Tuesday 24th June 2025
Blog Page 1348

Debate: Should Britain leave the EU?

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YES

Tom Posa

In May 2013, the European Union passed rules mandating that olive oil put on tables in restaurants must now be placed in specially designated bottles and labelled in line with food standards legislation. This is just one example of the overbearing technocracy that the EU is imposing on member states. Statistics from the House of Commons Library suggest that the percentage of laws now set in the country from Brussels has increased from 9.1% in 2005 to 15% in 2010. We ought to take seriously claims from senior European politicians that we are heading towards a United States of Europe. These are not the views of an obscure low-profile European politician – this was Angela Merkel speaking in 2011.

We need to reassert our preeminence on determining national laws which apply to Britain and its people. The EU actively undermines the democracy of this country by standing against the ability of our parliament and our citizens to shape our own laws. This is not just a problem with the fact that EU laws and regulations immediately overrule those set in Westminster – institutions such as the European Court of Justice now overrule British judges and represent the highest appeal in our legal system. It is not clear why exactly we think that judges from Lithuania, Finland or Romania are better at administering legal judgements in this country than a British judge.

The key arguments deployed in favour of continued membership of the Union include that it maintains peace in Europe, that we have intrinsic cultural links to Europe, that the economic harms of leaving outweigh the benefits, and that since we would remain subject to some regulations from Brussels, we should have a say in making them. The EU may have maintained peace in Europe in the past, but the idea that in 2014, the UK would go to war with France, Germany, or Italy if we left the EU is farcical. Equally, our cultural links with Europe will not fall away if we leave the Union. It is fair to assume that reasonably liberal migration laws would continue (but without the current prejudice shown to non-EU migrants), and that tourists and citizens will continue to flow in both directions. Our ties with the USA, Canada or Australia have not been undermined by our membership – nor would ours with Europe were we to leave. On the economic front, we need only look at Iain Mansfield’s research proposal – which won him a Brexit award – to see an economic upside of £1.3 billion to our GDP. The false claims of lost trade and productivity do not translate into reality.

Finally, the idea of being continually subject to EU regulations is frequently trotted out in favour of membership. Yes, those companies which continue to trade with EU members will be subject to legislation. However, now they can chose between paying a higher cost of compliance in transactions with Europe, or trading with other countries where compliance costs are lower. This can only benefit us economically. And I ask you – when the EU is preoccupied with questions such as how high a hairdresser’s heel is, or how much in subsidies we should pay to cows in rural France, why should we continue to waste our time, money and political talent in this enterprise?

NO

Eleanor Newis

There’s been a lot of hot air floating around regarding Britain’s EU membership in recent times. In reality, despite the pro-Europe debate being severely handicapped by the continued presence of Nick Clegg, the argument for staying in the EU is actually very sensible.

The idea proposed by many Eurosceptics that Britain could have an ‘amicable divorce’ from the EU and make like Norway and Switzerland is nothing but a pipe dream. Marit Warncke, head of Bergen’s chamber of commerce said in 2012, “We are the most obedient of EU members, rapidly implementing directives to the letter, yet we have no say in them.” Norway contributes €340 million a year to the EU, without having membership. Switzerland, has actually reviewed all its parliamentary bills for their EU conformity since 1988.

Apart from this, the ‘amicable di- vorce’ idea is completely bogus, even if Britain declared that the marriage was loveless from the start and left, its exports would still be subject to EU laws. All export tariffs would still apply, and would have to meet EU production standards – only then, Britain would have no say in them. The impact on trade would be considerable – Farage’s “We’re Britain, we can stand out or own two feet” argument is just too idealistic. The EU is the UK’s main trading partner, worth more than £400bn a year – 52% of the total trade in goods and services. So, if we don’t have a say in any of those tariffs, a good portion of our trade will be impacted by laws we aren’t making.

UKIP’s nationalism is attractive to many, and Cameron’s promise of a referendum to many more. But the argument is becoming clouded by issues like immigration. Without turning this into an exposé on immigration laws, I will say that Mr. Farage should be taken with a large plate of salt, and we should all do some research. Any dangers people see in immigration are not down to the EU – they are, like most things that go wrong, the fault of our own elected politicians. The UK is better off economically inside the EU; yes, they are responsible for some pesky anti-tobacco laws (which I am personally quite offended by) and they do have an unfortunate poster boy in Clegg. Yet it remains that Britain simply could not have the economic privileges it currently enjoys without EU membership.

