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Three Thousand Years of Longing review – heartfelt Aladdinesque adventure for grownups

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Three Thousand Years of Longing review – heartfelt Aladdinesque adventure for grownups

Some administrators are so prestigious they get to make studio films on the idea of one-for-them-and-one-for-me. George Miller has gone that bit additional. He hit a mom lode of fan-acclaim seven years in the past along with his rebooted action-thriller creation Mad Max: Fury Street, however this new movie – in all its oddity, sweetness and indulgence – reveals he’s now doing one-for-him-and-one-that’s-even-more-for-him. It’s an Arabian Nights-type fantasia which he has clearly been gagging to make for years.

Fury Street was in fact very private in addition to colossally profitable on the field workplace: however Three Thousand Years of Longing is such an intensely private ardour challenge, spectacular but fey, it might get every other director thrown out of the pitch assembly and crushed up. It’s the film equal of an illuminated manuscript in medieval Latin stored in a protected and allowed to be consulted solely by accredited students making notes in 8H pencil. And but on the identical time it has the harmless, vibrant if weirdly defanged exuberance you’d see within the sort of household films proven on Christmas TV 30 or 40 years in the past.

Miller and co-screenwriter Augusta Gore have tailored the 1994 novella The Djinn within the Nightingale’s Eye by AS Byatt, and the ensuing film, for all its assumed worldliness and gnomic knowledge in regards to the tales people inform themselves, is sort of childlike as compared with different, darker and extra grownup Byatt function variations, reminiscent of Philip Haas’s Angels and Bugs from 1995, and Neil LaBute’s Possession in 2002. Tilda Swinton performs a nerdy and bespectacled educational referred to as Alithia Binnie, who specialises within the discipline of narratology and will get to journey the world collaborating in literary conferences in regards to the construction of narrative and the way it’s embedded in numerous cultures’ languages and mindsets. (There may be in fact one thing mythic about this globalised exercise that reveals the now forgotten affect of campus novelist David Lodge.)

Alithia arrives in Istanbul for a literary conference and finds herself staying on the flashy Pera Palace Resort, within the room the place Agatha Christie wrote Homicide on the Orient Categorical: an incidental level with out a lot relevance, though this lodge model promotion may need helped with the manufacturing funds. On a whim, she buys an beautiful glass objet in a market, will get it again to her room and – whoosh! – a Djinn comes out, at first gigantic however then human-sized, performed with a boomy voice and pointy ears by Idris Elba. This djinn has been imprisoned on this glass decoration for 3,000 years, eager for launch and longing to inform his extraordinary story of kings and princes and intrigue. And he’s additionally longing to grant Alithia her statutory three needs. However she will be able to’t consider a single factor that she desires: calm, equable Alithia doesn’t want for something, thus irritating the central motor of narrative itself.

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It’s a garrulous, but virtually static film, and weirdly for a movie about narrative there is no such thing as a single overwhelmingly essential storyline. Swinton and Elba sit round within the lodge room whereas all of the unique drama is given to us in flashback-fragments of surprise. There’s something very old style about it, and I believe a youthful film-maker may need wished to have interaction extra knowingly with concepts of orientalism, race and gender. But for all that it’s a little bit underpowered, with not a lot of a screen-relationship between Elba and Swinton. Miller finds in it one thing mild, ingenuous and heartfelt: like rediscovering a forgotten kids’s film beforehand out there solely on VHS.

Three Thousand Years of Longing is launched on 2 September in cinemas.

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Movie Reviews

Rex Reed’s 2024 Movie Review Roundup: A Masterclass in Blistering Honesty

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Rex Reed’s 2024 Movie Review Roundup: A Masterclass in Blistering Honesty

Rex Reed’s scalpel was particularly sharp in 2024, slicing through 43 films with the kind of ruthless precision only he can wield. This was the year he likened Mean Girls to “cinematic Covid,” torched Longlegs as a “dumpster fire,” and suggested that Cash Out had John Travolta so lost, “somebody stage an intervention.” For those seeking unfiltered truths about Hollywood’s latest offerings, Reed delivered—though not without a handful of pleasant surprises.

His ratings reveal a critic tough to impress: 28 percent of films earned 1 star, while 5 percent received the graveyard of zero stars. Horror films bore the brunt of his wrath—Longlegs and Heretic were sacrificed at the altar of his biting prose. Yet, amid the wreckage, 5 percent clawed their way to 4 stars, with dramas like One Life and Cabrini standing out for their emotional gravitas. Biopics, historical narratives and character studies fared best under his gaze, suggesting Reed still has a soft spot for films anchored in strong performances and rich storytelling.

One of the more controversial reviews? Reed’s glowing praise for Coup de Chance, which he called “Woody Allen’s best film in years.” In an industry where few dare applaud Allen publicly, Reed’s unapologetic endorsement (“unfairly derailed by obvious, headline-demanding personal problems”) was as bold as ever. Interestingly, the most-read review wasn’t the most positive—The Last Showgirl dazzled readers, perhaps more for the spectacle of Pamela Anderson’s Vegas reinvention than the film’s plot. It seems Reed’s audience enjoys his kinder takes, but they revel in his cinematic eviscerations just as much. When Reed loves a film, he ensures you know it—just as he ensures the worst offenders are left gasping for air.

