GREED (2020) – Review

So the title of this new comedy refers to one of the “seven deadly sins” as labeled in most Christian teachings. In these times the word’s a bit more complicated. After all, fictional real estate mogul Gordon Geeko, in an Oscar-winning performance by Michael Douglas, proclaimed that it is “good” in one of the most quoted scenes from Oliver Stone’s 1987 classic WALL STREET. Another take on that word now comes from two-thirds of the trio responsible for a delightful series of comedic travelogues that began ten years ago with THE TRIP. But they’re not going after Stone’s street, rather they’re taking aim at Great Britain’s avenue of haughty fashion retail shops, High Street. And as you might have guessed, this isn’t a remake of the Erich von Stroheim silent 1924 epic. The sin’s much the same, but this is a completely different take on GREED.

In the opening moments, we see a TV news report touting the success of the big fashion line from High Street staple Sir Richard McCreadie (Steve Coogan). Video of the big company shareholders’ party shows him handing out over-sized checks to supervisors and board members including his wife Samantha (Isla Fisher). Watching the report from his tiny apartment is writer Nick (David Mitchell), who is in the middle of his latest book deal, authoring a biography of said tycoon. The film then flashes back to Nick interviewing Richard’s past business associates and a few family members, and includes scenes of a young Richard (Jamie Blackley) conning classmates at his posh prep school before being expelled, with his mum Margaret (Shirley Henderson) deriding the headmaster. As Nick boards a plane to Greece, where a lavish 60th birthday celebration for Richard will be held on the island of Mykonos, we learn more of the mogul’s business past, lowballing clothing companies, pushing out competitors, low bidding “sweatshop” factories in Sri Lanka, bankrupting several shops and fashion lines, and getting a “rap on the knuckles” from the British courts. On the island , the McCreadie staff is in a panic trying to push the local laborers and craftsmen to finish a recreation of a Roman collesium in the next two days. It’s a party inspired by their boss’s favorite film GLADIATOR, complete with an old lethargic lion. Soon the McCreadie family begin arriving on different yachts. First, it’s Richard with his mistress, supermodel Naomi (Shanina Shaik). Then it’s estranged wife Samantha with her new French beau (yes, she and Richard are only married in the legal sense as he’s using her as a tax shield). Surly son Finn (Asa Butterfield) drops in as does the huge entourage (including the film crew of her “reality” TV show) of his sister Lily (Sophie Cookson). The planners are put through more agita as they try to deal with the refugees that are legally allowed to set up camp on the public beaches. But surely all will be ready for the world to witness the adoration of the famous and powerful for the “birthday boy”. But will this finally erase his nickname of “Greedy McCreadie”? It just might, unless something goes wrong…

Once again Coogan proves himself to be the comedy king of self-absorbed pompous jerks (talking of his roles, of course). With McCreadie, he ventures into cartoonish grotesquery with his over-sprayed tan and ludicrous blinding-white choppers (makes Sandler’s dental deceit in UNCUT GEMS look restrained). Perhaps this is to heighten the character’s disconnection with humanity and exaggerate his buffoonish braying and boasting. Sure he’s just as clueless as Coogan’s other comic turns, but unlike Alan Patridge and His caricatured persona in the TRIP flicks, there’s few redeemable qualities in McCreadie, all that’s there is an avarice ego-driven monster who lives to cheat anyone of the few possessions they need. The faults of his family and various sycophants pale next to this modern ogre. Henderson as his devoted, enabling mother proves that the apple doesn’t fall that far at all. She emits a true toxic energy casting a pall over any scene she waddles into. Fisher ‘s a delightfully daffy social climber whose heart (buried deep in her latest surgical …um…enhancements) still somehow longs for eventual ex. Meanwhile Butterfield, as their son, seethes with contempt, miserable as he must endure his Daddy’s taunts and tirades. Cookson scores lots of laughs as the typical “spoiled lil’ rich girl” who just can’t emote for his reality show’s “storyline”. Mitchell makes an awkward investigator who, with his clumsy, often witty musing, is a true fish out of water. The plot’s dramatic subplot is expertly carried by Dinita Gohil as Amanda, ex-retail store manager who’s now part of an army of personal assistants. She knows the true consequences of McCreadie’s dealings and may find a way to hasten his much-delayed comeuppance.

