the revenant - Odyssey Cinema
Transcription
the revenant - Odyssey Cinema
P R O G R A M M E – F e b r u ar y 2 0 1 6 THE REVENANT February 2016 • ISSUE 14 www.odysseypictures.co.uk 01727 453088 See page 3 for box office opening hours PUCCINI TOSCA ST ALBANS CHAMBER OPERA Abbey Theatre, St Albans. Performed in English TUESDAY 15th to SATURDAY 19th March 2016 at 7.30pm SUNDAY matinee 13th March 2016 at 3.00pm Tickets £18.50 available from the Abbey Theatre Box Office www.abbeytheatre.org.uk 01727 857861 By arrangement with Chester Music Limited trading as G Schirmer Limited on behalf of G Schirmer, Inc. St Albans Chamber Opera ad Odessy half page ad Feb programme.indd 1 16/01/2016 16:45 BEST IN February C I N E M A S T A L B A N S CONTENTS Films At A Glance 14-15 Obits 23 Awards 24-25 BOX OFFICE: 01727 453088 Mon to Sat 10.30am-6.30pm 8pm-9pm Sun2pm-5.30pm (with matinée) 6.30pm-7.30pm Sun & Bank Holiday 3pm-5.30pm (no matinée) 6.30pm-7.30pm TICKETS IN PERSON Mon to Sat 10.30am-8pm Sunday (with matinée) 12-7.30pm Sun & Bank Holiday (no matinée) 3pm-7.30pm ONLINE BOOKING Labyrinth Candy floss Bowie in his element, magical and ridiculous. Don’t miss Page 16 FILMS OF THE MONTH • General release tickets go online on the Monday following the Saturday General sale. • There is a £1.50 booking fee (to cover costs of card transactions and the booking site). www.odysseypictures.co.uk/listings SEAT PRICES ‘A small and perfectly formed school’ Open Morning - Saturday 12th March 2016 Management Team: Anna Shepherd Jo Littlejohn James Wallman Head Technician: Gary Hawkins Artwork: Demiurge Design 01296 668739 Director: James Hannaway LOCKERS PARK Preparatory School: Day & Boarding for Boys (7-13) Pre-Preparatory School: Co-Educational (4-7) www.lockerspark.herts.sch.uk Full Price Concs Upstairs £9.00 £7.50 Upstairs Settee £20.00 £20.00 (Single or double occupancy) Downstairs Settee £22.00 £22.00 (Single or double occupancy) Downstairs (Tables) £11.00 £10.00 Downstairs Premium £13.00 £13.00 (Front row /Royal Box) Disabled £7.50 Carer £0 Matinee’s from £5 no concessions Good Schools Guide T: 01442 251712 The Odyssey 166 London Road, St. Albans, Herts AL1 1PQ www.odysseypictures.co.uk Creed Room Stallone steals the ring one more bout. Who would have thought it…? Page 17 A heart wrenching ride, uncomfortable but edge of your seat. Could win all. Page 18 The Big Short Taxi Tehran Straight talking, funny. A swindling thriller, perhaps to beat them all. Don’t miss. Page 19 Banned filmmaker makes a very dangerous film in good humour. Unlike anything else. Page 21 FORTHCOMING PRODUCTIONS 26 Feb – 5 Mar 2016 By Tom Stoppard Company of Ten 22 – 30 Apr 2016 By Jez Butterworth Company of Ten 13 – 21 May 2016 By William Shakespeare Company of Ten Box Office: 01727 857861 www.abbeytheatre.org.uk Westminster Lodge, Holywell Hill, St Albans AL1 2DL CHILTERN BESPOKE SOLUTIONS & JOINERY For all your projects requiring a bespoke outcome from our experienced craftsmen & artisans. Your Theatre, Your Community FOR DETAILS OF OUR PROJECTS: www.chilternbespokesolutions.com ENQUIRIES: Mob: 07946 189670 Email: chilternbespokesolutions@gmail.com BY APPOINTMENT TO: The Rex & Odyssey Cinema February FILMS 6 THE ODYSSEY - February Box Office: 01727 453088 Bridge Of Spies Groundhog Day In 1957, the US and Soviet Union were in the height of the Cold War. Not a war of bloodshed and trenches; this was a war of spies. Both sides needed to know the nuclear capabilities of the other… We meet Jim Donovan (Tom Hanks) a lawyer who is recruited by the CIA to defend a Soviet spy, Rudolf Abel (Mark Rylance) much to the dismay of his family and disdain of his country. Just as the case turns, and by a twist of fate, it becomes irrelevant, but not so the verdict. Suddenly, it is international spy exchange time. The Soviet Abel for a US spyplane pilot, Gary Powers, recently shot down over Russia. This is the latest in a run of collaborations between Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, beginning with Saving Private Ryan in 1998. This Bridge does not disappoint, with some saying it is their best partnership yet. “Bridge of Spies connects Cold War paranoia to today’s terror. A bridge worth building.” (LA Weekly) With the Coen Brothers in charge of the screenplay, the dialogue is more true and exciting than any Bond chase. Rylance manages to keep his eyebrows-acting under control and Hanks is the embodiment of the understated Everyman. Extraordinary. We’ve got Groundhog Day on Groundhog Day…! This is Bill Murray in a time loop, in one of his bestloved roles as a grumpy, arrogant weatherman (Phil) on a hated annual assignment in Punxsutawney. After grudgingly giving his report on the festivities, Phil rushes his team back to Pittsburgh, but a blizzard shuts down all travel and the team are forced to return for one more night. When Phil wakes up the following morning he is reliving yesterday, the worst day of his life: 2nd February! To begin with he is confused but when the phenomenon continues every morning and with no long-term consequences to fear, he decides to take advantage of it. Directed and co-written by comedy favourite, Harold Ramis who starred alongside Murray in cult classic Ghostbusters. Andie