Wednesday, 27 May 2026

A question of attribution: "Power Ballad"


The latest of director John Carney's Films About Music - striking up the band where 2006's Once, 2013's Begin Again and 2016's Sing Street left off - Power Ballad hinges on the ever-thorny matter of attribution. After one reception gig, Rick (Paul Rudd), the American lead singer of Dublin's most regrettably named wedding band The Bride and Groove, crosses paths with Danny Wilson (Nick Jonas), a former boybander recording tracks for an eagerly awaited solo project. The pair jam, drink, get stoned, jam some more - Carney has always been good on how songs get written - and eventually work up the basis of what becomes "How To Write A Song Without You", a soaring love song that is to this movie what the once-ubiquitous "Falling Slowly" was to Once. (Translation: you better like it, because you'll be hearing a lot of it, possibly even outside of the multiplex.) Coming under sudden pressure from his label, who want a big hit single with which to launch the album, Danny runs - and arguably runs off - with the riffs Rick gave him, something the latter party only becomes aware of after "How To Write A Song" tops the Billboard chart and becomes a global smash. Conspicuously absent from the song's Spotify listing: any co-writer credit. At the heart of the film, then, are questions that seem altogether more urgent in the era of AI-assisted chart breakers: what if a song you helped to write made no money for you and a lot of money for somebody else? Furthermore, what if that song began following you around like the ghost of your own musical career?

It's quite the hook, but then Carney has thus far succeeded in turning riffs on song into a noteworthy directorial career: Once's Oscar-winning pavement poetry was followed by the starrier record-business chicanery of Begin Again, the teenage kicks of Sing Street and the lo-fi DIY charms of the post-lockdown Flora and Son. Hitting the road once more - with a film that hops between Dublin, where Rick resides with his wife and teenage daughter, and L.A., where Danny is based - Carney here reteams with Gary Clark, the singer-songwriter who's provided the (very credible) songs for this director's last few films, and who Eighties pop kids may remember as the behatted frontman of the band called Danny Wilson. (Appropriately, for a film centred on due credit, Carney cues up that group's biggest hit "Mary's Prayer" in one bar scene.) The story being told here has enough granular specificity to make one wonder if it was inspired by something Clark imparted to Carney, whether something that happened to him directly or to a musician he knows - though the script credit, as it turns out, goes to co-stars Rudd and Peter McDonald. Possibly Power Ballad was inspired by a broader truth: that there are now a lot of songs streaming around us, and a lot of songs streaming around us that sound naggingly like other songs, an obvious source of tension and aggravation if you feel your big musical idea has provided the crucial leg-up for a million-selling megahit. (Ask Ed Sheeran and the Marvin Gaye estate.) What particularly hurts here is that Rick feels he had to give up his rockstar dreams in order to settle down: everybody finally knows a song that he's written - but not that he's written it, so it also becomes a matter of bruised ego and wounded pride.

What's crucial is that, between them, Carney, Rudd and McDonald succeed in breaking this idea down into amusing scenes and characters: Power Ballad is that too-rare thing, a genuinely funny live-action comedy. Carney gets a lot from his equivalent of session singers, ushered up to the microphone from the supporting cast: McDonald is good value as Rick's rough-edged bachelor bandmate, and Beth Fallon is a lot of fun as Rick's droll daughter Aja (lol), who insists modern women don't want love songs so much as they want revenge. The direction, however, is at its surest around the two leads. It would be very easy to imagine some version of Power Ballad where Rick turns curdled and resentful - he already appears more than faintly obsessive in pursuing Danny back to L.A. - but no, he remains recognisably Rudd-like: sweet, funny, boyish. Jonas's Danny, too, could have easily been reframed as a strutting Timberlake, but this performance knows this character has got something wrong; Jonas plays the entire second half as a kid who's got his hand caught in the showbusiness cookie jar. We're left, then, with two men who, rather than sit down and talk something out between them, elect to take the circuitous route - and who eventually find themselves nitpicking this song's meaning, rather than addressing the more pressing slight and hurt. This is quite a funny idea in itself: antagonists who, even when riled up, still quite like one another, and may even indeed admire one another. Only the final reels betray the one limitation here: it's all a bit middle of the road, an ode to accepting your lot in life. (Call it the Danny Wilson effect.) But Carney gives us a stirring rendition of that particular song, nevertheless - and the kind of peppy, buoying crowdpleaser that, in the context of the modern multiplex, presents as something of a lost artform.

