridal-chamber scene. Twice.


View the original article here


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Social Network pips King's Speech to critics' award

10 February 2011 Last updated at 23:18 GMT By Tim Masters Entertainment correspondent, BBC News Colin Firth holds the Best Actor Award he collected during the 31st London Film Critics Circle Awards at the BFI Colin Firth is expected to win the best actor Bafta on Sunday The Social Network and The King's Speech have dominated this year's London Film Critics' Circle awards.

The former won four prizes, including film of the year, while the latter won three, among them a best actor award for Oscar hopeful Colin Firth.

Firth was among the celebrities at the annual awards, held for the first time at BFI Southbank.

The event comes three days before the Bafta Film awards, to be held at the Royal Opera House in London on Sunday.

Firth said that reports of cinema audiences spontaneously applauding The King's Speech were "overwhelming".

"To hear that people are actually standing up or clapping or expressing a personal response is probably as good as it gets," he told the BBC.

"Films like this depend entirely on what people say about them. They don't depend on the money because there wasn't much, they don't depend on a big studio machine or a big financial apparatus."

Asked about reports that the Queen had seen and enjoyed the film, he said: "It means a very great deal to me if that is the case."

It is the second year in a row that Firth has won the award. He won last year for his role in A Single Man.

The King's Speech, about George VI's battle with his stammer, was named British film of the year at the event, where its director Tom Hooper was also recognised.

The Social Network's other awards went to its director David Fincher, its screenwriter Aaron Sorkin and cast member Andrew Garfield, named best British actor in a supporting role.

Sorkin, who collected the awards, said: "The critics were the first ones to come out for this movie and they told people to go see it and they did go see it. Getting an award from people who see everything is really something."

Both The King's Speech and The Social Network are expected to enjoy further success at the Baftas and at the Academy Awards on 27 February.

Sam Taylor Wood (R) poses with Kristen Scott Thomas after presenting her with the Dilys Powell Award for Excellence in Film award Sam Taylor-Wood (r) presented Kristen Scott Thomas with the award for "outstanding contribution to cinema"

Mike Leigh's Another Year, which had received four nominations, came away with a single prize after Lesley Manville won British actress of the year.

Manville paid tribute to the other actresses in the film, including Ruth Sheen who she was up against at the awards. "This year there have been some great parts for older women, so it's a good move," she said.

Elsewhere, Olivia Williams was named best British actress in a supporting role for Roman Polanski's political thriller The Ghost.

Actress of the year went to Annette Bening for her role in The Kids are All Right, while Christian Bale won British actor of the year for The Fighter.

The young British performer of the year prize went to Scotland's Conor McCarren for his performance in Peter Mullan's gritty drama NEDs - short for Non-Educated Delinquents.

The award for breakthrough British film-maker went to Gareth Edwards for his feature debut Monsters, while French drama Of Gods and Men was crowned the year's foremost foreign language film.

The evening climaxed with Kristin Scott Thomas being honoured for her outstanding contribution to cinema - presented to the actress by Sam Taylor-Wood, her director on Nowhere Boy.

The actress said: "It was very special because I know she wouldn't have done that for many people and I'm really touched by what she said."

The awards are voted for by more than 120 members of the circle including critics, broadcasters and writers.


View the original article here


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.