A11 dompost.co.nz THE DOMINION POST THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013 CULTURE AT THE MOVIE S OPENING THE WAY, WAY BACK ✪✪✪✪ Comedy (M, drug references, sexual references). Coming-of-age comedy from comedic actors and screenwriters Jim Rash and Nat Faxon (The Descendants), starring Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Alison Janney, AnnaSophia Robb and Sam Rockwell. ‘‘The story of a teen desperate for a father figure who finds encouragement from a wild-and- crazy water-park employee – rather than from the guy auditioning to be his stepdad – can be explosively funny in parts, but overall feels pretty familiar, relying more on its cast than the material to win favour.’’ – Variety. PAIN & GAIN ✪✪✪ Action-thriller (R18, violence, offensive language, drug use, sex scenes). True-crime dramatisation about three Miami bodybuilders who botch a kidnapping. Michael Bay directs Dwyane Johnson, Mark Wahlberg, Ed Harris and Rebel Wilson. ‘‘It all leaves you pondering whether you have just seen a monumentally stupid movie or a brilliant movie about the nature and consequences of stupidity.’’ – New York Times. EVENT NZ INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL Closing highlights include A Touch of Sin, Much Ado About Nothing, Giselle, Maniac, The Gatekeepers, Dial M For Murder 3-D and Only Lovers Left Alive (Various venues, until Sunday.) CONTINUING NOW YOU SEE ME ✪✪ Thriller (M, violence, sexual references, offensive language). Jesse Eisenberg, Dave Franco, Isla Fisher and Woody Harrelson play bank-robbing illusionists. ‘‘Although the concept is passably inventive, the execution is lazy and slip shod.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. LOOKING FOR HORTENSE ✪✪✪ Comedy/drama (M, offensive language, sexual references, drug references). ‘‘The characters in the loquacious Gallic dramedy Cherchez Hortense aren’t looking for Hortense so much as for ways to survive a stagnant marriage, and for the courage to deal with things they would prefer to ignore.’’ – Variety. ONLY GOD FORGIVES ✪✪ Thriller (R18, Sadistic violence, sexual themes, offensive language). American-in-exile Ryan Gosling, who runs a Bangkok boxing club as a front for drug smuggling, discovers his brother’s killer is a retired cop. ‘‘God may forgive you for seeing this needlessly brutal film. But you won’t forgive yourself.’’ – USA Today. THE WOLVERINE (3-D) ✪✪✪ Fantasy (M, violence, offensive language). In his second solo outing, the X-Man battles a Japanese industrialist who wants to extract Wolverine’s near- immortality. ‘‘Between the highs, The Wolverine finds the same lows as its predecessor.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. PING PONG ✪✪✪✪ Documentary (PG, coarse language). Follows a handful of octogenarian competitors en route to China for the Over-80s World Table Tennis Championships. ‘‘Funny, touching, unsentimental and hugely entertaining.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. FAREWELL, MY QUEEN ✪✪✪✪ Drama (M, nudity). ‘‘A distanced but extraordinarily atmospheric costumer set in the heady (in the sense of pre-guillotine) final days of Versailles amid the commotion of the dawning French Revolution, Farewell, My Queen is a visual joy, even while its tale of a lower-class girl at court infatuated with the Queen of France labours to say something relevant.’’ – The Hollywood Reporter. THE WORLD’S END ✪✪✪✪ Comedy (R13, violence, offensive language, sexual references). Five mates reunite for a pub crawl in a village overrun by killer robots from outer space. Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Paddy Considine, Martin Freeman and Rosamund Pike star. ‘‘Truly funny, smarter and more ambitious than it needed to be.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. EPIC (3-D) ✪✪✪ Animation (PG, low-level violence). A teenage girl and an elite band of warriors try to stop evil forces from destroying their world. ‘‘Gorgeous visuals aside, Epic is resolutely kiddie fare.’’ – Total Film. THE CONJURING ✪✪✪✪ Horror (R16, horror and content that may disturb). Two families are terrorised by demonic forces. James Wan (Saw, Insidious) directs Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, Ron Livingston and Lili Taylor. ‘‘Pull-out-the-stops horror film-making of a very sophisticated order.’’ – Variety. PRIVATE PEACEFUL ✪✪✪✪ Drama (M, battle violence). Two brothers fall in love with the same girl before shipping out to the battlefield horrors of World War I. Pat O’Connor (Dancing at Lughnasa) directs Skins’ Jack O’Connell and, in his last role, Richard Griffiths. ‘‘A heart-felt indictment of the essential inhumanity of military law.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. PACIFIC RIM (3-D) ✪✪✪✪ Sci-fi (M, violence). Humans use giant robots to fend off invading aliens from the deep. Guillermo del Toro directs. ‘‘Ticks every box a blockbuster should. It entertains us, it makes us laugh and gasp, and it’s all wrapped up in just a shade over two hours.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. THE HEAT ✪✪✪ Action-comedy (R13, violence, offensive language, sexual references). An FBI agent and a Boston cop unite to thwart a drug lord. Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy star. ‘‘They deserve a much stronger showcase than this Laurel & Hardy Go Policin’ vehicle.’’ – Time Out New York. MONSTERS UNIVERSITY (3-D) ✪✪✪✪ Animation (G). Mike and Sully meet at college while training as scarers in a prequel that’s also a tribute to American college comedy. ‘‘Doesn’t quite live up to Monsters Inc but it does come darned close.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. DESPICABLE ME 2 (3-D) ✪✪✪✪ Animation (PG, low-level violence). Former criminal mastermind-turned- father of three Gru is recruited to thwart a powerful new super villain. ‘‘Gru and his brood return for another zany, if not quite as winningly despicable, animated escapade.’’ – The Hollywood Reporter. BEFORE MIDNIGHT ✪✪✪✪ Drama (M, nudity, offensive language, sexual content). Nearly 20 years after their brief encounter in Venice, Before Sunrise’s Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Julie Delpy) are unmarried with children in Paris. ‘‘They talk interminably, but the talk is extraordinary and insightful.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. WHITE LIES ✪✪✪✪ Historical drama (M, violence, nudity). Adaptation of Witi Ihimaera’s novella Medicine Woman, about a Maori midwife (Whirimako Black) and a wealthy white woman with a secret (Antonia Prebble). ‘‘Black is a fabulous presence on screen, powerful, still, and utterly composed.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. THE LOOK OF LOVE ✪✪✪✪ Drama (R16, sexualised nudity, drug use, sex scenes). Director Michael Winterbottom’s fourth collaboration with Steve Coogan stars the comic actor as Paul Raymond, Britain’s answer to Hugh Hefner. ‘‘Lays out the story in a matter of fact and unshowy way.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. THE GREAT GATSBY (3-D) ✪✪✪ Drama (M, violence, sex scenes). Leonardo DiCaprio, Carey Mulligan and Tobey Maguire star in Baz Luhrmann’s adaptation of F Scott Fitzgerald’s novel about a mysterious, self-made Jazz Age millionaire. ‘‘Stagey, showy, visually spectacular but, finally, shallow.’’ – Linda Burgess. THE OTHER SON ✪✪✪ Drama (M, violence, infrequent coarse language, drug use). An Israeli teenager discovers his biological parents are Palestinians. ‘‘This beautifully photographed drama is well-played throughout with great conscience without becoming heavy-handed.’’ – New York Daily News. REMEMBRANCE ✪✪✪✪ Drama (M, violence, sex scenes, nudity). A Polish prisoner and his Jewish girlfriend escape from a concentration camp in Germany, only to live the next 30 years thinking the other has died until an accidental discovery. ‘‘Without dwelling on the horror, or sentimentalising the story, Remembrance is an effective and moving film.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES ✪✪✪✪ Thriller (R16, violence, offensive language, drug use). A motorcycle stuntman turns to bank robbery to support his new- found family. Ryan Gosling and Bradley Cooper star. ‘‘Maybe not the best film I have seen this year, but it is my personal favourite.’’ – Graeme Tuckett. DVDS PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES (PG) Directed by John Hughes. Starring Steve Martin, John Candy. Movie: ✪✪✪✪✪ Extras: ✪✪✪✪ One of the funniest movies of the past 25 years at last gets buffed up on Blu- ray. This odd- couple classic teams Steve Martin’s uptight ad exec and John Candy’s insufferably chipper, know-it-all shower curtain-ring salesman with a wellspring of pointless anecdotes and never-tell-twice jokes on the ultimate road trip from hell as they try to make it home for Thanksgiving. Hilarious and heartfelt, it combines a respectable high-definition transfer with a droll deleted scene and an excellent hour-long HD tribute to writer and director John Hughes. (Subtitled.) A GOOD DAY TO DIE HARD (M) Directed by John Moore. Starring Bruce Willis, Jai Courtney, Sebastian Koch. Movie: ✪✪✪ Extras: ✪✪✪✪ Ironically, ‘‘mycop’’ is Russian for rubbish, and that’s what many fans of ex-cop John McClane will think of their yippie-kai-yay hero’s efforts to extricate his estranged, undercover son from the clutches of murderous Muscovites. Despite the ludicrous depths this action extravaganza plumbs, Bruce Willis’ unstoppable troubleshooter still holds irresistible appeal, some of the banter amuses, and the movie looks and sounds sensational on Blu- ray. The disc includes an extended cut and two hours of top behind-the- scenes extras. (Subtitled.) BULLET TO THE HEAD (R16) Directed by Walter Hill. Starring Sylvester Stallone, Sung Kang, Christian Slater. Movie: ✪✪✪ Extras: None. From the same era as Die Hard and Planes, Trains and Automobiles come a genre director and star in their first, overdue collaboration, a B-grade, Big Easy film noir about a New Orleans hitman and a Korean cop who reluctantly join forces to thwart corruption. The plot is a join- the-dots gumbo of cliches and shortcuts, but the action sequences are hot and the violence swift and bloody without being gratuitous. (Subtitled.) QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER (M) Directed by Simon Wincer. Starring Tom Selleck, Alan Rickman, Laura San Giacomo. Movie: ✪✪✪ Extras: ✪✪ In this reissue of the 1980 off-the- beaten trail western, Tom Selleck plays a sharpshooter who is left for dead in the Australian outback after he is double-crossed by genocidal land baron Alan Rickman. The star and director have made better shoot- ’em-ups together, but the cinematography and locations shine in HD and Rickman’s villainy is wickedly good. (Not subtitled.) ROMAN POLANSKI: A FILM MEMOIR (M) Directed by Laurent Bouzereau. Documentary: ✪✪✪✪ Extras: None. This is an illuminating if one-sided profile of the controversial Oscar-winner, conducted while under house arrest for statutory rape charges dating back to 1977. It relates the 80-year-old film-maker’s stranger-than-fiction triumphs, tragedies and longevity within the context of his audacious cinematic achievements and is the perfect post-Wellington Film Festival wind- down. (Not subtitled.) CITADEL (R16) Directed by Ciaran Foy. Starring Aneurin Barnard, James Cosmo. Movie: ✪✪ Extras: ✪✪✪ A traumatised solo dad holed up in a crumbling block of flats recruits a rogue priest to help flush out the supernatural forces that killed his wife in this creepy, claustrophobic, low-budget exercise in escalating silliness. (Not subtitled.) PHILIP WAKEFIELD New blood: Neil Jordan’s Byzantium is yet another story about vampires, but one with bite and a few surprises. BYZANTIUM ✪✪✪✪ Supernatural thriller (R16, horror, violence, sex scenes, offensive language). A vampire settles in a seaside town where her daughter befriends a sick youngster. Neil Jordan directs Caleb Landry Jones, Gemma Arterton and Saoirse Ronan. ‘‘It’s hard to teach an old bloodsucker new tricks. Still, Byzantium has a few moves that might surprise you. They have nothing to do with blood, but everything to do with the heart.’’ – The Washington Post. Striking a rich vein of music High note: Skeptics’ singer David D’Ath, who died in 1990 from leukaemia, was a compelling figure on stage and off and the driver for making the documentary Sheen of Gold. In Palmerston North and then Wellington in the 80s and early 90s, Kiwi band Skeptics were one of a kind. A documentary in the New Zealand International Film Festival sheds light on the band’s history and legacy, writes Gavin Bertram. THE DETAILS Sheen of Gold screens at the Paramount, tonight, 6.30pm and at the New Zealand Film Archive on Saturday, 8.15pm as part of the NZ International Film Festival. ‘I think I chose the right band to make a documentary about. The body of music the band created lends itself well to a movie soundtrack. It’s so varied, it’s so rich.’ director Simon Ogston I N 2006, Flying Nun Records founder Roger Shepherd sat agonising at a table in Warner Music’s Auckland office. He was scouring the fabled New Zealand independent label’s vast back catalogue, trying to decide on 80 songs for the Flying Nun 25th Anniversary Box Set. Encapsulating the label’s output was clearly a painful experience. But when pressed on his favourite Flying Nun related act, Shepherd was unequivocal. ‘‘I’ve always been a big Skeptics fan,’’ he said. ‘‘Love that band.’’ Sheen of Gold was the Skeptics’ track that featured on the compilation. It’s now the title of a moving documentary about the band by director Simon Ogston. It traces Skeptics’ journey from high school punks in Palmerston North in the late 1970s, to their move to Wellington and the death of singer David D’Ath in 1990. Ogston was familiar with some of their music, but his interest in the band only developed three years ago. ‘‘A friend put me onto some of their albums and I was intrigued,’’ he says. ‘‘I decided to do some research online and found there was very little information about Skeptics. I think I chose the right band to make a documentary about. The body of music the band created lends itself well to a movie soundtrack. It’s so varied, it’s so rich.’’ Robin Gauld first envisioned Skeptics between his fifth and sixth form years. Now professor of health policy at the University of Otago, he remembers becoming obsessed with playing guitar and punk music in Palmerston North that summer. Records by Iggy Pop, The Stranglers, Sex Pistols, Boomtown Rats, and Wire were the initial inspiration. And so when school began again, Gauld says he literally bullied his friends at Freyberg High School into starting a band with him. D’Ath was his oldest friend and first recruit, and the two formed an interest group at school to support the project. They soon dragged Don White aboard as drummer. ‘‘He had never played drums in his life and David had never sung in his life,’’ Gauld says. ‘‘We had another guy Ian Reiddy who played the bass. And we just played. We were just young and had this kind of vision, I think.’’ Under the name X-It, the band performed during their first year at a school talent quest. Early in 1980 they changed their name to Skeptics and debuted in the school library. Gauld admits that although they had written a handful of songs, their lack of musical knowledge didn’t help – guitars and bass weren’t tuned to the same key. Bassist Nick Roughan replaced Reiddy not long after. ‘‘I probably knew the most musically – three chords maybe,’’ he says. ‘‘We got together and learnt our instruments and how to play together at the same time. I can imagine those early times would have been fairly punishing for anybody listening.’’ Skeptics’ first recording Last Orders featured on the 1982 3 Piece Pack compilation from Auckland label Furtive. This and the ensuing national tour were a huge breakthrough, and the experience instilled Skeptics with greater ambition. In 1983 they opened Snailclamps in Palmerston North – a practise space that doubled as a venue for local and touring acts. The same year Skeptics released the Chowder Over Wisconsin EP on Flying Nun. ‘‘The song writing had evolved into a collaborative effort,’’ Gauld says. ‘‘There was a range of things going on and we were starting to create our own unique sound.’’ After the Ponds album in 1985 Skeptics moved to Wellington without Gauld, who pursued his academic career. In the capital, Roughan, White and D’Ath embraced technology as a way of replacing their guitarist. Sampling and drum machines became an integral part of Skeptics’ sound, even after ex-Gordons’ member John Halvorsen joined on guitar. At their own Writhe Studio they created their greatest work, with 1987’s Skeptics III and 1990’s Amalgam albums. Dense and involving, those album’s industrial tones and poignant mood shifts are peerless not just in New Zealand, but internationally. They are particularly resonant due to D’Ath’s death from leukaemia in September, 1990. A compelling figure, doing the story justice for the singer was a key driver for Ogston with Sheen of Gold. ‘‘Creating something that lives up to his legacy has been a major motivation for me,’’ he says. ‘‘I have great respect for the work that he created. By all accounts, he was a very warm and creative and generous person, and everyone remembers him fondly.’’ Ogston’s documentary coincides with both Skeptics III and Amalgam being re-released by Flying Nun, in collaboration with United States label Captured Tracks. ‘‘One thing behind the film was to try and get to a new generation of listeners,’’ Roughan says. ‘‘I feel that our music has aged fairly well and it would be nice to get through to another generation.’’