I understand that most people aren’t too bothered about tariff s and export charges – it’s hardly inspiring stuff . But there are other EU successes which are easy to forget, such as the capping of mobile phone roaming charges, and the rejection of ACTA, which would have severely restricted internet freedom. Let’s not forget fi nancial regulation either; without the EU, bankers could still be getting bonuses above 200% of their salaries. Please, please do some googling be- fore you jump on the anti-EU bandwagon. I know it’s becoming fashionable, but like hot pants and see-through stilettos, it really doesn’t make a lot of sense.

Women in media: Does the industry work against them?

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There are numerous events over the next few weeks celebrating the 40th anniversary of co-education at Oxford. It seems bizarre to think that only 40 years ago, other than a few female-only colleges, Oxford was solely open to men. This term, the University is looking at women in the workplace, ranging from law to media, and asking women how their gender has impacted their position within the professional world.

Jesus College was the driving force behind the first of these events which took place on 8th May and was entitled ‘Women in Media’. It was held at the British Academy in London and was open to both current students and alumni. The evening was structured around a panel discussion between four successful women working within the media industry: Broadcaster and novelist Francine Stock; Sunday Times Education Editor Sian Griffiths; weather presenter and meteorologist Kirsty McCabe, and Head of Editorial Partnerships and Special Projects at the BBC World Service Group, Emily Kasriel.

A 2013 survey showed that only one in five solo radio presenters are female, with that figure falling to one in eight during the peak- time breakfast and drive hours. A separate study from the same year, showed that women accounted for just 22% of national news- paper front page by-lines in nine national papers. These statistics were put to the panellists raising the question, why is it still the case that women remain underrepresented in the media?

They started by stating the obvious: women do have pregnancies, which biologically can’t be changed. Because of this, the majority of
them end up taking a break in their career which leaves them at a disadvantage. Kirsty McCabe commented that she worked for the duration of her pregnancy but was hurt by the abuse she received from (predominantly male) viewers, who didn’t like seeing “a pregnant woman on TV”. The comments ranged from, “Get off our TV” to, “I can’t see Wales”. Kirsty seemed confident enough to take this on the chin but felt that others might be more sensitive.

Then there is the period of time when the children are growing up. The panellists agreed it shouldn’t be the case that women still tend to be the ones that step back from their career to look after their children, but it nevertheless is. The general consensus on part–time work was that the workload isn’t lessened; it is rather a case of fitting five days of work into three, which for many women with children just isn’t manageable.

Emily Kasriel felt that during her career women have worked together and there hasn’t been a competitive edge with her colleagues. However, Sian Griffiths contradicted this believing that older women do feel a threat from the ‘younger models’ entering the industry, fearing that they might lose their jobs. The women collectively claimed that when we read about people who have retired “to spend more time with their families” it is more likely that they have been paid off because a younger option has taken over.

Nevertheless, they made it sound painstakingly difficult to enter this industry. This is somewhat disheartening. Though the occasional ‘younger model’ will manage to obtain a position, for the most part it is extremely tough for women to be successful in media. The fact of the matter is, long-standing employees don’t want to give up their jobs. This leaves the question, how can these statistics change if aspiring women face an impossible task when trying to get their foot through the door?

 

 

 

Review: Man of Mode

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The Man of Mode is perhaps not the most well-known play that Oxford has ever seen, but George Etherege’s Restoration comedy is a pleasing two and a half hours of theatre nonetheless, particularly so in the setting of Univ’s Master’s Garden, where a lovely little marquee had been set up to keep the chill from getting to the audience members too much. Even more charming is the change of era from the 17th century to the 1920s, and the costume department (if there is such a thing for a garden play) must be commended on a delightful array of outfits which fit the bill perfectly.

This is not to say that the production is entirely faultless, however. A bit of jitteriness with the script, and a tendency to overact and read the lines without much mind towards meaning does both cloud comprehension and make attention waver. Some of the “bit parts” are a touch weak, and the transitions between scenes, despite the good use which was made of the many entrances to the marquee, could be a bit clunky.

On a brighter note, the star of the show was without doubt Matthew Robson, playing the dandy Sir Fopling Flutter. His prancing movements and general cavorting (including a spritely jig and a tremendous burst of ham-singing) were a joy, and the scenes were invigorated by his presence. Another brilliant comic turn came in the form of Old Bellair, played by Joseph Prentice, whose obsession with his son’s love interest and sudden attempts to hide it were captured superbly.

