H IS FOR HAWK – Review

I would say that it’s unusual for a somber set-in-the-UK drama based on a memoir (yes, it’s all true) to be released three weeks into the new year, well past awards noms deadline, but further research has revealed that this did get a one-week run in a US theater last month to be considered for the accolades. And so far, bupkis (we’ll see early Thursday morning). Of course, that’s no reflection on this film’s quality or merits. Still, its title suggests a whimsical “nature-bonding” story ala THE PENGUIN LESSONS or countless canine sagas. Now, that species connection factors in, but the heart of the story is a woman’s emotional journey in H IS FOR HAWK.


The woman at this story’s center is a research (mostly science history) fellow at Jesus College, Cambridge named Helen Macdonald (Claire Foy). On a blustery day in 2007, she’s birdwatching in the nearby countryside. As she heads home, she phones her photojournalist father Alisdair (Brendan Gleeson) with news that she spotted a pair of goshawks (a rare sighting). Dad cuts the call short as he must head to a London assignment. That evening, at her on-campus housing home, Helen meets another academic, Christina (Denise Gough) for dinner. On the way out, Helen gets a phone call that changes everything: her adored papa succumbed to a fatal heart attack in the city. Helen’s life goes into a tailspin, indecisive about pursuing a three-year position in Germany, which squelches her new romance. She then has an epiphany and knocks on the door of an old friend named Stu (Sam Spruell). Years before, both had been ardent members of a falconry society. He’s still involved (his bird is perched in his kitchen), so Helen asks him for intel on getting back in. But she doesn’t want a falcon. Instead, Helen wants to train the more difficult, spirited goshawk. Stu hooks her up with a seller, and soon the bird she names Mabel is taking up her every spare moment. Quickly the bond between the two becomes so intense that Helen is neglecting her classes and ignoring calls and visits from friends. And then the school administrators tell her that this type of “pet” isn’t allowed in college quarters. Can Helen continue to train and hunt with Mabel? And could this be a way for Helen to escape her grief rather than facing it and moving forward with her life?

This exploration into the art and skill of falconry becomes a compelling showcase for the gifted Foy. We’ve seen her excellent supporting work in films like FIRST MAN and WOMEN TALKING, but we’ve really not seen her carry the emotional weight of a film’s lead performance (though I’m told she was excellent as Queen Elizabeth II in the streaming series, “The Crown”). Foy shows us the vibrant, engaged Helen in the early scenes of her birdwatching and lecturing her class, but with her loss we see the light in her eyes suddenly dim. Not even a romantic online fling brings that spark back, until Mabel literally swoops in. Then Foy shows us another side of Helen, with an overriding obsession that almost seals her off from the world. It’s a tricky balancing act as Helen elicits our sympathy while often frustrating us, and Foy is more than up to the complex challenges. Happily we’re treated to several flashbacks of her opposite the always engaging Gleeson as her lovably gruff, but warm and encouraging papa, perhaps a near perfect “girl dad”. It’s quite a contrast to Helen’s maternal connections with her mum, played with subtle restraint and grace by Lindsay Duncan. We see that the loss of her soulmate has drained her, though she also yearns to share the grief with her increasingly distant daughter. Spruell is strong as Helen’s her birding buddy Stu as he tries to help train Mabel while attempting to calm the always anxious Helen. Speaking of pals, Gough (so wonderful on another streaming show, “Andor”) is also very effective as co-worker confidant Christina, who wants to be a “lifeline” to her floundering chum as she tries to understand her increasing withdrawl into mania.

The impressive ensemble is guided by director Phillipa Lowthrope, working from Emma Donoghue’s screenplay adaptation of Helen Macdonald’s acclaimed memoir. Lowthrope keeps us engaged, as the backdrops suddenly switch from ancient academia to the glories of the countryside. And those scenes of Helen working (she insists that they’re partners in the hunts) with the gorgeous, intense (her glare) Mabel truly soar. A sequence in the deep woods of Mabel swooping in on a very unlucky rabbit is haunting (there’s a drone crew in the credits that were really “on their toes”). While these scenes are worthy of any lauded nature docuseries, it’s the very human drama at the center of the story that’s truly compelling. This is such a well-crafted exploration of the impact of mourning on someone grieving, though it offers no easy fixes. In less works, the introduction of an “animal partner” would be the needed “remedy”, but here we see how the distracting fixation can cut a person out of the human (rat) race. Some viewers may be a bit put off by the rather open-ended finale, but life can’t always be “wrapped up in a bow” to facilitate a desired “happy ending”. That idea and the winning performance of Foy really enables H IS FOR HAWK to spread its wings and take flight.

