Antonia and Marta take you through the week’s news and talk over the all important Eurovision Song Contest.
Review: Awaydays
As the name suggests, Awaydays centres on football hooliganism. Those looking for unadulterated violent entertainment in a similar vein to Football Factory should look elsewhere. In fact, those looking for any entertainment at all should probably avoid this completely. This film is not fun; it is miserable. More miserable than marriage, miscarriage and Morrissey ground together in a pot of genocide.
The setting for this film is Merseyside, naturally. In the grim early years of Thatcher, The Pack travel from town to town to engage in mindless fisticuffs with fellow football fans.
Carty (Nicky Bell) longs for acceptance into the group. He finds a means of entry through Elvis (Stephen Graham) – a bohemian amongst apes – who befriends him on the basis of their mutual appreciation of good music, and the opportunity to make an emotional connection with someone of intelligence. Despite mutual artistic leanings, both have divergent interests: Carty wants nothing more than primal release through sex and violence, whilst Elvis yearns to escape that very same vacuum.
To understand these characters, the director wants you to relate to the boredom and drudgery of their environment. In this respect he succeeds, only perhaps a bit too well. The scenery is awash with dull browns and greys and the plot moves at a snail’s pace, never managing to muster up much momentum. The film stretches your patience to its maximum, to the point where the prospect of mindless violence is screamed for. But the payoff never delivers.
The fight scenes are clumsily shot, never yielding the visceral impact that is demanded. The film itself is schizophrenic in its endeavours. On the one hand it wants to drag the audience through grit and grime, but at the same time it strives desperately for stylish cult-chic.
Slow-motion moments, pensive, wide-angled river shots and trippy drug montages are used liberally and superfluously. All of which detract from what is genuinely interesting-the characters. The young leads play their roles superbly, creating wonderful chemistry and managing to portray the contradictions within themselves with complete plausibility.
The supporting cast fare just as well; Stephen Graham as the leader of The Pack dominates the screen in every scene he’s in, and Holliday Grainger as Carty’s sister plays her vulnerable character perfectly.
Despite strong performances all round, perhaps the most disappointing area of the film is the lack of understanding of the characters’ situations and their consequent behavioural patterns.
Carty for example leads a humdrum life working in administration, his intelligence and artistic talents in danger of rotting away; but he never shows any contempt for his lifestyle. He seems perfectly happy with his underachievement: he taps plentiful ass; has a sister who idolises him; and holds no financial worries. As such, his dogmatic passion to beat the shit out of strangers never sits comfortably with the audience.
By the end of the film this irritates heavily, clouding whatever message is meant to be delivered. Some scenes are deeply poignant and yet others boring and drawn out. Interesting setups fail to be mined fully for their potential.
The film gets top marks for effort, but below average for execution. It is noble in its attempts to require patience from the viewer and avoid simple gratifying conclusions. In this respect it might warrant a viewing; any semi-decent British output should be commended.
Though if you do choose to watch it, expect to want to punch it in the face afterwards.
Two Stars out of Five
Top Five Films to…make you laugh irritatingly loudly
I apologise. ‘Comedy’ is far too broad for me to put my favourites down here and not to have whimpering twats droning in my ear about how Caddyshack is ‘seminal’. (It’s not. You are just a twat.)
But, onward. Anyone under the misconception that comedy is only funny when it is somehow relevant to them only has to look at Charlie Chaplin’s The Great Dictator for renewed faith in early comedies’ power to tickle.
This wonderful pastiche of Nazism includes the subtly (and wonderfully) named dictator Adenoid Hynkel performing a lovely bit of ballet with a big inflatable globe. Absolute genius.
This and the films of Chaplin contemporary Buster Keaton form the basis for almost all physical comedy produced today.
Despite the seeming dearth of genuine comedy talent in mainstream cinema in recent years, some gems have nevertheless emerged, foremost among them Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy.
Without a doubt, it contains some of the greatest hammed-up lines in modern cinema, whilst the romantic sub plot even (kind of) works.
And just last year, Martin McDonagh’s move from stage to screen produced the hysterically funny In Bruges, thereby proving that there is room for sharp and biting dialogue in amongst the temptation of star power to carry a film.
Doing comedy a little bit differently often helps too, and Rob Reiner’s This Is Spinal Tap exploits the director’s incredible (albeit anal) attention to detail, to ensure that the film gets every bit of the documentary style spot on.
