Friday 13th June 2025
Blog Page 2071

Where The Wild Things Are Review

0

It’s not often that an ostensible children’s film receives as much attention from the critical community as has ‘Where The Wild Things Are’, but then the adaptation of Maurice Sendak’s beloved storybook is the kind of movie that only comes around once in a very long while: a family picture that is also a bona fide work of art, as essential viewing for adults as kids, yielding riches galore for every potential audience. Its narrative is deceptively simple, following troubled seven-year old Max as he escapes from the pains of his family life into a fantastical world populated by gigantic furry monsters who crown him their king, only to discover that this alternate existence is not protected from the same anxieties that confront Max back home. 

 

The signs were always auspicious that this project would produce something special, from the singular beauty of the source text to the creative talent hired to realise it onscreen. Employing Spike Jonze, a director most famous for his background in bizarre 90’s music videos and the superb ‘Being John Malkovich’, was a risky move, but it has paid dividends. With a story so slight in its original form, someone with an expansive imagination was obviously needed to fill in the narrative and visual gaps, and Jonze succeeds admirably on both accounts. His accomplishment is fully evident in the exquisite design of the film. Take the island where it plays out, an inspired mix of the familiar and the surreal, with shots of woodland canopies giving way to desert vistas home to a shaggy dog hundreds of feet tall. It is this combination of the everyday and the otherworldly that perfectly encapsulates the wide-eyed wonder of childhood, where the world is not yet wholly mundane, but still capable of being an alien and extraordinary place to an inquisitive young mind.

 

The wild things are even more impressive, brought to life through a seamless blend of animatronics, CGI and good old-fashioned men-in-suits waddling about, which gives the beastly co-stars a physical presence that enhances both their magic and their danger.

 

And make no mistake, there is a very pronounced element of darkness to both the creatures and the film as a whole that is pleasingly reminiscent of Terry Gilliam’s great children’s films from the eighties like ‘Time Bandits’ and ‘The Adventures of Baron Munchausen’. The script is to be applauded for being one of the most unsentimentally accurate depictions of the childhood psyche that this reviewer has seen. It evokes not only the joyful abandon of childhood games, but also the acute sensation of betrayal that can sour one’s family relationships at that age, and the horrified fascination with death and the inevitable end of everything that I can recall fretting about myself. ‘We’re big guys,’ one of the creatures answers Max when the boy asks him if he knows that the Sun will someday die, ‘we don’t have to worry about little things like the Sun.’ Yet it is said with so little conviction that we are made to recognise that this fantasy world doesn’t hold the solution to Max’s problems. That it cannot hide him from the threats posed by reality.

 

In fact, the overwhelming impression that I came away from the film with was that it is essentially, even surprisingly, sad. Indeed, at points I thought the melancholic tone was a little too overbearing, the bickering, weeping and existential crises of the wild things becoming so frequent that it is possible to imagine this film as being what Ingmar Bergman might have produced had he ever made a children’s film. But for much of its running time it is also utterly enchanting, balancing sequences of visceral energy such as a ground-shaking dirt clod fight with moments of heartbreaking poignancy. ‘Where the Wild Things Are’ might not prove to be to everyone’s taste, but its idiosyncratic personality and edgy subject matter ought to recommend it to those after an antidote to the bland family flicks usually offered up at this time of year.

 

  

4 stars               

 

Staircase 22: Season Finale

Staircase 22 – The Season Finale

Will Anoton really go through with his dastardly plan? Will Eleanor save the animals? Will Ralph get laid? Will Kati find a man worthy of her affections? Will Sarah finally get the ultimate story? Will Paul actually manage to read Horace over Christmas?

