Tag Archives: Film Reviews

March 02

Son of Saul (2015)

In terms of cinematography, storytelling and emotional impact, this film is a modern masterpiece.

February 29

Ex_Machina (2015)

A chess game of guessing what is happening, who is manipulating who, and what is the real reason Caleb is there.

February 27

The Daughter (2015)

A metaphorical collision between a single ray of truth and the lie that connects two families.

February 23

Grandma (2015)

Grandmas are supposed to be helpful, bake cookies and give warm hugs, not swear, threaten, smoke dope, verbally and physically assault people, while conniving to raise money for an abortion.

February 21

Dogville (2003)

This allegorical meditation on the nature of evil and justice is as universal as the human condition.

February 18

Brooklyn (2015)

A beautifully photographed and finely acted historical drama.

February 16

Trumbo (2015)

the story of the 1950s right-wing purge of Hollywood

February 13

Concussion (2015)

The story of a modest hero who inconveniently discovers why so many pro footballers were dying and it shows the pressures that were mounted to silence him.

February 11

Holding the Man (2015)

Based on the 1995 memoir by revered gay rights activist Timothy Conigrave, the film version struggles to avoid soapy melodrama and corny humour.

February 09

The Babadook (2014)

An unusual hybrid of two closely related but different genres for which Australian filmmakers are acclaimed around the world: the horror and the psychological thriller.

February 07

Looking for Grace (2015)

Looking for Grace explores random destruction in a novel way by taking a simple plotline and splitting into separate narratives that converge with deadly force.

February 05

Anomalisa (2015)

Angst-ridden puppets disguise a lack of humanity, morality, or narrative purpose.

February 03

The Gift (2015)

We all fear false knowledge: the possibility that the person we know and love is really someone very different.

February 01

45 Years (2015)

While it is about life-cycles and memories and marriage, it is also a gendered probe into how differently men and women are emotionally constructed.

January 29

Spotlight (2015)

A David and Goliath style investigative drama where brave journalism exposes systemic corruption in the Catholic archdiocese of Boston.

January 26

Steve Jobs (2015)

An unexpectedly unflattering and melodramatic portrait of a tortured soul.

January 24

Last Cab to Darwin (2015)

This film can mess with your head about the complex issue of assisted dying, but it’s an Aussie gem well worth the effort.

January 22

The Danish Girl (2015)

Its like watching a newborn chick push its way through the shell of an egg: one faint crack becomes several and suddenly a new life form emerges, bewildered by the public gaze and nowhere to hide.

January 21

Truth (2015)

Its a gripping tale about the exhilaration of the hunt for big game and the carnage that follows if you pull the wrong lion’s tail.

January 19

Youth (2015)

The wit and wisdom of beautiful young people cuts through the homilies of elders to stop Youth from being a maudlin tale of loss.

January 17

Suffragette (2015)

A tale about brave protesting women and a suffragette who threw herself under the King’s horse.

January 16

The Intern (2015)

Do today’s audiences really want pre-feminist stories about wise old men that step in to prop up gorgeous and successful young career women…

January 14

Room (2015)

Brie Larson’s acting fixates on maternal dynamics at the cost of a convincing portrayal of captivity trauma.

January 12

The Dressmaker (2015)

The Dressmaker is a very funny and engaging Australian farce.

January 10

The Revenant (2015)

This film ticks all the top boxes for storytelling, casting, filming and action. It really is an epic.

January 09

The Martian (2015)

Science fiction or comedy, this is neither.

January 09

Goodnight Mommy (2014)

This is what the horror genre is all about: bringing us close to terror, then letting us down from the ceiling, calming us with logic to make our own lives feel better.

January 08

Carol (2015)

This is one Blanchett film that struggles to inspire.

January 06

The Great Gatsby (2013)

This is an outstanding modern adaptation of an all-time classic.

January 04

The Bélier Family (2014)

Can you imagine crying over a song you cannot hear?

January 03

Joy (2015)

An entertaining but clichéd story of feminine triumphalism in the fabricated-value world of television commerce

January 01

Thelma & Louise (1991)

One of the most remembered stories of feminist struggle in modern times

December 24

Brokeback Mountain (2005)

A brave challenge to Hollywood’s idea of sexuality

December 22

Lost in Translation (2010)

A wonderfully crafted film, but unsettling in its ability to leave you yearning.

December 22

Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015)

A cinematic triumph on its own merits or a beloved movie with a cult following?

December 22

A Room in Rome (2010)

A gem of a film that deserves more critical acclaim

October 27

Philomena (2013)

A story of a mother’s search for her son and the lack of compassion by religious institutions

September 27

NEBRASKA (2013)

A touching father and son road movie

August 29

Struggle Street (2015)

This is poverty-porn of the worst kind that does not even resemble a truthful documentary.

August 22

Aussie Wedding Films

How does Australian film represent the “white wedding” ritual?

July 26

Truth and Documentary

There are many kinds of documentary just as there are many kinds of truth

July 11

WELCOME to CineMuseFilms

This blog started out in 2013 as part of a digital media unit in a Bachelor of Media & Communication course.  I’ve left the original posts here as historical markers, as well as eclectic mix of other writings, such as academic essays, a short story, a book published from my PhD, and other odds and sods. The […]