Power Ballad opens in cinemas nationwide Friday.

From the archive: "Bullet in the Head"


Although reputationally overshadowed by 1989's The Killer and 1992's Hard Boiled, 1990's Bullet in the Head remains the most ambitious film made by John Woo before the director's turn-of-the-millennium Hollywood relocation. Starting out as an American Graffiti/Big Wednesday-like teen reminiscence, it gradually segues into a large-scale, widescreen period piece before concluding as homecoming drama: The Deer Hunter would be the obvious Western reference point, although Bullet proves a far less problematic landmark. After killing a gang boss, three boyhood friends (Tony Leung, Jackie Cheung and Waise Lee) are forced to swap the frying pan of Hong Kong's 1967 riots for the fire of Vietnam, where they find the independence movement blowing up. Realising that lawlessness is the norm, the trio turn their hands to profiteering, taking up with a mercenary in a white suit (Simon Yam) only to eventually find themselves caught behind enemy lines, their friendships fraying under pressure. The gear changes that result aren't as smooth as those in Woo's 'straight' action movies, and the brothers-in-arms homoeroticism is absurdly overstated in places: two of the boys share a pregnant moment in a nightclub toilet, played out to the strains of "I'm a Believer". But of all Woo's Hong Kong films, this is the one that most suggested he wanted to work for an American paymaster, or at least move in the same circles as his American contemporaries: there are varyingly subtle nods towards Rebel Without A Cause, Mean Streets and The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, to spot but three. It's sincere in that desire, at least: however knowing and referential the filmmaking gets, and however much one prison-camp sequence borders on revisionist wish fulfilment, the movie is performed without a single flicker of irony - it pre-dates Tarantino - and Woo stages the gunplay and pyrotechnics with his customary elan.

(November 2008)

Bullet in the Head returns to selected cinemas from Friday, ahead of a limited edition Blu-ray release on June 22.

Tuesday, 26 May 2026

On demand: "Hustle"


Overseen by Robert Aldrich in the midst of his late, great Seventies run, 1975's
Hustle is a down-and-dirty Klute variant centred on an unlikely romantic pairing. Burt Reynolds is the all-American Phil Gaines, a lieutenant with the LAPD; Catherine Deneuve the French call girl with whom he trysts after hours. (The original tagline? "They're hot." Simpler times.) The pair's arrangement is complicated after the body of a teenage girl washes up on the Pacific shore, her stomach loaded with barbiturates and semen; the official verdict is suicide, but that gets challenged after the cops find a photo of the deceased with one of Deneuve's wealthier clients. As the investigation proceeds, Aldrich - working from Steve Shagan's script - steps back and makes the movie far more about these characters than it finally is about the case. Among a roster of compromised or otherwise complicated supporting characters, whole scenes are turned over to the dead girl's grief-wracked parents (Eileen Brennan and Ben Johnson), mom lapsing into drink, her husband into impotent rage. Round about the time Reynolds and partner Paul Winfield themselves get pie-eyed after an especially tough day at the stationhouse, riffing on Moby Dick and the search for the great white whale, we realise something else is going on here, altogether more existential.

To be fair, Hustle doesn't present as unduly philosophical. What the film actually looks like is a lodestone for a lot of mid-Seventies telly, including Columbo and The Rockford Files: a moustache-less Reynolds, at his most relaxed and likable, seems to be doing a variant of what James Garner was doing in the latter, albeit with the freedoms of an R certificate. Yet Aldrich keeps expanding the scope of the film's own inquiry, pushing beyond the established parameters of the police procedural to pursue a broader idea of L.A. as a town of seekers and searchers, where the hustle that's meant to reel in what you want is often the very thing that gets between you and your dreams - and which, if you're not careful, may finally cost you your life. You spy it most clearly in Aldrich's resonant use of movies: Reynolds takes Deneuve to see the then-voguish A Man And A Woman, which is at least a step up from the porno Reynolds shows the Johnson character, starring the latter's own daughter. We're only a few years away from Taxi Driver and Hardcore, where the death of dreams would be represented by a disillusion with the moving picture itself. With its focus on sex work, stray moments of era-specific racism and sexism, and one very tricky love scene between the leads, it now looks decidedly rough-edged, but Hustle nevertheless holds up as one of the few American films of its time to appear at least as profound as it is sleazy. If you were searching for an example of how the 1970s studio system had been geared to manufacture movies for grown-ups, Aldrich's film would absolutely fit the bill: the dead giveaway is that the Deneuve who'd spent the previous decade working with Polanski, Buñuel and Melville doesn't seem at all out of place in this milieu.