The Man of Mode did have a capable and rather large cast, headed by the reprobate ladies’ man Dorimant (Will Yeldham), but another performance which stood out from the rest was Imogen Hamilton-Jones as Harriet Woodville, the young lady who becomes the match for Yeldham’s character in the final scene. Her accent, demeanour and posture were all entirely convincing, and she was perhaps the easiest member of the cast to place in a 1920s setting in terms of engaging with the sense of her lines and pairing them with a well thought out portrayal of character.

All in all, the performance was not without its lukewarm lows, but as the flappers settled after a well-executed and suitably cheering Charleston to close the show, it was with a warm heart, and not just a warm pair of feet, with which the audience left the cosy marquee. It was a successfully amusing evening’s entertainment, and in its role as a light-hearted garden play, The Man of Mode did its job well.

Review: Timon of Athens

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This week the Magdalen Players attempted to rescue Timon of Athens, notoriously regarded as one of Shakespeare’s most difficult works, from its obscurity in an atmospheric late night performance. A collaboration between Shakespeare and Thomas Middleton, the play is riddled with difficulties from textual tension between the two dramatists, to archetypal, one dimensional characters and digressive subplots. It follows the fortunes of overly generous patron of the arts, Timon, in Ancient Greece as his excess and indulgence leads to misanthropy and debt.

In the programme Gabriel Rolfe outlines his directorial vision, which foregrounds the play’s didacticism to present “a different breed of tragedy in its struggle, and arguably its failure, to achieve ‘life’.” The setting in the shadowy, dark wood panelled Magdalen hall is reminiscent of this “different breed of tragedy” which would have taken place before the birth of theatres in the homes of the aristocracy. He reverses the trend among recent performances, which have shifted the play to modern settings like the City or Wall Street, to evoke the medieval morality play in a “parable-like simplicity”.

The choice to stage the play inside the hall is the most successful aspect of the performance. On entering the candle-lit room each audience member receives a glass of prosecco from the circulating waiters and gradually take their seats around the centrally situated stage. The ambiguously named ‘banquet food’ for which you fork out an extra four-fifty turns out to be a strange mix of after eights, baklava, olives, and pineapples (though perhaps these latter are more for decoration since there is no way to eat them). The players mingle amongst the audience, completely collapsing the fourth wall to breed anticipation for the performance. They wear a eclectic mixture of clothing from velvet cloaks conveying decadent luxury, to 1920s dresses reflecting the Gatsby-ian theme of vacuity in society. When it does begin I miss the first few lines amongst the chattering of the audience and as a result struggle to follow the first scene. However, Dina Tsesarsky gives an interesting performance as the painter conveying an almost manic artistry as she smudges the murky portrait with her hands. 

Rolfe makes full use of the magnificent space, having Timon silhouetted by the projector in a captivating entrance. The players take their positions at the head table in a raucous feast scene which will form a tripartite structure in the play. In the reversal of Timon’s fortunes he invites the same shallow and flattering guests to dine at an empty table after they have refused to help him, and in the closing moments of the play we are given a glimpse of the first scene repeating itself reflecting the last lines to “Make war breed peace, make peace stint war, make each/ Prescribe to other as each other’s leech.” It is an effective and original way to portray the cyclical nature of human folly. 

Alive Rivers playing Timandra is excellent, investing the haughty courtesan with a fragility that takes her beyond being a stock character to show that she is to be pitied for being “a slave to her obsession with money”. In one of the most climactic scenes, Timon has withdrawn from society to live alone in a cave hoarding his gold. Timandra and Alcibiadies visit him and when throws his gold on the ground, she scrabbles desperately on the floor to pick up the pebbles which represent money. Simon Palfrey writes of the character of Timon that he suggests how “Depth is an illusion; inwardness no more than a raging soliloquy”. Tom Dowling, who had given a strong performance up until Timon’s break down, takes “raging” too much to heart. He attempts to portray madness simply by shouting for twenty minutes, and as a result much of his monologues are drowned out. It’s evocative and intense to watch, but ultimately misses something of the play. 

The Magdalen Players give a hit and miss performance of this demanding play. The director had recognised that there is an “uncertainty, or even impossibility, of the play’s own dramatic potential” and despite the experience of the performance being a novel one, there is an “uncertainty” about whether they carry it off. 