Director Michael Winterbottom, who wrote the script with an assist from Sean Gray, appears to be juggling the styles of several other iconic comedy filmmakers. Nick’s inquiries and interviews are much in the vein of Christopher Guest’s “mockumentaries” with the cuts from the “talking heads” to the scenes of McCreadie’s corruption. As the prep for the party amps up, Winterbottom adds to the chaos via the overlapping dialogue techniques of Howard Hawks and especially Robert Altman (with some of the thick accents I had a tough time grasping some gags). Still the film falters a bit when it explores several real-life tragedies, especially with the families stranded on the beach, although their exploitation by the reality show is a needed jab at publicity-starved celebs using those really starving. That’s when story is set aside for the film’s real agenda. It’s hammered (or pummeled) home during an interminable “fact-montage” preceding the end credits pointing out (over and over) the massive gap between those who make the clothes and those that sell and model them. The producers must assume that we didn’t come away with that from the film’s previous 95 minutes. Perhaps part of that sequence could have been whittled down in order to spend the time and budget on that inept CGI lion (I may owe the cartoon Buck the dog in CALL OF THE WILD an apology). Yes, this is a satire on society, but the true ugliness of the subjects (and their real-life inspirations) works against the comic tone of the tale. What should be a banana peel pratfall of a stuffy rich guy turns into a gruesome evisceration. Coogan’s always a watchable performer, but the heavy-handed GREED is just not (here’s Gecko again) “good”.

2 out of 4

GREED opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas

WAMG Giveaway – Win THE SPACE BETWEEN US Blu-ray


Star-crossed lovers find their place in the universe together in THE SPACE BETWEEN US. The movie landed on Digital HD May 2nd  and will be on Blu-ray™, DVD, and On Demand May 16 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. Discover young romance and the beauty of Earth, starring Asa Butterfield (Ender’s Game; Hugo), Britt Robertson (Tomorrowland; The Longest Ride), Gary Oldman (The Dark Knight trilogy; the Harry Potter franchise), and Carla Gugino (Sin City; San Andreas).
Now you can own THE SPACE BETWEEN US Blu-ray. We Are Movie Geeks has FIVE copies to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment answering this question: What is your favorite movie featuring Gary Oldman? (mine is TRUE ROMANCE!). It’s so easy!

Good Luck!

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.  NO P.O. BOXES.  NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.

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Two worlds. One connection. Embark on an extraordinary mission through space to find love and experience our planet like never before in the romantic adventure, The Space Between Us, arriving on Digital HD on May 2, 2017 and on Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand onMay 16, 2017 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. Starring Gary Oldman (The Dark Night Rises,Harry Potter), Asa Butterfield (Ender’s Game, Hugo), Carla Gugino (Night At The Museum, “Wayward Pines”), Britt Robertson (A Dog’s Purpose, Tomorrowland), BD Wong (Jurassic World, “Law & Order: SVU”) and Janet Montgomery (“This Is Us”, Black Swan), The Space Between Us takes viewers on an out-of-this-world journey that reveals all the incredible beauty of the Earth and proves love is a universal language. From STXfilms (The Edge of Seventeen, Bad Moms), The Space Between Us on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD is filled with special bonus features including a never-before-seen alternate ending and deleted scenes!

THE SPACE BETWEEN US

Sixteen-year-old Gardner Elliot (Butterfield) is the first human born on Mars, living his whole life with a team of scientists on the red planet.  He’s always longed to see Earth to find the father he’s never known and to meet a beautiful street smart girl named Tulsa (Robertson) he’s encountered friends with online.  But when his chance finally comes, doctors discover his heart can’t withstand the Earth’s atmosphere.  Eager to find his father, Gardner and Tulsa escape on a cross-country race against time to unravel the mysteries of how he came to be and where he belongs in the universe.  See the heartfelt and inspiring romantic adventure about how far one person can go for love.

BLU-RAY, DVD AND DIGITAL BONUS FEATURES:

  • Alternate Ending
  • Deleted Scenes
  • “Love” Featurette  – An inside look, with the cast and filmmakers, at the themes of the film,highlighting the one theme that connects us all – Love.
  • Feature Commentary with Director Peter Chelsom – Available only on Blu-RayTM and DVD.

