Showing posts with label Andrew Pulver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Pulver. Show all posts

Thursday, January 16, 2025

David Lynch, Twin Peaks and Muholland Drive director, dies aged 78


 

David Lynch, Twin Peaks and Muholland Drive director, dies aged 78

Film-maker who specialised in surreal, noir style mysteries made a string of influential, critically acclaimed works including Wild at Heart and EraserheadDavid Lynch, the maverick American director who sustained a successful mainstream career while also probing the bizarre, the radical and the experimental, has died aged 78.


Andrew Pulver
Thursday 16 January 2025

“There’s a big hole in the world now that he’s no longer with us,” his family wrote in a Facebook post. “But, as he would say, ‘Keep your eye on the donut and not on the hole.’”

Last August, Lynch said he had been diagnosed with emphysema and in November, spoke further about his breathing difficulties. “I can hardly walk across a room,” he said. “It’s like you’re walking around with a plastic bag around your head.”

Friday, November 8, 2024

Van Gogh: Poets & Lovers review – blockbuster portrait of a thoughtful master

 


Van Gogh: Poets & Lovers review – blockbuster portrait of a thoughtful master

Exhibition on Screen’s latest gallery documentary offers a walkthrough of the National Gallery’s winter show, complete with extras

Sunday, October 27, 2024

‘I never really learned anything from anybody’: Isabelle Huppert on 50 years in film


Isabelle Huppert
Photo by Peter Lindberg

THE READER INTERVIEW

‘I never really learned anything from anybody’: Isabelle Huppert on 50 years in film


As told to Andrew Pulver
Thursday 24 October 2024

François Ozon is a great director and 8 Women was a fantastic film. What brought you to work with him again for The Crime Is MineBenderRodriguez

I loved doing 8 Women and I just saw his last film in San Sebastián, When Fall Is Coming, and it’s really great. He’s very versatile. He goes from one style to the other, like a French Stephen Frears. The Crime Is Mine is more in the line of 8 Women. It’s a comedy, an adaptation of an old play that he turned into more contemporary material; something more feminist and more updated. He’s very vivid and he’s very, very, very fast, so when you work with him he gives you a certain kind of energy.

Friday, October 22, 2021

Alec Baldwin profile / A versatile but troubled star

Alec Baldwin


Alec Baldwin profile: a versatile but troubled star

Tragic shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins happened on set of actor’s latest movie


Alec Baldwin kills woman by firing prop gun on film set of Rust


Andrew Pulver

Friday 22 October 2021


A

lec Baldwin was on location in New Mexico, playing the role of an outlaw with a bounty on his head in a film called Rust, when the catastrophic prop-gun incident that killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and injured director Joel Souza took place. Baldwin is the producer and star of the picture, which was filming at the Bonanza Creek Ranch just outside Santa Fe.

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Brad Pitt / No speechwriters involved in my acceptance speeches

Brad Pitt


Brad Pitt: No speechwriters involved in my acceptance speeches

Oscar-winner Pitt tells Variety that ‘funny friends’ helped him with his zinger-laced thank-yous during the 2020 awards season
Andrew Pulver
Tuesday 11 February 2020
Brad Pitt has revealed that his newfound skill in the acceptance-speech game is not due to having hired a speechwriter, but that he wrote them with the help of “very funny friends”.
In an interview with Variety prior to the Oscars ceremony, Pitt said: “Historically, I’ve always been really tentative about speeches, like they make me nervous … This round, I figured if I’m going to do this, let’s put some real work into it, try to get comfortable. This is the result of that.”

‘A public speaker of rare zip and self-awareness’ … Brad Pitt waits for his best supporting actor Oscar statue to be engraved last week. Photograph: Eric Gaillard/Reuters

Pitt’s podium work has resulted in widespread compliments, with the Guardian describing him as “a public speaker of rare zip and self-awareness”. At the Golden Globes, when he won best supporting actor for his role as a stuntman in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, he said he’d hoped to bring his mother as his plus-one, “but any woman I stand next to they say I’m dating and it’d just be awkward”. After accepting the same award at the Screen Actors Guild ceremony he said his role was “a big stretch: a guy who gets high, takes his shirt off and doesn’t get on with his wife”.

Leonardo DiCaprio, Margot Robbie and Brad Pitt

Pitt told Variety that he “worked on” the speeches with “a lot of funny friends” – naming comics Jim Jefferies and Bob Oschack, as well as “my man” David Fincher, who directed him in Seven, Fight Club and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. “We trade barbs every week,” Pitt said.
Pitt won the best supporting actor Oscar for the same role, and got a politically charged gag into his acceptance speech, saying: “They told me I only have 45 seconds up here … which is 45 seconds more than the Senate gave John Bolton this week.”