 

Preview: Frankenstein

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Harley Viveash’s brave version of Frankenstein has been made more difficult by the complete transformation it has un- dergone, being set for the first time entirely in the modern day. This is a highly intelligent decision which pays off. There are several reasons why Frankenstein adapts so well to modern life. As the cast explained, we live in an age where scientific progress is such that the creation of human life from scratch no longer seems a far-off dystopian reality. Frankenstein’s creation of his creature is now a possibility and that makes it all the more powerful.

The production is a devised play; thus the cast have created the entire script from scratch. This is a risky strategy, but the result is impressive. As the cast explained, something like death is not a plot device in their production. The strangulation of Frankenstein’s brother William is not a device to reintroduce the monster, but a real event with emotional consequences. This was poignantly shown in one of the scenes I previewed where Victor’s mother, replacing his father in one of the casts’ major and best changes to the origianl novel and played beautifully by Lamorna Ash delivers her son’s eulogy. This is part of the director’s clever reinterpretation of the play to focus more on the people of Frankenstein, not just the Gothic concept.

The ‘monster’ is always the most intriguing character in any production of Frankenstein, and Nick Finerty is excellent in the role. Although the production strips away the out- wardly monstrous, Finerty’s voice is mesmerising. It has a demonic quality, mixed with an entirely apt social awkwardness.

Frankenstein at the O’Reilly is original, creative and has a talented cast. If you wanted the tired format of Gothic castles and lumbering monsters, you won’t enjoy this production. But, if you want a highly intelligent, modern and forward-thinking production, this is one to watch.

Review: Father God

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Religious satire has long been a rich source of material for comedians; one inevitably thinks of Monty Python’s Life of Brian or Mitchell and Webb’s Evil Vicar sketch. It is this vein that Mansfield student Tasha Dhanraj has attempted to tap with her new comedy Father God, a hectic, almost farcical, three-person piece concerning the divine trinity and its exasperation with humanity, performed at various locations within Mansfield.

The play sprints through both Testaments from the perspective of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Tom Barnett played the almighty God, affecting a Pacino-esque Manhattan drawl and growing steadily more irate with the mind-numbingly stupid activities of us here on planet Earth. Reuben Adams played a moping, adolescent Jesus who frequently sulks over his lack of responsibility, much to the annoyance of his shrill sister, Holly (Holy Spirit, you see?), played by Helen Harvey. A bright red telephone provided the conduit to Earth, and it was through this that we learn of mankind’s progression, from Cain and Abel to the nativity itself.

The writing is genuinely funny and notably intelligent. A scene in which God and Jesus argue over the Ten Commandments (originally the Fourteen Instructions apparently) was particularly memorable. However, the most common font for humour were the conversations on the bright red hotline to humanity from which we hear only one side. It was here that we learn of Moses’ infantile tantrums (“Put him in a basket in a river and the waves will rock him to sleep”, Jesus advises), Joseph’s technicolour dreamcoat (“I don’t care how many colours there are!”, snaps the Holy Spirit), and Jonah’s unfortunate exploits (“I don’t believe it, he’s got himself stuck where?”, moans the Father).

Unfortunately, the originality and quality of the script was let down by some nondescript performances. Adams’ Jesus was painfully wooden; although his sullen teenage attitude is convincing, any more sophisticated characterisation seems beyond him. Harvey’s Holy Spirit was disappointingly shallow, her range of emotion wavering between irritatingly shrill discontent and annoyingly loud unhappiness, with only occasional glimmers of comic timing.

Barnett, on the other hand, with his accomplished New York accent was a joy. His exasperation was thoroughly enjoyable and he delivers the play’s funniest line with laudable panache: “Omniscient, omnipotent, omni-pissed-off, that’s what I am!”. He was the only one of the three who truly did justice to Dhanraj’s writ- ing, confidently expressing himself without fear of mistake.

Despite two questionable performances, Father God was a commendable production. At only 40 minutes long, Dhanraj’s gentle satire was a delectable treat, and Barnett’s God will live long in the memory. 

Review: Into The Woods

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I had heard good things about Into the Woods, and was keen to go and see the first musical I’ve seen in a long, long time. Arriving in the flash Pichette Auditorium at Pembroke, I was firstly disappointed by a fairly naff set. Nevertheless, I told myself it would get better, and considering the subject matter was a series of fairy-tales, the production could be forgiven for the childish feel of the set.