Hustle is available to rent via YouTube.

The goon show: "Athiradi"


The Malayalam campus comedy Athiradi could well be the first feelgood movie in existence to open with a fatal stampede at a rock concert: here's a film that, much like its young hero, learns how to take even disastrous events in its stride. College freshman Samkutty (Basil Joseph, the amiable beta of 2024's Guruvayoor Ambalanadayil) enrolls with limited braincells under what looks alarmingly like the beginnings of a mullet, and precisely zero game around the opposite sex; his very voice sounds like it's attempting to break again. Still, he's a young man with a plan, and the plan is to revive the campus's annual music festival - an event that, as that prologue illustrates, turned deadly five years earlier, when his older brother Joppan (Vishnu Agasthya) was running things and watched on in horror as his sweetheart was trampled underfoot. Joppan has been in a depressive funk ever since, so Samkutty's quest isn't just to install himself as the big man on campus, but to restore both family honour and his brother's mojo. What's unusual is that, for a long while, the comedy in debutant writer/director Arun Anirudhan's film is more administrative than zany, a matter of Samkutty petitioning the relevant authorities in the hope of getting his way. This, it's implied, will be the making of this particular civil engineering student: first he will build it and then, he hopes, people will come. Those of us watching on from the cheap seats can only hope his festival will prove more Field Day than Fyre.

Although it appears to have drawn college-age audiences keen to see an onscreen institution of higher education that looks not unlike their own, Athiradi isn't an especially surprising comedy. We know the girl Samkutty wants, because he makes eyes at fellow freshman Swathi (Riya Shibu, the Delulu of last year's Sarvam Maya) during initiation, and we're pretty sure the festival will go ahead in some form, so all that's left is to guess what the obstacles will be, when they'll appear and how our guy will overcome them. The big intermission twist, emerging from a mass brawl on the outskirts of town, merely carries the film back in the direction of 2024's Fahadh Faasil hit Aavesham. Athiradi isn't as funny as that predecent, but that's not a bad comic model for a young writer-director, nor for a good night's entertainment, and the new movie shares at least two winning qualities with its protagonist: dogged persistence and geniality. You're quite happy to sit there as its foolish schemes unravel and it makes its silly jokes. Early on, we hear gossip that Samkutty has even petitioned the local bishop to bring the festival back - and Anirudhan duly shoots the cutaway that confirms this unholy intervention, complete with befuddled priest; running gags involve the unhip marble company brought on board as festival sponsors, and a synchronised dance troupe who take the form of an angry mob but toss their weapons so as to bust moves rather than heads. (I was going to say Athiradi works from a more realistic base than Aavesham, which had the wackiness of a live-action cartoon, but then I remembered that that mass brawl also involves a malfunctioning robot from the school's science department. Athiradi is very much a comedy for anybody who believes there should be more malfunctioning robots in cinema.) The patchwork second half takes a turn for the postmodern, as the students and their gangster foe (Tovino Thomas) vie for control of Vineeth Sreenivasan, the real-life entertainer (playing himself) who serves as the most illustrious of in-jokes. (For Western readers: imagine Daniel O'Donnell caught up in a Guy Ritchie caper.) And while the finale, in which we sense Samkutty finally becoming a man, hinges on a concrete squirt gun we've previously seen fail in first-reel R&D functioning at long last - there may well be a Freudian reading - Anirudhan also pulls off something more heartfelt involving the festival logo. A minor event in the release calendar, Athiradi is not unlike one of those festivals where everyone behind the scenes gives of their best while the featured artists play the hits: no great surprises, all told, but everyone goes home alive and satisfied - and a cinema ticket is still far better value than a three-day pass. No scam.

Athiradi is now playing in selected cinemas.

Saturday, 23 May 2026

For what it's worth...