Don’t miss Season 2 starting next term, exclusively here on www.cherwell.org

Find us on Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=130644584908

CREDITS

Ruari Craig-Wood as Anton
Mohit Dalwadi as Ralph
Lucy Fyffe as Eleanor
David Harvey as Paul
Eleanor Lischka as Kati
Agnes Meath-Baker as Sarah

with

Alice Fletcher and Charlotte Roberts

Music recorded by: Sean McMahon, James Harding

Created by: Tom Clucas, James Harding, Leonore Schick and Selena Wisnom
Writers: Tom Clucas, James Harding, Valentine Kozin, Alexandra Nachescu, Leonore Schick and Selena Wisnom
With thanks to: Annakatherin Meiburg, Jenny Rossdale and John Starr

Sound Manager: Caroline McLean
Produced by: James Harding and Selena Wisnom

 

Extended Review: 101

A challenge to everything. That is my lasting impression of 101, the new professional show from Oxford alumna Asia Osborne, which challenges theatre convention, social norms – and review attempts.

The first offering from director Osborne’s devised theatre company ONEOHONE is not really a play. It’s a half-hour interactive experience that changes every night. The audience is just as involved as the cast, who prefer to remain anonymous to preserve the element of surprise.

We sent two reviewers. They saw two completely different shows. Adam Bouyamourn was at the opening performance:

The producer warns: ‘The experience is quite intense. If at any point in the performance you should feel uncomfortable, you are asked to remove this white sash.’

Eighteen people are in a room; nine of them know what to expect.

The half-hour play proceeds like a Masonic ritual. We, the audience, face the cast in a small underground room. There is a courtly dance, and we pair with cast members, singing some old, broken hymn. We are alerted to the presence of a Usurper. He fights and defeats the King, who is reduced to a snarling heap; we kiss hands with the play’s new monarch. The King – now a blindfolded Machiavellian Gollum – contrives to wrest control from the Usurper. There are four possible outcomes. What happens depends on the audience.

This is what it is like to be a cultist. Your immediate what-the-fuck reaction sublimates into demure obedience. The ceremony evokes a strong emotional response that is heightened by your participation. You find yourself as a character in a familiar but unspecific power game. It is only on reflection that you understand how the actors, Zimbardo-like, procured your obedience.

Your entrance and your exit are suggested as the door is opened and the cast, frozen in tableau, glance urgently towards it. No explanation is forthcoming, but the images are profoundly symbolic. You leave almost entirely unable to express what you saw.

101 is scintillating experimental theatre – it’s a strange, elegant, almost numinous intellectualization

of an interaction between nine people and nine other people. It is an exercise in challenging what theatre is – specifically, what it is to be an audience member.

Usually one sits, reaches for a snack, drifts off, shares a wry observation with a neighbour, even grunts appreciatively – but here, we are dragged, lifted, escorted, danced with, hugged. It is an audience member who, at the King’s whispered suggestion, asphyxiates a member of the cast; an audience member who defeats the Usurper; it is the audience who legitimises each monarch with the words: ‘They are loves I give to you.’

There is no stage, there are no seats: there are just eighteen people in a room.

We were intrigued. Who came up with the idea? Had anything like this been done before? And why, of all places, choose Oxford, a bastion of conservatism? Before sending our second reviewer we asked 101 producer Chris Thursten some questions.

Where does the name ONEOHONE come from?

The company name came from the name of the show – 101 – which is our
signature piece. The name denotes simplicity and the importance of fundamental principles.

Who are the people behind ONEOHONE?

ONEOHONE was founded by [Oxford students and alumni] Asia Osborne, Christopher Thursten, Elle Rushton, Ellie Tranter and Harry Creelman in September 2009.

Why did you found ONEOHONE?

The purpose of the company is to explore new, democratic approaches to theatre. The techniques developed in small-scale, intimate performances like 101 will feed directly into our larger, scripted productions.

What does the future hold for ONEOHONE?

101 will continue to be performed in Oxford and London on an ongoing basis while we develop the first in a series of full-scale productions. We’re looking to expand the company and are auditioning in January. Contact information on the website.

What are your main influences?