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THE SPACE BETWEEN US – Starring Asa Butterfield Now on Digital HD – On Blu-ray & DVD May 16th

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Star-crossed lovers find their place in the universe together in THE SPACE BETWEEN US. The movie landed on Digital HD May 2nd  and will be on Blu-ray™, DVD, and On Demand May 16 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. Discover young romance and the beauty of Earth, starring Asa Butterfield (Ender’s Game; Hugo), Britt Robertson (Tomorrowland; The Longest Ride), Gary Oldman (The Dark Knight trilogy; the Harry Potter franchise), and Carla Gugino (Sin City; San Andreas).

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Two worlds. One connection. Embark on an extraordinary mission through space to find love and experience our planet like never before in the romantic adventure, The Space Between Us, arriving on Digital HD on May 2, 2017 and on Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand onMay 16, 2017 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. Starring Gary Oldman (The Dark Night Rises,Harry Potter), Asa Butterfield (Ender’s Game, Hugo), Carla Gugino (Night At The Museum, “Wayward Pines”), Britt Robertson (A Dog’s Purpose, Tomorrowland), BD Wong (Jurassic World, “Law & Order: SVU”) and Janet Montgomery (“This Is Us”, Black Swan), The Space Between Us takes viewers on an out-of-this-world journey that reveals all the incredible beauty of the Earth and proves love is a universal language. From STXfilms (The Edge of Seventeen, Bad Moms), The Space Between Us on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD is filled with special bonus features including a never-before-seen alternate ending and deleted scenes!

THE SPACE BETWEEN US

Sixteen-year-old Gardner Elliot (Butterfield) is the first human born on Mars, living his whole life with a team of scientists on the red planet.  He’s always longed to see Earth to find the father he’s never known and to meet a beautiful street smart girl named Tulsa (Robertson) he’s encountered friends with online.  But when his chance finally comes, doctors discover his heart can’t withstand the Earth’s atmosphere.  Eager to find his father, Gardner and Tulsa escape on a cross-country race against time to unravel the mysteries of how he came to be and where he belongs in the universe.  See the heartfelt and inspiring romantic adventure about how far one person can go for love.

BLU-RAY, DVD AND DIGITAL BONUS FEATURES:

  • Alternate Ending
  • Deleted Scenes
  • “Love” Featurette  – An inside look, with the cast and filmmakers, at the themes of the film,highlighting the one theme that connects us all – Love.
  • Feature Commentary with Director Peter Chelsom – Available only on Blu-RayTM and DVD.

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THE SPACE BETWEEN US – Starring Asa Butterfield Landing on Digital HD May 2nd and on Blu-ray & DVD May 16th

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Star-crossed lovers find their place in the universe together when THE SPACE BETWEEN US lands on Digital HD May 2, and on Blu-ray™, DVD, and On Demand May 16 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. Discover young romance and the beauty of Earth, starring Asa Butterfield (Ender’s Game; Hugo), Britt Robertson (Tomorrowland; The Longest Ride), Gary Oldman (The Dark Knight trilogy; the Harry Potter franchise), and Carla Gugino (Sin City; San Andreas).

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Two worlds. One connection. Embark on an extraordinary mission through space to find love and experience our planet like never before in the romantic adventure, The Space Between Us, arriving on Digital HD on May 2, 2017 and on Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand onMay 16, 2017 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. Starring Gary Oldman (The Dark Night Rises,Harry Potter), Asa Butterfield (Ender’s Game, Hugo), Carla Gugino (Night At The Museum, “Wayward Pines”), Britt Robertson (A Dog’s Purpose, Tomorrowland), BD Wong (Jurassic World, “Law & Order: SVU”) and Janet Montgomery (“This Is Us”, Black Swan), The Space Between Us takes viewers on an out-of-this-world journey that reveals all the incredible beauty of the Earth and proves love is a universal language. From STXfilms (The Edge of Seventeen, Bad Moms), The Space Between Us on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD is filled with special bonus features including a never-before-seen alternate ending and deleted scenes!

THE SPACE BETWEEN US

Sixteen-year-old Gardner Elliot (Butterfield) is the first human born on Mars, living his whole life with a team of scientists on the red planet.  He’s always longed to see Earth to find the father he’s never known and to meet a beautiful street smart girl named Tulsa (Robertson) he’s encountered friends with online.  But when his chance finally comes, doctors discover his heart can’t withstand the Earth’s atmosphere.  Eager to find his father, Gardner and Tulsa escape on a cross-country race against time to unravel the mysteries of how he came to be and where he belongs in the universe.  See the heartfelt and inspiring romantic adventure about how far one person can go for love.