The result? The viewer is immediately and intensely transported into the sordid world of Nigel Tufnel and co.
Choosing my absolute personal favourite, though, required a painstaking effort to decide which comedy classic to pick from the bastion of bloody funny that is the complete Monty Python oeuvre. In the end, The Meaning of Life won out with just the right combination of witty dialogue and absurdity.
I know everyone will disagree with me, so I say this to the whimpering twats-bring it on.
Album Review: Skepta’s Microphone Champion
‘Let me tell you why I’m the King of Grime…’, brags Joseph Junior Adenuga, aka Skepta, in album opener ‘Reflecting’. Admittedly, North London’s foremost DJ-cum-producer-cum-MC has grounds for gloating; Skepta has carved out a reputation for himself on the North London grime scene as something of a shrewd operator, establishing prominent label/collective Boy Better Know with brother JME, and teaming up with grime mogul Wiley last year to record a UK Top 100 single in ‘Rolex Sweep’.
He also created a minor dance phenomenon in the process; imagine a chronometrically-themed, grimey Macarena, and you’re some way towards imagining the song’s bizarre music video. Incidentally, it’s fellow wristwatch-enthusiast Wiley who is Skepta’s main contender, set to release his fourth studio album Race Against Time on the same day as Skepta’s Microphone Champion.
Don’t worry though, kids – Wiley’s appearance on second track ‘Are You Ready’ confirms that this feud is nothing but a thinly-veiled publicity stunt, the pair engaging in a staged war of words over familiar shudders of mid-tempo electro. While lyrically solid, it’s not long before we’re treated to the first unnecessary chorus of the album: ‘You can’t threaten me with no bad-man talk/I’m not scared, sorry man’ repeated three times, followed by: ‘I’ve seen so much, now I don’t give a monkey’s/I swing from tree to tree, just like monkeys’.
Unfortunately, it’s only on opening track ‘Reflecting’ that Skepta mercifully declares ‘no chorus’. The mindnumbingly repetitive refrains very soon start to grate; in recent single ‘Sunglasses At Night’, Skepta barks: ‘Roses are red, violets are blue/You know that I got my eyes on you’. The old charmer.
And, of course, there’s ‘Rolex Sweep’. This really is a terrible song; the sort of content-lite drivel that epitomises the recent glut of electro-grime-meets-pop-seeks-chart success. The result is one that radically compromises Skepta’s artistic integrity, and is unlikely to appeal to anyone who isn’t a drunk student in a club.
That said, there is a handful of decent tracks amongst the sixteen: sleazy ‘Look Out’ has UK Hip-Hop MC Giggs deliver his sinister lyrics through a dark, syrupy bassline, layered with pitch-dipping techno synths; wild card track ‘Skepta’ is great fun, ditching all lyrical sincerity for something a bit more funky.
These tracks may flaunt Skepta’s abilities behind the mixing desk, but the irony of the album’s title is that his rhymes aren’t the centrepiece that they should be; gone are the intelligent lyrics that characterised his 2007 debut Greatest Hits, surrendered in return for sing-song choruses and gratuitous guest appearances. And a new Macarena.
Two Stars out of Five
Interview: Bombay Bicycle Club
Every year for four days in May The Great Escape Festival sees the city of Brighton taken over by an army of music fans who swarm to the 34 bars and clubs chosen to host the performances in the hope of catching the year’s ‘next big things’ before they hit the big time.
One of these bands is Bombay Bicycle Club, who seem destined to be perpetually ‘hotly-tipped’ for success. Having offered two excellent performances across the three days, and with an album on the way later this year, they seem finally ready to fulfil their much vaunted potential.
2006 was a big year for Bombay Bicycle Club. Having formed just a year before that, the four boys in their mid-teens suddenly faced the full attention of the English music-press. Some feared that, like so many other skinny-jeaned indie-hopefuls, the band would be too young to withstand the harsh winds of the hype machine. Happily, they emerged virtually unscathed from the clutches of the NME’s claws and, talking to singer Jack Steadman, guitarist Jamie MacColl, and bassist Ed Nash, it is clear that they couldn’t be more optimistic about the band’s future.
‘We want to be the biggest band in the world,’ jokes MacColl, ‘but seriously, we just want to do this for as long as we can. It’s been frustrating not being able to put an album together, but now that it’s ready it’s pretty exciting’.
But how did being on the pages of NME at only fifteen years old affect them? Surely it must have been hard to keep their feet on the ground when their rockstar dreams were coming true before their eyes?