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Movie Review: A Locksmith lives to Regret Taking that One “Night Call”

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Movie Review: A Locksmith lives to Regret Taking that One “Night Call”

I’m of two minds about that subgenre we call the hero/heroine with “particular skills” thriller.

The parade of Liam Neeson/Jason Statham/John Cena et al action pictures where this mobster, that rogue government or rogue government agency or creepy neighbor crosses this or that mild-mannered man or woman who turns out to be ex-CIA, a retired Marine, a former assassin or Navy SEAL has worn out its welcome.

Somebody effs around, somebody finds out they’ve “Taken” the wrong relative, crossed the wrong professional mayhem-maker. Yawn.

It’s always more interesting when somebody a lot more ordinary is tested by an extraordinary situation, and by people ostensibly a lot more capable of what Mr. or Ms. In Over Their Heads is attempting. “Three Days of the Condor” is the template for this sort of film. A more recent example is the snowplow operator tracking down and avenging himself on his son’s mob killers — “In Order of Disappearance.”

Throwing somebody with one “particular skill” that doesn’t include violence, criminal or espionage subterfuge or the like? As an exercise in screenwriting problem-solving that’s almost always a fun film to watch. That’s why I have high hopes for Rami Malek’s upcoming spring fling, “The Amateur.”

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Let’s hope that’s as good as the lurid, violent and tight-as-a-drum Belgian thriller, “Night Call.” A young man (Jonathan Feltre) is tricked, trapped and life-or-death tested by one long night at work.

Mady is a student, we gather, and a native-born Belgian with a thing for Petula Clark ’60s pop — in French. His night gig is as a locksmith. On this one night, that job will get him into trouble despite his best efforts to avoid it. And his “particular skills” and the tools of his trade will come in handy just enough to make you mutter, “clever, clever boy” at the screen and what writer-diector Michiel Blanchart has cooked-up for his feature filmmaking debut.

Mady’s the guy you summon when you’ve locked yourself out of your car, business or flat in the wee hours. He’s professional, courteous and honest. No, the quoted price — 250 Euros — is all you owe.

He’s also careful. The young woman named Claire (Natacha Krief) summons him to a Brussels flat she’s locked out of. She doesn’t have the 250. It’s in her purse, in her flat. With her keys. No, that’s where her ID is, too. As she’s flirted, just a bit, and the streets all around them are consumed by Black Lives Matter protests because Black people die at the hands of white cops in Belgium, too, he takes her word for it.

Mady might be the last to figure out that her last lie, about “taking out the trash” (in French with English subtitles) and hitting the ATM downstairs, is her get-away. When she rings him up and warns him to “Get OUT of there” (in French with subtitles) he’s still slow on the uptake.

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That’s when the apartment’s real resident, a musclehead with a punching bag and lots of Nazi paraphrenalia on the walls, shows up and tries to beat Mady to death. He fails.

But can a young Black man call the possibly racist cops about what’s happened and have them believe him? Maybe not. It’s when he’s trying to “clean” the scene of the “crime” that he’s nabbed, and his night of hell escalates into torture, threats and attempts to escape from the mobster (Romain Duris at his most sadistic) in pursuit of stolen loot and the “real” thief, the elusive but somehow conscience-stricken “Claire.”

As Hitchcock always said, “Good villains make good thrillers.” Duris, recently seen in the French “The Three Musketeers” and “The Animal Kingdom,” famous for “The Spanish Apartment” and “Chinese Puzzle,”, is the classic thriller “reasonable man” heavy.

“Either you become a friend, or a problem,” his Yannick purrs, in between pulling the garbage bag off the suffocating kids’ head, only to wrap Mady’s face in duct tape, a more creative bit of asphyxiation.

The spice that Blanchart seasons his thriller with is the backdrop — street protests, with Black protesters furious that Mady isn’t joining them and riot police pummeling and arresting every Black face in sight. That’s jarringly contrasted by the oasis-of-calm subway and unconcerned discos where Mady chases clues and Claire.

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A getaway on a stolen bicycle, dashing through streets and down into a subway station, suspense via frantic escapes, frantic bits of outwitting or outfighting crooks and cops, a decent confrontation with the not-cute-enough-to-excuse-all-this Claire and a satisfying “ticking clock” finale?

That’s what makes a good thriller. And if those “particular skills” show up here and there, at least we know Mady’s learned something on a job that if he lives to finish school, won’t be his career.

Rating: unrated, graphic violence, sex scenes in a brothel

Cast: Jonathan Feltre, Natacha Krief, Jonas Bloquet, Thomas Mustin and Romain Duris.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Michiel Blanchart. A Magnet release.

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Running time: 1:37

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Movie Reviews

'Cunk on Life' movie review: Laugh-out-loud mockumentary on life’s big questions

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'Cunk on Life' movie review: Laugh-out-loud mockumentary on life’s big questions

‘Cunk on Earth’ (2023), a mockumentary series on BBC, was hailed for its laugh-aloud mockery of pretentious documentaries and Morgan’s razor-sharp comedic timing — British droll at its very best.

Rashmi Vasudeva

Last Updated : 04 January 2025, 03:01 IST

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