3 Out of 4

H IS FOR HAWK opens in select theatres on Friday, January 23, 2026

See Eddie Izzard In Teaser For DOCTOR JEKYLL – Debuts At FrightFest August 25

Check out the brand new teaser for DOCTOR JEKYLL, directed by Joe Stephenson.

The film will have its’ World Premiere at FrightFest on Friday, August 25 and stars Eddie Izzard, Scott Chambers, Lindsay Duncan and Simon Callow. The film’s score is from Blair Mowat.

An isolated mansion, a mysterious locked room, creepy corridors, a dusty cellar and a mad doctor…Hammer horror is back with a modern reimagining of the classic Robert Louis Stevenson’s 1886 novella ‘The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde’.

When ex-convict Rob takes the carer position to the infamous Nina Jekyll, little does he know he’s part of an evil master plan devised by her alter ego Rachel Hyde. But to what lengths will Rob go to satisfy his client’s weird wishes and his own ambitions for the daughter he has never even seen? 

Some of Izzard’s best roles have been in 2020’s SIX MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT (review), 2017 VICTORIA & ABDUL (review), 2008’s VALKYRIE (streaming on MAX), 2009’s RAGE from director Sally Potter, 2001’s THE CAT’S MEOW (streaming on Prime), and the superhero film MYSTERY MEN (streaming on Peacock).

GIFTED – Review

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In just a couple of days the Summer blockbuster season will get a big jump-start (hey Spring’s not yet a month old) when those magnificent men (and women) in their flying “muscle-car” machines start spinning their wheels and defying gravity at the multiplex. As they rev their engines here’s a quiet little “heart-tugger’ about family and kids that stars a guy that usually helps usher in the big popcorn flicks as Marvel Studios’ patriotic powerhouse. Like many “swinging” singles from TV (“Family Affair”) and cinema (RAISING HELEN), he’s tackling unexpected parenthood after the tragic demise of the birth mother. And things get even more complicated, when (as in other recent films like LITTLE MAN TATE) the child is a genius, brainy, or as the title proclaims, GIFTED.

 

Frank Adler (Chris Evans) is living a pretty good life in the southern “sunshine state” of Florida. He keeps busy bringing in the bread by repairing boats at the local dock. This skill certainly comes in handy, since this hunky bachelor is raising his late sister’s only child Mary (Mckenna Grace), They live in a modest cottage complex next door to their landlord, and weekend babysitter, Roberta (Octavia Spenser). But things are a-changin’, now that Mary is seven. Frank has been home-schooling her, and can barely keep up with her astounding aptitude for mathematics. But now that she’s seven, Frank thinks Mary should attend public school in order to hone her social skills. As her stunned first grade teacher Bonnie (Jenny Slate) discovers, Mary is intellectually miles ahead of her classmate. And Mary is boooored. After a school bus dust-up, Frank is called into the principal’s office for a confab. Ms. Davis (Elizabeth Marvel) tells him that she can get Mary into an exclusive school for gifted children on a full scholarship. But Frank insists that Mary needs to stay put. That night Bonnie tracks him down to their local watering hole, to lend a sympathetic ear. One drink leads to another, and…the two share a secret romance. But Frank’s joy is short-lived by the arrival of his estranged mother the wealthy Evelyn (Lindsay Duncan). She’s enraged that Mary is in public school and, since Mary’s father left the picture before she was born, insists that the child return with her to Boston for a “proper education”. The squabble leads to a court battle, but can “average Joe” Frank possibly prevail against his mom’s hired legal “guns”? And what about Mary and her future?

 

 