‘We were really well managed: we weren’t aware of the hype at all. It was weird being recognised-and it was definitely exciting-but we didn’t take it too seriously. We’ve all got places at university waiting for us if this doesn’t work out; we’ve tried to be sensible about it’.
Asked if they’re happy with their debut album, the response comes promptly in the affirmative. ‘Definitely,’ asserts Steadman, ‘some of the songs are a few years old now, so it’s hard to keep perspective when you’re so familiar with them, but we’re pleased with the finished product. It’s been a long time coming; now we just want to get it out there’.
Having worked so hard on the album, MacColl says the possibility of it leaking online is a definite concern for the band. ‘It would make you sick if you’d been working on an album for ages and people got their hands on it before you were ready. It happened to Grizzly Bear, one of our favourite bands: they recorded an incredible album and it leaked months before the release date’.
The issues of releasing albums in the modern world aside, Nash asserts that playing live is the only real reason to be in a band: ‘we love it’, he says, ‘we’ll never get tired of it.’ When they start to play, their raw talent makes it instantly clear that they belong on the stage. Their live set is nicely varied, offering shout-a-long choruses while maintaining enough individuality to keep things credible. Their new single ‘Always Like This’ is a definite standout, and sees the crowd descend into an ugly, dancing mess of sweaty youths.
If they continue to perform like this, it seems that there is nothing to stop them from triumphantly entering into the mainstream
Uncooping diverse talents
Next Tuesday go to the Playhouse and break out of the Oxford bubble. It’ll be the best thing you’ve done all term, and Chickenshed’s As a Mother of a Brown Boy will be by far the best piece of professional theatre you have seen in a long time.
Chickenshed are all about a perspective shift. When the company was founded 25 years ago in north London, the message was simple: that life is good if you’re in it. This remains true today: theatre is at heart a social medium and it must be inclusive.
The group’s emphasis on a kind of modern social humanism infliltrates all of its work. And in the case of Brown Boy, the production’s commitment to human issues goes far deeper than its aesthetic. Director Christine Niering has a hugely personal relationship with the production, as the narrative centres around the traumatic ordeal that her sister underwent when her son was killed. He died in a police chase after being caught up in jewellery thefts in London. The boy had been a member of Chickenshed, where he sought refuge from the harsh realities of growing up as a fatherless black male on the council estates of north London.
Niering is emphatic about the play’s human message. In a piece which deals so provocatively with the ‘black issue’, alongside difficult questions of single parenthood, the danger of dwelling in the solely political dimension is avoided.
This is largely due to the way in which the production is staged artistically. Connectivity is central to Chickenshed’s message; making connections across social and physical boundaries has always been important. Chickenshed productions incorporate not only able-bodied cast members, but also physically or mentally disabled people. It is all about returning to the issue itself: political or social issues are, at heart, human ones. So long as we are able to see through this politicised veil, we are able to see the truth. And for Chickenshed, in art there is truth.
Niering believes Chickenshed’s role is both social and artistic, but that the former must not be at the latter’s expense – ‘our ultimate responsibility is to produce excellent theatre. The only way we can do this is by drawing in individuals who do come from all over the place.’ If Chickenshed were to target one section of society, they would not be able to express the experiences of such a diverse group of people so effectively. It is the company’s social spectrum which makes it unique.
My sister is a member of Chickenshed. She comes from a nice, middle class family and is lucky enough to have been privately educated. Yet, she works and leads young people with severe learning disabilities, kids from the nearby council estates our parents warned us not to walk through. This is the amazing thing about Chickenshed. It unites people regardless of background. Once you are on stage, it’s not about where you’re from: it’s about where you are going.
Ultimately, the production is socio-politically relevant. But in projecting through theatre, the piece breaks down the political and gives a simple message: this is human. In labeling someone as criminal, black, IC1, we immediately alienate that person from him or herself. It’s about treating people with decency, giving them the respect they deserve. As a Mother of a Brown Boy is unique, and deserves your undivided attention.
Fit Fiction: Shakespeare’s Men
I must confess, my sexual awakening was not found in day-dreamed dalliances with strapping farm-hands from the well-worn pages of Penguin classics. My childhood taught me to understand books as tools of mind-expansion, soul-enrichment and exam-passing, not, alas, groin-engorgement (a-hem). I guess things can change.