MacDowell features as Rita, the Producer of Phil’s weather show and ultimately the key to his fate. “The master of bone-dry acerbic wit, and even as his stiff facade is worn away by the toil of endless days (of self-discovery) he doesn’t let things descend into the saccharine.” (Empire) Come out of your burrows on (the real) Groundhog Day and brave the cold for Murray’s flat faced genius. (research Anna Shepherd) Director: Cast: Duration: Origin: Certificate: Company: Steven Spielberg Tom Hanks, Mark Rylance 141 mins USA 2015 12A Twentieth Century Fox When... Mon1 Tue 2 2.00, 7.30 2.00 Director: Cast: Duration: Origin: Certificate: Company: Harold Ramis Bill Murray, Andie Macdowell 142 mins USA 1993 PG Park Circus Films When... Tue 2 7.30 www.odysseypictures.co.uk THE ODYSSEY - February Brooklyn Director John Crowley and writer Nick Hornby have empathetically adapted Colm Tóibín’s 2009 bestselling novel in this graceful masterpiece starring the disturbing child/teen star (Atonement) now a magical grown up: Saoirse Ronan. We begin in 1950s Ireland, as young Eilis Lacey (Ronan) is persuaded to up-sticks to America, leaving behind her small town to start anew in New York. She soon falls in love with an Italian plumber, Tony (Emory Cohen) and Brooklyn begins to feel like home. When Eilis is suddenly drawn back to Ireland, she pledges to return, but finds herself torn when she gets home. A classic love story, but don’t for a second think it meek or mild. The acting is cool and easy, the writing intelligent and richly literate. Period details of 1950s New York are breathtaking. By sheer force of quality in every respect, Brooklyn is an astonishingly good film, the kind ‘they don’t make anymore’. How lucky for us. “Saoirse Ronan is one of the most intelligent and compelling screen presences of her generation.” (Guardian) “Brooklyn has an old-fashioned perfection so incandescent and so winning, that it’s almost spooky.” (FT) It might well win things, even your heart perhaps? Don’t miss. Director: Cast: John Crowley Saoirse Ronan, Domhnall Gleeson, Julie Walters Duration: 112 mins Origin: Ireland/UK 2015 Certificate: 12A Company: Lionsgate Films UK When... Wed 3 Tue 16 Mon22 2.00, 7.30 7.30 2.00 7 8 THE ODYSSEY - February Box Office: 01727 453088 www.odysseypictures.co.uk Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 2 Star Wars: The Force Awakens Director: J. J. Abrams Cast: Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, John Boyega, Andy Serkis, Max von Sydow Duration: 135 mins Origin: USA 2015 Certificate: 12A Company: Walt Disney Studios When... Thu Fri Sat Sat 4 7.30 5 7.30 13 2.00 13 7.00 Sun 14 1.30 Mon 15 2.00 Tue 16 2.00 ‘In JJ we trust’ has become a well-known motto since Abrams, together with Disney, took on the responsibility of bringing back Star Wars from the burnt wreckage left by George Lucas. The Empire may have fallen, but from its ashes rises a new threat in the form of the First Order (think space Nazis), led by the mysterious Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) a man obsessed with continuing Darth Vader’s legacy. Fin, a startrooper (John Boyega) abandons his post, hoping there’s more to life than a white plastic suit and flees to a desert wasteland where he meets young scavenger Rey (Daisy Ridley). Together with a fabulously greyer Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and Chewie they uncover a secret war that is brewing between this sinister order, and a band of resistance fighters, led by General (Princess) Leia (Carrie Fisher). This JJ Abrams’ The Force Awakens brings balance to Lucas’s preposterous prequels. No one was expecting to see another Star Wars film, let alone one that reunites Luke, Han, and Leia. It is a good time to be alive. (research Jack Whiting) The Rex’s own Lisa Tomblin, is JJ’s chosen Head of Hair dept. Alongside everyone’s, she is responsible for Princess Leia’s classic, edgy new look. Bleak and unrelenting in its tone and visuals; the final (final) part of this consistently brilliant series is heavy going, but utterly satisfying. This new last film starts with a traumatised Katniss Everdeen with her neck in a brace and barely able to speak. To compound her misery, her beloved Peeta (Josh Hutcherson) has been tortured and brainwashed by President Snow (Donald Sutherland on fine Machiavellian form) into believing she is a monster. She is not sure that he is far wrong. Together with Gale (Liam Hemsworth), and others, Katniss ventures to the Capitol. She is supposed to be part of the propaganda drive by the rebels as they seek to liberate the citizens of Panem, but her real intention is to make Snow pay in person for all the suffering she has endured. It’s all doom and gloom, with little in the way of the kitsch elements that made the first two films so endearing (no games here, just war). Still, Lawrence is just as captivating and Philip Seymour Hoffman too, gives a touching final screen performance. Sadly, he died in February 2014 during the making of it. Reminding us how long it takes to milk a two-part final episode. Director: Francis Lawrence Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth Duration: 137 mins Origin: USA 2015 Certificate: 12A Company: Lionsgate UK Ltd When... Sat 6 Sun 7 2.00 1.30 THE ODYSSEY - February 9 Daddy’s Home Will Ferrell is one of those comedic actors that, when the slapstick reaches new levels of lowbrow, can pull through unscathed. Ferrell is Brad, smooth jazz-loving, cookie-baking, lunchbox-packing stalwart of the PTA. He is also the doting stepdad of a pair of poppets who are just beginning to accept him as part of their life. Then their biological dad re-enters the picture. Dusty (Mark Wahlberg) rocks up on a motorbike, a slipstream of testosterone and reckless excitement drifting behind him. He’s the lawless, leather-clad opposite to Brad’s beige, homespun cosy. Naturally, the kids fall for Dusty. Lame title aside, Daddy’s Home is a moderately fun time killer. The continued pairing of Ferrell and Wahlberg is a smart move, and it flirts with the same inane humour seen in Anchorman, but the truly inspired skits (which are oddly, the dumbest) are few and far between. There’s a genuine subversive nature about Ferrell however, that love him or hate him, elevates crude slapstick enough to raise many unexpected chuckles, and its safe 12A rating prevents the cruder jokes from really taking off, thus introducing new constraint into pair’s natural smut. (research Jack Whiting) The constraint works. Come and see. Directors: Sean Anders,John Morris Cast: Will Ferrell, Mark Wahlberg, Linda Cardellini Duration: 96 mins Origin: USA 2015 Certificate: 12A Company: Paramount Pictures UK When... Sat 6 7.00 10 THE ODYSSEY - February Box Office: 01727 453088 The Danish Girl Director: Tom Hooper Cast: Eddie Redmayne, Alicia Vikander, Ben Whishaw Duration: 120 mins Origin: UK/Germany/USA 2015 Certificate: 15 Company: Universal Pictures When... Sun 7 Mon 8 Tue 23 6.00 2.00, 7.30 2.00, 7.30 Eddie Redmayne is right in the thick of it with this fictionalised biopic of the pioneering transgender painter Lili Elbe. When we are first introduced to young artists Einar (Redmayne) and Gerda (Alicia Vikander) they are enjoying a happy and wholesome marriage. Events are turned on their heads as Einar begins to embody the persona of Lili, driving a wedge between the marriage and pursuing a lifestyle that would eventually see him becoming one of the first people to undergo sex reassignment surgery. Adapted from David Ebershoff’s 2000 novel, The Danish Girl is full of the flair and elegance you would expect to find in Hooper’s film. His 2010 Best Picture winner The King’s Speech contained little else. Could it be two years in a row for Eddie at the Oscars? “Redmayne’s fine bone-china features are prime movers in all of this being convincing but so is his performance, reticent, vulnerable and acutely observed.” (Empire) “This is a handsomely made picture, intelligent and sympathetic, with something of the uninsistent manner of Jan Morris’s memoir Conundrum” (Guardian) “Eddie Redmayne makes another astounding transformation in The Danish Girl, after his Oscarwinning turn as Stephen Hawking” (Times) (research Chris Coetsee). It seems a pointless exercise in fancy dress acting. www.odysseypictures.co.uk THE ODYSSEY - FEBRUARY 11 The Lady In The Van Joy As with The History Boys, Nicholas Hytner has adapted a stage hit for the big screen from his time as the artistic director of the National Theatre. The Lady in the Van sees Maggie Smith reprise the role she first played in the 1999 stage production of the Alan Bennett play. She is Miss Shepherd, who lived in a van on the driveway of Alan Bennett’s north London home between 1974 and 1989. If the set looks authentic, that’s because the film is shot on location on the same Camden Town road in Bennett’s real house. Bennett is simultaneously irritated, kindly and secretly delighted to have such a rich and pungent source of material on his doorstep. Miss Shepherd’s mysterious past, her fear of policemen and the rumour that she was a pianist or a nun, all fascinate him. The excellent Alex Jennings plays two versions of Bennett the literary observer and the participant. “I live, you write, that’s how it works,” says Bennett to Bennett. “This is a lavish gift of a role for Ms Smith. She makes this hardy troglodyte a tottering, staggering force of nature, determined to owe nothing to anybody.” (Telegraph) David O Russell’s (Silver Linings Playbook) spin on the rags-to-riches biopic opens with the line: ‘Inspired by stories of brave women.’ Joy is loosely based on the life of Joy Mangano (Jennifer Lawrence) the Long Island single mum who in the early 1990s invented the self-wringing Miracle Mop and became a shopping channel superstar. Joy has a supremely dysfunctional family. Her mother Mimi (Virginia Madsen) is bed-bound and spends her days watching soap operas on TV. Her divorced father, Rudy (Robert De Niro) shares the basement with her own ex-husband Tony (Edgar Ramirez) a would-be nightclub singer whose career has never amounted to anything. Joy’s moment of inspiration comes when she shreds her hands while trying to clean up shards of broken glass on the deck of the yacht belonging to her father’s wealthy new girlfriend (Isabella Rossellini). Her revolutionary cleaner-upper leads her to QVC, a burgeoning home-shopping channel run by Bradley Cooper’s hard-but-fair businessman. How can she sell herself in a live television environment where powerdressing prevails? And will her mop shift 50,000 units before all is lost? “Joy is the best film you will ever see about the manufacture of mops.” (Independent) Do many (English) in the SE know what a mop is…? Director: Nicholas Hytner Cast: Maggie Smith, Alex Jennings Duration: 104 mins Origin: UK 2015 Certificate: 12A Company: Columbia Pictures Corporation Ltd When... Tue 9 Wed 10 Director: David O. Russell Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Bradley Cooper Duration: 124 mins Origin: USA 2015 Certificate: 12A Company: Twentieth Century Fox When... 2.00, 7.30 7.30 Wed10 2.00 Thu 11 7.30 Fri12 7.30 12 THE ODYSSEY - FEBRUARY Box Office: 01727 453088 www.odysseypictures.co.uk THE ODYSSEY - FEBRUARY 13 VALENTINE’S DAY Roman Holiday 45 Years Mary Poppins Carol Audrey Hepburn’s first starring role won her a Best Actress Oscar in 1954, illuminating her unique qualities from the start. Hepburn plays Ann, bored princess (of an unnamed country) who is slowly being driven to despair by the toll of endless engagements. While in the bustling city of Rome, Ann makes her escape for 24 hours of fun. She happens to meet American Journalist Joe Bradley (dashingly handsome Gregory Peck). Recognising a hot news story, Joe pretends not to recognise the princess and offers to give her a guided tour of Rome. “It’s a beautiful snapshot into the past, both for the historic look of Rome and to witness the birth of the romantic comedy.”(7MPictures) “Timeless, exuberant classic, with Hepburn’s naïve sense of fun and perfectly charming performance matched equally by Peck’s louche and charismatic worldy American.” (Empire) Filmed entirely in Rome, the location does rather dominate the movie. However, it turns the viewer into a willing tourist. (the location, it’s beauty, it’s sunshine and a time lost, is the whole reason for the film) Come and escape to Italy for Valentines day with real stars, Miss Hepburn and Mr Peck. (research Anna Shepherd) Writer-director Andrew Haigh presents a masterful take on how a shadow from the past can plunge a loving relationship into crisis and torment. Adapted from short story ‘In Another Country’, we are placed in rural Britain during the run-up to the 45th wedding anniversary of Kate and Geoff Mercer (Charlotte Rampling and Tom Courtenay). As preparations for the sumptuous celebration continue, a letter arrives from Switzerland telling of the discovery of Geoff’s ex-girlfriend Katya, killed during a walking accident across the Alps 50 years earlier. Her body has now been discovered, perfectly preserved in ice. As Kate finds it increasingly difficult to deal with Geoff’s emotional struggles, the foundations of their relationship begin to strain. Delicate and thoughtful, this particularly moving film further enhances Haigh’s reputation as one of British cinemas brightest talents, drawing out superb performances from his veteran leads which is now in BAFTA contention with the best of the rest. “It’s a film of small moments and tiny gestures that leaves a very, very big impression.” (Time Out) “A moving and absorbing drama featuring two actors offering a lifetime’s wisdom and technique in their performances.” (Guardian) (research Chris Coetsee) Tiring but well played by two veterans together for the first time. Long resistant to film adaptations of her Mary Poppins books (See ‘Saving Mr Banks’!). P.L. Travers finally succumbed to the entreaties of Walt Disney, and the result is often considered the finest of Disney’s personally supervised films. When Mr. Banks advertises for a new nanny, his children alternately compose their own ad, asking for someone with a little kindness and imagination. Mary Poppins (Julie Andrews in her screen debut) answers the children’s ad by arriving at the Banks home from the skies, parachuting in by her umbrella. The exploits of novelist P. L. Travers’ nanny sparkle thanks to the Sherman brothers’ songs (from the sweet Feed the Birds to the rollicking Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious) Poppins’ arrival from the sky to shape up the lives of the Banks family is still magical, and the animation (so hated by P.L. Travers) is too. “Julie Andrews’ first appearance on the screen is a triumph. She performs as easily as she sings, displaying a fresh type of beauty nicely adaptable to the new colour cameras.” (Variety 1964..!) (research Anna Shepherd) A timeless piece of family cinema made ever more memorable by Dick Van Dyke’s butchery of cockney. Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara star in this exquisite, melancholic period piece. Directed by Todd Haynes, an adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s 1952 novel The Price of Salt, Carol charts a secret lesbian love affair in Fifties New York. Carol (Blanchett) is a glittering, glamorous housewife. She meets a Manhattan department store assistant Therese (Mara) in the lead up to Christmas 1952. What begins magnetically builds into a bittersweet forbidden love, tainted by the turmoil of its taboo. Their relationship is amplified within the quintessential 1950s framing, juxtaposing the two women’s wildly transgressive love affair with deep poignancy. Then there are the details. The impeccable costume and production design are richly meticulous, and the grainy 16mm film cinematography makes for delicious viewing: think moody, jewel-toned cafe scenes à la Edward Hopper. Carol is a beautiful, potent triumph. Unquestionably the new benchmark for period pieces to come. “It’s jazz and poetry are just wonderful… More than hugely accomplished cinema, it’s an exquisite work of American art” (Telegraph) “Blanchett manages to give a 1950s housewife the pathos and grandeur of a tragic heroine” (Independent) “An exquisite brush of a coral-polished fingernail, a pulse of expensive scent and if looks could… thrill.” (Times) Oscar Cate again…? Director: William Wyler Cast: Audrey Hepburn, Gregory Peck Duration: 118 mins Origin: USA 1953 Certificate: U Company: Park Circus Films When... When... Sun 14 Director: Andrew Haigh Cast: Charlotte Rampling, Tom Courtenay Duration: 95 mins Origin: UK 2015 Certificate: 15 Company: Artificial Eye 6.00 Mon 15 7.30 Director: Robert Stevenson Cast: Julie Andrews, Dick Van Dyke Duration: 139 mins Origin: USA 1964 Certificate: U Company: Walt Disney Int’l When... Wed17 2.00 Director: Todd Haynes Cast: Cate Blanchett, Rooney Mara Duration: 119 mins Origin: UK/USA/France 2015 Certificate: 15 Company:Studiocanal When... Wed17 7.30 14 THE REX - February www.therexberkhamsted.com 01442 877759 Film 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 6 7 8 8 9 9 10 11 11 12 13 13 14 15 15 16 16 17 17 18 18 19 20 20 21 22 22 23 24 24 25 26 27 27 28 29 The Lady In The Van Star Wars: The Force Awakens Star Wars: The Force Awakens Bridge Of Spies Bridge Of Spies Joy Star Wars: The Force Awakens Joy The Lady In The Van The Danish Girl Le Mepris The Lady In The Van The Danish Girl The Danish Girl The Danish Girl Grandma Bridge Of Spies Star Wars: The Force Awakens Daddy’s Home When Harry Met Sally Star Wars: The Force Awakens The Assassin Snoopy & Charlie Brown Bridge Of Spies Star Wars: The Force Awakens Brooklyn Inside Out Steve Jobs The Revenant Iron Giant – Signature Edition The Revenant The Revenant Brooklyn The Sea Inside Room Grandma Room The Revenant Creed Star Wars: The Force Awakens Creed The Big Short The Big Short Mon Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sat Sun Mon Mon Tue Tue Wed Thu Thu Fri Sat Sat Sun Mon Mon Tue Tue Wed Wed Thu Thu Fri Sat Sat Sun Mon Mon Tue Wed Wed Thu Fri Sat Sat Sun Mon THE ODYSSEY - February COMING SOON ODYSSEY F e b r u ar y FILMS: Date www.odysseypictures.co.uk BACK BY DEMAND The Big Short The Revenant Joy Brooklyn Time 2.00 7.30 2.00, 7.30 2.00, 7.30 2.00, 7.30 7.30 2.00 7.00 6.00 2.00 7.30 2.00 7.30 2.00, 7.30 2.00 7.30 7.30 2.00 7.00 6.00 2.00 7.30 2.00 7.30 2.00 7.30 2.00 7.30 7.30 2.00 7.00 6.00 2.00 7.30 2.00, 7.30 2.00 7.30 2.00, 7.30 7.30 2.00 7.00 6.00 2.00, 7.30 NEW RELEASES Spotlight The 33 Youth 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi Triple 9 The 33 Spotlight Youth 13 Hours C I N E M FILMS: A S T 01727 A L B A 453088 N S February Date Film 1 2 2 3 4 5 6 6 7 7 8 9 10 10 11 12 13 14 14 15 15 16 16 17 17 18 18 19 20 20 21 22 22 23 24 25 26 27 27 28 29 29 BRIDGE OF SPIES BRIDGE OF SPIES GROUNDHOG DAY BROOKLYN STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS HUNGER GAMES DADDY’S HOME HUNGER GAMES THE DANISH GIRL THE DANISH GIRL LADY IN THE VAN JOY LADY IN THE VAN JOY JOY STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS ROMAN HOLIDAY STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS 45 YEARS STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS BROOKLYN MARY POPPINS CAROL IN THE HEART OF THE SEA LABYRINTH CREED THE PEANUTS MOVIE CREED ROOM BROOKLYN ROOM THE DANISH GIRL THE BIG SHORT THE BIG SHORT THE REVENANT THE IRON GIANT – SIGNATURE EDITION THE REVENANT THE REVENANT THE BIG SHORT TAXI TEHRAN Mon Tue Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sat Sun Sun Mon Tue Wed Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Sun Mon Mon Tue Tue Wed Wed Thu Thu Fri Sat Sat Sun Mon Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sat Sun Mon Mon Time PAGE 2.00, 7.30 2.00 7.30 2.00, 7.30 7.30 7.30 2.00 7.00 1.30 6.00 2.00, 7.30 2.00, 7.30 2.00 7.30 7.30 7.30 2.00, 7.00 1.30 6.00 2.00 7.30 2.00 7.30 2.00 7.30 2.00 7.30 7.30 2.00 7.00 1.30, 6.00 2.00 7.30 2.00, 7.30 2.00, 7.30 7.30 7.00 2.00 7.00 1.30, 6.00 2.00 7.30 6 6 6 7 8 8 9 9 9 10 10 11 11 11 11 11 8 8 12 8 12 8 7 13 13 16 16 17 17 17 18 7 18 10 19 19 20 21 20 20 19 21 15 16 THE ODYSSEY - FEBRUARY Box Office: 01727 453088 www.odysseypictures.co.uk In The Heart Of The Sea Labyrinth Creed Director Ron Howard is at the helm of this gargantuan high sea affair. In the Heart of the Sea tells the true story of whaling ship Essex that became stranded at sea for 90 days, a story that originally inspired Herman Melville to conjure his 1851 masterpiece Moby Dick. Owen Chase (Hemsworth) along with Capt Pollard (Benjamin Walker) and his modest crew are attacked mid-voyage by a huge seemingly enraged sperm whale, splitting the ship in two and leaving the survivors shipwrecked more than 1000 miles from land. His shrewd filmmaking, Howard successfully produces a blend of drama and horror, showing us the grisly images that