UK box office Top Ten (for the weekend of May 15-17, 2026):

1 (2) Michael (12A)
2 (1) The Devil Wears Prada 2 (12A)
3 (3) The Sheep Detectives (PG)
4 (new) Obsession (18)
5 (5) Mortal Kombat II (15)
6 (re) Top Gun (12A) ***
7 (new) The Christophers (15) ***
8 (6) The Super Mario Galaxy Movie (PG)
9 (re) Shrek (U) ***
10 (new) Athiradi (12A) ***

(source: BFI)

My top five:
1. Hen


DVD/Blu-Ray/Download top ten: 

1 (new) Project Hail Mary (12) ***
2 (9) "Wuthering Heights" (15)
3 (2) Ready or Not 2: Here I Come (15)
4 (6) Hoppers (U) ****
5 (3) Avatar: Fire and Ash (12) ***
6 (7) G.O.A.T. (PG)
7 (36) Cold Storage (15) ****
8 (4) Shelter (15)
9 (1) Scream 7 (18)
10 (12) Wicked: For Good (PG)


My top five: 
1. Cold Storage


Top five films on terrestrial TV this week:
1. Some Like It Hot [above] (Sunday, BBC Two, 2.15pm)
2. What's Up, Doc? (Sunday, BBC Two, 12.45pm)
3. Funny Face (Saturday, BBC Two, 10.35am)
4. Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret (Holiday Monday, BBC Two, 10pm)
5. Love & Mercy (Friday, BBC Two, 11pm)

"Diabolic" (Guardian 21/05/26)


Diabolic
**

Dir: Daniel J. Phillips. With: Elizabeth Cullen, John Kim, Mia Challis, Luca Sardelis. 95 mins. Cert: 15

Though it features few recognisable faces, this Oz-shot, US-set indie horror displays a core competency that gets it some of the way to where it’s heading – only to collapse, come the final reels, into the usual hacky manoeuvres. Ten years after fleeing a fundamentalist branch of the Latter-Day Saints, snub-nosed artist heroine Elise (Elizabeth Cullen) has started shunning the advances of boyfriend Adam (John Kim), instead obsessively digging holes in the couple’s back garden and trashing the living room in the middle of the night. (You don’t want to see what she does to a neighbour’s poor dog.) Could it have something to do with the grimy cellar door she feels compelled to paint, or the traumatic baptism we witness in a pre-title sequence? What are the chances?

For somewhere between half and two-thirds of its running time, we’re watching a diagnostic case study. Elise and close pals return to Mormon country – more specifically, the in-no-way ironically named hamlet of Haventon – to undergo a regression therapy involving a local ayahuasca variant; this will strike rational onlookers as ill-advised even before an actual cellar door is uncovered outside the venue and everybody starts throwing up. (Cue the especially dreadful line: “She must have torn internally.”) Thereafter, flashbacks reveal what’s been suppressed or concealed: the younger Elise’s growing closeness to bishop’s daughter Clara (Luca Sardelis) would seem to indicate our girl isn’t possessed, merely bi.

The results prove middling at best, hardly the KO religious conversion therapy deserves and never the campy scream this set-up might have licensed. Cinematographer Michael Tessari gives matters a wintry, low-lit, persuasively un-Australian look, and gathers the odd suggestive image, like a dream sequence scattering of petals. More of that delicacy would have done Diabolic a world of good, but co-writer/director Daniel J. Phillips heads the other way, cranking up the soundtrack’s parping and the underlying Mormonphobia: supporting players go decidedly heavy on the repression and hysteria. Seasoned soap fans will spot Dennis Coard, formerly Pippa Ross’s foursquare second husband Michael on Home and Away, among the church elders. Never mind Elise, what’s got into him?

Diabolic is available to rent via Prime Video and other digital platforms from Monday 25. 

Thursday, 21 May 2026

Chicken run: "Hen"