BLU-RAY, DVD AND DIGITAL BONUS FEATURES:

  • Alternate Ending
  • Deleted Scenes
  • “Love” Featurette  – An inside look, with the cast and filmmakers, at the themes of the film,highlighting the one theme that connects us all – Love.
  • Feature Commentary with Director Peter Chelsom – Available only on Blu-RayTM and DVD.

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THE SPACE BETWEEN US – Review

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Young teen girls who believe in sticky-sweet miracles may have an easy time sitting through the poorly-written and relentlessly mawkish THE SPACE BETWEEN US, but for many it will be hard to overlook the combination of cloying sentimentality and gaping plot holes. In 2018 astronaut Sarah Elliot (Janet Montgomery) departs on a mission to Mars overseen by wealthy scientist Nathaniel Shepherd (Gary Oldman) before she realizes she is pregnant (oops!). Shortly after landing on the Red Planet, she dies from complications related to childbirth. Her son Gardner (Asa Butterfield) thus grows up on Mars, reaching the age of 16 only having known only a handful of people in this space colony including Kendra (Carla Gugino), a scientist who looks after him and Centaur, a robot. Using the technology available, Gardner has connected via the internet with a sassy high school girl back on Earth named Tulsa (Britt Robertson) who lives with her boozer crop-duster foster dad (we know he’s a drunk because he’s introduced passed out with empty beer cans all over his lap). Though they email each other for some time, Tulsa has no idea Gardner isn’t, as he claims to be, a wealthy New York kid isolated due to health issues. Gardner falls for Tulsa through cyberspace, and after a plot device sends him to Earth, he heads to Colorado to find her. Armed with on old photo, the couple then hunt down Gardner’s mysterious father whom he has never met. Complicating all of this is Earth’s pesky environment, which applies atmospheric pressures that Gardner’s Mars-born body cannot withstand.

The many problems with this wannabe weepie from director Peter Chelsom (THE HANNAH MONTANA MOVIE) extend far beyond its paint-by-numbers plot.  Though it has an ‘adapted from the from the best-selling young adult novel’ vibe to it, it’s actually an original screenplay – a really lousy one crammed with groaners like “I can’t choose where I was born, but I can choose where I die” and “Hurry, there’s no time!”, and “Stay with me, Gardner!” and “Earth doesn’t want me”. The story may have worked better on paper, allowing for more introspection and emotional exploration, but the characters in THE SPACE BETWEEN US are poorly-developed. I didn’t see Gardner and Tulsa bonding or making much of a connection during their brief facetime chats. When they finally meet, her first instinct is to slap him in the face, as she’s clearly more annoyed than happy. But minutes later they’re suddenly declaring their love for each other while on the run, government agents and choppers in pursuit (good thing she knows how to fly that crop duster!). Why is she risking her life for this kid she barely knows? Who is Gardner’s real father and why is that so important? Who’s that creepy hippy chick tossing flower petals? Instead of focusing on these questions, THE SPACE BETWEEN US is satisfied to prance around whimsically in Precioustown for two solid hours, delivering sweet vignettes devoid of purpose. The film is padded with scenes of Tulsa riding on her motorcycle while lame new pop songs wail loudly on the soundtrack, or Gardner and Tulsa stealing vintage cars and falling in love while lame new pop songs wail loudly on the soundtrack.

Even allowing for a certain level of unreality in a movie about interplanetary romance, THE SPACE BETWEEN US smells of contrivance and ineptness. That crop duster crashes into a barn which explodes in a massive fireball as if it was being used to store napalm, yet minutes later authorities are combing through the wreckage and it barely looks singed. What keeps THE SPACE BETWEEN US from being completely insufferable is the earnest charm in Asa Butterfield and Britt Robertson’s performances. Screen chemistry is tough and when you’ve got young actors who haven’t really proven themselves in film outside of things like ENDER’S GAME and TOMORROWLAND, you can be forgiven for expecting the worst when they’re supposed to be communicating a once-in-a-lifetime love. But their time together is sort of sweet. Miscast Gary Oldman, a long-term devotee of the art of ham, overacts like a champ while Carla Gugino is a bit better. Even I am occasionally up for a good mushy movie, but THE SPACE BETWEEN US is softer in the head than the heart.