are bound to make today’s audience recoil yet managing to convey the excitement of a job so dangerous. A true example of a film made-for-big-cinema. “Howard puts heart, soul and every computerised whale trick in the book into crafting a seafaring adventure to rock your boat.” (Rolling Stone) “It’s a harrowing tale that still packs an entertaining wallop.” (Observer) “Hemsworth’s botched New England accent and all, this is movie star material.” (Guardian) (research Chis Coetsee) ‘Rock your boat’ ‘wallop’ and ‘botched’ (estate agents to Seamen everywhere) Blubber them all. It is fabulous. Don’t miss. Fully embracing that decade – or helplessly stuck in it, depending who you ask – Labyrinth is a concoction of gothic fantasy, and David Bowie in big hair and tight leggings. A young Jennifer Connelly, playing Sarah, wishes that the goblins would come and take her annoying baby brother away, and they duly oblige. Thus, a quick natter with Jareth (Bowie) and she must get to the castle in the middle of the labyrinth of the title. Oh, for the days when model-based effects were more prevalent – the labyrinth itself still looks just brilliant. Coming to this now for the first time you may question the sanity of the cast and crew as well as your own, but to many Labyrinth fans this is more than simply a fond memory. This is often/ sometimes bolstered by screenings where the audience is encouraged to dress up (but please, you don’t have to – in fact Don’t!) Muppets creator Jim Henson has crafted a cult classic here. He uses his film as a chance to produce the most accomplished puppetry work of his illustrious career, even if it makes Labyrinth more a technical masterpiece than a narrative one. (research Jack Whiting - fan) Back at the Odyssey by special request. Ryan Coogler’s riveting drama lands every punch in what is a much needed shake-up of the Rocky franchise. Adonis ‘Donny’ Johnson (Michael B. Jordan) the illegitimate son of Apollo Creed, walks away from his office job to pursue a career in professional boxing. Saddled with a murky past and deep longing to know the father he never met, he travels to Philadelphia for answers and to track down ring icon Rocky Balboa. Life for Rocky himself has come full circle. Now a widower and in declining health, he can only look back on all that he has won and lost in a career spanning four decades. Like the 69-year-old Stallone hoisting his frame gingerly into play, Creed takes a while to move. But by the end it is genuinely moving. “Creed” is a dandy piece of entertainment, soothingly old-fashioned and bracingly up-to-date.” (Times) “After taking a while to limber up, Ryan Coogler’s continuation of the Rocky saga packs a real emotional punch” (Telegraph) “A career of action dreck has often obscured the fact that Stallone can act, and here he gives perhaps his best performance.” (Empire) It boxes clever. Come and see. Director: Jim Henson Cast: David Bowie, Jennifer Connelly, Toby Froud Duration: 98 mins Origin: UK/USA 1986 Certificate: U Company: Warner Bros Director: Ryan Coogler Cast: Michael B. Jordan, Sylvester Stallone, Tessa Thompson Duration: 133 mins Origin: USA 2015 Certificate: 12A Company: Warner Brothers Ents Director: Ron Howard Cast: Chris Hemsworth, Cillian Murphy Duration: 122 mins Origin: USA 2015 Certificate: 12A Company: Warner Brothers Ents When... When... Thu 18 2.00 Thu 18 When... 7.30 Fri19 Sat 20 7.30 7.00 THE ODYSSEY - FEBRUARY 17 Snoopy & Charlie Brown: The Peanuts Movie Charles M. Schulz’s comic strips spring to life once more in this utterly charming outing for Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Lucy, Linus and the gang. Commemorating the 65th anniversary of the comic strip, this is the first time in 35 years on the big screen. More a string of sub-plots rather than one over-arching story, this has the feel of a greatest hits album, something of a love letter, capturing all the classic moments that have helped shaped Schulz’s beloved ‘Peanuts’. And for all the CGI gloss, The Peanuts Movie remains completely true to its original values providing a perfect blend of humour and tenderness certain to strike a chord with young and old hippies. “A meticulously faithful and clearly loving tribute to America’s favourite blockhead” (Times) “From the opening, familiar Vince Guaraldi piano chords it’s clear that director Steve Martino is taking a “don’t fix what ain’t broke” approach with all this.” (Guardian) “The Peanuts Movie is deeply rooted in the look and tone of Schulz’s soulful comic strip.” (TIME) (research Chris Coetsee) It’s back to late 60’s tank tops bad beards and the worst hair for those who loved Charlie Brown. Even better now bald. Bring the street. Director: Voices: Duration: Origin: Certificate: Company: Steve Martino Noah Schnapp, Bill Melendez 93 mins USA 2015 U Twentieth Century Fox When... Sat 20 2.00 18 THE ODYSSEY - FEBRUARY Box Office: 01727 453088 Room Director: Lenny Abrahamson Cast: Brie Larson, Jacob Tremblay, Sean Bridgers Duration: 118 mins Origin: Ireland/Canada 2015 Certificate: 15 Company:Studiocanal When... Sun 21 Mon22 1.30, 6.00 7.30 The room in Emma Donoghue’s Room, a worldwide publishing (and book club) smash, shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2010, is