Reviews

2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
Born Equal (2006 TV Movie)
6/10
Richard Curtis attempts Mike Leigh
17 December 2006
Richard Curtis attempts Mike Leigh! It isn't actually written by Richard Curtis but at points it felt like it could have been!

This is a one off BBC Drama focusing on the lives of several characters in central London. It is a feature length drama dealing with social inequality.

There's the Banker with the impossibly large bonus, the pregnant wife and the overly large house, who's conscience is tweaked by a beggar in the subway. There's the Nigerian journalist fearing for his father's safety, and the opulent house cleaned by his partner. There's Robert Carlyle's character recently released from prison and staying in a hostel. There's Anne-Marie Duff's heavily pregnant character and her daughter also staying at the hostel. All of their stories interweave with explosive consequences.

It was very watchable, and the acting from the star studded cast was wonderful. It wasn't as gritty as it could have been. Scars by Leo Regan gives us a better insight into violence, and High Hopes by Mike Leigh or anything by Ken Loach might give more gritty realism and bleak humour.
12 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Changing Perspectives with Cinematography
23 April 2004
I have today become determined to go out and discover more about the work of Peter Mettler. My previous familiarity with Mettler's work was limited to his 11th film The Top of His Head from 1989.

Gus a successful satellite dish salesman is entirely caught up in the capitalist material world, until he meets the mysterious and alluring Lucy, who is wanted by the cops for her radical performance pieces that espouse environmentalism. ...but any description of the plot really doesn't cover it.

It's a film about breaking away from perceptions and finding other ways of seeing the world. Peter Mettler shows us this world through his cinematography. It's about God as a satellite. It's about working out which side of the net the fish is on. It's about a rust map. It's about last looks at the world. ...and it's about giving birth on a train to a monkey with a port on the top of his head.

The visual imagery is so rich that it becomes a valid substitute for plot in the film. Although Kathryn, who fell asleep two out of the three times I tried to make her watch this film, would probably beg to differ. I remember fondly for example the scene where there is a plasic curtain on the other side of which there appears to be a strobing light. As we pass the thick plastic we see that the strobe effect is created by a half naked man swinging an enormous storm lamp around and around on a very long metal chain.

I realised that one of the reasons I'd liked the top of his head was the cinematographer-writer-director Peter's expression of the looking (and the perspective of looking) changing the thing that it seen. The painting of Gus by his uncle for example, and the fish in or out of the nets.

This quote is from his most recent film: "Maybe there is a difference between looking for something and looking at something, when you are a part of what you are looking at, and you look at it and it looks back at you." (Gambling, Gods and LSD, 2002).

The Top of His Head does for Mairzy Doats what Reservoir Dogs did for Stuck In The Middle With You.

Mairzy doats and dozy doats And liddle lamzy divey, A kiddlely divey too, wouldn't you? Mairzy doats and dozy doats And liddle lamzy divey, A kiddlely divey too, wouldn't you?
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed