In cinemas May 29: Under the Skin, The Trip To Italy, A Million Ways to Die in the West and Maleficent.
Under the Skin - Based, very loosely, on Michael Faber’s
stunning 2000 novel of the same name. Both texts are so
different that they proudly stand alone, linked only by the predatory female –
named Isserley in Faber’s novel - who cruises the streets of Scotland looking
for men to seduce. In Faber’s novel it is revealed that the heroine is an alien
who has been surgically altered to appear as a female, looking for suitable
specimens - young, healthy Scottish men with no families and whose sudden
disappearance wouldn’t be soon noticed – who are then turned into a type of
meat to be sent back to her starving homeland. She views herself as a
professional, dedicated to doing her job to the best of her ability. She has
learned how to act human purely for the purposes of her role, but that façade
often slips, caught out by language barriers and unacquainted cultural and
political references. The girl prepares herself for her role and
cruises through the streets of Scotland in a white van. While we come to
understand something about the creature, enough to inform what is to follow,
she remains intriguing. What is it? Where is it from? What is the mission? How far
do its human characteristics stretch? The men the girl successfully lures to
her cottage with the prospect of sex find themselves engulfed in an inky
blackness that feels like it is within another dimension. How they meet their
demise, and what transpires in the film’s very different second half, is best
left unshared. Under the Skin is an intense, unnerving, horrifying and devastating masterpiece. If a film
can challenge the way you think about the world you live in, and the humans
that populate it, it deserves the highest praise.
★★★★★
The Trip to Italy - Michael Winterbottom's largely improvised 2010 film, The Trip, took
comedians Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon or semi-fictionalized versions
thereof on a restaurant tour around Northern England. In this witty and
incisive follow-up, Winterbottom reunites the pair for a new culinary
road trip, retracing the steps of the Romantic poets' grand tour of
Italy and indulging in some sparkling banter and impersonation-offs.
Rewhetting our palates from the earlier film, the characters enjoy
mouthwatering
meals in gorgeous
settings from Liguria to Capri while riffing on subjects as varied as
Batman's vocal register, the artistic merits of Jagged Little Pill, and,
of course, the virtue of sequels. ★★★★
Maleficent - Explores the untold story of Disney's most iconic villain from the
classic "Sleeping Beauty" and the elements of her betrayal that
ultimately turn her pure heart to stone. Driven by revenge and a fierce
desire to protect the moors over which she presides, Maleficent cruelly
places an irrevocable curse upon the human king's newborn infant Aurora.
As the child grows, Aurora is caught in the middle of the seething
conflict between the forest kingdom she has grown to love and the human
kingdom that holds her
legacy. Maleficent realizes that Aurora may hold the key to peace in the
land and is forced to take drastic actions that will change both worlds
forever.
A Million Ways To Die in the West - Seth MacFarlane directs, produces, co-writes and plays the role of the
cowardly sheep farmer Albert. After
Albert backs out of a gunfight, his fickle girlfriend leaves him for
another man. When a mysterious and beautiful woman rides into town, she
helps him find his courage and they begin to fall in love. But when her
husband, a notorious outlaw, arrives seeking revenge, the farmer must
put his newfound courage to the test. Starring alongside MacFarlane are Charlize Theron, Liam Neeson, Amanda Seyfried, Giovanni Ribisi, Sarah
Silverman and Neil Patrick Harris. MacFarlane reunites many of the
filmmakers behind Universal and MRC's hit film Ted.
Weekly Recommendation: Under the Skin and The Trip To Italy.