With his strong lead performance, Evans confirms that he’ll have a long career after his passes on his “mighty shield” (just don’t let it go too soon, okay?). He makes Frank an affable, easy-going everyman, but one that’s focused. This is particularly true when he goes to see the principal, knowing when to call her bluff. He’s strong in his beliefs about what’s best for Mary, and will defend his decisions without backing down. But Evans shows us his inner conflict, as he wonders whether he is doing right by her. And he conveys Frank’s sadness, over the loss of his sis, then the possibility of losing her child,  knowing that his heart is being chipped away to nothing. Best of all, Evans is a great partner for the remarkable Grace, at once achingly adorable just before frustrating us with her stubbornness (maybe she gets it from her uncle and grandma’). As Mary she projects intelligence with a sense of longing, wanting to connect with kids her age, but unable to fit in. And just try not to tear up as she bounces from despair to rage when forced to do “what’s best”. The last part of the family triangle is the terrific Duncan, taking a character that could’ve been a one-dimensional villain and adding real depth. In her first appearance Evelyn seems “snooty” and aloof until we see that she believes that Mary is a second chance, a way to correct what went wrong with her own daughter. And like Frank, she’s a fierce fighter, best illustrated when she is cross-examined (that “mama bear” will not suffer fools). Slate is warm and nurturing as the sympathetic teacher, but she’s given little to do after her awkward “walk of shame”, relegated to being a supportive witness to the legal battles. The same can be said of Spencer, who must be another cheerleader for Franks and Mary, a clichéd soulful “earth mother” who dispenses home-spun wisdom spiced with lots of “sass”.

 

Director Marc Webb bounces back from the flawed Amazing Spider-Man flicks, to guide a film that’s got a little something for everyone: comedy, drama, romance, and legal thriller. The pace never sags, since he knows when to dwell on a moment for impact and when to move on before things get way too sentimental. Tom Flynn’s screenplay borrows more than a bit from TATE and KRAMER VS. KRAMER (with some of LOSING ISAIAH and GOOD WILL HUNTING tossed in for good measure), but his story takes a couple of unforseen turns that keep viewers on their toes. Although some of the courtroom scenes are compelling, the real heart of the story is Frank and Mary. Their exchanges ring true and avoid being maudlin, although one scene of them having a spiritual talk silhouetted against the setting sun felt like a bit from the old “Courtship of Eddie’s Father” sitcom. The cinematography by Stuart Dryburgh captures the hazy look of humid Florida, while the score from Rob Simonsen never overpowers and knows when to back away. In other hands the film could have come off as a bigger budgeted “made for basic cable TV” movie of the week, in heavy rotation on Lifetime, but Webb’s confident direction and the easy rapport between Evans and Grace make GIFTED a sweet, not syrupy look at the highs and lows of parenting.

 

3.5 Out of 5

 

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New Poster For Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s BIRDMAN Goes Retro

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Once upon a time, when studios built their films around a big cast filled with A-listers, they made sure to promote their latest spectacles by plastering their stars faces at the bottom of just about every poster. The actors names were also prominently featured to remind moviegoers of their favorite stars’ next movie.

In a nostalgic throwback to those golden days of Hollywood, Fox Searchlight has released a new name, face-driven poster for their film BIRDMAN.

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Directed by Academy Award nominee Alejandro González Iñárritu (Babel, 21 Grams), BIRDMAN stars Michael Keaton as washed-up actor Riggan Thompson, who must overcome his ego and family trouble as he mounts a Broadway play to reclaim his past glory.

“Riggan is profoundly human,” Iñárritu says. “I saw him as a kind of Don Quixote, where the humor comes from the disparity and permanent dislocation of his solemn ambitions and the ignoble reality that surrounds him. Basically, it’s the story of all of us.”

The film, which also stars Zach Galifianakis, Edward Norton, Emma Stone, and Naomi Watts, will close the New York Film Festival on October 11 following critically acclaimed showings at the Telluride and Venice Film Festivals.

Grammy Award winning drummer and composer Antonio Sanchez scores Fox Searchlight’s dark comedy.

In his first role as a film composer, Sanchez recorded parts of the drum score by improvising from the script’s themes and collaborating with director Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu prior to filming began. Gonzalez Iñárritu needed the film shoot to be cohesive and, with cinematographer Emanuel Lubezki’s extended tracking shots, well-timed. The director relied on Sanchez’s drum score to set the pace for the film’s cast; with the rhythm of the drums tied to the flow of the camera, all tethered to Riggan’s journey towards self-discovery.

“Antonio and I rented a studio one week before I started shooting and he recorded and improvised 60 tracks based on some objectives or emotions the film needed. That helped me enormously and sometimes I even used it on the stage for the actors to understand the rhythm of the scene. Rhythm is everything in cinema,” says Gonzalez Iñárritu.

The soundtrack will be released October 14 on Milan Records. BIRDMAN opens in theaters October 17, 2014.

Be sure to check out the film’s brand new OFFICIAL SITE for a special and interactive experience featuring the imagery from the movie.

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LE WEEK-END – The Review

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Review by Kathleen Kaiser

Director Roger Michell, who brought us such films as Notting Hill, Changing Lanes and Morning Glory, takes us along for a “joy ride” of sorts with his new film – LE WEEK-END.