Who is my favourite fictional fittie then? Well, the classical heroes are not for me: Achilles’ prowess is hampered by a pushy mother and crippling arrogance; Odysseus’ cunning and strength are dampened by eyes (and other more troubling portions of his anatomy) that wander as far from home as he and his Greek chums.
The warrior-heroes of this fair isle hold little more allure. No doubt Beowulf’s biceps would bulge breathtakingly (and I am sure I could find some use for his legendary grip), but hour upon hour of monosyllabic self-aggrandising tales would wear the libido a little thin methinks.
Perhaps not a hero from the days of yore then, but surely those sexually repressed lascivious ladies of Georgian and Victorian literary circles bequeathed men to tantalise and titillate me? Alas, no. You can keep Darcy with his sexless reserve, his moral fibre and soggy breeches, and though I’d happily make room for Heathcliff’s brooding, dangerous passion, he is too wild a stallion. Gaskell’s men are all eclipsed by their more striking and impressive female counterparts, and Eliot’s are all well-intentioned, intellectual also-rans.
The only rich hunting ground populated with men you can really sink your teeth into is – no, not Bram Stoker’s Dracula – but Shakespeare’s drama. There are so many men in Shakespeare’s work with whom I could tussle the sheets all midsummer night long making the ‘beast with two backs’ (forgive me), because the way to this man’s heart is one of words. Who can deny the sexiness of Iago’s mastery of both language and man? Certainly not me; that menacing, wordy malignancy, balanced at once dangerously and deliciously with such poise and confidence, is beyond my power to resist. And ‘what a piece of work’ is Hamlet! I could forgive a man almost anything if he could talk to me as Hamlet does when declaring his indifference to humanity. I don’t care if ‘man delights not’ him, give me his ‘quintessence of dust’ any day. Then of course, there is Benedict with his suave, acerbic wit, and Oberon with his jealous passion and mystical power, and Othello with his noble presence and physical grandeur…the list goes on. Shakespeare’s men are the men for me; they are, most definitely, fit fiction.
Catz fail to show their claws
In what had been predicted as a tight affair, St John’s strolled through their second round cuppers match against a lackluster St. Catz side. The new look bowling attack of the home side made short work of the opposition’s batting line up, and a comfortable win was eventually closed out for the loss of only one wicket. The result came as somewhat of a surprise, with St John’s starting the match as underdogs against their higher league opponents. However, St Catz were missing their Blues opening bat, and were struggling with numbers at the start of the game. Thankfully, after winning the toss, St John’s skipper Evans-Young chose to bowl, allowing the Catz latecomers to arrive before it harmed their teams chances.
Despite conditions seeming to favour the batsman, it was clear from the off that the away side would be in for a long day. John’s have been fortunate this year to make one or two key additions to their bowling line-up, the most obvious being that of Roscoe Roman. The imposing South African troubled the with his aggressive style but, frustratingly for him, the pitch seemed to show little life, and his shorter deliveries failed to reach the height desired. Despite the constant threat of Roman’s pace though, Catz captain Patel began to settle nicely into his innings, avoiding one or two close calls and managing to control the strike.
The deadlock was finally broken at the other end, with Mike Jones finally getting the wicket he deserved after a spell of accurate swing bowling. A cross bat shot took the top edge, and was pouched comfortably by the bowler. The next ball bought even more success, as Ryan Taylor suffered being bowled by Jones for a golden duck. But with their backs against the wall, St Catz rallied and began to put together their first meaningful partnership. Patel continued to play well, and was, for once, ably supported. When Roman was taken off after ten overs, it looked as though the worst had been weathered. However, the introduction of Elstrop, another new recruit for John’s, meant this was not to be. After only giving away 10 runs in his first five overs, he finally broke the partnership with a contentious LBW decision.
The Catz innings now seemed to hinge on the performance of Patel. Unfortunately, he was run out by Berend in a bizarre piece of decision making by the new batsman at the wicket. Having not faced a ball, and clearly eager to get on the strike for the first time, he called a suicidal single to midwicket, leaving his captain stranded. The desolation on Patel’s face made it clear that St Catz’ best chance of making a defendable total had just disappeared, out for 23. Despite Elstrop being taken off soon after, the Catz wickets continued to fall. The introduction of the left-arm spin of Vice Captain James Earle had the Catz lower order in all sorts of trouble as they attempted to play off the back foot on a pitch which had been keeping low all day. The result was that the spinner ended up with impressive figures of three wickets in five overs for 12 runs.
