Film Review: THEY SHALL NOT GROW OLD (UK 2018) ***** TOP 10

They Shall Not Grow Old Poster
Trailer

A documentary about World War I with never-before-seen footage to commemorate the centennial of the end of the war.

Director:

Peter Jackson

Un-reputedly the best documentary of 2018,  hands down, THEY SHALL NOT GROW OLD arrives right between Remembrance Day and Christmas, an appropriate time for good cheer to celebrate the heroism of man, less we forget.  The setting are the front lines, as the closing credits proudly declare – shot on location on the Western Front between 1914 and 1918 during the First World War WWI.

The film was created using original footage of World War I from the Imperial War Museums’ archives, most of it previously unseen, alongside audio from BBC and IWM interviews of British servicemen who fought in the conflict.  The first 30 minutes  of the film is black and white, turning then into colour,  with most of the footage colourised and transformed with modern production techniques, with the addition of sound effects and voice acting to be more evocative and feel closer to the soldiers’ actual experiences.  The film is in 3-D.

But the film is clearly not a recounting of events.  The film reveals the unforgettable riveting experiences of the common soldier as seen from the eye of the common soldier, many not old enough to be recruited to fight but were passed through the enlistment lines anyway, as the British had a duty to perform.  Jackson’s crew reviewed 600 hours of interviews from 200 veterans, and 100 hours of original film footage to make the film.  The title was inspired by the line “They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old” from the 1914 poem “For the Fallen” by Laurence Binyon, famous for being used in the Ode of Remembrance.

The documentary captures a capsule of the great or disastrous war, depending on how one sees it, as fought in the trenches.  The last British war film set in WWI trenches was JOURNEY’S END last year, that film based on a famous British play.  I admired that film for reminding the world what fighting did to men but a fellow critic complained that, that film did not reveal anything new.  The same argument might be applied to Peter Jackson’s labour of love and duty, but the effort is a worthy cause, for human beings need to be reminded both the horrors of war and the heroism of men.

But it is not one man’s or a few men’s stories.  It is the story of all the men as the footage covers the all the infantrymen in the front lines of the Western Front.  The footage follows the young men, mostly from recruitment to training to fighting to return after the war.  After the war, these heroes had their feel of redundancy as human beings being out of work in unemployment.  Job signs would shamefully read: “Servicemen need not apply’.  Civilians had no clue what the war was all about.

These are the words that are heard on the soundtrack at the film’s beginning before the soldiers went to fight – a variety of words that emotionally describe all aspects of emotions on the war!

job that needed to be done

take it in stride

rough but did not complain

nothing really exciting 

like a boy going out to play

good and bad days

I was only a kid

like a game

going to be over in a few days

             Jackson then puts the viewer into the training and then right into the war.  Reality sets in.  The film contains vivid scenes with rats and corpses lying around.  The horrid yellow colour of mustard gas can almost be tasted.  The sight of young German soldiers, when they were captured, look no different that the British lads.  The segment of one German soldier speaking English to his English captor, saying “I used to work as a waiter at the Savoy’, moved me to tears.

The film ends with black and white credits listing all the soldiers who lent their voices to this doc.  The famous WWI song “Mademoiselle from Armentieres,” often sung by WWI-era soldiers is heard on he soundtrack to complete the viewer’s total experience.

If there is only one film you see this year THEY SHALL NOT GROW OLD should be it.  The film opens December the 17th and widely on December the 27th in Toronto!

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGaDOpKbyVA

1987 Movie Review: BAD TASTE, 1987

BAD TASTE  MOVIE POSTERBAD TASTE, 1987
Movie Reviews

Directed by Peter Jackson

Cast: Terry Potter, Pete O’Herne, Craig Smith, Mike Minett, Doug Wren
Review by James Mansell

SYNOPSIS:

When an army of aliens arrive on a small New Zealand town and attempt to turn the entire population into the key ingredient for their intergalactic fast-food chain, a small group of men from the Astro-Investigation and Defense Service are sent to investigate. What ensues is a dangerous rescue mission, a full on assault on the alien’s head-quarters and a whole series of precarious situations.

REVIEW:

When you hear the name Peter Jackson, one film, or three perhaps will spring to mind. The highest box-office grossing trilogy in the history of cinema, most number of Academy Awards won, equalled only by Ben-Hur and Titanic, and a faithful and unique adaptation rarely seen on the screen. Peter Jackson propelled himself into legendary director status with his version of J.R.R. Tolkien’s ‘the Lord of the Rings’ trilogy, wowing cinema and fantasy goers alike for three Christmas’s in a row. A feat unimaginable until the New Zealander decided to tackle it.

But aside from his epic fantasy tale, you may also know him from his re-working of his childhood favourite ‘King Kong’, his Kate Winslet period piece ‘Heavenly Creatures’, his gore-drenched masterpiece ‘Braindead’ or even his story of depravity, debauchery and puppets in ‘Meet the Feebles’. But before all this, before any priests kicked ass for the lord, before any puppets played Russian roulette in Vietnam, a group of aliens landed on a small New Zealand town in what can only be described as timeless low-budget horror that Sam Raimi would be proud of.

When a distress call comes through from a small New Zealand town, ‘the boys’ are sent to the location to investigate the disturbance. Enter a gloriously graphic opening scene of an exploding head to the manic laughter of one of Peter Jackson’s two characters, Derek. Within 10 minutes, we’ve had a healthy dose of black humour, pseudo mysterious music and brains sprayed across the ground. The film is set up perfectly, aliens have landed, and Derek and his team are there to save the world from the extra-terrestrials wrong doing.

Things don’t begin to do totally as planned, as Derek, who has captured one of the aliens (interestingly enough, also played by Jackson) begins to torture it for information, the ‘inter-galactic wanker’ as Derek describes it. As its screams of pain emanate across the town, Derek is surrounded by them, resulting in dire consequences. Jackson’s directing comes through in waves in this scene, his timing is impeccable, and the effects (shooting through an alien’s stomach) are so inventive it only but makes you grin with excitement. How they shot a scene teetering on the edge of a cliff is beyond me, and a fight between two Peter Jackson’s is nothing short of breath-taking.

After a local town collector is kidnapped by the aliens, and there heinous scheme is revealed to ‘the boys’, an all out assault on the aliens ensues. Once the headquarters have been located, and a repulsive tasting session of sorts occurs for the one of the boys, Derek returns and an action-packed and blood-soaked gun fight follows that Sam Peckinpah would be proud of. Jackson’s home made prosthetics come to force during the finale of the film, as the aliens break out of their human bodies, and into their own form.

For cult, low-budget horror that has its tongue firmly in its cheek, this is one of the best ever made. And the climax is so hilarious and memorable; it makes you want to watch more of Peter Jackson before the world became aware of him. It is a pure and unadulterated rollercoaster through a young filmmaker’s love of horror, shot over 4 years and totally improvised; it is an achievement in low-budget filmmaking.

Bad Taste is an onslaught of do-it-yourself prosthetics made with enough ingenuity and precision to make it all work. Yes this is low-budget horror, and yes you can see the joins, but this is why we love it. This is low-budget greatness at its most simplistic and basic, but with a balls out attitude and no holds barred what more could you ask for?

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