Showing posts with label Slumdog Millionaire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slumdog Millionaire. Show all posts

Friday, 3 August 2012

The Complete Collection: Danny Boyle (Part 5)

To celebrate Danny Boyle directing the Opening Ceremony for London Olympics 2012, this is the final post about his career including Slumdog Millionaire, 127 Hours, The National Theatre's production of Frankenstein and The Olympics Ceremony itself...
Slumdog Millionaire (2008)

Why not change styles, again, and focus in on Bollywood and see if, by any chance, it sells. A cheap programme like Who Wants to Be A Millionaire? sounds unlikely to be any good...

Boyle decides to work with Simon Beaufoy on an adaptation on a novel by Vikras Swarup - no John Hodge or Alex Garland in sight. John Murphy is gone too - replaced with a more suitable Bollywood musician in A.R. Rahman. Anthony Dod Mantle seems to be one of the few people Boyle has worked with before that joins him on the project. Having lost a teeny-bit of money on Sunshine, Boyle's budget is a mere $15m - Celador and Film4 support the film but it doesn't take long before the distribution company, Warner Bros, got cold feet. They decided it didn't have mass-appeal and relegated it to straight-to-DVD in the US. Fox Searchlight picked it up and saw its potential ... leading to a huge commercial success of $377m and becoming the Best Picture winner at the 81st Academy Awards. Not a bad buy-up from Fox.

We have the two lead children running through the streets of Mumbai - a Boyle set-up establishing pace - at the start, much like Trainspotting, Millions and the recent Olympics Ceremony. We have the huge-sums-of-money in the set-up of a 'slumdog' winning millions of rupees - think of the money in Shallow Grave and Millions. The lead actor Dev Patel, from Skins and The Last Airbender, is the British actor holding the film. This is the 'small-film-that-could' and it sure as hell did. I was personally in tears at the end of the film - tears of happiness - and it is this beauty that Boyle captures so well. Even in the shitty streets of Edinburgh or the imagination of a Saints-obsessed child, in the slums of India through to the sun in the sky - Boyle captures the immense beauty of nature and people.
127 Hours (2010)
 
From the crazed-rush of winning Oscars, and carting around the Oscar buzzing crowd, Boyle could do anything he wanted. He could've made anything. But, again - like his post-28 Days Later success - he kept it low-key. Small-scale and personal, choosing a true story with primarily one-actor in one-location. James Franco stuck under a rock. It's interesting to note that Frieda Pinto, star of Slumdog Millionnaire would go on to play Franco's love-interest in Rise of the Planet of the Apes.
 
Like The Beach and Sunshine, the film has it's fair share of 'crazy bits'. Sequences that make you feel a little uncomfortable as the scene is a little off-the-wall. Franco talks to himself and, like McGregor's cold-turkey 'gameshow' moment with Dale Winton in Trainspotting, Franco creates his own morning radio-show to deal with his isolation. Isolation, you could argue is a theme, as Dev Patel is very-much 'on his own' when facing the corrupt presenter of Who Wants To Be A Millionnaire? in Slumdog Millionnaire. And Trainspotting is very-much Renton's story.
 
Like Boyle's finest, 127 Hours deals with faith in exceptional circumstances and it truly utilises the landscape of Utah to great effect. A tour de force from Franco and a great way to calm down for Boyle.
 
Frankenstein (The National Theatre, 2011)

I guess Boyle was still a little high from the come-down of Slumdog Millionnaire. Then again, 127 Hours became an Oscar-darling too - with Best Picture, Best Adapted-Screenplay and Best Actor nominations to its name. But winning none. At any rate, you could argue the small-scale of 127 Hours was very theatrical in its nature - forcing Boyle to get back in touch with his theatre roots. And his next project moreso, as he directed Frankenstein for the National Theatre on the London Southbank.

Utilising Jonny Lee Miller (Sick Boy from Trainspotting) and Benedict Cumberbatch, the roles of Dr Frankenstein and the 'Creature' swapped during the production. To some extent you didn't know what you were going to get. I managed to see a performance whereby Cumberbatch was the Dr, whilst Miller was the creature. Utilising Underworld again for the soundtrack, it seems many of the production team may have worked with Boyle on the Olympics ceremony. The performance truly took you by suprise as, in the first sequence we see the creature burst free from an egg-like sack - stretching the material before figuring out how to walk, naked as a baby. Then, suddenly an industrial train bursts onto stage, clanking and banging, as what-represents-the-world bustles around the machine.

Funnily enough, a little of this industialism crept into his next project: Olympics 2012

The 2012 Olympic Opening

It opened as we zoom around the British Isles, shot close to the ground. The small-camera from Shallow Grave is now covering the entirety of Britain. We see the industrial revolution, harking to the industrial-train in Frankenstein. The dream-like NHS beds, floating and highlighted across the stadium. James Bond - what would a Danny Boyle James Bond Film look like? Maybe this is the closest it will ever get? Underworld provides the vast majority of the music, whilst a house - that would not look out of place on the street whereby the boys from Millions lived - portrays the internet and technology, and its influence on society and, crucially, teenage love. Indeed, the playfulness of teenage love - as the guy wears a trademark Chaplin-hat.