a garden shed, locked from the outside, in which a brutalised young mother and her five-year-old son are kept permanently imprisoned. The story is told from the perspective of Jack, a five-year-old boy who knows nothing outside the small room he and his mother have lived in for his whole life. Jacob Tremblay is a startling revelation in this role, a long-haired boy completely oblivious to the everyday struggle his mother goes through to find the will to live. In the lead role, Brie Larson registers as numb to the pain she’s been forced to endure since being kidnapped and held captive by a menacing man only known as Old Nick. For exercise, Jack tumbles back and forth between two walls. For sanity, Joy tells her son that “room” is all that separates them from the infinity of outer space, and for survival she’ll eventually begin to teach him the truth. “Too grim and heartbreaking for some viewers, Room is nevertheless an extraordinary film so powerful and unforgettable that it must be seen.” (research Jane Clucas) Oscars on their way. www.odysseypictures.co.uk THE ODYSSEY - FEBRUARY 19 The Big Short Both Margin Call and Wolf of Wall Street showed just how the financial crash of 2008 could make for gripping drama and/or a riotous comedy. The Big Short shoots for both, and the results are mostly successful. Based on the non-fiction book of the same name, director Adam McKay lets his all-star cast have a little fun. The Big Short tells the story of the financial crisis from the perspective of financiers who grasped the implications of the toxic, parasitic waltz of Wall Street and property lenders before anyone else. The film alternates between an energetic, comic documentary style and realist re-enactments from the book. Explanatory interludes are intended to enable viewers to make sense of all the financial arcana. McKay, whose tomfoolery with regular Will Ferrell in the Anchorman films, makes him an interesting choice to tackle grounded material. There are nods and winks to the camera as characters break the fourth wall. The effect is jarring at first a la David Brent, but the devise starts to work here as an absorbing, easily digestible method of condensing all the madness. (research Jack Whiting) Investment players will get a smug kick out of it. Bring one of your own, to kick. Director: Adam McKay. Cast: Brad Pitt, Ryan Gosling, Steve Carell Duration: 130 mins Origin: USA 2015 Certificate: 15 Company:Paramount When... Wed 24 Thu 25 Mon29 2.00, 7.30 7.30 2.00 20 THE ODYSSEY - February Box Office: 01727 453088 www.odysseypictures.co.uk The Iron Giant Signature Edition The Revenant Director: Cast: Duration: Origin: Certificate: Company: Alejandro González Iñárritu Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hardy 156 mins USA 2015 15 Twentieth Century Fox When... Fri26 Sat 27 Sun 28 7.00 7.00 1.30, 6.00 Alejandro Iñárritu’s inspiring tale of revenge and human survival is a stone cold classic in the making. Leading a fur-trapping expedition through the swallowing wilderness of 1823 Midwest America, tracker Hugh Glass (a superb DiCaprio) and his band of hunters are suddenly attacked by a Native American tribe. When his former confidant John Fitzgerald (Hardy) then leaves him for dead following a brutal bear attack, Glass must call upon his inner strength and harness his survival skills to forge a way back home across 200 miles of icy wasteland and track down the man who betrayed and abandoned him. Already the undeniable victor at the Golden Globes, The Revenant looks sure to sweep the Oscars this year, nominated in 12 categories, perhaps deservedly so. Unflinching filmmaking at its most raw. “It is a mad, visionary and quite often preposterous survival tale, very bloody, very violent and full of murky religious symbolism. It is also often astounding in its flights of macabre lyricism.” (Independent) “Frontier epic takes cine-suffering to new levels of agony and, most importantly, veracity.” (Times) “DiCaprio’s raw performance helps elevate what could have been just another man-versus-nature drama” (Empire) (research Chris Coetsee) I wouldn’t have minded a little cardboard studio ice and a warm bath. It is directed by the noted animator/director/writer Brad Bird. You can blame him for The Simpsons. Based on Ted Hughes 1968 novel The Iron Man, this feature-length animated adventure tells of a giant metal machine that falls to earth, frightening the residents of a small town in Maine in 1958, until it befriends a 9-year old boy named Hogarth and ultimately unselfishly saves people from their own fears and prejudices. Featured among the voices are Jennifer Aniston as Annie Hughes, Hogarth’s mother; Harry Connick Jr. as Dean McCoppen, one of the town’s residents who befriends Hogarth and the giant; and newcomer Eli Marienthal as young Hogarth. Also on hand is Christopher McDonald voicing the role of Kent Mansley, a government agent determined to destroy the giant. This film features 2D and CGI animated characters. It’s a good story, and apart from its Americanisation, is pretty loyal to Hughes’ original. This ‘Signature Edition’ has extra frames and of course a signature… Come and see. Director: Brad Bird Voices: Vin