Empire UK

(Chris Devlin) #1
Dane DeHaan as
James Dean with
Robert Pattinson’s
looky-likey
photographer.

Life


★★★
OUT SEPTEMBER 25 / CERT. 15 / 111 MINS.

DIRECTOR Anton Corbijn
CAST Dane DeHaan Robert Pattinson
Joel Edgerton Sir Ben Kingsley

PLOT Ambitious freelance photographer
Dennis Stock (Robert Pattinson) tries to
secure a photo shoot with 1955’s most
promising new actor: James Dean
(Dane DeHaan).

DD TO SAY GIVEN


his vociferous
fanbase but Robert
Pattinson is quietly
becoming one of our
most interesting
young actors. Those
of us who dismissed the Twilight
heartthrob as a pair of cheekbones who
got lucky should now guiltily rescind
the snark as he’s not only growing as
a performer but is unabashedly using
his star status to pursue interesting
off -kilter work that may not otherwise
get made. The wan vampire is on the
side of the cinematic angels.
That’s not saying the fi lms are
entirely successful or that playing
ambitious young men who feel out of
their depth should be considered on
the face of it much of a stretch for him.
But here he shows sides of fragility and
frustrated tenderness — for his character’s
son sidelined by his father’s professional
desires — that are deftly aff ecting.
It’s not hard to see why the story
may have appealed to him given it’s
about a young actor both drawn to
and appalled by success. Or at least
its corollary: fame. He’s ostensibly the

Miss You Already
★★★
OUT SEPTEMBER 25 / CERT. 12A / 112 MINS.
DIRECTOR Catherine Hardwicke
CAST Drew Barrymore Toni Collette
Paddy Considine Dominic Cooper


➞ Written directed and toplined by
women — how often can you say that?
— Miss You Already is a valiant if flawed
attempt to make a candid fi lm about living
with breast cancer through the prism of
the lifelong friendship of Jess (Barrymore)
and Milly (Collette). Juxtaposing Milly’s
deterioration with Jess’ pregnancy it has
good moments (a wig fi tting with Frances
de la Tour is a hoot) and it doesn’t leave
its male characters (Considine Cooper)
completely hanging but the central
friendship fails to convince. It’s a sad
emotive important subject but it deserves
a more detailed heartfelt fi lm than this. IF


American Ultra
★★★
OUT NOW / CERT. 15 / 96 MINS.
DIRECTOR Nima Nourizadeh
CAST Jesse Eisenberg Kristen Stewart
Topher Grace

➞ A kind of Bourne with a bong this
pitches Eisenberg and Stewart as a stoner
couple the twist being that Eisenberg is
actually a brainwashed super-soldier who
can improvise murder with any implement
and is now facing a termination order.
It’s ragged and messy but it has more
energy and ideas than more coherent
so-called successful fi lms. Nourizadeh
stages exaggerated bone-crunching
action with cackle and glee but this gets
by on Eisenberg and Stewart — he is
a master of zero-degree humour; so
is she but adds a warm centre and
something else up her sleeve. IF

Howl
★★★
OUT OCTOBER 16 / CERT. 18 / 89 MINS.
DIRECTOR Paul Hyett
CAST Ed Speleers Holly Weston
Elliott Cowan

➞ A late-night train is stranded in the
countryside and the crew are terrorised
by werewolves while guard Speleers
tries to keep the passengers safe.
Hyett’s second fi lm as director (after The
Seasoning House) is an old-fashioned
British horror with a group of disparate
types menaced on a drab down-at-heel
British train. Screenwriters Mark Huckerby
and Nick Ostler — who have previous
Thomas The Tank Engine credits so
probably count as train-spotters — go
for a mix of soap and comedy and the
creatures have a different shaggy-human
look. An unashamed B picture but fun. KN

DID
YOU
KNOW?
Jesse
Eisenberg
and Kristen
Stewart will
both star in
the new as-
yet untitled
Woody Allen
fi lm along
with Blake
Lively and
Steve Carell.
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