Boyle deserves this. He has reached this.
It was a stunning ceremony and and unforgettable opening.
Danny Boyle.
You are a legend.

Large Association of Movie Blogs

Tuesday, 31 July 2012

The Complete Collection: Danny Boyle (Part 4)

To celebrate Danny Boyle directing the Opening Ceremony for London Olympics 2012, over the next couple of days, I will be charting the career of one of Britains top director...

So, following the success of 28 Days Later, this time Boyle didn't let it go to his head. He had no cast members that he would stick-with indefinately (though we would see Cillian Murphy again). No sell-out action-films (e.g. directing a sequel - though he played a role as producer of 28 Weeks Later he didn't direct and Alex Garland didn't write it). Instead, Boyle stayed small scale, stretching his talent further. He had tackled the drug-fuelled adrenaline and dance-scene in Trainspotting, he had tackled horror with 28 Days Later and he had even tried the Hollywood blockbuster with an A-List actor with . Next, he made a British Children's film rooted in Catholic Saints and with a strong moral centrepoint ...

Millions (2004)
With nine producers and executive producers (none of which were Andrew MacDonald), Boyle seemed to use most of his crew from 28 Days Later... with Anthony Dod Mantle, Chris Gill and John Murphy on board. Frank Cottrell Boyce wrote the script - a writer who denies the neccessity of structure in a script. Does it have to be three acts? Not really. And I wouldn't scoff at such modern thinking as he won an award at the British Independent Film Awards for Best Screenplay! Millions is the story about a young boy and his brother, who have lost their Mother. It is set within the context of the fictional-scenario of England joining the Euro and, amongst it all, a huge bag of money - at least £1million - is thrust into the two boys lives. John Murphy, with a great ear for sound, even used two tracks by Muse on the soundtrack. Certain skills were gained in Boyle's direction of the children and the start of the film - as the two kids run around their future house as it builds itself around them - is inspired and sets a fast-pace to film. A similar technique to the front-of-car credits in Shallow Grave and the 'Lust for Life' sequence at the start of Trainspotting.

Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper both claimed it as one of the best films of the year. Perhaps inevitably, the Christian-community supported the film - though there is always one who complained about the 'menace' and 'violence' in the film. Indeed, if you like Slumdog Millionnaire, you will love Millions. Vastly underrated, Millions is a must-watch that may even bring a tear to your eye ... because it did bring a tear to mine.

Sunshine (2007)

But alas, the big-budget nature of a blockbuster lured Boyle back - this time to a different genre: Science Fiction. Danny Boyle has stated that all directors inevitably 'do' their Sci-Fi film. Stanley Kubrick and 2001: A Space Odyssey comes to mind, Ridley Scott - now more known for his epics and action films - obviously has roots in Sci-Fi with Blade Runner and Alien. And now Prometheus. The two types boil down to the action-sci-fi, such as Star Wars and Star Trek. Then there are the 'serious' science-fiction that inevitably focuses on faith (tick Danny Boyle atribute number 1...) and humanity. These, more often than not include the 'machine' - Mother in Alien and HAL in 2001 -  and a 'signal'...

Alex Garland wrote the script, with a missing space craft already in orbit, another space craft - Icarus II - flys out to 'deliver the payload' and reignite the sun. A sun, which is dying. As Icarus II gets closer to the sun, it picks up a signal from the first space craft, Icarus. An outstanding film, with fascinating visuals - clear colour schemes in every sequence - the warmth of the 'sun' room, the cool blues and greens of the 'oxygen-creating' room. An outstanding cast in Michelle Yeah, Captain America in Chris Evans, Rose Byrne and star-of-The-Last-Samurai (no, not Tom Cruise) Hiroyuki Sanada. Cillian Murphy played the lead - the lucky charm of 28 Days Later... and, lo and behold, some great reviews but disapointing box-office returns. The budget was $40m but the gross revenue managed to gain only $32m. Personally, I have decided that in many of Boyle's film, there is always an exceptionally awkward moment whereby you feel a little uncomfortable and I have found that this is simply what Boyle wants you to feel. Examples of these moments would include the 'madness' of McGregor in Trainspotting seeing babies on the roof, whilst DiCaprio's madness is equally strange in The Beach. Sunshine switches from its sci-fi roots to a slasher movie in the final moment - Mark Strong playing the murderous Pinbacker (which, on the first watch, is jarring). It feels as if it doesn't make complete sense - though is Pinbacker real or a figment of their mind? should it make sense? Indeed, does faith make sense? Sunshine is one of Boyle's finest efforts - add to this John Murphys collaboration with Underworld (musicians behind Trainspotting's 'Born Slippy', the soundtrack on Sunshine was even used on Kick-Ass) on the soundtrack, and you have a fascinating work of art.

This post was originally released on 16th July 2010, but has been adapted to cover his recent film releases and provide a 'Part 5', to an originally only 4-part series.