Empire UK

(Chris Devlin) #1
VERDICTThe inside track on one of
sport’s biggest scandals nimbly shot
and sharply scripted powered by an
outstanding performance from Foster
and the quiet integrity of O’Dowd.

HE PROGRAM IS


a fi lm with go-faster
stripes. Its opening
credits sell the
exhilaration and
freedom of cycling
and the danger and
achievement of the Tour de France.
Its closing roll with “where are they
now?” captions prods and informs
until the fi nal sentence. It powers on
visually dynamic and like its compelling
antihero doesn’t have an inch of fat on it.
Virtually everybody knows the name
Lance Armstrong: cancer survivor and
Tour de France champion inspirational
author and charity activist American
idol and massive cheat. Plenty of us read
his books and felt awe at his journey
from facing death to reaching glory
and found the pesky allegations that he
was taking drugs to be mealy mouthed
fairy tale-wrecking in a too-cynical age.
And then of course they were right.
The Program assumes you know
this and takes you inside the process —
from the moment the young Lance (Ben
Foster) sees he has to cheat to triumph
to the cosseted champion eventually
undone by his own hubris. And it is

fascinating. Armstrong is obsessed by
the desire to win to turn his team —
The United States Postal Service — into
a ‘Blue Train’ of cyclists blitzing the
opposition. By any means necessary. He
meets with unscrupulous Italian medic
Michele Ferrari (Guillaume Canet) who
dismisses him as the wrong body shape
but enlists him on his ‘program’ when
Armstrong returns light and sinewy
after chemotherapy. These scenes as
Armstrong is inducted into Ferrari’s
methods tuned up like a machine are
a clinic in clever exposition showing
us the process and quietly asking where
we would draw the line — even if Canet
having rather a lot of fun proves French
actors can match English or Americans
for outrageous Italian accents.
Along Lance’s journey from survivor
to record-breaker cycling is quietly
damned and the media too — as the
authorities and newspapers largely look
the other way happy to sell a dream to
the public. All as presented here anyway
exceptSunday Timesjournalist David
Walsh (Chris O’Dowd) who nips at the
heels of the arrogant Texan infuriated
by how he and his like are destroying the
sport he loves. This is a superbly cast and

Red Army
★★★★
OUTOCTOBER 9/CERT. 15 /84 MINS.
DIRECTORGabe Polsky
CASTSlava Fetisov Scotty Bowman
Vladislav Tretiak

➞Like Rocky IV on ice Gabe Polsky’s
enthralling doc nips behind the Iron
Curtain to tell the story of the Soviet
Red Army side of the ’70s and ’80s
the greatest ice hockey team in history.
Defenseman Slava Fetisov takes the
Drago role as the team’s spiritual leader
in a film which probes at the priorities of
a regime that prized sporting glory over
all else. His interviews with Polsky are as
entertaining as his slick interplay in the
rink even if the main mystery — how such
a controlling state could breed a team
so packed with spontaneity and artistry
— remains tantalisingly out of reach.PDS

The Lobster
★★★
OUT OCTOBER 16 / CERT. 15 / 118 MINS.
DIRECTOR Yorgos Lanthimos
CAST Colin Farrell Rachel Weisz
Léa Seydoux


➞ In some ill-defi ned future or alternative
present the recently single or perpetually
unattached are required to book into a
hotel where they have 45 days to fi nd
a romantic match or be turned into the
animal of their choice (a disappointingly
peripheral process). Farrell’s forlorn
architect David ditched by his wife has
decided upon a lobster because he likes
the sea. Greek New Waver Lanthimos’
Kafkaesque sci-fi is a surreal exploration
of the rules of attraction that we think
set us above animal kind. The results are
inordinately strange and tiresomely glum
but in spots hideously funny. IN


Sinister 2
★★
OUT NOW / CERT. 15 / 97 MINS.
DIRECTOR Ciarán Foy
CAST Shannyn Sossamon James
Ransone Dartanian Sloan

➞ A standard follow-up to the solid
horror-mystery. Abused wife Sossamon
hides out in a church where a massacre
took place and her two sons fall under
the spell of the demon who was behind
the curse from the fi rst fi lm. It features
more talking-point 8mm family snuff fi lms
staged as very nasty jokes and spends
more time with the pack of well-spoken
malicious spectral kids who are agents
of the boogeyman. However the story
ties itself in knots over its extraordinarily
complicated curse and the occasional
decent scare doesn’t elevate it much
from the Insidious-Paranormal pack. KN

DID
YOU
KNOW?
Lobsters
can live up
to 70 years
and do not
weaken
slow down
or lose
fertility with
age. They
can also
regenerate
limbs...

performed picture — each tiny bit-player
has personality — though obviously the
tour-de-force of the Tour de France
tragedy is Foster who is mesmeric
frighteningly committed and uncannily
like Armstrong. To the point that it’s
hard to see however much you strain
the segues between archive and freshly
fi lmed footage. His Armstrong is
something of a monster true but there are
moments of self-doubt and questioning
and some genuine compassion — the
cancer ward visit is a grace note —
that Foster sells completely. O’Dowd
though requiring much less physical
transformation is superb as someone
just as driven in his own way: desperate
for the truth. Stephen Frears quietly
does his thing orchestrating it all —
from John Hodge’s deft script — and
cinematographer Danny Cohen is all
Dutch angles and energy putting us on
the bike and inside the head space of the
world’s greatest... cheat. NEV PIERCE
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