Showing posts with label John Boorman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Boorman. Show all posts

Sunday, 28 April 2013

100W: Deliverance

As a writer, it is a regular expectation to keep to a strict word count. Every time you pick up a magazine, articles can be a small 100-word write-up or a 1000-word review. My own notes for the many films seen are always over 100 words - so this is a new feature that will focus on reviewing films in a concise 100 words.


Deliverance (Dir. John Boorman/1972)

Deliverance is known for the "duel of the banjos" when we see a man-child compete with Ronny Cox. But the “crazy hicks” look at the city-guys suspiciously too – and this tension is central. Lewis (Burt Reynolds) is arrogant; Ed (Jon Voight) is innocent; Bobby (Ned Beatty) is the victim. Canoeing downstream, they meet local men who rape and hold them at gunpoint. They survive, but scars run deeper than skin. An influence on Mean Creek amongst others, Deliverance continues past the holiday itself too - and shows that you can’t erase memories, despite how much you try and bury them.

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Sunday, 9 January 2011

TSAJFS 09/01/2011 The Kings Speech/Deliverance/Machete

From the balcony of the New Years Party, Simon and Jo are now able to watch the films released in the US in 2010 - namely Tom Hoopers The King's Speech and Robert Rodriguezs' Machete. Simon additionally watched John Boormans Deliverance as one of 1001 Movies he must see before he dies.

UK Box-Office and New-Releases discussion ensue whilst the News discusses Gareth Edwards taking on Godzilla, Tarantino's Top 10 of 2010 and Frodo Baggins return amongst many other topics.



Links

Facebook-er of the week is Whitney Borup, aka, Whitney from the "Frankly, My Dear" podcast - make sure you listen!

Twitter-er of the week is Peter Bradshow, click here for his Twitter-feed, as he is an esteemed film critic for The Guardian.


Music

All music is from the soundtrack to The Kings Speech by Alexandre Desplat (same guy who composed the score for Polanski's The Ghost and the odd Harry Potter film!)

The last track is taken from Deliverance and the duelling-banjo sequence. 

Remember - you can always email The Simon and Jo Film Show directly using this email: simonandjoshow@gmail.com
We are also on Twitter  and Facebook.

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