We admire the work of companies like Punchdrunk and Complicite.

Our curiosity was piqued, but not satisfied. Punchdrunk, the company cited by ONEOHONE as an influence, is famous for its interactive adaptations of classical texts from Shakespeare or Sophocles. 101, however, is the completely original product of its company, and has no single script, but several distinct storylines. Could the cast cope with the challenge of putting on a different show every night? Tara Isabella Burton reviewed the following evening’s scenario:

It is difficult to give a grade to 101. After all, for much of the show’s 45 minutes the roles were reversed.

Blindfolded, this audience member was first appraised, then adopted, then trained as a kind of bipedal puppy by one cast member who played the role of my master.

While in traditional theatre one expects to see the actors transforming on stage, undergoing psychological pressures that fundamentally change them, in this production it is the audience that is asked to do the same.

It’s a surprisingly effective transformation at that. At first eager to be a helpful part of the production, I gladly came forward, rolled over, turned around, and pawed at my master’s hands on command. Rewarded by a scratch on the head or a chime of ‘Good Boy,’ I began to take pride in my actions and try even harder to perform them as they grew in difficulty.

Things grew more sinister, however. My master was snatched away and I was left to fend for myself amid the sounds of violence and snarling. While I could not see, I could hear far less kind masters berating their audience-pets.

I was decidedly unnerved by one actor’s brutal commands – his poor ‘dog’, I fear, far more so. Although the pace grew somewhat monotonous after twenty minutes, this should not be attributed to the cast’s consummate skill, but to the energy of that particular audience.

As an exercise in forced transformation, 101 succeeded admirably. The concept was an interesting one, and the initial energy striking. The performance may well vary depending on their enthusiasm, but I imagine 101 can work its magic on even the most reticent of audiences.

four stars out of five

So far, the spell holds. 101 continues in London until 13th December; more performances from this company are expected in Oxford in the spring.

Reviews – Adam Bouyamourn and Tara Isabella Burton
Text – Maximus Marenbon

 

Battling blues fall to resilient Cambridge

0

On Thursday, the grandest stage of English rugby once again hosted a tight and compelling Varsity match: 30,000 partisan fans flocked to Twickenham for a game that fully lived up to its billing as ‘Grudgeby‘.

Oxford’s Dark Blues suffered an agonisingly narrow defeat, 31-27, at the hands of a dogged and determined Cambridge side. The standard of play was expectedly high, delivering rugby of real quality – only a few moments of individual brilliance and some poor second-half tackling decided the outcome.

The opening 30 minutes of the game were fraught with tension, and fear of giving an inch to the opposition seemed to stifle offensive creativity for both teams: turnovers, knock-ons and unforced errors prevailed all over the pitch, with neither side performing to their full capacity. Locked at 0-0, Oxford quickened the pace and drew first blood with a well-deserved penalty try: camped at the Cambridge line, the Dark Blues’ powerful pack shoved and barged its way forward – too many fouls from the Light Blues forced the umpire to signal for a 5-0 advantage; a conversion later, Oxford were on the scoreboard and in control at 7-0.

Suddenly, with 10 minutes remaining before the break, an attritional battle for field-position opened out into expansive and free-flowing phases of rugby. Cambridge sensed an opportunity, squandering one breakaway attack before hitting back with a try of their own: James Greenwood plunged over the line, cutting the deficit to 7-5. The kick went wide, and Oxford went in for half-time with a slender but justified 2 point lead.

The second half saw much greater quality in attack, with both sides producing some exciting passages of play. The ball was sweeping wide regularly and dangerously, and the Dark Blues were keen to get last year’s hat-trick scorer, winger Tim Caitling, into possession. However, they were able to tack on only 3 points, and Cambridge soon took their first lead of the day, crashing through the weakening barrier of Oxford’s defensive line. Ahead 12-10, the Light Blues brimmed with confidence, raising their level again. Oxford responded with ability and character, led by the excellent Ross Swanson at fly-half; his kicking was immaculate, and the class of his individual performance warranted more than a loss in this match.

