GOOD TIME – Review

An uneven oddity from writer/directors Joshua and Ben Safdie, GOOD TIME never generates the momentum its ‘one crazy night’ premise needs, but its mood is dark, its settings weird, and its characters eccentric enough that I recommend it. This tale of crime and urban living takes place in the streets of the Queens section of NYC. Robert Pattinson stars as Constantine “Connie” Nikas, a wiry scruff who teams up with his mentally-challenged younger brother Nick (Ben Safdie) for a bank robbery that goes all kinds of wrong. The dye packs explode, dousing them both in red. Connie somehow escapes but Nick runs through a glass door and is apprehended. Soon after he’s tossed in jail, Nick picks a fight with another prisoner that doesn’t end well for him and he’s transported to a hospital. Increasingly desperate, Connie spends the rest of the night trying to free his brother from captivity, a goal that involves a series of colorful characters that pass through Connie’s crusade. Jennifer Jason Leigh is strong in a couple of scenes as Corey, Connie’s high-strung older girlfriend who he tries to talk out of bail money when she’s not battling her imbalanced mother. Taliah Webster plays Crystal, a 16-year old black girl caught up in Connie’s scheme, and even seduced by him as he uses her to avoid the cops on his tail. That’s Barkhad Abdi (That Oscar-nominee guy from CAPTAIN PHILLIPS) as an ill-fated security guard at an amusement park who crosses Connie’s path, but you might not recognize him since you never see his face clearly. Then there’s Buddy Duress as Ray, a recently-paroled drug dealer so dense that he makes Connie look like Jason Bourne. Connie mistakenly breaks Ray out of the hospital, thinking he’s Nick, and the pair team up for a night of misfortune that takes up much of the film’s second half, one that includes an angry guard dog, a break-in at an amusement park, and a soda bottle filled with LSD.

Robert Pattinson does all he can to shed his pretty-boy TWILIGHT persona and while he’s excellent, his fan-base from that franchise will have little reason to embrace him here. Connnie’s a petty loser, nasty in his treatment of others, especially women and black folk, and generates almost no sympathy.  Benny Safdie seems real as Nick, a quiet dullard on the verge of rage when introduced being grilled by a therapist (Peter Verby) in the film’s tense and well-written opening.

GOOD TIME tells an inventive crime story with style. Its 35mm camerawork is constantly in motion with artful, neon-lit nighttime imagery and tight close-ups. But it heads down so many peculiar side alleys and tangents from Connie’s initial quest that it goes off track and loses focus, scuttling some potential.  I enjoyed GOOD TIME less for its craziness than for its control. The more bizarre and frantic the material, the less I felt the strength and sureness of the Safdie ‘s directorial hands. GOOD TIMES is not, ultimately, as satisfying as I’d hoped, but it’s never dull and I do recommend it.

3 1/2 of 5 Stars

GOOD TIME opens in St. Louis August 25th exclusively at Landmark’s The Tivoli Theater

Robert Pattinson And More Robert Pattinson In First GOOD TIME Trailer

Ahead of its World Premiere as a Competition title at this year’s 70th Annual Cannes Film Festival, A24 Films has released the first trailer for GOOD TIME starring Robert Pattinson in a career-defining performance.

GOOD TIME is a psychotic symphony of propulsive intensity crafted by two of the most exciting young directors working today. Josh and Ben Safdie’s transcendent vision is an intoxicating portrait of desperation and destruction that will not be soon forgotten.

Following the mind-bending HEAVEN KNOWS WHAT, celebrated filmmakers Josh and Ben Safdie return to the mean streets of New York City with GOOD TIME, a hypnotic crime thriller that explores with bracing immediacy the tragic sway of family and fate.

After a botched bank robbery lands his younger brother in prison, Constantine Nikas (Robert Pattinson) embarks on a twisted odyssey through the city’s underworld in an increasingly desperate—and dangerous—attempt to get his brother out of jail. Over the course of one adrenalized night, Constantine finds himself on a mad descent into violence and mayhem as he races against the clock to save his brother and himself, knowing their lives hang in the balance.

Pattison recently starred in THE LOST CITY OF Z. In his review Jim Batts said of the actor’s performance “Pattinson, almost unrecognizable in his bushy beard, brings some needed humor to what’s basically a sidekick character.”

Also featuring Benny Safdie, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Buddy Duress and Barkhad Abdi, A24 will release GOOD TIME on August 11, 2017.

http://goodtime.movie/

https://www.facebook.com/GoodTimeMov/

GOOD TIME Opens August 11th From A24 – Stars Robert Pattinson


A24 will release GOOD TIME on August 11, 2017.  The film, from Josh & Benny Safdie, will make its World Premiere as a Competition title at this year’s 70th Annual Cannes Film Festival.  The film stars Robert Pattinson, Benny Safdie, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Buddy Duress and Barkhad Abdi.


