Film review – Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Right, I don’t want to say too much about this one, because I’m a nightmare for dropping accidental spoilers. This is the first movie released since Disney took over the franchise from George Lucas, and I have to say I’m very pleased with the result. I thought the last three movies (The Phantom Menace, Attack of the Clones, Revenge of the Sith) were pretty disappointing. The special effects were spectacular, but the heavy use of CGI gave me the impression that I was watching a poorly-scripted cartoon.

star-wars-force-awakens-official-poster.jpgThe Force Awakens takes us back to the original three movies (A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi):  less reliance on special effects; a familiar (and better) story, and an element of humour that has been missing from the last few outings. ( Jar Jar Binks was annoying, not funny). The acting isn’t the best (aside from decent performances from Harrison Ford and Adam Driver), there are a couple of holes in the storyline that are no doubt going to raise Jedi-nerd eyebrows, and the whole plot did seem very familiar. But on the whole it’s a great movie that fully deserves the pile of money it’s going to make in film tickets, soundtracks, DVDs, Blue-Ray, special edition DVDs, special edition Blue-Ray…

Eight out of ten.

 

 

 

Film review: Bridge of Spies

Bridge_of_Spies_poster.jpgWell, I’ve always said that the truth makes the best stories, and Bridge of Spies is no exception. It’s a Cold War tale that tells the story of the first (that we know of) prisoner exchange between the US and USSR. Tom Hanks plays the role of James Donovan, a lawyer defending a Russian spy captured in  United States. He succeeds in keeping him off Death Row, which is just as well, because round about the same time a US spy plane is shot down over Russian airspace. To complicate matters, an American student finds himself trapped on the wrong side of the recently constructed Berlin Wall…

Donovan is approached by the CIA and asked to facilitate an exchange with the USSR: their spy for our pilot. Should have been simple, but it’s not enough for a man as principled as Donovan; he wants the student too.

Tom Hanks starring, Steven Spielberg directing … What can go wrong? Fortunately, nothing. This film is brilliant, no two ways about it. A political thriller that demonstrates that the bravest men are the quiet ones. It’s superbly shot, the script manages some real elements of humour without going overboard, and the acting from all players is superb. It blistered along at a hell of place too, showing that Mr Spielberg is well aware how difficult to hold folks’ attention these days. Marvellous stuff.

Nine out of Ten.