Showing posts with label james fox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label james fox. Show all posts

4 July 2013

EIFF 2013 - A Long Way From Home Review

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Rating: 12A
Release Date: 30th June 2013(EIFF)
Stars: James Fox, Brenda Fricker ,Natalie Dormer, Paul Nicholls
Director: Virginia Gilbert


Virginia Gilbert directs A Long Way from Home, a graceful dramatic feature based on her own short story of the same. Gilbert provides us with a rich palette of fascinating characters and breathtaking locations in this often touching and hugely charming tale of desire in old age.

Long married couple Joseph (James Fox) and Brenda (Brenda Fricker) have retired to the French town of Nimes and live quiet, routine lives. However, Joseph is becoming restless in the banality of this routine - something that is challenged by the arrival of vibrant young couple, Suzanne (Natalie Dormer) and Mark (Paul Nicholls).

Gilbert's feature is a graceful look at desire in old age - seen through Joseph's gradual infatuation by the young Suzanne. However, this is a desire for an emotional connection and sense of enchantment - which Joseph appears to recall (and miss) from his earlier years with Brenda. Nimes makes a staggeringly beautiful backdrop for Gilbert's feature, seamlessly paralleling Joseph's whimsical and enchanted view of Suzanne. The cities ancient temples, vineyards and sun-drenched streets add an elegant sense of the picturesque to A Long Way From Home.

The feature provides us with a palette of well-crafted central characters, magnificently played by the film's key players. James Fox provides a thoroughly impressive leading turn as Joseph, a performance which contains glimpses of sadness behind his refined 'classically British' demeanour. The actor showcases Joseph's transformation as a result of the arrival of Suzanne, showcasing a performance full of warmth - yet shadows of something slightly sinister as Joseph's looks can occasional verge on leers. These ultimately never feel too threatening thanks to the unspoken chemistry between Fox and Fricker - a dynamic which captures a long-married couple who deeply love each other.

Fricker is equally excellent presenting us with a woman who appears slightly scatter-brained yet remains fully in control in a crisis - showcased in a somewhat bizarre sequence where Brenda breaks a dying cat's neck. Brenda's gradual suspicions over Joseph's fidelity adds further dramatic interest into A Long Way From Home. Natalie Dormer is vibrant and engaging as Suzanne, who alongside Paul Nicholls' Mark captures the themes of young love and the initial warmth of a relationship.

A Long Way From Home is a graceful and touching look at relationships in both their early stages and in later-life. Stunning settings and sublime performances ensure that Gilbert's feature is a charming and engaging watch.

★★★★

Andrew McArthur

14 March 2013

Studiocanal To release Joseph Losey's The Servant,Accident, Entertaining Mr Sloane

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restorations and theatrical re-releases of British classics. March 22 will see a beautifully restored release of Joseph Losey's THE SERVANT for its 50th anniversary. Scripted by Harold Pinter (their first collaboration) and starring Dirk Bogarde and James Fox, it will be screening at selected London cinemas.

A disturbing tale of seduction, sexual and social tension and psychological control, THE SERVANT is a stunning dissection of two men, the wealthy young playboy Tony (James Fox) and his new manservant, Barrett (Dirk Bogarde), and the shifting power dynamic in their initially cosy but progressively more fraught relationship. Winner of three BAFTA awards, it is still recognised as one of the best portraits of British class warfare ever committed to screen.

April 8 will see the Home Entertainment release, on DVD, and as the latest Studiocanal Collection Blu-ray - its first ever blu-ray release. Newly created extras include award winning director Richard Ayoade interviewing James Fox, a new interview with Stephen Wooley, a leading fan of the film and new featurettes. The SCC blu-ray will come in the usual exclusive packaging with newly created booklet

Also April 8, STUDIOCANAL will be releasing the second Losey/Pinter collaboration - ACCIDENT, in a new restoration completed by the BFI and also as a blu-ray premiere. New featurettes with film critics and experts have also been created for the extras.

