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February 1, 2014 Eimear Fallon
Watched: Only God Forgives

There is a moment of this film of such unbridled ferocity that it shocked me out of my chair. Weirdly enough, for a film with so much violence and gore, it was entirely verbal, involving no physical contact, but sizzled w…

Watched: Only God Forgives

There is a moment of this film of such unbridled ferocity that it shocked me out of my chair. Weirdly enough, for a film with so much violence and gore, it was entirely verbal, involving no physical contact, but sizzled with so much intimidation that it instantly changed my perception of Ryan Gosling’s character in this.

It’s also the moment where you’re shocked out of seeing this as a Drive spin-off - the Gosling of the sun-soaked Sallis adaptation was capable of great violence, but in such a muted and sinister way that it felt chillingly methodical. Here, that role is passed to another (Vithaya Pansringarm, who is terrifying), and while Gosling is often quiet, you can see the seething rage underneath. In one scene, he clenches his fists, and you can see his smoothly sculpted jawline start to quake with anger. It’s rendered with such specificity that it’s hard not to look away.

It’s easy to see why this polarised people. It revels in Oedipal horror, and features extended, agonising sequences of torture, but it uses blood as a canvas (much like Dredd). At times, it’s hard to stomach; at others, it’s utterly transfixing.

Tags only god forgives, film, film.2014
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January 15, 2014 Eimear Fallon
Watched: Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues

This was funny, but overlong and with one or two jokes in really poor taste. It also felt a little thematically dissonant - at times, the jokes about Brick felt more mean-spirited than absurd.

The absurd …

Watched: Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues

This was funny, but overlong and with one or two jokes in really poor taste. It also felt a little thematically dissonant - at times, the jokes about Brick felt more mean-spirited than absurd.

The absurd points were where the film shined, incidentally. There’s an extended sequence where Ron Burgundy rears a shark in captivity, and I suspect it confused some of those in the cinema; allowing the film to go on flights of fancy is where its genius lay, and retreading familiar ground (the final fight scene, while laden with a half-dozen funny celebrity cameos, felt a little reworked) often felt more like pandering than genuine humour.

All that said, it was still very funny. And maybe that’s enough.

Tags anchorman 2: the legend continues, film, film.2014
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