Thunderdance film festival is a bi-annual event set in the heart of East London and the Dalston area. Winning films will be screened in local cinemas and followed by meet and greets/afterparties. Thunderdance is a festival for the ultimate in new wave London film culture.
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- THUNDERDANCE DARK FILM FESTIVAL (NOVEMBER 2018)
- THUNDERDANCE FILM FESTIVAL (SUMMER 2019)
JUDGES:
RUTGER HAUER
Actor – Blade Runner, Hobo with a Shotgun.
DAVID NUTTER
Director – Game of Thrones, Band Of Brothers.
BARRY WALDMAN
Producer – ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides’ ‘The Taking of Pelham 123’ ‘Armageddon’ ‘Bad Boys II’.
COLIN SALMON
Actor – ‘James Bond’ ‘Resident Evil’ ‘Alien vs. Predator’.
KATHY PHILLIPS
Beauty Director of Conde Nast International.
LEE HICKMAN
Owner of Wizzo DOP representatives.
ANDY MOROHAN
Director – ‘Goal III’ ‘Highlander III’ ‘Guns N’ Roses: Bad Apples’ ‘Murder In Mind’.
SUE TILLY
Fashion and art world influencer.
SHERIDEN THOMAS
Global Executive Producer of Great Guns.
Film Review: CARDINALS (Canada 2016) ***1/2
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CARDINALS is a thoroughly enjoyable dry comedy/suspense drama written by Grayson Moore and and directed by him and Aidan Shipley, both Toronto’s Ryerson University graduates. It stars Sheila McCarthy who is always ever so good in movies like these, since she shot to fame in Patricia Rozema’s I’VE HEARD THE MERMAIDS SINGING. McCarthy plays a mother, Valerie just out of prison from a drunken driving crime that killed her neighbour. She is so good in CARDINALS that one cannot get enough of her.
The film is a bit disorienting. For many a segment, it begins blurry with the audience not knowing what is going on. For example, one scene starts with two women talking in a car before it is revealed that they are Valerie’s two daughters. Another begins with a male visiting Valerie’s house before the male is revealed to be Valerie’s husband. Moore’s script requires the audience to concentrate on the film, often providing surprises that titillate the senses. It is recommended that the film be watched in its entirety in a cinema or if watched at home, without any interruptions. The flow of the film’s narrative should not be interrupted.
One has to love the dialogue. Wants what’s best for your mother. Not so easy when your mother is just out of prison. Example is the daughter to mother conversation when Valerie is just out of prison and the daughter wants the mother to make a few friends again. “Did she suggest going out or did you?” “She called and asked when you were coming out.” “Then she suggested.” “How do you know I want to see her?” Valerie is smart talking all the way and knows what she wants, likely that she had a decade in prison to plan what she was going to do when she got out.
As if the film is not without sufficient surprises (a good thing of course), the directors insert a spring swan parade that Valerie attends out of the blue. Apart for the weird exhibits and odd swan hats and attire, the attendees wear it is snowing in the open. These quirky and other highly original scenes distinguish and make Moore and Shipley’s film their own, creating a unique personality that is impossible to copy.
The role of Valerie’s parole officer is brilliantly written. Though he is shown as a kind of asshole, he does make valid points and observations contributing to the story. All this is evident in the scene where he mediates a meeting between Valerie and (Noah Reid), the son of the man Valerie ran over.
As the film goes on, it becomes apparent all the incidents are not what they seem. A flashback shows Valerie opening a bottle in the car to have a drink after she had hit the neighbour. She enquires if her friend, Wendy who worked at the plant told the reason she had left weeks after Valerie went to prison. Something is afoot and directors Moore and Shiokey piques the interest of the audience like a true Hitchcock suspensor.
CARDINALS remains one of the quirkily films Canadian directors used to churn out in the 80’s like Atom Agoyan, Patricia Rozema, Guy Madden and others. One can hardly wait to see Moore and Shipley’s next project. And stay for the closing credits to listen to the sweet little creepy song.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZjOw0ug3Bqw
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TIFF 2018 Review: TITO AND THE BIRDS (Tito e os Pássaros)(Brazil 2018) ***
Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.
