4/5
What Films Are Out This Weekend? The Only Ones You Need To Know & See Are Reviewed Right Here! By Tim David Harvey. Contact: tdharvey@hotmail.co.uk. Or Follow on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram & Pinterest @TimDavidHarvey
Sunday, 25 August 2024
REVIEW: MONKEY MAN
4/5
Saturday, 24 August 2024
TV REVIEW: THE BEAR - Season 3
4/5
The Bear Necessities
10 Episodes. Starring: Jeremy Allen White, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Ayo Edebiri, Lionel Boyce, Liza Colón-Zayas, Abby Elliott, Matty Matheson, Oliver Platt, Jamie Lee Curtis & Jon Bernthal. On: Disney +.
R.E.M., Radiohead...just everything on your damn radio. The soundtrack of each season of the Emmy winning FX series 'The Bear' (Season 3, now streaming on Disney +) is so damn good and sought after, that it may as well come with its own sponsorship from the app Shazam (just like the fact that my favourite app needs to come with a direct Spotify curating and creating playlist link). But 'The Bear' growls louder than all that, even the once Gotham, gargoyle, classic Chicago skylines and cityscapes that aesthetically match the scoring soundtrack of this series.
Yes, Chef, 'The Bear' is even much more than the legendary company of its Emmy winning guest stars like a punishing Jon Bernthal (that look between Jeremy Allen White and Jon in the closing moments of Season One, as 'OK Computer's' 'Let Down' plays, is everything), Oscar winning Jamie Lee Curtis and many more you could shake the menu of an award's season envelope at, that we simply shouldn't spoil like the soup.
Jeremy Allen White is a Springsteen star of the future, but his glory days are right now. And not just because this Calvin Klein ad man looks good in a pair of tighty-whities with the NYC skyline in the distracted background. Biting into his own Big Apple in the home of the deep dish, 'The Bear' is serving up an even bigger and better slice in the Windy City. Capturing the anxiety (and explicitly) of anyone whose ever worked in a kitchen (*dishwasher raw hands up*) perfectly. Especially the head chef.
You should keep the receipts from the check machine of this nuanced and niggling performance, all the way down to the iconic, not so plain white tee under the apron his hands wipe on. Hiding, yellowing stains like the cigarette packet under his shirtsleeve like a convict. Imprisoned in his own world, a slave to the system of customers and perfection, under his fingernails, that won't shift like garlic, keeping his demons at the door. Or the chest freezer. Now that's service.
The thing is, 'The Bear' is more than the cousin of JAW too. Take Eban Moss-Bachrach, almost unrecognizable (it's those eyes) from his time playing Keanu Reeves' brother in 'The Lake House'. He's hit pay dirt with Marvel, all to play a pile of rocks for the 'Fantastic Four', but you just know this fantastic actor could get blood, sweat AND tears out of a stone. His first reminiscent, throwback moment with an also amazing Liza Colón-Zayas (for her own epic episode of origin story) truly gets some. Meanwhile, the acclaimed Ayo Edebiri steals the show with every course she takes. Motivated by Coach K and the Duke of this kitchen amongst all the black and bruised blue devils of s### shift work.
Add the 'Sugar' of Abby Elliott running all of this and holding onto the breaking branches of the thorny family tree, and 'The Godfather' like presence (and best, Orwellian line of the series) of Oliver Platt, and this is the perfect recipe. Like the delightful, but heartbreaking, more than just desserts of Odd Future member Lionel Boyce (with an even brighter one on-screen). This show is as ever likeable as Matty Matheson, and after the appetizer, mains and dessert, we can't wait for a fourth course like a fresh cup of coffee. Nothing on television tastes like this. Grab a bite of what everybody's been recommending. TIM DAVID HARVEY.
Further Filming: 'Beef', 'Succession', 'Burnt'.
ANIME REVIEW: KAIJU NO. 8 - Season 1
4/5
Monster Man.
12 Episodes. Starring: Masaya Fukunishi, Asami Seto, Wataru Kato, Fairouz Ai, Kengo Kawanishi & Yuuki Shin. Screenplay: Ichirō Ōkouchi. Directors: Shigeyuki Miya & Tomomi Kamiya. On: Netflix.
Godzilla rears his iconic head above the famous Shinjuku TOHO Cinemas in Tokyo, Japan. So much so, the street he roams over is named after him. Yet, I've been here in the Land of the Rising Sun, five years, next month, and I still was in for a surprise the last time I walked down Godzilla Road on just another neon night. On the hour, like Paris Eiffel Tower shining in glittering flashbulbs and gold in the City Of Light, Godzilla roars like clockwork, along with his iconic theme tune.
And not just that, he spits hot fire like Dave Chappelle's Dylan with an electric blue that crackles and cackles from his mouth. Now I no longer wonder why everyone stands at attention there, on the hour, and where that music is coming from. It's not from the legendary Don Quijote that even Bruno Mars, no stranger to Tokyo having sold out more domes than the Giants, has made a music video for. His latest collaborator, the legendary Lady Gaga also spending thousands (and we aren't talking about Yen) in the Osaka outlet.
King Kong ain't got s### on all this. Kaiju's are kind of a big deal. You only have to watch Hollywood's recent face off with the planet of the ape, or look at Japan's own Oscar winning, 'Godzilla Minus One' and the film noir that's about now on our shore, 'Minus Colour' to see the glow like his minty fresh breath. Nothing is bigger than the God, who recently celebrated his 70th birthday. But in this movie multiverse, his strand of storytelling stomps all sorts of new ground.
From movies thinking about what to do with his colossus corpse, to Netflix anime about other famous monster lizards. And this is where 'Kaiju No. 8', available on the streaming service, meets these same minds in the middle. Based on Naoya Matsumoto's massive manga series, this Production I.G. and Studio Khara production is directed by Shigeyuki Miya and Tomomi Kamiya and scripted by Ichirō Ōkouchi, knocking this adaptation out the park like his baseball namesake.
Chief animator Tetsuya Nishio really steals the show, too, with his character designs. Whilst Shinji Kimura's art direction and the monster designs of Mahiro Maeda (a concept artist for 'Mad Max: Fury Road') really bring even more vivid detail to this mix of classic and "kawaii" anime, with its digital opening and terrific themes from Youngblud and OneRepublic, two acts no stranger to hits, like they are a spacebar...I'm sorry, a space-bar. Streaming on TV Tokyo and an X simulcast, this show, starring the vocal talents of Masaya Fukunishi, Asami Seto, Wataru Kato, Fairouz Ai, Kengo Kawanishi and Yuuki Shin has just been green lit for a second season, and you can see why.
Beyond a terrific knife-wielding and big-gun team, reminiscent of those trying to take on an 'Attack On Titan', there's a rogue gallery of kaiju (armed with voices akin to the opening of Prince's '1999'), even more diverse than Godzilla through the ages. The best being the man who became one in humanoid form. Straight from the clean-up team that takes care of the destruction left in the wake of these big beasts (The Avengers would never). This is what makes the regular Joe anime fantasy of 'Kaiju No. 8' the wonder that it is. TIM DAVID HARVEY.
Further Filming: 'Gamera-Rebirth', 'Attack On Titan', 'Godzilla: Singular Point'.
Monday, 19 August 2024
TV REVIEW: THE UMBRELLA ACADEMY - Season 4
3.5/5
Saturday, 17 August 2024
REVIEW: THE FALL GUY
3.5/5
Sunday, 4 August 2024
REVIEW: TWISTERS
4/5