Following the mind-bending HEAVEN KNOWS WHAT, celebrated filmmakers Josh and Ben Safdie return to the mean streets of New York City with GOOD TIME, a hypnotic crime thriller that explores with bracing immediacy the tragic sway of family and fate.

After a botched bank robbery lands his younger brother in prison, Constantine Nikas (Robert Pattinson) embarks on a twisted odyssey through the city’s underworld in an increasingly desperate—and dangerous—attempt to get his brother out of jail. Over the course of one adrenalized night, Constantine finds himself on a mad descent into violence and mayhem as he races against the clock to save his brother and himself, knowing their lives hang in the balance.

Anchored by a career-defining performance from Robert Pattinson, GOOD TIME is a psychotic symphony of propulsive intensity crafted by two of the most exciting young directors working today. Josh and Ben Safdie’s transcendent vision is an intoxicating portrait of desperation and destruction that will not be soon forgotten.

 

EYE IN THE SKY – The Review

Credit : Bleecker Street
Credit : Bleecker Street

Gavin Hood showed a talent for handling complex issues with brilliant skill in “Tsotsie,” a film about a small-time thug that was both a thriller and a balanced exploration of the intersection of crime, poverty and AIDS in South Africa’s slums. Now the South African director brings that knack for taut thrillers with nuance, balance and humanity to the morally murky subject of drone warfare, in EYE IN THE SKY.

Hood takes a neutral tone in this gripping thriller, where a joint British and American mission to capture a British national, who has become an Islamic terrorist leader in Kenyan, is complicated when their remote surveillance, the “eye in the sky,” reveals a suicide bomber mission in progress. The unexpected discovery seems to change the mission from capture to kill, but that decision is debated between politicians, diplomats, military leaders across international lines, in a tension-filled drama with the soldiers at the drone controls buffeted by their own feelings. The suicide bomber plot starts a countdown and window to take action but the decision is further complicated by the appearance of a young girl (Aisha Takow) in the kill zone.

Drone warfare has allowed soldiers to kill enemies from great distance while eliminating the risk of being on the battlefield, and has sparked myriad moral questions. In this film, Hood explores some of those questions, through the eyes of the human beings involved. At the same time, “Eye In The Sky” is a top-notch thriller, with all the tension and rawness needed to keep audiences riveted and nail-biting.

The film features a fine performance by Helen Mirren as hard-as-nails Colonel Katherine Powell, a British military officer who has spent years tracking the targeted terrorist, a British female convert to radical jihad who has risen to become number 4 on the international terrorist most-wanted list.

When intelligence leads Powell to a house in Kenya, the British see a chance to capture the terrorist alive, and bring her back for interrogation. The late Alan Rickman plays British Lieutenant General Frank Benson, the military top brass observing the military operation Powell is directing, along with a few British politicians, from a panelled conference room in London. In one of his last performances, Rickman plays his part with style and a sharp intelligence, a character who helps viewers to tease out what responsibility is carried by the military and what by their civilian political leaders.

A need for a positive identification of the target leads to a delay. When their terrorist change locations, the “eye in the sky” follows, sending a insect drone into the house, operated by Kenyan undercover agent Jama Farah (Barkhad Abdi). Surveillance reveals the preparations for a suicide bombing. To prevent civilian deaths, the military wants to change the mission from capture to kill but they need political approval for the change.

In a conventional action thriller, this scenario would have painted the various people involved in this decision as right or wrong, good or bad, morally black or white. Hood instead lets each character express their own view of the situation, as well as reveal their feelings about their actions. The result is a film that has all the ticking-clock tension of an action thriller, while intelligently exploring the moral and ethical questions behind drone strikes in a balanced way.

Hood takes no sides, simply presenting the issue in all its complicated nature for the audience to decide. There are no perfect, clear answers here – it is all in the ethical, moral calculation. Is the death of one innocent person worth it if it means saving hundred of others? Do they let this terror mastermind slip from their grasp? How do the Americans and British differ? What about the feelings of those who will pull the trigger? The bouncing back-and-forth in taking responsibility for the action is very telling, as are the different calculations made by the military and the politicians. The film also touches on the moral responsibility and personal anguish of the soldier with his finger on the trigger, USAF drone pilot  Lieutenant Steve Watts, (Aaron Paul), something rarely presented in conventional thrillers.

Although the film plays like an ensemble cast piece, it is interesting to note that all the various characters are in far-flung locations – the general and politicians in a posh London office, Col. Powell in her command center, the American drone operators in Las Vegas. All are pretty remote from the focus of the action, except for the Kenyan agents on the ground, who are facing more direct risk, particularly Kenyan agent Farah, played with verve by Barkhad Abdi, who was nominated for an Oscar for his debut role as the Somali pirate leader in “Captain Phillips. The thriller brilliantly illustrates the power of a connected world, the sophisticated state of surveillance and communications, as well as its limits.

