TOMB RAIDER: 3 STARS
The last time we saw archaeologist-adventurer Lara Croft on the big screen she looked like Angelina Jolie and was seen dunking a bad guy into a pool of acid, dissolving him and saving the world in the process. A new film, simply titled âTomb Raider,â takes us back. Back before the leather bodysuits and twin Heckler & Koch USP Match pistols, back to a time when Lara Croft was an emo twenty-one-year-old whose biggest adventure was navigating Londonâs busy streets as a bicycle courier. This time around she bears a striking resemblance to Swedish Oscar winner Alicia Vikander.
Although born and raised at the swanky Croft Manor, when we first meet Lara she is scraping by, studying MMA fighting, when she can afford the gym fees, and delivering food via bicycle. A fortune, courtesy of her late father Lord Richard Croft (Dominic West), awaits but for seven years she has steadfastly refused to sign for her inheritance, fearing that if she does she will have to accept that papa, who disappeared without a trace somewhere in the Sea of Japan, is truly dead and gone.
âYour father is gone but you can pick up where he left off,â says Croft family executive Ana Miller (Kristin Scott Thomas). âItâs in your blood.â âIâm sorry Iâm not that kind of Croft,â replies Lara.
And yet, when she discovers a, âIf youâre watching this tape I must be deadâŚâ tape from dear old dad detailing his plan to find a remote Japanese island, home to a deadly ancient witch, the dutiful daughter sets off on a dangerous missionâto find the island and her father.
To do that she travels to Japan and recruits Lu Ren (Daniel Wu) who warns her of the danger ahead. âThatâs right in the middle of the Devilâs Sea,â he says. âYou may as well tie a rock to your leg and jump overboard.â
Armed with nothing more than a backpack and one of her fatherâs notebooks the pair find the island only to be met by a suspicious character named Mathias Vogel (Walton Goggins). âYou shouldnât have come here,â he says. âBut Iâm glad that you did.â
âTomb Raiderâ contains lots of backstory, mumbo jumbo about global genocide, Queen Himiko Witch of Death and supernatural organization that controls much of the world, but this is Laraâs journey from bike courier to international woman of mystery. At the beginning of the film she is nothing like the polished Croft of the Jolie films. Sheâs scrappier, undisciplined. Her two greatest powers are loyalty to her father and fearlessness. And jumping. Lots of jumping. As played by Vikander, Croft never met a chasm she couldnât leap across and that skill sure comes in handy.
Unlike Jolieâs iconic, stylized take on the character, Vikander plays her as self assured and independent but directionless. A young person trying to make her way in the world, thirsty for life experience. Itâs a nice reinvention of the character, although a post credit scene suggests she is headed toward Jolie territory should there be a âTomb Raider 2: A Career in Ruinsâ next year. Still, sheâs a spirited female action hero in a male dominated field.
There are big action sequences, but as the stunts get bigger they donât necessarily get better. Vikander, flying through the streets of London, cutting through traffic while being chased by her courier friends, is as exciting as any of the CGI exploits that come later.
âTomb Raiderâsâ story and action are fairly generic but Vikander carries the day, reshaping a character we already thought we knew.
THE DEATH OF STALIN: 3 ½ STARS
The Daily Telegraph calls writer/director Armando Iannucci "the hardman of political satire." As the creator of sardonic films and TV shows like âIn the Loopâ and âVeepâ heâs a vitally caustic comic presence.
As the film begins itâs 1953 and Joseph Stalin (Adrian McLoughlin), the second leader of the Soviet Union, is alive and well. Under his watch death squads are rounding up his enemies, executions are common and the mere mention of his name strikes fear into the hearts of the people. The Central Committee, surround him. Thereâs the scheming Nikita Khrushchev (Steve Buscemi), the pompous Georgy Malenkov (Jeffrey Tambor), Old Bolshevik Vyacheslav Molotov (Michael Palin) and secret police chief Lavrentiy Beria (Simon Russell Beale). When he suffers a stroke everything changes as his inner circle engage in a power struggle that will determine not only their futures but also the future of the Soviet Union.
The idea of chaos in the halls of power, though set sixty-five years in the past, feels almost ripped from the headlines. With jet black humour âThe Death of Stalinâ supercharges the farcical elements of a very dark time in history. With the cast using their natural accentsâno one here tries to sound Russianâit feels surreal, like Monty Python gone amok. Thereâs doublespeak, jealousy and sight gags galore as this band of yes-men bumble around in an attempt to seize the Kremlin in the days following their leaderâs passing.
Iannucci avoids the danger of trivializing the very real-life tragedy of the storyâyou hear gunshots off screen for much of the first half of the filmâby not glorifying the villains. He takes a sharp knife to the reputations of Stalin, Khrushchev et al, portraying all of them as spoiled incompetents capable only of looking out for number one. In this historical context that approach works to show how absolute power corrupts absolutely.
âThe Death of Stalinâ is an audacious reimagining of history. Strong comic performances are highlighted in a film that is both frightening and funny at the same time.
THE LEISURE SEEKER: 2 ½ STARS
Donald Sutherland and Helen Mirren are household names with an astounding 400 television and film acting credits between them. Before their new film, âThe Leisure Seeker,â they have appeared onscreen together only once in 1990âs âBethune: The Making of a Hero.â Here they prove the chemistry that worked when the first Bush was president is still intact.