1 1/2 of 5 Stars

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Eva Green And Asa Butterfield Star In Second Trailer For MISS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN

DF-07504 - Jake (Asa Butterfield) makes sure Emma (Ella Purnell) stays relatively down to earth. Photo Credit: Jay Maidment.
Photo Credit: Jay Maidment.

20th Century Fox has released a BRAND NEW trailer for MISS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN

From visionary director Tim Burton, and based upon the best-selling novel, comes an unforgettable motion picture experience. When Jake discovers clues to a mystery that spans alternate realities and times, he uncovers a secret refuge known as Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. As he learns about the residents and their unusual abilities, Jake realizes that safety is an illusion, and danger lurks in the form of powerful, hidden enemies. Jake must figure out who is real, who can be trusted, and who he really is.

MISS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN hits theaters everywhere September 30, 2016.

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A BRILLIANT YOUNG MIND – The Review

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A BRILLIANT YOUNG MIND tells the story of a mathematically gifted British teen on the autism spectrum as he prepares to compete in an international math Olympics.

Nathan (Asa Butterfield) is gifted at math but struggles with relationships, including with his caring but overwhelmed mother Julie (Sally Hawkins). Nathan has the more functional form of autism once known as Aspergers but he is also still struggling with the trauma of the accidental death of his father Michael (Martin McCann), who was killed in a car wreck while Nathan was in the car. His mother has done her best to raise him as a single parent but Nathan was never as close to her as his dad and it has been difficult for them both. A chance to enter the International Math Olympiad brings an unconventional math coach into Nathan’s life and introduces him to other mathematically gifted kids.

There is quite a bit of comedy and even some romance in this pleasant, crowd-pleasing British film. While it follows a conventional story arc, A BRILLIANT YOUNG MIND also accurately depicts some of the difficulties of raising a child on the autism spectrum. Director Morgan Mathews loosely based the story  on a boy he met while filming his documentary “Beautiful Young Minds.” This British film was originally named “X + Y” when it played at the Toronto film festival, which is a clever mathematical title but a little obscure in telling an audience what the film is about. Nathan is indeed a brilliant young mathematical mind, and in fact sees everything in his world through a mathematical filter. Although he is a nice looking boy, Nathan is shy and the only thing he seems to care about is math. Despite his shyness with others, he is a bit of tyrant towards his eager-to-please mother, treating her with coldness although he clearly knows he needs her too. He is picky about his food, and his obsession with prime numbers leads him to demand that he have an exact number of shrimp in his Chinese take-out, berating his long-suffering mother if she gets it wrong. His mother is so devoted to her still-grieving son that she takes his abuse without complaint, and even seeming to feel inadequate to the task of raising him.

When Nathan’s school recommends a math coach to prepare him for the math competition, a new factor changes the toxic social dynamics. Martin Humphreys (Rafe Spall) is a once-promising math prodigy who didn’t quite live up to potential. Now teaching in the middle school, he is an unconventional wise-cracker and a bit of a slob, who also suffers from muscular dystrophy. Still he makes a connection with Nathan and the two become close. The pair travel to a math camp in Taiwan, where Nathan meets other mathematical-gifted kids, including another boy with autism, a girl who plays piano and introduces him to the links between music and math, and a Chinese girl, Zhang Mei (Jo Yang), under pressure to succeed by her family.

The film moves smoothly back and forth between comic and drama scenes, never becoming overly sentimental. The British cast is splendid, but Eddie Marsan nearly steals the show as Richard, the head of the British math team and a competition official, a sharp, funny fellow who cuts through a lot of distractions to get straight to the heart of the matter. Fine photography and the film’s nice pacing enhance the experience.

One does not have to have an interest in math to enjoy A BRILLIANT YOUNG MIND’s appealing, intelligent, informative story with a surprisingly realistic peek inside life raising an autistic child.