As we meet Meg (Lindsay Duncan) and Nick (Jim Broadbent), they are attempting to rekindle their relationship and save their marriage by returning to the ambiance and breathtaking beauty of gay Paris’.  Having honeymooned there, they are both consumed by the notion that once back in Paris’, they can reconnect and their lives will return to the way they used to be…..

It seems that while incredibly excited about their travels, the idiosyncrasies that each have over-looked for many years, seem to be exacerbated in their new surroundings.  Meg’s love of the “good life” is being tested, as Nick tries to stay on budget with their accommodations, sending her over the edge.  As Meg is already questioning her continued commitment to Nick and their marriage, not being able to enjoy the types of things she is accustomed to in Paris, sends her off the deep end.

Nick tries to appease her, and regroups to try to make her happy, in hopes of getting a little “somethin – somethin” like in days gone by.  Meg toys with Nick’s emotions, and lets him believe that there is hope for their relationship, all while still questioning her next move.   Nick thinks that everything is going splendidly, when they meet up with an old friend of Nick’s from College, Morgan (Jeff Goldblum).  Morgan extends an invitation for the “two love birds” to attend a party at his home, so they can meet his new young wife and a few of his friends while they are visiting.  Meg is intrigued not only by Morgan, but one of his friends that she meets at the party, as she once again begins to question the purpose of her relationship with Nick, if there is one, and what her next move will be ….

Will Meg and Nick’s relationship make it through their “second honeymoon”?  Will Nick reveal secrets to Meg that will change their lives forever?  And will their chance meeting with Morgan produce the inevitable circumstances that bring everything in Meg and Nick’s relationship to crumble?

The storyline seemed endearing when it started – older couple trying to find passion and rebuild their relationship in the most romantic city on earth – but the emotional rollercoaster that Meg apparently enjoyed keeping Nick on, along with Nick’s puppy-dog existence hoping for glimpse of the beautiful woman he once knew, became down right depressing as this film inched along.  One of the few positives for me was to see Jeff Goldblum back on the BIG SCREEN, as I usually enjoy the characters he plays, but sadly, even his role was unsubstantial in bringing anything positive to the story line.  Suffice to say, even the fact that this movie has some breathtaking scenes in beautiful Paris’, it still wasn’t enough to persuade me to like this film.

1 of 5 Stars

LE WEEKEND opens in St. Louis Friday, March 28th at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Theater

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Roger Michell’s LE WEEK-END Opens in St. Louis March 28

Le Weekend Directed by Roger Michell Starring Lindsay Duncan and Jim Broadbent

If you have a proclivity for the smaller, indie films, then you won’t want to miss LE WEEK-END.  This charming film opens at the Plaza Frontenac Cinema in St. Louis this Friday, March 28th.

Academy Award winner Jim Broadbent (IRIS, TOPSY-TURVY, ANOTHER YEAR) and Lindsay Duncan (ABOUT TIME, ALICE IN WONDERLAND, MANSFIELD PARK) give exquisite performances as Nick and Meg, a long-married British couple revisiting Paris for the first time since their honeymoon in an attempt to rekindle their relationship.

During a two-day escapade, diffident, wistful Nick and demanding, take-charge Meg careen from harmony to disharmony to resignation and back again as they take stock of half a lifetime of deep tenderness – and even deeper regret. A surprise invitation from Nick’s old friend Morgan (Jeff Goldblum), an amusingly boorish American academic with a fancy Parisian address, soon leads them to an unexpectedly hopeful vision of what their love and marriage might still become.

Le Weekend Directed by Roger Michell Starring Lindsay Duncan and Jim Broadbent

LE WEEK-END marks the third feature collaboration between Director Roger Michell and screenwriter Hanif Kureishi (twitter: @Hanifkureishi). The idea for the project started when they were finishing 2006’s Oscar-nominated VENUS. “We thought it would be fun to do the idea of a couple in Paris together,” says Michell. “Seeing what happens between a couple when the kids start to leave home” was central to the original idea for the film.

Michell and Kureishi then embarked on what seemed the most sensible method of research: to visit Paris together as a sort of grumpy couple. “All the things you see Jim and Lindsay do in this film, we did!” jokes Michell.

Watch the trailer for the film that Ann Hornaday (The Washington Post) calls “Emotionally charged and very funny.”

Every so often, films will turn their attention to the romantic lives of older people, but often in an “isn’t that charming” manner that borders on condescension. Bracing, and full of passion, LE WEEK-END’s characters shed the cozy comfort of retiree romantic comedy for an altogether more charged love story.

