Events

Jun 302013
 
EIFF 2013:  The Geekzine's alternative "Best of the Fest"

And so we bid a fond farewell to this year’s Edinburgh International Film Festival.  A typically diverse programme of movies from around the world brought us touching drama, thrilling action, surreal fantasy and insightful documentaries, and made for a fascinating fortnight of cinema.  The festival always concludes with a “Best of the Fest” line-up shown […]

Jun 282013
 
REVIEW:  'Frankenstein's Army' (EIFF 2013)

Nazis make the best movie villains; that’s something almost everybody can agree on.  Officious, racist bureaucrat-soldiers with a fevered devotion to a pseudo-mystical ideology are perfect fodder for the “stock bad guy” role, and it helps that for half a century the vast majority of cinema-goers have been raised to instinctively hate them.  The fact […]

Jun 262013
 

I remember the first subtitled film I ever watched all the way through.  It was Ang Lee’s Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, and I must have been in my mid-teens at the time.  I found it distracting at first, having to follow the words on the screen whilst simultaneously trying to take in all the images the […]

Jun 252013
 
REVIEW:  'Monsters University' (EIFF 2013)

Cynics have suggested that Pixar’s recent move into spinning off its existing properties (first with Cars 2 and now with Monsters University) rather than producing more original content is (a) a sign of creative bankruptcy, and (b) a calculated attempt to further monetise old products.  It would be naive to suggest that the latter consideration […]

Jun 242013
 
REVIEW:  'Emperor Visits the Hell' (EIFF 2013)

Classical literature has provided storytelling fodder for cinema since the invention of the medium, but rarely is it adapted as unconventionally as in Emperor Visits the Hell, the new film from Chinese director Li Lou.  Based on a part of the 16th century Ming Dynasty classic Journey to the West (which also inspired the cult ’70s TV […]

Jun 222013
 

Upon entering a darkened screening room and observing the humanoid shapes within, two questions immediately strike the intrepid amateur film critic as he nervously clutches his satchel of empty carrier bags and discounted pork pies: who are these people, and how should I act around them? That the gathered patrons are film critics is obvious; […]