Now well into the tail, St John’s chose to bring back Roman for his final overs in an attempt to kill the game off. However, despite clearly being too quick for the tailenders, he somehow failed to get a wicket, eventually bowling out his overs and finishing with none for seventeen off eight. But with Earle steadily taken wickets at the other end, and batsman Deane seemingly the only one attempting to play any shots, the end was not long in coming. The return of Elstrop with Catz nine wickets down signalled the end, and he only needed one ball to condemn the visitors to a paltry 87 all out.
Over lunch the attitudes of the two sides were markedly different, and the game seemed over before Catz had even taken the field. The confidence of the John’s team was proven to be correct however, as openers Lawton and Wintour set about steadily making their way towards the target. Despite some quality bowling from Evans from the Pavilion End, luck seemed to be siding with the home team, as several edges managed to avoid the fielders. Wintour especially was treading a fine line, surviving several close LBW shouts, before eventually dollying one up to extra cover. However, Patel could not make it stick, and Wintour advanced to forty two before finally being bowled out, with St John’s 87-0.
Although now merely a formality, number 3 Eugene Duff seemed surprisingly nervous as he faced his first few deliveries. With only one run to win, and perhaps conscious of his worryingly low average this year, the Etonion played tentatively throughout to find that elusive single.
Thankfully though, Lawton proceeded to crash a ball through the covers for four, thus taking him to 44 and confirming the John’s victory, and bringing to an end Catz chances of proceeding in Cuppers this year. For St John’s however, a place in the quarter finals awaits, and they must be feeling confident after this performance.
Sit down and shut up: the end is not nigh
“The political system itself is under attack…parliament has failed, the government is paralysed…many MPs feel as if the establishment itself is crumbling.”
All this from the Observer’s feature article on the latest scandals and embarrassments that have careened out of Westminster into the public eye. The British press have always loved smearing the reputation of politicians, and with the expenses scandal the mud lies particularly thick.
There is much being said about MPs expenses all over the country at the moment, much of which is groaningly self-evident. Of course many of the claims made have been ridiculous. Of course we need a more transparent system and greater oversight. Maybe most of the offending MPs are working within the letter if not the spirit of the rules, in which case the rules need changing. And naturally as some have pointed out, Stephen Fry included, people in all walks of life sneak away with a larger slice of pie if they’re able, although I happen to think a pricey hotel room on a journalists travel allowance differs somewhat from thousands of pounds for a non-existent mortgage.
Rather than being swept up in righteous fury and doomsday prophecies on the future of British politics, many members of the respectable British press need to step back and cling tightly to just a small thread of perspective. In every newspaper there are new tales of how the public’s trust in politics has been shattered and how the once noble British parliamentary democracy has been reduced to a shambles
I have a simple for message for all those spouting this sensationalist nonsense: shut up. There is some small flicker of truth in all tales I just mentioned, but not nearly enough to merit the number of journalists currently chanting them like mantras. Firstly the issue of trust. Indeed the public trust in politicians has been damaged by the scandals, but even before the revelations was it really so solid? For many years now politicians in Britain have been considered slimy, arrogant and deceitful until proven otherwise. In a few months people will look back on this episode as another proof of that assumption, and it will fit neatly alongside the countless other scandals which have collectively made the rulers of Britain some of its most reviled inhabitants. You can’t shatter trust that did not exist in the first place.
“Where will this revolutionary fervour end?” Asks one broadsheet journalist eager to please his editor, the implication being that it just might end in revolution. Personally I’m all for some kind of British revolution, we’ve never had one to match the French or the Russians and our political history could certainly do with some livening up. However, neither I nor any other sane person in Britain is feeling the pull of “revolutionary fervour” because a few MPs fiddled the system. This is not the end of parliamentary democracy as we know it, so please Mr Editor, tether your crazy journalist to a pole in a field and leave him there until this all blows over.
When the recession hit the doomsday prophets were out in force predicting the end of capitalism. They were wrong then, and they’re wrong now. Our political system is in no danger. This will all finish with Brown announcing some new measures, a few MPs losing their jobs and most of us breathing a sigh of relief that the press can move on to more important things. Until that golden day comes, let’s not wallow in the romance of Armageddon.
For the Love of Film 10
Just before they take a break from the podcast for a couple of weeks, Ben and Laurence enthusiastically review Coraline and Star Trek, and bring us film news and gossip!