Showing posts with label Films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Films. Show all posts

Friday, 12 February 2021

My A.O.I. Review for BENEFICIAL SHOCK! – ISSUE 5: The Secrets & Lies issue

Editor Gabriel Solomons

Published by Beneficial Shock! Ltd. ISSN: 2399-5173


“I wasn’t interested in “illustrating” them in the usual literal way, which I’ve always regarded as redundant and insulting to a viewer’s intelligence and imaginative capacities. I was more interested in the possibilities of apparently disparate juxtapositions and the new worlds that might emerge.” Russell Mills

Issue Five of the pioneering cinematic publication has arrived and it continues to build upon the campaigning strategy “to see more creative editorial expression” through the exploration of meaning within filmmaking and cinema. Early on in the magazine the publishers make statements of intent which are worth mentioning as others should note them too: 

On page 2, “We aim to retain independence in order to support creative collaboration and provide professional opportunities for young and emerging creative talent.”

On page 3, “We aim to challenge the traditional role of the visual creative from a content servicer to that of an author researcher and content ‘driver’ – adding value and responsibility as a visual communicator.”

The theme for this issue is SECRETS & LIES. The contents page has its structure divided into Covert on the left and Untruths on the right. The Features articles drill down into the conceits that are inherent in the very structure of film, and how classic and modern narratives are shaped by geo-political, cultural and societal upheavals. The writing is impeccable as all concerned are passionate about communicating ideas that are underpinned by artistic rigour. 

Once again Art Director Phil Wrigglesworth’s wraparound cover illustration is an epic scene containing visual references mined from the entire contents of the magazine. We see images from the Coen Brothers oeuvre, a recumbent Statue of Liberty with a deflated Superman and some naked figures descending into darkness. All of this detail displayed using a palette of only three colours.

I have continued to refine my own critical appreciation of film since I reviewed issue one of this magazine, so I was looking for a challenge and I was not disappointed. Notable for me are the articles ‘Not So Super After All’ by James Charisma & Jason Raish, ‘Once Upon A Dream’ by Neil Fox & Ryan Jackson, ‘The Parent Trap’ by Thomas Puhr & Ryan Snook and Jonny Hannah’s ‘Anarchy In The UK: Ealing Comedies’ a combination of energetic print techniques and droll commentary with text as image, or is that image as text?

At 80 pages the magazine has grown, but not through the addition of advertising that plagues many other periodicals. I’ve noticed that the articles advance a more polarized viewpoint that reflects the tensions between the power of old patriarchy and something that appears much freer and progressive on the surface.

The diversity of the source material drawn upon is also something I find to be very positive. Who knew that the real force behind ‘The Man With the Movie Camera’ was a woman? The editorial stance seems less shocking this time and more contemplative, which I think suits this complex theme. I’m glad that the magazine has endured as we are possibly at a crossroads that might do away with the cinema altogether. However, that said I look forward to reading issue six which takes as its theme COURAGE & STRENGTH – something that we all need right now.








Friday, 11 May 2018

My book review for Film Noir - An Introduction by Ian Brookes

As an avid fan of film noir for over 25 years I was more than pleased to read this book by Ian Brookes. I wanted to see if it could add to the canon of knowledge about this visual style, genre, movement or category, take your pick! Brookes covers all the familiar tropes and confirms much about the existing debates on this subject. However, I am glad to say that this book has added much to my understanding and also took me on some unexpected journeys. 

This book contains some sound scholarship and covers many of the contradictions of the film noir movement. There are broad explorations of the historical and cultural roots that began with six movies from the 1940’s, which impressed French critics so much after the 2nd World War. The book makes direct references to and analyses the work of the established critics and experts including Raymond Borde and Etienne Chaumeton, E. Ann Kaplan, Foster Hirsch and James Naremore. To me this indicates that all the bases have been covered. The author has realised that Film Noir is an ever-expanding universe with a multitude of opinions and explanations offered as to why a cowboy movie with Joan Crawford in it should be classed as noir.

What I found most fascinating was the social dimensions of the post war US society that these films were created to reflect or comment upon. This was where the book departs from the many texts that I’ve read.

The chapter devoted to the new science of sociology sought to address the changes in the social structures and disillusionment with the organs of the Government during and after WWII. It reflects upon the role of masculinity as it sought to re-establish itself despite economic challenges and feminist assertions.

The veteran problem – this was something that politicians and media were fully aware of but the sheer scale of 13 million plus service men returning from a life-altering world war was difficult to contain. In the narratives of the films quoted this is a problem that was tackled in many ways with the resolution always resting in the balm of domestic stability.

The extreme left became the main focus of paranoia during the late 40’s and 50’s. The House Un-American Activities Committee found the means to neuter and expel the creative critics of the social conditions in the US.Whilst Communism was seen as a world evil by the state some filmmakers were more concerned that the extreme right was actually more established and more dangerous while remaining overlooked. References to Racism and Anti-Semitism wasn’t overt but was at the heart of films like Crossfire (Edward Dmytryk,1947)

This is book is an important critical introduction to the most important film category that Hollywood had the good fortune to originate and return to time and time again no matter the format whether that be in black and white, colour, sci-fi, western or television series. Noir is here to stay.

Karl Foster Monday 26 March 2018