Their latest pairing sees them play old married couple former English professor John and Southern belle Ella Spencer who still playfully call one another, âMy love.â
Their relationship is healthy but they are not. He has Alzheimerâs and she has cancer. As memories fade and the reliance on pills increases they embark on one last road trip, from Massachusetts to the heart of Old Town Key West and the Hemingway Home & Museum. Hitting the road in their 1975 Winnebago, dubbed the Leisure Seeker, they begin their final adventure. âThey are just doing the thing they have done their entire lives,â says daughter Jane (Janel Moloney). âStaying together.â
Based on the 2009 novel of the same name by Michael Zadoorian âThe Leisure Seekerâ is a so-so movie elevated by two endearing performances. Mirren emphasizes Ellaâs warmth and strength, how she uses idle chatter to mask the uncertainty and frustration that churns inside her. Sutherland, as a man aware enough to know he wants to go out like Hemmingway when the time comes but getting foggier everyday, sensitively finds a balance between the glimpses of Johnâs former personality and his new diminished state. Both sparkle, and hand in engaging performances.
They glide through the spotty material finding humanity and the touching moments tucked away in this overly sentimental travelogue.
The moments that work really work. They handle the comedic passages expertly and real heft to exchanges like this:
âWho are you? My John is a young teacher. Heâs charming. Very handsome. Educated,â she says to him. âI want him back. You stole him from me and I want you to give him back.â
âIf I could I would,â he says. âWhatever is stolen from you is stolen from me too,â he replies.
It is just a shame the rest of the film doesnât work on that level.
7 DAYS IN ENTEBBE: 1 STAR
Itâs hard to know how to classify â7 Days in Entebbe.â It begins with an interpretive dance number but isnât a musical. Itâs about a daring real-life hostage rescue but it doesnât contain enough combat to qualify as an action film. Itâs about political ideology and yet so many points of view are on display itâs difficult to know what the film is trying to say. Itâs a real life drama so slackly paced the drama evaporates into thin air.
Call it what you will. I call it a bad movie.
An international cast, including Daniel Brühl and Rosamund Pike as the German reactionaries and Eddie Marsan as Israeli Minister of Defense Shimon Peres, tell the story of what would become the Entebbe rescue operation.
On July 27, 1976 an Air France flight from Tel Aviv to Paris via Athens was hijacked and forced to land in Entebbe, Uganda. On the ground the Jewish passengers were singled out and held hostage. The hijackers, two members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and two Germans affiliated with the left-wing extremist group Revolutionary Cells, demanded a ransom of $5 million and the release of prisoners from Israeli jails. If their conditions werenât met by the deadline of Sunday, July 5 the terrorists would start executing hostages one by one. In response the Israeli government ordered a daring counter-terrorist hostage rescue operation.
Itâs sometimes difficult to find a new spin on an old story. The raid on Entebbe has been told many times on the big screen, on TV, on the stage and even in videogames. Thereâs probably something left to say but â7 Days in Entebbeâ doesnât say it. It talks and talks and talks an endless stream of words, many right out of âRevolutionaries for Dummies.â âI want to throw bombs into the consciousness of the masses,â intones terrorist Wilfried Böse (Daniel Brühl) when, realistically, we would have been better served if that bomb had been better thrown at the slack-jawed script. Every time the movie finds some momentum the storyâs forward movement is stymied by speechifying.
Add to that dubious artistic choices and youâre left with a Mulligan Stew of political ideology with no strong point of view. In what maybe one of the silliest flourishes in a film this year, and the director cuts back-and-forth between a dance performance and the military operation. âI fight so you could dance,â says a commando to his ballerina girlfriend. Itâs meant to illustrate the art of war brought to life I suppose but Iâm sure Chuck Norrisâwho starred in âDelta Force,â one of the better movies inspired by Entebbeâwould approve.
â7 Days in Entebbeâ takes a significant world event and reduces it to melodramatic pap and speechifying. And the dance. Donât forget the dance.
LOVE, CECIL: 3 ½ STARS
Cecil Beaton, the subject of a new documentary called âLove, Cecil,â says he was determined not to be âjust an ordinary, anonymous person.â To that end he distinguished himself as a diarist, painter, interior designer and an Oscarâwinning costume designer but it was as a photographer that he made his grandest statements.
Director Lisa Immordino Vreeland (related by marriage to fashionista Diana Vreeland) presents a portrait of a serial multi-tasker, a man âtormented with ambitionâ who wonders aloud if he might have been more successful had he focussed on one discipline over the others. Still, it is hard to imagine the restless spirit shown in the film as anything but creatively unsettled. His iconic portraits of everyone from Greta Garbo and Marilyn Monroe to Mick Jagger and Queen Elizabeth are world famous but equally impressive, perhaps more so are his wartime photographs, pictures that captured the horrors of the German Blitz. His startling photo of 3-year-old bombing victim Eileen Dunne, laying in a hospital, clutching a ragged teddy bear became famous in the day, is thought to have helped push America into the war and remains an indelibly powerful image seventy-five years later.
The doc also showcases Beatonâs unsettled private life. Controversial, outspoken and publicly vengeful, he was once also fired from American Vogue for inserting anti-Semitic phrases into an illustration; an act he admits was inexcusable. His romantic life is lightly touched on. Affairs with Garbo and various men never did led to lasting love, a fact that hints at the great sadness that lay just beneath his polished exterior.
In the 1920s Beaton was one of the Bright Young Things, a bohemian group of young aristocrats and artists who exemplified the excesses of Britainâs Jazz Age. He was an active member and documenter of their short lived heyday but the spirit of creativity that fuelled his exploits as a young man stayed with him until his death in 1980 at age seventy-six.
âLove, Cecilâ is a traditional talking head doc that features notables like David Bailey, designer Manolo Blahnik and artist David Hockney. It moves chronologically through the manâs life and there is none of the style Beaton brought to his own life on display in the filmmaking but narration by Rupert Everett, lifted directly from the photographerâs own diaries, brings intimacy to the proceedings.