Unfortunately, I was distinctly unimpressed by the first twenty minutes of the show. No one really seemed bothered, in particular Cinderella’s stepmother and sisters who weren’t the least bit evil; they merely seemed quite irritated that they had been asked to perform a show that day. For a few isolated characters, this sense of being rather annoyed by the whole affair continued throughout. Thankfully, however, I did begin to enjoy myself when the large cast first ventured “into the woods”. Standing out amongst the characters were the baker and his wife, played by Tommy Siman and Clemi Collett respectively. Siman gave a hilariously understated edge to what could have been extremely dull lines, but still kept a surprisingly moving tone to his performance when misfortune befalls him in the second act. His duet with his weird father (a superb Christian Gilberti) was therefore possibly one of the most heartfelt pieces of music as it demonstrated the emotional side of two characters, who up until this point had only been seen as comic.

Collett’s relationship with Siman was an excellent balance of the comic and the loving, and her singing voice one of the most impressive in the ensemble. With regard to the musical side of the piece, the orchestra were faultless and played beautifully throughout, responding almost always on point to small actions on stage with a pleasing jingle on a xylophone or a bell.

At the end of the first act, I was all but converted, but much of that was due to my (and indeed many of the other audience members’) thinking that it was the end. This was not the case, however, and a lengthy, considerably less comic second half followed. I’m not really sure why Sondheim thought this would be a particularly interesting topic for a musical, as it comes across as rather twee and silly, with Rapunzel shrieking at the top of her voice every ten seconds, for example. In the end, I was bored, but then again many of the actors on stage looked that way too. 

Review: The Wind Rises

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★★★★★
Five Stars

A field of corn stands still, as dawn breaks in the first scene of The Wind Rises. Soon, though, the wind picks up, a dream begins, and so does the story. The eleventh of Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki’s career, it tells the tale of a young boy growing up alongside the simple dream of making planes fly, in the shadow of the Japanese militaristic ambition of the 1920s and 30s. 

It is made up of the same components that have come to be expected from the father and founder of Studio Ghibli, Japan’s world-famous animation studio. Beautiful scenes follow on from each other, as sorrow and humour is drawn out from images in ways that should seemingly be only be possible from live action. Unlike Miyazaki’s previous work, The Wind Rises flows slow, imbued with a sort of languid, pensive beauty that lies in contrast to the rapid action of films such as Spirited Away, or Howl’s Moving Castle. This works though; it is the goals and relationships of the characters that keeps this film going, rather than sequential events. It feels as though Miyazaki has finally, with his last work, been given the space to slow down the pace. 

The subject matter, in which warplanes are designed and made in anticipation of the Second World War, has drawn criticism from audiences both in Japan and abroad. However, it seems as though those accusing Miyazaki of failing to properly condemn the actions of those involved have found focus in the wrong place. The film is not a commentary, but a story – a story about a young man who finds passion in the power of flight.

The narrative demonstrates the amazing ability of the human mind to validate its actions, no matter what the consequences. Provocatively, perhaps, during one dream sequence the hero, Jiro is asked by his mentor Marconi, ‘‘Which would you rather choose, a world with pyramids, or without?’’ This chance to engage with the repercussions of his actions however is passed over by Jiro. He replies simply, ‘‘I want to build beautiful airplanes.’’

The film’s dream sequences see Jiro recognise the disastrous results of the flights taken by the machines he has made. Time after time, planes fall to the ground, becoming grey, lifeless wreckage. The colours and shapes used to represent this destruction bring the mind back to the fallen civilisations seen in Miyazaki’s previous work Castle in the Sky, or Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, where advanced societies are brought low by their quest for power through technology. Here, though a statement is not made on the problems of society, it is made on the overpowering and amazing ability of Jiro, and his colleagues, to reach for a dream no matter the consequences. 

The film is an incredible and powerful way for Miyazaki to finish his career. Beyond the context in which it is placed, it is a touching love story about relationships in the face of overwhelming creative passion. And, although it is stationed in an adult realism that may come as a surprise following works such as My Neighbour Totoro, or Ponyo, it is, simply, about the power of dreams. As one character proclaims, standing on the tip of an airplane wing, soaring over fields of green, ‘‘Yes, this is a dream. The world’s a dream.’’