Mirren and Rickman dominate most of the action but the cast also includes Jeremy Northam as Brian Woodale and Iain Glen as British Foreign Secretary James Willett. Director Gavin Hood also plays a role, as Lt. Colonel Ed Walsh.

EYE IN THE SKY is a compulsively watchable thriller, packed with some striking performances, but also a film that engages the mind and humanity of viewers. That Hood can pack all this real-world complexity  in a film that is still a terrific, white-knuckle thriller is amazing and a tribute to his skill. Aided by nice performances and believable, feeling characters, EYE IN THE SKY a must-see film that tackles the issue of drone strikes in a first-rate, intelligent  thriller.

OVERALL RATING: 4 1/2 OUT OF 5 STARS

EYE IN THE SKY opens in St. Louis March 18th, 2016.

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New Photos Of Helen Mirren, Aaron Paul And Alan Rickman From Director Gavin Hood’s EYE IN THE SKY

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Credit : Keith Bernstein / Bleecker Street

Check out the new images of Helen Mirren, Aaron Paul and Alan Rickman from director Gavin Hood’s EYE IN THE SKY.

The film had its World Premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival to a standing ovation and rave reviews.

The upcoming thriller about a top secret military operation that escalates into international crisis opens in select theaters Friday, March 11.

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Alan Rickman stars as Lt. General Frank Benson.

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Phoebe Fox (left) stars as Carrie Gershon and Aaron Paul (right) stars as Steve Watts.

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(Left to Right) Actress Phoebe Fox, director Gavin Hood and actor Aaron Paul on the set of EYE IN THE SKY.

 EYE IN THE SKY

Phoebe Fox (left) stars as Carrie Gershon and Aaron Paul (right) stars as Steve Watts.

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Director Gavin Hood (left) and actress Helen Mirren (right) on the set of EYE IN THE SKY.

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Barkhad Abdi stars as Jama Farah.

Eye In The Sky

(Left to Right) Daniel Fox as Tom Bellamy, Iain Glen as James Willett and Jessica Jones as Kate Barnes.

EYE IN THE SKY stars Helen Mirren as Colonel Katherine Powell, a UK-based military officer in command of a top secret drone operation to capture terrorists in Kenya. Through remote surveillance and on-the-ground intel, Powell discovers the targets are planning a suicide bombing and the mission escalates from “capture” to “kill.”

But as American pilot Steve Watts (Aaron Paul) is about to engage, a nine-year old girl enters the kill zone, triggering an international dispute reaching the highest levels of US and British government over the moral, political, and personal implications of modern warfare.

Also starring Alan Rickman, Barkhad Abdi, Jeremy Northam, Iain Glen and Phoebe Fox, the film is directed by Gavin Hood (TSOTSI) and written by Guy Hibbert (“Prime Suspect”). Producers are Ged Doherty, Colin Firth and David Lancaster.

Visit the official site: bleeckerstreetmedia.com/eyeinthesky

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EYE IN THE SKY Poster Features Helen Mirren

EITS_DIGITAL_One_Sheet

Check out Academy Award winner Helen Mirren in the new poster from Bleecker Street’s EYE IN THE SKY.

From director Gavin Hood and writer Guy Hibbert, the upcoming thriller starring Mirren alongside Aaron Paul, Alan Rickman and Barkhad Abdi opens in select theaters March 11.

EYE IN THE SKY stars Helen Mirren as Colonel Katherine Powell, a UK-based military officer in command of a top secret drone operation to capture terrorists in Kenya.

Through remote surveillance and on-the-ground intel, Powell discovers the targets are planning a suicide bombing and the mission escalates from “capture” to “kill.” But as American pilot Steve Watts (Aaron Paul) is about to engage, a nine-year old girl enters the kill zone, triggering an international dispute reaching the highest levels of US and British government over the moral, political, and personal implications of modern warfare.

Also starring Alan Rickman, Barkhad Abdi, Jeremy Northam, Iain Glen and Phoebe Fox, the film is directed by Gavin Hood (TSOTSI) and written by Guy Hibbert (“Prime Suspect”). Producers are Ged Doherty, Colin Firth and David Lancaster.

Rated “R” for some violence images and language.