Diesel, Eli Marienthal, Jennifer Aniston, Harry Connick Jnr Duration: 86 mins Origin: USA 2015 Certificate: PG Company: Warner Bros When... Sat 27 THE ODYSSEY - FEBRUARY Taxi Tehran Winning the best prize at Berlin in January, director Jafar Panahi’s latest defiance won Berlin’s Golden Bear, but not for running rings around its government’s censors. Crafted from a series of apparently unrelated encounters Taxi Tehran chronicles a barrage of ‘fares’ with their comings and goings, all the while under the watchful eye of Panahi’s dashboard-based double camera setup. His remotely controlled cameras secretly revolve between the action both inside and outside the cab. From the flourishing market of pirated Blockbuster films to the sensitive issues of capital punishment, these ‘topics of conversation’ all over the Capital are brilliantly interwoven with a multitude of intelligent references to modern cinema. Certainly it is rare that a director, officially prohibited, is capable of producing such a good humoured and humane piece of topical cinema. “This spry, sharp and relentlessly clever middle finger to censorship is Panahi’s boldest act of defiance to date.” (Time Out) “It tells you more about modern Iran, I think, than you’ll discover on the news.” (Guardian) “This is a delightful surprise, and though it is even more minimalistic than his last two illegal exports, it is also fun.” (Screen International) Well done Berlin. It is fabulous. Come and see. Director: Jafar Panahi Cast: Jafar Panahi Duration: 82 mins Origin: Iran 2015 Certificate: PG Company: New Wave When... 2.00 21 Mon29 7.30 www.odysseypictures.co.uk OBITS 23 Starmen... N ot a good start to the year, any year, and looking like bad news for 69 year olds. Now hoping their soixante-neuf status doesn’t move from flaccid to dead before the year is out. First out, Lemmy made it to 70 by two days and Glenn Frey, a mere junior at 67. They all disappeared within 20 days of each other, politely waiting not to clutter the same day. But it is the two 69ers: David Bowie and Alan Rickman who take this page. There is little more to be said about David Jones from Brixton who changed his name to the evermore disputed pronunciation of ‘Bowie’ and in doing so, changed the face and sound of popular music and street-style and high/low brow fashion for ever. Alan Rickman was hand picked in a rare stroke-of- accidental casting masquerading as casting-genius to play arch villain Hans Gruber in the first vest Die Hard (1988). Then in 1991 to archer villain as the Sheriff of Nottingham, effortlessly upstaging Costner’s Robin Hood Prince of a loathsome Bryan Adams’ wedding song. One beautifully spat line from a bad tempered Sheriff Rickman (roughly remembered): “You’ll do, get washed… and bring your sister.” In the same year came the warm blanket of Truly Madly Deeply. We will show this when the corporate turkeys stop arguing who owns it. The thing about Rickman and Bowie, like John and George, they should never have died before us. They have, so now we carry a memory like our kids’ shells from the shore, forever safe in every bathroom we move in to. DAVID BOWIE 1947 – 2016 “… and the stars look very different today.” 24 RANTS AND PANTS www.odysseypictures.co.uk www.odysseypictures.co.uk ODYSSEY choices Awards 2016... Best Screenplay: Aaron Sorkin for Steve Jobs Coen Brothers & Matt Charman for Bridge of Spies Best Actor: Michael Fassbender for Steve Jobs Tom Hanks (understated and not wrestling Mark Rylance for the screen) for Bridge of Spies Everybody doing retakes of brutal ODYSSEY CHOICES RANTS AND PANTS scenes and trying to perform in bitter, unforgiving, icy, wet tundra. For The Revenant Best Film: Steve Jobs Bridge of Spies Best Foreign Language: Wild Tales (raucous) Theeb (serious) Best Twist: The Gift Ex Machina Rex Eleven Year Favourites: Everything is Illuminated Bombón: El Perro The Band’s Visit A Very Long Engagement The Diving Bell and The Butterfly Tell No One The Secret in Their Eyes Untouchable Calvary Of Time and the City Wild Tales sOME REX FAVOURITES (11 years) Wild Tales Bridge Of Spies Mr Holmes Ex Machina 25 The Gift Everything Is Illuminated Calvary Tell No One Bombón: El Perro The Diving Bell and The Butterfly The Band’s Visit The Secret In Their Eyes Of Time And The City A Very Long Engagement Steve Jobs SELECTED NOMINEES... William Young William Young (1876) Creative(1876) Tailoring Creative Tailoring Unique Unique Everything Everything in in wewe do do Made to Measure Tailoring Made to Measure Tailoring a a Bespoke service for Bespoke Groom Mother Bride W E B & G R A P H I C D E S I G N Gentlemen and Ladies service service for the Gift vouchers available for theWeddings Business Evening wear Weekend of the Open Tuesday 9.00am-5.30pm Open Tuesdayto to Saturday Saturday 9.30am-5.30pm Locations : London,Berkhamsted, Berkhamsted, Leighton Buzzard Locations : London, Leighton Buzzard Tel: 01442 859034 Tel: 01442 859034 www.williamyoung1876.com www.williamyoung1876.com W W W. D E S I G N H O U S E S TA L B A N S . C O M 6 S T. P E T E R ’ S S T R E E T, S T. A L B A N S , H E R T S , A L 1 3 L F. 01727 837 533 ♥ Roman Holiday Sun 14th February 6pm
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