Tag Archive: Tom Hiddleston


HIGH RISE directed by Ben Wheatley (UK, 2015)

high_rise_2014_film_posterIf this movie had met with universal critical acclaim or had achieved commercial success it would almost certainly have denoted its failure in artistic terms. Fortunately, therefore, it polarized the press and bombed at the box office.

J.G. Ballard’s novel (published in 1975) was meant as a morbid, provocative slice of entertainment designed to leave readers absorbed but seriously spooked. It begins arrestingly: “Later, as he sat on his balcony eating the dog, Doctor Robert Laing reflected on the unusual events that had taken place within this huge apartment building during the previous three months”.

This big screen adaptation has a similarly jarring impact since, in Ben Wheatley, we have a director whose mindset is every bit as warped as the polite but misanthropic English writer. Continue reading

ARCHIPELAGO directed by Joanna Hogg (UK, 2010)

In the age of digital cinema and crowd pleasing blockbusters, social realism has largely gone out of fashion.

Top grossing movies are often those with the most elaborate special effects. while modest, people-centred dramas or comedies tend to rattle along at such a rapid pace as though directors are worried that if viewers are given time to draw breath they’ll realise how superficial these  ‘entertainment’ packages really are.

Thankfully, there are still filmmakers out there who focus on stories with genuine substance and depth. Joanna Hogg is one of them.

Archipelago is a slow-moving, at times static, film that many could lose patience with but which stands as a welcome antidote to the contrived story-lines and stereotypical characters you find in so many so-called ‘serious’ dramas. Continue reading

HENRY V by William Shakespeare directed by Thea Sharrock (BBC Two)

So there we have it. Shakespeare’s TV tetralogy (a word I have never knowingly used before) is complete.

This quartet of the bard’s history plays have triumphantly brought the very best of the British theatrical tradition to the small screen and for this we should be truly thankful.Any accusations of the BBC dumbing down its drama will have to put on hold for a few years at least.

The Henrys (IV + V) were directed in a more traditional manner but , aside from the flop of Falstaff, they have provided a master class in acting. Richard II was the boldest and most cinematic of the four which is why it remains the highlight of the series for me.

In Henry V, Tom Hiddleston cuts a dash in a leather bomber jacket. Not for him the burden of regal regalia as he defies the “confident and lusty French” and leads his not particularly merry “band of brothers” to win the Battle of Agincourt against all the odds. Continue reading

Shakespeare’s Henry IV Part 2 is the tale of two kings and one fat bloke.

The outsize guy is Sir John Falstaff. It’s not clear how he got that knighthood as he looks like a man more devoted to big meals than good works. He is also given to bawdy deeds and to being what Prince Hal poetically refers to as “the feeder of my riots”.

Falstaff’s anarchic, irreverent wit is remarked upon by many but is never made manifest in this TV production directed by Richard Eyre. Simon Russell Beale is hopelessly miscast in this role as he is not the jolly jester he surely should be.

Fortunately the kings provide more than adequate compensation. Continue reading

It’s the way he tells ’em! Falstaff has Hal splitting his sides.

Have  you ever had that feeling of being in a room where everyone is laughing at a joke and you don’t get it?

I had this sensation when watching BBC’s Henry IV Part One.

Falstaff and Prince Hal (Tom Hiddleston) are doing a stand-up routine which has everyone in stitches but I couldn’t understand what was meant to be so funny. Continue reading