The sides traded scores, and the lead continued to switch until Cambridge blew the game open, tearing through the middle of the pitch and increasing their advantage to 31-20: Jamie Hood’s impressive charge evaded the Dark Blues’ unsure tackles, capping a strong 15 minute period for the agile and aggressive Cambridge backs. Oxford rallied strongly with 10 minutes left to play, but were unable to make any meaningful incisions into a resolute and rock-solid Light Blue defence: wave after wave of forward surges were repelled, and it was not until the 80th minute that Oxford finally stormed through for a consolation try. Too little, too late for the battling Blues, whose collective frustration was shared by swathes of Oxford people on Twickenham’s terraces.

The U21s Varsity match, played at the same stadium earlier in the morning, was won by Oxford in a dominating 53-17 rout, so congratulations must go to those players. The clear quality in our developmental sides can only bode well for future years.

Blues captain Dan Rosen, a player who has risen through the ranks of Blues rugby at Oxford, could only articulate the massive disappointment of his team. There is no middle territory in the Varsity match: it is either win or lose, a high stakes gambit whose success or failure is dictated by an 80 minutes of monumental significance. The quest to regain supremacy in 2010 will soon begin and the Blues must aim to avenge this tough and bitter defeat.

The U21s celebrate their win. 

Dark Blues scored the first few points. 

Light Blues increased their advantage to 31:20 in the second half. 

Photo: Alice Gardner

Afghanistan. Strategically, the jury’s out.

0

First things first, this NY Times piece is excellent. Its message: The administration’s Afghanistan announcement last week arose from a lengthy, intensely thorough process of debate at the highest levels of government in which no participant’s wishes seem to have been completely fulfilled. The end product is, in short, what we’d expected: a compromise.

 

This was an unenviable decision for Obama to make; a classic case of damned if you do, damned if you don’t. There would never be a ‘right’ answer — indeed part of the answer would have to be that victory in its purest form might never be achieved. The route he took — of deploying 30,000 additional troops in the next six months, with the aim of withdrawing them from mid-2011 — is close to what General McChrystal is thought to have wanted in terms of troop numbers, but speeded up quite dramatically. This makes it a bit of a gamble. The bet is that a medium number of new troops can be effective almost immediately, and that power can start to be handed over to a viable Afghan government and army soon after. It’s fast in, fast out. Strategically, that’s pushing the envelope somewhat. It’s high risk.

 

Politically, the problem is great. Obama’s policy puts him at odds with both the left and the right: hardened liberals don’t like escalation; many Republicans wanted more troops. And yet the new policy doesn’t sit too well with much of the moderate middle. Obama now owns this war in a new and powerful sense — the new strategy is his not Bush’s. He now has no alibi if the policy fails; more than that, he needs it to succeed to get the public back on his side. But this tells us something about the new President — on the big questions, political expedience isn’t as important to him as trying to get it right. Not the best way to win elections, but probably a good way to be President.

 

The first half of his speech at West Point was light on flourish, and that was right for the moment. It was more argumentative essay than stump speech. The second half, to my mind, was too ethereal. Obama does that stuff better than anybody, but we didn’t need it on that night. There is a danger, I think, when an appeal is made to American exceptionalism as justification for intervention — when the argument is framed in universalist, purely moralistic terms — that it looks and feels as if the brains have been switched off somewhere along the line. “We could think about costs and benefits, but it’s easier to just retreat to freedom vs. tyranny”. Framing the argument in that way does the policy a disservice. The process Obama followed was rational, it was realistic; from what we understand all options were weighed up and strategically this one was thought the best. That alone should have been the sales pitch — we’re now on the right track and here’s why. Frankly, we didn’t need all the guff about freedom — Americans have heard that one before and it’s not clear they’re buying it.