Meg and Nick have been together forever. For their thirtieth wedding anniversary, they’ve chosen to return to Paris, where they honeymooned. It’s not long before the city of light begins reflecting the couple’s conflicts right back at them.

Le Weekend Directed by Roger Michell Starring Lindsay Duncan and Jim Broadbent

Rejecting their first, depressingly beige, hotel for an impossibly expensive choice, Meg then begins rejecting her husband. “Can I touch you?” he asks, tentatively. “What for?” she snaps. Although they would never stoop to acting them out physically, this relationship has emotional contours the Marquis de Sade could embrace.

When Meg and Nick run into their insufferably successful old friend, played with pure delight by Jeff Goldblum, their squabbles rise to a register that’s both emotionally rich and very funny.

Le Weekend Directed by Roger Michell Starring Lindsay Duncan and Jim Broadbent

By turns sharply comic and deadly serious, LE WEEK-END is full of surprises. The dialogue has both the heart and the crackle of Richard Linklater’s BEFORE… series, delving deep into the tensions that shape this couple’s relationship while holding nothing back.

Director Roger Michell has shown us the pleasures of complicated romance before, but never has his filmmaking felt freer.

LE WEEK-END will have wide appeal for both underserved older audiences and a wider movie-going public. The theme of “Love conquers all” underlies all that happens on Nick and Meg’s Parisian weekend sojourn.

From the brittle scenes at their hotel, to Goldblum’s delicious intervention, LE WEEK-END strikes one surprising grace note after another in its deeply honest portrayal of the perils – and the glorious possibilities – of our romantic lives.

Le Weekend Directed by Roger Michell Starring Lindsay Duncan and Jim Broadbent

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Alejandro González Iñárritu’s BIRDMAN Begins Prinicpal Photography

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Fox Searchlight Pictures and New Regency announced today that principal photography on Alejandro González Iñárritu’s black comedy, BIRDMAN, began on April 15th in New York City. They will co-finance the picture with Worldview Entertainment. Iñárritu co-wrote the script with Nicolas Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris, and Armando Bo.

The film stars Michael Keaton, Lindsay Duncan, Zach Galifianakis, Edward Norton, Andrea Riseborough, Amy Ryan, Emma Stone, and Naomi Watts.

The film will be a New Regency production with Iñárritu and John Lesher serving as producers. Worldview Entertainment’s Christopher Woodrow, Molly Conners and Hoyt David Morgan will executive produce alongside Jim Skotchdopole. The film will be produced by New Regency and Fox Searchlight Pictures will handle marketing and distribution.

“It is thrilling to have such a talented cast to bring this script to life,” says Iñárritu.

“It’s great to be working on Alejandro’s deeply original project with Fox Searchlight and New Regency as they always strive to allow filmmakers to realize their creative vision,” says Lesher.

“We’ve been mesmerized by Alejandro’s work for years. We’re honored to work with this visionary auteur on his imaginative and original dark comedy,” said Claudia Lewis, Fox Searchlight Pictures President of Production.

BIRDMAN or The Unexpected Virtue Of Ignorance is a black comedy that tells the story of an actor (Keaton) – famous for portraying an iconic superhero – as he struggles to mount a Broadway play. In the days leading up to opening night, he battles his ego and attempts to recover his family, his career, and himself.

The deal was brokered by New Regency’s EVP of Business Affairs Eric Roth and Fox Searchlight Pictures Senior Vice President of Business Affairs Megan O’Brien, and by CAA on behalf of the filmmakers and Worldview Entertainment. The project will be overseen by New Regency’s President Brad Weston and VP of Production Andrew Calof and Fox Searchlight Pictures’ Lewis.

Fox Searchlight Pictures is a specialty film company that both produces and acquires motion pictures. It has its own marketing and distribution operations, and its films are distributed internationally by Twentieth Century Fox. Fox Searchlight Pictures is a unit of Fox Filmed Entertainment, a unit of Fox Entertainment Group.

Worldview Entertainment is a leading independent motion picture production and investment company. The company’s slate includes: James Gray’s “Lowlife” starring Marion Cotillard, Joaquin Phoenix and Jeremy Renner; Guillaume Canet’s “Blood Ties” starring Clive Owen; Daniel Espinosa’s “Child 44” starring Tom Hardy with Summit Entertainment; and David Gordon Green’s “Joe” starring Nicolas Cage.