The Midwich Cuckoos

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The Midwich Cuckoos

Issue 4: Trinity 2014

Model: Suzie Ford (long hair) & Ophelia Rai Lester (short hair)

Photographer & Stylist: Erin Floyd

Assistant: Katie Pangonis

 

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Ophelia wears: ASOS Bandeau Skort Playsuit, ASOS, Exclusive Strappy Skater Dress with Gold Trim, New Look Macy Clutch (white), Lemon Clutch from Accessorize.

Suzie wears: Lavish Alice Cropped Mini Dress, ASOS Dress with Peplum in Floral Jacquard, ASOS Cami Strap Dress with Bar Belt.

 

Review: Godzilla

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★★★☆☆
Three Stars

It is difficult to stifle the childish enthusiasm that grows inside over a film like Godzilla. There is something gloriously gratifying about seeing an enormous lizard surge dramatically from the ocean and lay waste to all before him. Sadly, in this big-budget American remake, made 60 years after Godzilla first rampaged onto the screen in 1954, a giant monster toppling skyscrapers and roaring gratuitously at every opportunity is the film’s only commendable facet.

Bryan Cranston (of Breaking Bad fame) plays Joe Brody, an engineer-turned-conspiracy-nut, whose wife (Juliette Binoche) was killed in a nuclear disaster apparently brought on by an earthquake at Janjira Nuclear Plant in Japan. When he and his despairing son Ford (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), an explosives expert in the US Navy, discover an active facility inside the deserted zone, they realise that (surprise, surprise) Brody was right all along, and the Japanese government are in a film that forgoes the process of inadvertently awakening a MUTO (Massive Unidentified Terrestrial Organism) that has lain dormant for millennia. 

But this is not Godzilla; it is an enormous winged spider-like creature, that subsequently flies off to awaken its female counterpart in Nevada and, you guessed it, provokes the anger of Godzilla, who has been hiding in the Pacific for decades. The subsequent three-way monster battle rages from Japan to Honolulu to Las Vegas to San Francisco, with us puny humans desperately trying to nuke anything that poses a threat.  

The cast is woefully undistinguished, with Cranston supplying the film’s only memorable performance. His endearingly passionate Brody is utterly compelling and the brief scenes in which he and his wife interact are charmingly believable, which only serves to heighten the gut-wrenching sadness of her death. Taylor-Johnson is regrettably miscast as Ford; he seems much more suited to comedy, given his sterling performances in both Kick-Ass films. Ken Wantanabe is underemployed as expert scientist Ichiro Serizawa and Elizabeth Olsen is forgettable as Ford’s anxious wife Elle.

Godzilla is the unquestionable star. He is strikingly impressive, as are his alien-looking MUTO adversaries. The film’s slow build-up to the first MUTO’s appearance is masterfully done, helped by Cranston’s excellence and Alexandre Desplat’s thunderously ominous score. There are shades of Guillermo del Toro’s Pacific Rim about the various monster battles throughout, and although their lack of imagination occasionally crystallises into repetitiveness, they are undeniably exhilarating nonetheless. 

Disappointingly, the 2014 Godzilla lacks any of the political relevance of its Japanese original. 1954 Godzilla was a pertinent metaphor for the atomic bombs that had devastated Hiroshima and Nagasaki just 9 years earlier; the destruction Godzilla caused was a reflection of the devastation of August 1945 and the film sounded a cautionary note about the development of nuclear power.

This version, despite the opening sequence’s ill-disguised similarities to the Fukushima incident in March 2011, is comparatively lacking in moral observations. Nuclear power is just the MUTOs’ food source and atomic bombs are just another weapon to be used against them. In truth, humanity itself is entirely missing after the MUTOs appear; humans are relegated to a supporting role, resulting in an unshakable shallowness, and all the audience is left with is some well-realised, if uninspired CGI set-pieces.

Ultimately, director Gareth Edwards has produced a film that forgoes emotional content in its predilection for CGI action. One could argue that the two are incompatible with a big-budget summer blockbuster such as this, in which all-out monster carnage is the primary selling point. However, a host of successful ‘disaster’ movies prove otherwise: Roland Emmerich’s Independence Day, Steven Spielberg’s 2005 remake of War of the Worlds, and even the first two Jurassic Park films. Commendable as it is for its impressive CGI, Godzilla’s lack of humanity renders it disappointingly mediocre.