Saturday, March 2, 2019

Rami Malek lined up as Bond 25 villain after Oscars win


RAMI MALEK Y LUCY BOYNTON

Rami Malek lined up as Bond 25 villain after Oscars win

The Bohemian Rhapsody star and best actor winner is set to join the much-delayed new 007 film, which is due to start shooting in April

ANDREW PULVER
Thu 28 Feb 2019

Fresh from his Academy Award win for Bohemian Rhapsody, Rami Malek is set to sign up as the lead villain in Bond 25, the much-delayed new 007 film that is due to be Daniel Craig’s last outing in the role.
Collider reports that Malek is in final negotiations for the part, with his newly enhanced status as an Oscar-winner a factor. Malek had been under consideration for some time, but Variety had reported in December that his work schedule on the final season of Mr Robot, the TV series in which he plays a computer hacker with an anxiety disorder, meant he was unable to do both. Now, however, it appears he will be accommodated.

Wednesday, January 2, 2019

The 50 best films of 2018 in the UK / No 7 / Cold War





The 50 best films of 2018 in the UK: No 7 – Cold War

A couple’s passionate relationship mirrors postwar Poland’s political turmoil in Paweł Pawlikowski’s romantic epic

Andrew Pulver
Thu 13 Dec 2018


H
aving smashed his last film out of the park – the Oscar-winning Ida from 2013 – Polish director Paweł Pawlikowski repeated the feat with Cold War, which has already won him the best director award at Cannes and a bunch of best foreign-language nominations. It is superficially similar to Ida – period Polish setting, stylish black and white photography, a preoccupation with Poland’s past socio-historical compromises – but there the resemblance ends. While Ida was a spare, distilled piece that perfectly reflected the unspoken crisis beneath its frozen surface, Cold War is more obviously epic and romantic, with an overpowering appeal to universal values.

Cold War, as its title indicates, is clearly working on two levels: it’s a reference to the geopolitical events that irretrievably marked entire generations in eastern Europe – including Pawlikowski’s parents, who are named in the final credits – and which actively dominates and shapes the film’s central liaison. This is between an aspiring singer, Zula, who auditions for a folk-singing troupe and Wiktor, the troupe’s musical director who hires her; their instant, chemical passion soon develops into a cold war of its own.
Their relationship begins in 1949 as Poland is coming to terms with its enforced postwar communism, and progresses through the 50s with increasing restiveness. Escape, of course, is a possibility; and how and why each of them responds to the opportunity of shifting abroad is a key thread in the film.


But this would be nothing without the sheer drama of Zula and Wiktor’s coming together – so brilliantly played by Joanna Kulig and Tomas Kot. As we jump forward, When Harry Met Sally-style, from headlong infatuation to persistent longing to a kind of desolate, self-harming stasis, we can sense Pawlikowski intends this as an emotional biography of Poland itself. The visual brilliance of the black and white photography – from high-contrast jazz club smokiness, to the wintry chill of the Polish countryside – sets the tone superbly, and represents a second triumph for cinematographer Łukasz Żal, after his stunning work on Ida.
Pawlikowski has had one of the most interestingly peripatetic careers of modern film-makers: from his beginnings making literary documentaries for British television and his early features as part of a naturalist/improvisatory British school. His return to Poland has been the making of him as a director. Long may it continue.



Saturday, July 7, 2018

Daniel Craig visits CIA in run-up to shooting new James Bond film

I, spy … Daniel Craig was reportedly told that real-life espionage is a lot more ‘cloak’ and a lot less ‘dagger’ than presented on screen. Photograph: CIA



Daniel Craig visits CIA in run-up to shooting new James Bond film

US intelligence agency entertains 007 star as it attempts to engage with public and increase understanding of how it operates

Andrew Pulver
Friday 6 July 2018


Daniel Craig has visited CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, as part of the CIA’s attempt to engage with the public and increase understanding of how intelligence work operates in the real world.
Craig is currently preparing to shoot the 25th James Bond film, his fifth and apparently final time in the role, and the CIA hosted his visit on 26 June as an adjunct to its recent Reel vs. Real seminar.
In a statement on its website the CIA said: “Mr Craig met with our leadership and workforce, who explained that real-life espionage is a lot more ‘cloak’ and a lot less ‘dagger’ than presented in the entertainment world of spy v spy.” The statement also added: “Mr Craig remarked about the teamwork that goes into the intelligence cycle and how impressed he was with the commitment and dedication of CIA officers.”
The agency said its motivation was “to combat misrepresentations and assist in balanced and accurate portrayals” of the intelligence community.
Production on Bond 25 is due to start in December; Danny Boyle will be the director and is writing a script with Trainspotting screenwriter John Hodge. No details of the plot or title have been released, but rumours have suggested the film may be called Shatterhand (after a Blofeld alias used in You Only Live Twice) and that Boyle and Hodge will depart from the customary portrayal of female Bond characters to better reflect the #MeToo era. The series is also expected to continue its attempt to construct a “universe”, but Christoph Waltz will not return as Blofeld.
Bond 25 is due to be released on 25 October 2019 in the UK and on 8 November in the US