 

So the policy is risky strategically and politically. It’s not clear whether or not we’ve found a good answer to the question of Afghanistan. The President sold it well but could’ve done better. And — rightly or wrongly — what happens next will be a big factor when Obama runs for re-election in 2012.

 

 

Staircase 22: 8th week, part 1

Kati’s organised a somewhat embarassing secret Santa and Paul and Ralph end up going as a pantomime deer to the Christmas bop. Anton’s actually turned up to a social event for once, but Sarah and Eleanor can’t find him…

Don’t miss out on tomorrow’s Staircase 22, the last in this series.

Staircase 22: 7th week, part 2

Sarah and Kati find a mysterious letter from one of Anton’s relatives while Eleanor tries to work out how to imitate a peacock’s mating call. Have Ralph’s dishonest tactics got him elected to the Union?

Don’t forget you can catch up on all the previous episodes of Staircase 22 on the podcasts section of our website. Don’t miss tomorrow’s episode exclusively on cherwell.org.

Merton outrage at forced retirement of a porter

0

Merton alumni have voiced concern over the forced retirement of college staff, with some even threatening to withold donations to their College.

The College’s policy to reitre employees at 65 has come under scrutiny this year, as two popular members of staff reach this age. Both members of staff have requested to exte

nd their contracts.

Another member of staff recently received a letter from the Domestic Bursar telling him he must retire at 65 unless he requests an extension to his employment, according to JCR president James Nation.

The Facebook group “Mandatory retirement of Merton Staff” was set up by 2007 Merton graduate Tom Newton-Lewis after College staff members complained to alumni about the policy.

Merton graduate Edward Brightman wrote that the retirement policy was “definitely something all Mertonians should be up in arms about.” Andy Godfrey argued, “I imagine if enough people were to threaten to refuse to donate money to them they’d start to worry.”

Jennifer Hoogewerf-McComb, another alumnus of Merton, commented, “This is completely disgusting” adding, “we should be refusing to donate.”

JCR President James Nation commented, “Mertonians do have a very strong attachment to certain members of staff by virtue of the fact that we have a very friendly community here of which [they] are a key part. Particular cases at the moment have brought the College’s policy to light.”

Nation explained, “In this particular case, I do not think College will change their policy…Some Mertonians I’ve spoken to so far can see the reasons why College has gone for this option, but are just upset that it is affecting a well-known staff member in particular.”

Merton has a set retirement age for all staff, which applies to everyone, including scouts, porters and Fellows. Other Colleges decide on an individual basis whether staff should retire at 65 or stay on. However, Merton argues that it is fairer to have an overarching policy that would see all staff retire at the age of 65.

Angel Sarmiento, finalist at Merton and former JCR Treasurer said, “One thing is pretty clear – Merton alumni have set a precedent both for Merton and for other Colleges, that policies will be subject to the scrutiny of the alumni as well as that of current students.

“It is amazing how fast the response was to the issue. Even if it does not make an effect on this situation, Colleges will be more careful in the future about how they act. They will not be able to brush off the alumni with a statement by the JCR President if they cannot justify their policy.”

Douglas Bamber, the Domestic Bursar, argued in defence of Merton’s position. “Merton College policy has not changed and the default retirement age of 65 has always been the College policy.

“We operate the same policy as the University for all categories of staff and furthermore we comply with the law of the land.”

Porters at Merton declined to comment on the issue.

 

 

Oxbridge funding slashed by £10 million

0

Concerns have been raised about the status of the unique Oxbridge tutorial system following news that around £10 million will be withdrawn from government funding to Oxford and Cambridge Universities.

In a document addressed to the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE), Oxford University has reportedly said that it will have little choice but to slim down provision for teaching unless an alternative source of income is found.

The proposed cuts would affect funds allocated for the upkeep of Oxbridge’s historic buildings, and the University warns it would have to divert resources to fill the gap.