The film opens Friday, Sept. 25, at Plaza Frontenac Cinema

OVERALL RATING: 3 1/2 OUT OF 5 STARS

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Asa Butterfield And Britt Robertson Sci-Fi Film Officially Titled THE SPACE BETWEEN US

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Motion picture and television studio STX Entertainment has officially titled their previously untitled intergalactic love story as THE SPACE BETWEEN US, it was announced today by Oren Aviv, President of STX Entertainment’s Motion Picture Group.

Set to start production this month, the film stars Gary Oldman (The Dark Knight, Harry Potter), Asa Butterfield (Ender’s Game, Hugo), Carla Gugino (“Wayward Pines,” Night at the Museum), Britt Robertson (Tomorrowland, The Longest Ride), BD Wong (Jurassic World, “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit”), and Janet Montgomery (Black Swan, “Salem”).

In this star-crossed science fiction love story about two teens from different worlds, Gardner Elliot, the first human born on Mars, is secretly raised in an experimental colony after his astronaut mother dies during childbirth. Sixteen years later, Gardner begins an online romance with a girl living in Colorado and hatches a plan to travel across the universe to meet her. Now, on the run, with Earth’s gravity threatening his very existence, Gardner must race against time and nature to find his love and win her heart. Once united, the two teens venture to seek out the enigmatic billionaire who funded the original expedition to Mars, in hopes of uncovering information about Gardner’s mother and the mysterious circumstances surrounding how Gardner came into existence.

A BRILLIANT YOUNG MIND Trailer Features Asa Butterfield, Rafe Spall And Sally Hawkins

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Watch the trailer for the coming-of-age drama A BRILLIANT YOUNG MIND.

From Samuel Goldwyn Films, the movie opens in theaters September 11, 2015.

In A BRILLIANT YOUNG MIND, a young math genius didn’t count on one thing: love.

Teenage math prodigy Nathan (Asa Butterfield, HUGO) struggles when it comes to building relationships with other people, not least with his caring, widowed mother, Julie (Oscar-nominated Sally Hawkins, BLUE JASMINE), who grapples with her own loneliness.

In a confusing world, Nathan finds comfort in numbers. And when he’s taken under the wing of an unconventional and anarchic teacher (Rafe Spall), the pair forge an unusual friendship. Eventually, Nathan’s talents win him a place on the U.K.’s National team at the International Mathematics Olympiad (IMO) and the team travels to a training camp in Taiwan, under the supervision of enthusiastic squad leader Richard (Eddie Marsan).

In unfamiliar surroundings, Nathan is confronted by a series of unexpected challenges — not least the unfamiliar feelings he begins to experience for his Chinese counterpart, the beautiful Zhang Mei (Jo Yang), feelings that develop when the young mathematicians return to England for the IMO, held at Trinity College, Cambridge.

From suburban England to bustling Taipei and back again, this original and heartwarming film tracks the funny and complex relationships that Nathan builds, as he is confronted by the irrational nature of love.

Featuring an all-star British cast, A BRILLIANT YOUNG MIND is directed by BAFTA award-winning filmmaker Morgan Matthews and is inspired by his documentary BEAUTIFUL YOUNG MINDS. The film is photographed by Oscar-nominated cinematographer Danny Cohen (THE KING’S SPEECH and LES MISÉRABLES) and written by James Graham.

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Director Morgan Matthews and Asa Butterfield on the set of A BRILLIANT YOUNG MIND.

Photo Credit – Samuel Goldwyn Films

TEN THOUSAND SAINTS – The Review

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It was the hair, at first I thought I would hate this movie because of the kid’s hair.  Allow me to explain, Jude is one messed up teenager (aren’t all teenagers messed up in the movies?)  At the very start we see his Father and Mother break up.  His Father,( Ethan Hawke: Gattaca), likes to grow marijuana in his green house, and that is where he sleeps when Mom kicks him out of the house.  Jude’s Father, Les, explains to young Jude,( Henry Keleman,) exactly what happened and how that will impact the future story.

Fast forward a few years and Jude, now played by Asa Butterfield, is a young man with troubles.  He and his best friend,( apparently his only friend,) Teddy (Avan Jogia) like to get high and listen to Hard Core Punk Rock. Through the early part of the movie Jude has one of those locks of hair hanging right in his face, hanging limp between his eyes.  Never thought I would be so old as to say this but that hair is really annoying, no character in the movie asks him about the hair hanging in his face, and he never brushes it out of the way.