Monday, May 29, 2017

Cannes 2017 / Ruben Östlund wins Palme d'Or for The Square

Ruben Oustland with the Palme d’Or for The Square. Photograph: Stephane Cardinale 


Cannes 2017: Ruben Östlund wins Palme d'Or for The Square

Swedish director takes Cannes’ top prize for an art-world satire featuring Elisabeth Moss and Dominic West

Andrew Pulver
Sunday 28 May 2017


The art-world satire The Square has won the Palme d’Or at the 2017 Cannes film festival. Directed by Ruben Östlund, The Square is about a museum director (played by Claes Bang) who is desperate to make a success of his gallery, and stages a new installation called “The Square” to promote it.

The Square was well received after its debut on 19 May, earning a string of glowing reviews. The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw gave it four stars, saying it created “some gobsmackingly weird and outrageous spectacle, with moments of pure showstopping freakiness”.


Swedish director Östlund is best known for his previous film, Force Majeure, which also addressed the toxic nature of middle-class guilt. The film also starred Mad Men’s Elisabeth Moss and The Wire’s Dominic West, as well as an already-celebrated appearance from animal-movement expert Terry Notary, as a performance artist who impersonates an ape.
The Square’s victory somewhat upset the formbook, as much attention appeared to be focussing on Andrei Zvyagintsev’s eerie fable Loveless, an apocalyptic study of a failed marriage and the subsequent disappearance of a child, and Robin Campillo’s 120 Beats per Minute, about the French arm of the Aids-activist Act-Up movement. In the end they were awarded the jury prize and grand prix, respectively, the festival’s notional third and second prizes.
The jury, presided over by Spanish film-maker Pedro Almodovar, gave two awards to Lynne Ramsay’s sex-traffic thriller You Were Never Really Here: a joint best screenplay award and best actor to Joaquin Phoenix; the latter appeared shellshocked to win, and took to the stage wearing Converse sneakers.

The best actress award went to Diane Kruger, who played a woman seeking revenge for her husband’s death in a terrorist bombing in In the Fade, directed by Fatih Akin; although the film itself received largely negative reaction – including a two-star review from the Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw – Kruger’s first performance in her native German was well-liked. Kruger dedicated her win to everyone who “has survived an act of terrorism and who is trying to pick up the pieces and go on living after having lost everything”.

Sofia Coppola became only the second woman to win Cannes’ best director award (the first being Yuliya Solntseva in 1961 for the Russian film The Story of the Flaming Years). Coppola’s adaptation of Thomas Cullinan’s The Beguiled won many plaudits, and in a statement read out by jury member Maren Ade Coppola thanked Jane Campion, the only female Palme d’Or winner to date, for being a “role model”.
The Camera d’Or for best first film went to Jeune Femme, from French director Léonor Serraille, while the maker of the best short film, Qiu Yang, declared the award “fucking amazing”.
As suggested earlier in the festival by Almodovar, neither of the Netflix-backed selections in the competition – the ensemble comedy The Meyerowitz Stories and giant-pig eco-fable Okja – received any award recognition.


Monday, January 30, 2017

John Hurt / 10 key performances from Alien to Doctor Who



John Hurt

John Hurt: 10 key performances from Alien to Doctor Who

John Hur was a brilliant and versatile actor who made memorable film appearances over five decades. Here we look at ten of the best

Andrew Pulver
Saturday 28 January 2017 10.06 GMT

10 Rillington Place

Hurt’s first major film role was as the hapless Timothy Evans, executed for murders committed by his neighbour John Christie. Richard Attenborough, as Christie, set a world standard for creepiness, but Hurt excelled as the pathetic, wronged Evans.

Sunday, August 14, 2016

My favourite album / Songs of Leonard Cohen by Leonard Cohen





My favourite album: Songs of Leonard Cohen by Leonard Cohen

Our writers are picking their favourite albums. Here, Andrew Pulver explains how he fell for the dark charms of a figure who used to be a joke to him

Andrew Pulver
Thursday 6 October 2011 15.59 BST



I
'd be lying if I said Leonard Cohen's records soundtracked my adolescence, or comforted me during student awkwardness. The sad truth is, as I suspect it was for most gormless teenagers growing up in 80s suburban Britain on a steady diet of post-punk, Berlin-era Bowie, and the Velvet Underground, Cohen was a joke.
Blame, if you will, The Young Ones. Looking back, I don't quite understand how, but the show was an early-80s religion, and their running gags at Cohen's expense. Consequently, Cohen's actual music was a sealed book to me; if I ever thought about it, I suppose I assumed he was a hippy, like Neil. File under lame.