Showing posts with label Skins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Skins. Show all posts

06 February, 2008

Cloverfield

In the world of cinema, New York has taken a pounding. It must be the most devastated city in movie history. They've faced the lot. You've got aliens blowing up the Empire State Building in Independence Day while asteroids shower the city in both Armageddon and Deep Impact. A.I: Artificial Intelligence sees it submerged in water and in The Day After Tomorrow it's buried in snow. Godzilla smashed up the place in the mid nineties and that gigantic randy ape King Kong has visited three times. A derelict Statue of Liberty pops up in The Planet of the Apes as a reminder of the age of man. Hell even the last film I saw in 2007, the loose adaptation of the book of the same name, I Am Legend had New York as a starting point for an apocalyptic virus. If I was New York I'd take this personally as Richard Matheson's novel is actually set in California.

Yesterday I went to see the next cinematic contender to take on New York, Cloverfield. It's pretty much a monster film from the perspective of Joe Public following characters that act how you imagine you might in such strange circumstances. Without wanting to add to the already enormous amount of hype surrounding the release, I have to admit I found the film fantastic. I'd even goes as far as to say it was more of an experience then a film, one I found exhilarating. I left the cinema with my heart still racing. The film is packed full of intense set pieces particularly the first couple of times you see glimpses of the beast. There's plenty of jaw dropping images of destruction made all the more potent by my recent visit to New York. In a strange similarity we walked over the Brooklyn Bridge and filmed the journey with a digital camera as they do in Cloverfield. Our footage is freakishly alike although our stroll wasn't interupted by a creature of the deep. As you probably know it's all filmed on the shaky hand held digital camera which can lead to some feelings of nausea. As I purchased my ticket the lady asked me to read a note stating those watching the film could experience a motion sickness similiar to riding a rollercoaster. I took some time in getting use to this, it's far more heavy going then The Blair Witch Project. The monster itself is rarely seen, a technique that works so well in modern classics such as Jaws and Alien but is somewhat lost on a lot of people today. I've read comments on Internet forums saying things like "the film is rubbish, you never see the monster" or "it's rubbish there's no blood in it". I suppose when gruesome franchises like Hostel and Saw score big in the Box Office it perhaps shows that people are beginning to think that horrors have to be taboo breaking to be considered an entertaining film. A thought scarier than any scary movie.

I've heard people criticise the film for being overhyped. Definitely a fair comment but come on, everything is overhyped these days. Take the second series of Channel Four's Skins, you'd think it was a television masterpiece and not what it is, a creepy show about sixteen years olds having it off thats predomintely watched by over thirties. Every other ad break on Channel Four, More 4 and E4 has some sort of reference to it while bus stops and billboards alike are covered with images of the 'stars' of this piece of shit programme. Then look at the Dave channel who are currently running trailers for the television premier of Bottom Live. "See Bottom as you've never seen it before" says the man proudly on the trailer, geniuningly expecting us to be excited by it. It's bloody fifteen years old, older than most of the cast of Skins.

05 February, 2007

Don't believe the hype

I’ve never known Channel Four to promote a show as much as they have with their new venture ‘Skins’. I for one don’t think the show merits the hype, in fact I think it’s bloody awful. I really had expected more from the makers of the sublime ‘Shameless’, a show that also heavily relies on the talent of the younger members of the cast. None of the young actors in ‘Skins’ came close to performing as well as the kids of ‘Shameless’. To be fair the lad that plays little Liam has more charisma and screen presence then anyone in ‘Skins’. As a whole there was nothing substantial to it. If you took away the drugs, the nudity, the swearing and the trendy soundtrack it would leave you with very little.

Caitlin Moran, television columnist for the Times, wrote last weekend that lead character Tony (Nicholas Hoult) is “the best working class hero we’ve had in years”. I very nearly threw up the moment I read those words. From what I’ve seen so far there is nothing remotely working class about him. I find his smirking face so amazingly annoying I feel like ripping my eyeballs out of my head and flushing them down the toilet just so I wouldn’t have to see him ever again. It seems I’m very much alone on this one as every female featured in ‘Skins’ wants Tony to nail them. One scene in the first episode had what seemed to be an entire girl school lusting over him, not one of them bothered by his bowl head haircut and Dr Spock eyebrows. What the hell? For me it didn’t reflect the life of the average teenager in Britain, well not my teenage years anyway. If you made a T.V. show about my social life aged seventeen it wouldn’t last ten episodes. In fact about five minutes would cover everything. The opening scene would be me walking into an off license asking for four cans of lager. The shopkeeper would ask me for some I.D. I’d tell him I didn’t have any then he would say he can’t serve me. Role end credits…I’m probably just jealous.

Away from the television I’ve been spending my time watching the mighty Youtube. It is an amazing gift from the heavens! With it I’ve been able to find so many clips of long forgotten programmes of my youth; programmes like the influential early nineties Channel 4 sketch show ‘Absolutely’. The show starred Morwenna Banks and John Sparkes (Better known in Wales as Barry Welsh) it played a big part in reinventing the sketch show as a medium. Nostalgia has a habit in making you remember things being a lot better than they actually were so I approached the clips with caution. I’m glad to say that it had me in stitches; a lot of ‘Absolutely’ has aged well. Without Youtube I doubt I would have had the opportunity to review the show. In a time where Channel 4 will screen hours of people sleeping and talking crap on ‘Big Brother’ it’s a mystery that they choose not to repeat ‘Absolutely’. If you visit the fan site you’ll see there’s definitely an audience for it. There’s also an online campaign to get a DVD release for he show.

I suppose when it comes to hype, the underated 'Absolutely' sits on the opportunity end of the scale to 'Skins'. Here's a clip from the show. Hope you like it.