Seriously, I felt a lot better about Jude when about halfway through TEN THOUSAND SAINTS he cuts that lock of hair off and has pretty much a normal haircut.  But well before that I came to really love this movie.  Jude’s Father, Les, so very well played by Ethan Hawke (more or less playing the same type of messed up Father he did in Boyhood) is real big on marijuana.  He is also a surrogate Father to Eliza (Hailee Steinfeld, so damn good in True Grit!) who comes to Vermont to spend a weekend with Les’ ex wife, and Jude’s Mother, Harriet (Julianne Nicholson: August Osage County).

A whole lot happens on that cold weekend, Eliza, Jude and Teddy go to a party, get high, Jude gets beaten up, and Teddy loses his virginity to Eliza.  Naturally Eliza gets pregnant, and then it really gets complicated.  In what seems like a predestined event Jude and Teddy huff Freon taken out of an air conditioner.  (These kids have so little access to marijuana they huff paint thinner!)  The Freon, of course is a bad idea.  Both of them pass out, Teddy dies.  The title comes from a Bible passage spoken by the Minister at Teddy’s funeral.

Eliza goes back to her Mother Diane, Les’ girl friend (Emily Mortimer: Hugo, City Island, Shutter Island) in New York City.  Jude also goes to New York to live with Les, who tries his best to be a good Father, but a professional pot farmer is not such a good role model.   Teddy has an older half brother Johnny (Emile Hirsch: Milk, Speed Racer) who has gone straight edge, that is no drugs, no sex, healthy diet.  Johnny also plays in a seriously hard core band, One Man Army.  He is also practicing Hare Krishna.

There is much talk about Jude being adopted, that Johnny and Teddy have different Fathers, that Eliza should give up her baby for adoption.  And there is much talk about families not necessarily being related.  Much like many other movies about teenagers, (Rebel Without a Cause certainly comes to mind,) a surrogate family is formed, with many members, all of whom want to do the right thing for the memory of Teddy, a kid we hardly get to know.

Where do I begin?  TEN THOUSAND SAINTS has the complexity, the frustrations, the confusion, the dead ends, and the new beginnings, of real life.  The relationships are so complex, the characters so well defined and the story so intimate, and real, and raw that you cannot help but be drawn in and feel that you know these people, or maybe you are, or were, these people.

The setting of New York City when hard core punk was happening, when homeless people were being chased out of Washington Square Park,  when kids were doing anything to get high, and often paying the consequences, all of this is so well defined, and quite obviously on a low budget, you cannot help but be impressed.

I don’t want to give away too much plot but Johnny wants to do a seriously right thing and marry Eliza, even though we learn he is not really oriented that way.  Of course it’s Jude who really loves her and tries his best to do the right thing as well.

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TEN THOUSAND SAINTS is a true ensemble, with every character indelible, and true and memorable.  Every actor gets moments, many moments, to shine.  Against all the odds there is a happy, a very happy ending.  Not ashamed to say it, I wept at the last few minutes of TEN THOUSAND SAINTS, partly from sadness at seeing the story come to an end.  I could spend hours with these characters, this movie could be twice as long, or longer, and I would love every minute.

Based on a novel by Eleanor Henderson, which may be where a lot of the joy and heartfelt emotion comes from, this movie is a treasure.

In a very sweet, odd little moment, when they are just getting to know each other Eliza asks Teddy if he is Indian, because of his eyes.  He says yes “but Gandhi, not Geronimo.”  There are dozens of moments like that, all through TEN THOUSAND SAINTS.  This is one of those movies, many are being made now, that deserves to be widely distributed in theaters, but likely will not.  Movies that are character driven, that tell a story, that have something valid and real and honest and sincere to say about the human condition, don’t seem to stand a chance to be shown in multiplex theaters anymore. And we are all the more impoverished as a culture because of that.

I have to give TEN THOUSAND SAINTS Five out of Five stars, this movie is a masterpiece.  I sincerely would like to see more work from Shari Springer Burman and Robert Pulcini.  They have done good work before, such as American Splendor and Cinema Verite’.

Did I mention that TEN THOUSAND SAINTS is also funny?  Very, very funny at times.  And the music flat kicks ass!

TEN THOUSAND SAINTS opens in theaters, On Demand and iTunes August 14th

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