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The Irish in Britain, including those of Irish descent, make up a significant part of the UK population. Here, you will find news, entertainment, events, sports and features from the local Irish Post newspaper.

 
 
 
 
Film and DVD Reviews

FILM REVIEW

The Brothers Grimm

By Patrick Ryan

There’s nothing like a great movie to cheer you up. And this is nothing like a good movie. On paper The Brothers Grimm has it all — a wonderful cast, a great director and a fantastic idea.

The reality is somewhat different.

Ledger and Damon play the famous brothers as a pair of conmen who are inadvertently thrown into battle with an evil witch who is stealing kids from a nearby village.

Heath Ledger and Matt Damon are The Brothers Grimm

With Gilliam at the helm this should have been at the very worst an enjoyable genre romp.

Instead we are given an incoherent mess that looks like it was made 15 years ago.

The effects are so bad that you will be hard pressed to suppress laughter when you are supposed to be awestruck.

This wouldn’t be so bad if there were other redeeming factors. But there isn’t a single one.

Both leads are badly miscast. Both sport the sort of dodgy English accents that can only result in tears of laughter.

Even the sets, which should have been the film’s redemption, aren’t up to the task.

Everything looks like it was filmed indoors, no doubt because it was, and there’s a real sense of cost-cutting going on.

It might not be the worst film of the year, but given the level of talent involved it certainly has to rank alongside the most disappointing.

Starring: Matt Damon, Heath Ledger, Lena Heady, Peter Stormare and Monica Bellucci.

Directed by Terry Gilliam.

War of the Worlds

DVD REVIEW

By Patrick Ryan

Spielberg's big budget adaptation of HG Wells’ classic novel was one of a handful of movies to buck the recession and soar at the box office this year.

It isn’t hard to see why.

A slightly miscast Tom Cruise plays a divorced dad who spends the weekend with his estranged kids. Their domestic squabbles are put aside as aliens launch a devastating attack wiping out everything in their path.

It’s this part of the movie that works best. Spielberg revels in the amazing effects and there are obvious parallels to be drawn with the events of September 11.

It’s to Spielberg’s eternal credit that he doesn’t allow this to descend into a sub-Independence Day romp. There’s nothing jingoistic about this at all. It’s grim, gritty and unrelenting.

It’s also refreshing to see that in the age of over-elaborate computer effects (cough, cough George Lucas) there is one director who remembers less is more.

Cruise might not be believable as a blue-collar dockworker but he more than convinces when the story heats up, in every sense of the word. His relationship with his daughter, played by Dakota Fanning, and teenage son is put through the mill and there is a real sense of desperation to their plight.

The ending may have been a bit of a letdown to some audiences, their main gripe being they had to think about what happened, but War of the Worlds retains an integrity that most modern blockbusters have eschewed long ago.

Other critics felt the ending a bit saccharine-heavy. But after the unrelenting grimness of what has gone before, surely a light at the end of the tunnel isn’t too much to ask?

Starring: Tom Cruise, Dakota Fanning, Miranda Otto and Tim Robbins.

Dir: Steven Spielberg

 
 
 
 
 
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