Credit: Keith Bernstein / Bleecker Street

Helen Mirren, Aaron Paul And Alan Rickman Star In Trailer For EYE IN THE SKY

Credit: Keith Bernstein / Bleecker Street
Credit: Keith Bernstein / Bleecker Street

Academy Award winner Helen Mirren, Aaron Paul, Alan Rickman and Barkhad Abdi acquire their target in the new North American trailer from Bleecker Street’s EYE IN THE SKY

EYE IN THE SKY stars Helen Mirren as Colonel Katherine Powell, a UK-based military officer in command of a top secret drone operation to capture terrorists in Kenya.

Through remote surveillance and on-the-ground intel, Powell discovers the targets are planning a suicide bombing and the mission escalates from “capture” to “kill.” But as American pilot Steve Watts (Aaron Paul) is about to engage, a nine-year old girl enters the kill zone, triggering an international dispute reaching the highest levels of US and British government over the moral, political, and personal implications of modern warfare.

Also starring Alan Rickman, Barkhad Abdi, Jeremy Northam, Iain Glen and Phoebe Fox, the film is directed by Gavin Hood (TSOTSI) and written by Guy Hibbert (“Prime Suspect”). Producers are Ged Doherty, Colin Firth and David Lancaster.

EYE IN THE SKY opens in select theaters March 11, 2016.

Rated “R” for some violence images and language

BAFTA 2014 Winners – GRAVITY Leads With 6 Awards; 12 YEARS A SLAVE Clinches Best Picture

GRAVITY

With two weeks to go until the 86th Academy Awards are handed out in Hollywood, all eyes were on London as the EE British Academy Film Awards were announced Sunday evening from the Royal Opera House.

12 YEARS A SLAVE was named Best Film with Chiwetel Ejiofor winning leading actor. GRAVITY won six awards including British Film, Director, Original Music, Cinematography, Sound and Special Visual Effects, while AMERICAN HUSTLE won three BAFTAs for Original Screenplay, Make Up & Hair, and Supporting Actress for Jennifer Lawrence.

Leading Actress was presented to Cate Blanchett for playing the title role in BLUE JASMINE – her third BAFTA win ­– and in his feature film debut Barkhad Abdi won Supporting Actor for CAPTAIN PHILLIPS.

12 YEARS A SLAVE

Hosted by Stephen Fry, the ceremony featured a live performance from multi-platinum-selling artist Tinie Tempah and Mercury Prize nominee Laura Mvula.

Dame Helen Mirren was the recipient of the BAFTA Fellowship, Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema went to Peter Greenaway (THE COOK, THE THIEF, HIS WIFE & HER LOVER), while the EE Rising Star Winner (voted for by the public) was Will Poulter.

Check out the red carpet arrival photos HERE.

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Full list of winners:

Outstanding British Film:  GRAVITY – Alfonso Cuarón, David Heyman, Jonás Cuarón

Best Film: 12 YEARS A SLAVE – Anthony Katagas, Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Steve McQueen

British Short Film:  ROOM 8 – James W. Griffiths, Sophie Venner

British Short Animation:  Sleeping With The Fishes – James Walker, Sarah Woolner, Yousif Al-Khalifa

Production Design:  THE GREAT GATSBY – Catherine Martin, Beverley Dunn

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Sound Winner:  GRAVITY – Glenn Freemantle, Skip Lievsay, Christopher Benstead, Niv Adiri, Chris Munro

Editing Winner: RUSH – Dan Hanley, Mike Hill

Documentary Winner:  THE ACT OF KILLING – Joshua Oppenheimer

Christian Bale;Amy Adams;Bradley Cooper

Make-Up and Hair Winner:  AMERICAN HUSTLE – Evelyne Noraz, Lori McCoy-Bell, Kathrine Gordon

Costume Design Winner:  THE GREAT GATSBY – Catherine Martin

Original Music Winner: GRAVITY – Steven Price

Animated Film Winner: FROZEN – Chris Buck, Jennifer Lee

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Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer:  Kieran Evans – Kelly + Victor

Supporting Actor: Barkhad Abdi – CAPTAIN PHILLIPS

Cinematography: GRAVITY – Emmanuel Lubezki

Supporting Actress:  Jennifer Lawrence – AMERICAN HUSTLE

Jennifer Lawrence

Original Screenplay Winner: AMERICAN HUSTLE – Eric Warren Singer, David O. Russell

Adapted Screenplay Winner:  PHILOMENA – Steve Coogan, Jeff Pope

Special Visual Effects Winner:  GRAVITY – Tim Webber, Chris Lawrence, David Shirk, Neil Corbould, Nikki Penny

Film Not in the English Language Winner: THE GREAT BEAUTY – Paolo Sorrentino, Nicola Giuliano, Francesca Cima

Chiwetel Ejiofor

Leading Actor Winner: Chiwetel Ejiofor – 12 YEARS A SLAVE

Director Winner:  Alfonso Cuarón – GRAVITY

Leading Actress Winner:  Cate Blanchett – BLUE JASMINE

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