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Eduardo Benaim (screenwriter), Gustavo Steinberg(screenwriter)
From Brazil and in Portuguese comes an unusual animation fantasy TITO AND THE BIRDS, created using oil paintings, digital drawings, and graphic animation. The story concerns a young boy Tito who with his two friends, Sarah and big eyed Buiú set out on a mission to find his father’s missing research on bird songs — the one thing that just might save their world from an epidemic where being afraid makes you ill.
As explained by Tito’s father the only thing to fear is fear itself and he invents a therapy bird machine that explodes with Tito inured. Father is banished by the mother and disappears. It is clear that the filmmakers imitate Disney’s features with its family story and attention to charm.
The metaphor of fear and disease is emphasized a bit too much which also will not be appreciated by the younger audience. What stands out in this feature is the stunning oil colouring.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9aMR9dWWar0
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TIFF 2018 Review: STYX (Germany/Austria 2018) ***
Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.
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In Greek mythology STYX is the river that separates the human world from the underworld. Wolfgang Fischer’s second feature, STYX, begins with a well filmed night accident in Gibraltar where an emergency doctor comes to the rescue. This doctor is the film’s subject. Rike (Susanne Wolff) leaves for on a solo voyage across the Atlantic (reason not given).
She decides to take on the high seas with her 12-metre yacht but gets more then she bargained for. She encounters a monster storm followed by a mammoth human decision on a moral scale as to what to do when she encounters a sinking refugee ship.
Not much story and with minimal dialogue so that the film lags a little, but still occasionally full of emotional impact, STYX is magnificently shot with stunning cinematography by Benedict Neuenfelsthat that will leave one spellbound. The night storm scene demands mention.
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TIFF 2018 Review: SEARCHING FOR INGMAR BERGMAN (Germany/France 2018) ****
Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.
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Margarethe von Trotta (concept), Felix Moeller (concept)
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German director Magareth von Trotta pays tribute to Swedish director Ingmar Bergman in honour of the centennial of his birth. Margarethe von Trotta presents a detailed account of his life and his impact on filmmaking through excerpts of his work and interviews with family and contemporaries (Olivier Assyas, Mia Hansen-Love, Ruben Ostlund).
Her film begins with a segment of THE SEVENTH SEAL with actor Max Von Sydow and explanation of each shot in detail. Many of his other films are also displayed and put into perspective by actresses like Liv Ulmann who speak fondly of the man. His thoughts and inability to love his own children are also revealed. The film whets the appetite for watching Bergman films, a retrospective of the Master’s work that will be presented by TIFF Cinematheque this fall.
Extremely insightful and a treasure for cineastes! Von Trotta’s own film THE GERMAN SISTERS was selected by Bergman as one of his favourite films.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CGeHGcKh1KM
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TIFF 2018 Review: MARIA BY CALLAS (France 2018) ***
Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.
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Tom Volf ‘s MARIA BY CALLAS offers fresh insights into one of the great talents of the 20th century via recently rediscovered writings and interviews with the Greek-American soprano. Maria Callas has been praised by many as the greatest singer of the century. Callas was born and bred in New York City though many think she is of Italian or European origin.
The film is comprised of beautifully restored archival footage with her own words from her letters and writings as narrated by American opera singer Joyce DiDonato. The Greek-American soprano rose to fame after World War II and became a star attraction in all the major opera houses. This film offers fresh insights into her public and private lives, especially her long-time romance with Aristotle Onassis, the affair that made headlines as both were still married at the time. Callas’s music is obviously paramount in the film.
The film’s real treat is Callas’ complete performances of the arias from the operas Norma, La Traviata, Carmen, and Tosca. Also insightful and funny is the footage of the David Frost interview with Callas telling Frost, “If someone really tries to listen to me, he will find all myself there.”
The doc feels longer than its running time and could have been edited to a tighter 90 minutes.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tdxBhU46TGM
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Film Review: SEARCHING (USA 2018) ***
Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.
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SEARCHING is a psychological thriller starring John Cho (STAR TREK and HARRY AND KUMAR who plays David Kim, a father trying to find his missing 16-year-old daughter, Margo (Michelle La). As David interviews people who were supposedly close with her, he begins to learn that his daughter was not as perfect as she seemed. SEARCHING is a psychological thriller that unfolds almost totally from the computer screen. This is not a new tactic thought still quite a novel one, having being used only recently in UNFRIENDED: DARK WEB and its original UNFRIENDED films.