Here's an unexpected comeback. The writer-director György Pálfi emerged at the turn of the century as the mad professor of Hungarian cinema, compiling one-of-a-kind films from a variety of diverse and unusual angles. 2002's Hukkle, a U-rated symphony of the natural world, was followed by the raw meat of 2006's Taxidermia, a decidedly 18-rated study of human flesh and blood that repelled almost as many spectators as it compelled. Two decades on, Pálfi returns with - and no, I swear I'm not making this up - a movie shot largely from the perspective of an errant chicken. The 15-rated Hen splits the difference between this unique filmmaker's breakthrough works: the singular path it follows allows us to see, on one side, the wonders of nature and, on the other, the horrors of the human sphere. Opening on a tight close-up of creation - an egg emerging from a cloaca - it then plunges us into the ever-staggering processes of factory farming. The egg is warmed, and a chick eventually breaks out; the chick is funnelled through slides and chutes and into a heavily crowded barn, where she grows up. Our heroine is, as it were, a black sheep, her inky colouration distinguishing her from the mass of Easter-yellow and snow-white birds she's farmed with; she will, indeed, be rejected from this process for being different, less saleable, at which point Hen begins to assume an air of the sociopolitical. Initially earmarked for inclusion in a trucker's soup, she escapes at a service station, and thereafter proceeds to having marvellous, sometimes alarming adventures along an especially sunsoaked stretch of the Greek coast. For long stretches, Hen resembles a live-action version of those animations we show our young, or an ultra-leftfield item of the Incredible Journey/Homeward Bound/Babe school; you may at an early point expect the protagonist to start clucking with the voice of a Kate McKinnon or an Olivia Colman.

But no, because this is an actual hen - beady of eye, scarlet of wattle - albeit one who's been granted the kind of close-ups typically reserved for actresses with L'Oréal contracts. Furthermore, she's an actual hen who's been loosed on the real world, where - even after leaving behind the factory-farming environment - death lurks around every other corner. A riotous early setpiece, likely to stand among the summer's best, answers the age-old question of why the chicken crossed the road, in this case a perilously busy carriageway: she was being pursued by a ravenous fox. (Here we should credit the three "stunt chickens" listed in the closing credits, named as Jackie 1, 2 and 3.) Perhaps Pálfi's film is more readily compared to 1998's Babe: Pig in the City, a euphemistic way of warning animal lovers to approach with some degree of caution: you will, I think, spend much of Hen praying for a happy ending in the form of a "no animals were harmed" disclaimer. (Spoiler alert: there is one.) It's not just that the hen has to dodge that fox and a no less hungry-looking hawk (introduced polishing off a fieldmouse without much in the way of contrition); she will also be snatched up at one point in the jaws of a hound and carried right back into the hands of those pesky humans, always plotting and scheming, quick to anger, invariably peckish. Here, Hen crosses paths with the methodology of the recent EO (after Bresson, about a donkey), Gunda (about a pig) and Cow (about a cow): we're looking at humankind through the eyes of one of those poor, unfortunate creatures obliged to share a planet, or just a backyard, with humankind. To borrow a Manny Farberism that sort of fits the bill, those earlier works were white elephant movies, films in which a director bore down on their animal subjects with the intention of Saying Something Despairingly Profound about the world these beasts were led through, kicking and squealing.

Led instead by Pálfi's far lighter touch, Hen reveals itself as a prime instance of termite art, scratching around at ground level with its subject, and seeing what truths these talons scuff up. Although this chicken's legs carry her within touching distance of a prominent theme in contemporary European cinema - and although her eyes appear to register their fair share of human folly - Hen feels like another of this director's experiments rather than any didactic statement, seizing the opportunity to see how far one might take a chicken for a walk. As an experiment, Hen proves surprisingly successful and engaging. Even amid its occasional dramatic lulls - such as a first-half diversion into a freer-range form of farming - the eye is drawn by Pálfi's virtuosic choices: layering Ravel's "Bolero" over footage of the hen clucking around a yard, allowing the hen to waddle into the bedroom of a child watching a documentary about dinosaurs (thereby presenting our heroine with a moving cave painting of her ancestors), a makeover sequence that demonstrates - after a lot of evidence to the contrary - just how hospitable we humans can be at our best. From around the halfway point, Pálfi and co-writer/wife Zsófia Ruttkay offer us two films for the price of one: the chicken's journey, and a drama about those humans pushed into the background. (There are, believe it or not, points where the two stories intersect, and we're led to wonder whether this chicken can pull a Lassie Come Home and save the day. But, again, no: she's just hen.) What's upfront, a feat of staging and editing, is all the more remarkable for the unified and expressive-seeming performance Pálfi has coaxed out of the eight (count 'em) chickens credited as playing the lead role: this, truly, is the Belmondo of birds, climbing, clambering, strutting and posing, taking a delight in her own freedom, and even throwing herself into a late-breaking romance with a brooding cock called Titan. A question: just how much birdseed did Pálfi get through here?

Hen opens in selected cinemas from tomorrow.