David Palfreyman, the bursar of New College, Oxford, and the director of the Oxford Centre for Higher Education Policy Studies, expressed concern at the difficulties less wealthy colleges could face in maintaining the prestigious tutorial system. “We are a relatively rich college and we will do our damnedest to keep it going but I don’t know how poorer colleges are going to struggle through.”

Commenting on the challenges facing Oxford, a University spokesperson denied that the tutorial system is to be scrapped. However, they pointed out, “Current public funding only covers about 50% of Oxford’s undergraduate teaching costs. The more cuts we face in government funding, the more acute this problem becomes.

“We are doing all we can to help ourselves, particularly through our large fundraising campaign, where we are asking friends and alumni to help us maintain Oxford’s standards of excellence.”

The University is not alone in facing fiscal difficulties. The University and College Union has suggested that more that 5,000 jobs are at risk nationwide as the government reduces its Higher Education budget by £180 million.

However, some have argued that it is disproportionate that Oxbridge should be hit by £10 million of this cut.

Oxford University is still engaged in consultations with the HEFCE.

Cringe, appreciate and cringe some more

0

While travelling with my family through the United States, we decided to watch Bruno, a film with rave reviews that opened to packed audiences. Needless to say, watching the film was not a very pleasant experience for my mother, who was raised in a strictly orthodox Hindu home and witnessed all the horrors of religious pogroms when she was young. Her inability to understand irony merely added fuel to the fire. The ability to divorce subject matter from its artistic expression in a humourous form is culturally subjective, but one should not assume that this is purely symptomatic of cultural upbringing. While it may be obvious to most that it is not Bruno’s political insensitivity but rather its stupidity that is humourous, the line between the two is often blurred. In fact, a large part of why Bruno and Borat have been so popular is their suppression of obvious irony.

“The problem is that an audience may confuse the irony with political insensitivity itself”

Borat is a classic example of where this divorce between the subject and its portrayal has been most successful. For instance, when Borat makes fun of Jews, this is not intended to support anti-Semitic views but rather portray the narrow minded, racist nature of these views. The problem is that an audience may confuse the irony with political insensitivity itself. The success of these films, may in fact result in desensitizing us to racism by making racism funny. Today, political insensitivity has become a fad and young people often take pride in justifying mild forms of racism.

On more than one occasion, I have come across individuals who seem to think that making Holocaust or ‘dead-baby’ jokes is acceptable. While I am not making any value judgments as to whether these jokes can ever be made, I can say with a degree of certainty that in most cases the individuals telling these jokes would never have dared exercise the same degree of insensitivity had there been Jews or pregnant women around at the time. While the intention of these jokes may have been to display, in a self-deprecating manner, the idiocy of these ideas, often conversations may take a defensive turn and efforts are made to justify racist or bigoted ideals. Mix that with the absence of irony, or its ineffective portrayal, and you have a classic recipe for unpleasant jokes.

“Nowadays, politically insensitive humour is analagous to cigarette smoking amongst teenagers; the allure of the taboo”

Earlier this year, during a regular gathering of friends in a local pub, a friend of mine decided that it would be appropriate to pretend to be racist. To be honest, it made for loud laughs and a good time. However, as the night wore on, the pretence seemed to wear off, and a strange form of the forbidden fruit effect seemed to take over. Nowadays, politically insensitive humour is analagous to cigarette smoking amongst teenagers; the allure of the taboo. The attraction to the forbidden is fertile ground for attention-seeking teenagers who want to be provocative. This can be dangerous when they convince others that their ideas are reasonable. While the comedian may know at the back of his mind that he is not racist, he may encourage it in others or be seen as racist himself.

I am not sure that the risks involved in such interpretations justify censorship, but they are risks nonetheless; a risk that is present with most activities from bungee jumping to drawing cartoons. The question is, how far should these risks go? The line should be drawn at some stage, but where?