The question that immediately comes to mind is whether the story warrants this style of movie making and if it does, how effective it is.
The story involves David searching through her daughter’s web history, so quite a chunk of the film would involve watching the computer screen. Watching events unfold through a computer screen is more taxing for the following reasons:
it requires the audience to often absorb simultaneous events occurring on the screen. When a user is typing a reply, the question above the txt involving the question needs to be read too
the texts on screen is often too small to ready (this occurs a few times in the film), though it an be made larger when the box is maximized.
what appears on the screen is sometimes blurry
But being a novel idea, it is still a fresh look at a psychological film and the tactic does work, though one mayans argue that the entire film need not have to be told this way, without compromising the story. But credit to the filmmakers to try something new, and one can tell the amount of effort and coordination going into the making of the film this way.
While director Changanty does his best to put as much of the film on the computer screen, it is not always possible. The part of David beating up a possible suspect at a theatre is shown as if seen on youtube. But the searching for Margot’s body in the ravine area is not. The film revokes back to normal non-computer mode necessary keep the story intact.
The decision to make an American film about a missing daughter to include an Asian family is a good one. Most films have centred on whites or African American families, and this is a rare one where the fully English film is on a Korean American family. Apart of a few references to Korean culture (the kimchi cooking), the film could be substituted for any minority couple. But typical to most Asian families is to have a daughter take piano lessons. John Cho is one of the most famous young Asian actors today after making his name in STAR TREK and the HARRY AND KUMAR films. He show his serious acting chops in this movie.
Credit should be given to the studios for a thriller with a break in trend, made with a Korean family and taking place on a computer platform.
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TIFF 2018 Movie Review: COLETTE (UK 2018)
Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.
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Richard Glatzer (screenplay by), Wash Westmoreland (screenplay by) |2 more credits »
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TIFF 2018 Movie Review: COLD WAR (ZIMNA WOJNA) (Poland 2018) ****
Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.
Director:
Writers:
Pawel Pawlikowski (story), Pawel Pawlikowski(screenplay) »
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The director of the Best Foreign Film Oscar winner IDA three years ago, Pawel Pawlikowski returns with a new film, dedicated to his parents (as state at the end of the film) and based loosely on their lives.
The film traces is the remarkable journey of a troubled love relationship that survived the cold war. But the lovers endure a cold war of their own where nothing is black and white. What is black and whit, however, is the film’s stunning cinematography, capturing the years after the war where Poland indulged in popular propaganda. Wiktor (Tomasz Kot) the musical director of a dance tripe falls in love with a recruited rural dancer, Zula (Joanna Kulig).
They travel together to different cities. She fails to show up when he decides to defect, while in Paris. They meet again at different times in different cities proving that their love is true – though plagued with jealousy. The intensity of the love is vividly portrayed by the two actors and the setting of the dance troupe (with some excellent dances) add a super backdrop to the story.
Lots of metaphors in the film including the hilarious ‘pendulum that kills’ metaphor that got those watching the preview screening laughing.
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TIFF 2018 Movie Review: FLOAT LIKE A BUTTERFLY (Ireland 2018) ***1/2
Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.
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FLOAT LIKE A BUTTERFLY is a well-made female version of the underdog making good, a role reversal of BILLY ELLIOT, this film set in rural Ireland with boxing replacing dance.
The film tells the fictitious tale of an Irish girl, Frances (Hazel Doupe) who hero worships the great boxer and herself becomes one. The film open with her as a kid punching away, on top of her father, Michael’s (Dara Devaney) shoulders. FLOAT LIKE A BUTTERFLY is a feel good comedy/drama on an underdog making good. It could be classified was a family film but there is a lot of swearing in the dialogue. Few films have been made around Irish tinkers.
What distinguishes FLOAT LIKE A BUTTERFLY from the average feel-good film is the screen time and effort put into the story’s background. Frances’ family especially the influences of her father, late mother and nana, the rich Irish background of tinkers, the rural Irish beauty and solid drama of Frances always being classified as a social reject all contribute to making Frances’ story a strong one and one that the audience will root for.
The result obviously is a solid and satisfying feel-good and entertaining drama.
Trailer: (unavailable)