Rounding out the week's releases will be our DVD release of ENTERTAINING MR SLOANE, the film version of Joe Orton's black comedy starring Harry Andrews and Beryl reed, focusing on the brother and sister pairing who become involved and increasingly infatuated with the sexy young amoral drifter with a mysterious past. The DVD features a new extra of Joe Orton;s last ever chat show appearance, recorded a few months before his tragic death.

8 APRIL THE SERVANT50th Anniversary DVD, Studiocanal Collection Blu-Ray& EST

Tony (James Fox), a wealthy young Londoner, hires Hugo Barrett (Dirk Bogarde) as his manservant. Initially, Barrett appears to take easily to his new job, and he and Tony form a quiet bond, retaining their social roles. Relationships begin shifting, however, and they change with the introduction of Susan (Wendy Craig), Tony's girlfriend, who seems to be suspicious of Barrett and to loathe all he represents. Barrett brings Vera (Sarah Miles), whom he presents as his sister, into Tony's household as a maidservant, but it emerges that Vera is actually Barrett's lover. Through Barrett's and Vera's games and machinations, they reverse roles with Tony and Susan; Tony becomes more and more dissipated, sinking further into what he perceives as their level, as the "master" and the "servant" exchange roles

DVD extras: James Fox interviewed by Richard Ayoade / Interview with Wendy Craig / Interview with Sarah Miles / Audio interview with Douglas Slocombe (Director of photography) / Harold Pinter Tempo interview / Joseph Losey talks about The Servant / Stills gallery / Trailer

Blu-ray extras: As above plus Interview with Stephen Wooley (fan of the film) /Harry Burton (Pinter expert) on Harold Pinter / Joseph Losey and Adolfas Mekas at the New York film festival / John Coldstream (Bogarde biographer) on Dirk Bogarde

Buy The Servant On: DVD / Blu-ray




8 APRIL ACCIDENT- DVD, Blu-Ray & EST

The second of director Joseph Losey’s collaborations with playwright Harold Pinter, The Accident is a taut, dark, brilliantly acted dissection of the emotional lives of the English intelligentsia. Dirk Bogarde stars as Stephen, an Oxford Philosophy lecturer, contentedly married to Rosalind but silently resentful of his colleague Charley, whose star is rising as a TV pundit. Among Stephen's students is the casually charming young aristocrat William (Michael York) who has his eye on another of Stephen's charges, Austrian princess Anna (Jacqueline Sassard). Motivated by a dangerous mixture of admiration and envy, Stephen facilitates a meeting between William and Anna. But Stephen's gently magnanimous demeanour conceals a rising tide of anxiety, self-centredness and sexual desperation. Over the course of one drink-drenched summer afternoon in the rolling English countryside, Stephen and Charley's unspoken impulses - charged up by the seductive presence of Anna - break the veneer of English civility

Extras: Talking About Accident documentary featuring an interview with Harry Pinter / · Joseph Losey and Harold Pinter discuss Accident (1957) / Dirk Bogarde biographer John Coldstream discussing Dirk Bogarde – NEW / Harry Pinter expert Harry Burton discussing Harold Pinter – NEW / Interview with feminist author and academic Melanie Williams – NEW / Interview with film critic Tim Robey – NEW

Buy Accident - DVD



8 APRIL ENTERTAINING MR SLOANE- DVD Only

A deliciously dark and humorous story about manipulation and repressed sexuality from controversial playwright Joe Orton. An attractive young charmer by the name of Mr. Sloane weasels his way into the lives of a middle-aged brother and sister, while trying to disguise the truth about his unpleasant past. Sexual tension drives the plot from the very beginning, when the lonely Kath (Beryl Reid) spots Mr. Sloane (Peter McEnery) in a cemetery and invites him to become a boarder. Despite the age difference, Sloane coyly plays along with her flirtations for his own benefit. Their fun seems over when Kath's brother Ed (Harry Andrews) shows up, but the prim and proper gentleman also takes a shine to Sloane, hiring him as his chauffeur and taking particular interest in the young man's tight leather uniform. Kath and Ed's elderly father, however, develops a strong hatred of Sloane, and accuses to him of being involved in an old, unsolved murder.

Buy Entertaining Mr Sloane - DVD


Extras: Eamonn Andrews talks with Joe Orton (Eamonn Andrews chat show episode) / trailer