5 live's resident movie critic Dr Mark Kermode reviews The American.
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Fritz Lang's brilliant sci-fi epic Metropolis arrives on DVD and Blu-Ray this week looking richer and more beautiful than at any time since its original release. A genuine eye opener it also arrives with a full orchestral score rather than the Giorgio Moroder techno version specially commissioned a few years ago. Which begs the following question: Just how important is the right score for a movie?
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Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives was the surprise winner of the Palme D'Or at this year's Cannes Film Festival. A mystical tale with something of the David Lynch about it, the film has received almost universal critical acclaim. So what chance do you think there is you'll see it in a cinema?
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5 live's resident movie critic Dr Mark Kermode reviews Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - part 1.
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As Colin Firth and Helena Bonham-Carter pull on the regal drag for stiff upper lipstick Brit flick The King's Speech, a question is raised. Is the difference between royal and plebeian profanities measurable in years?
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So I'm winnowing away at my Top Ten and Bottom Ten lists for 2010 and already there are spectacular new candidates jostling for position at the polarities.
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5 live's resident movie critic Dr Mark Kermode reviews Skyline.
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Lest there remain scinitillae of doubt in your minds, be assured that howsoever your natural human curiosity compels you there is not a single reason to be found for seeking out and watching Let Me In, the English-language remake of Tomas Alfredson's Kermode Award-winning Let the Right One In.
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Yes it's that time already, time for me to sit down and review your typically thoughtful and inspired comments on the blog which this time include reactions to Sam Neill and Isabelle Adjani's performances in Possession, to Jeff Goldblum and Michelle Pfeiffer's classic 80s outing Into the Night and a rupture of anticipation following my instant reaction to Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan starring Natalie Portman.
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A couple of weeks ago my band was asked to join a prestigious charity concert at the Albert Hall, this year's Concert for Care featuring music stars such as Paloma Faith and Johnny Greenwood of Radiohead, comedians Jimmy Carr and Ed Byrne, and organised by none other than Bond movie composer David Arnold. Well, when I say "join" I mean "warm up for", while people are arriving, but, you know, THE ALBERT HALL!
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Long before Wallace and Gromit's lunar excursion another iconic animated dog had already placed paw to moondust. In the 1960s and early 1970s The Magic Roundabout's Dougal was the most famous canine on British television and in his only movie outing (we shall draw a kindly veil over the recent CGI version) he took a very spacey trip there accompanied by a mysterious blue cat and with the voice of none other than the great Fenella Fielding ringing in his floppy ears.
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5 live's resident movie critic Dr Mark Kermode reviews Easy A.
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