Friday, December 31, 2010
UK Bloggers Top Films of 2010
This week I took part in Saam poll at Faded Glamour to find the top 50 films of 2010, as voted for by UK film bloggers.
It seems my choices featured pretty highly, so you can hop on over to Faded Glamour to check it out!
We also have the Top 20 Quotes from the Top 10 Films of 2010 at the Quotables Blog, which I had a lot of fun putting together last week.
What were your top films of 2010? Which films are you most looking forward to in 2011?
Once again, I hope you all have a very happy new year!
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Uncultured Critic: Best of 2010
2010 was the premier year of Uncultured Critic. I started the site back in February when I was looking for a writing outlet and a place to share the work I'd done for various other outlets. The idea was to share my discoveries and thoughts as I watched and read. After a few months of film reviews and features, I added books into the equation. Things have changed a little since then. I used to do a lot of Classic and Recommended spots, now I post less frequently about newer releases and feature items.
I'd love to know your thoughts about the growth of UC, what you've enjoyed and what you'd like to see more of on here. Feel free to leave a comment, , or shoot me an email using the logo on the right.
Here are the top posts from Uncultured Critic in 2010. Thanks for reading and , and I look forward to seeing you in the New Year!
Features
The Underappreciation of Charlie Chaplin & Buster Keaton
Early days, waxing lyrical.
The Art of the Viral Marketing Campaign
My penchant for memes and internet video attempt to combine.
The Case of 3D Filmmaking
What's to love?
In Defence of 3D?
Perhaps I've changed my tune.
How to Make Films & Alienate Women
Dead wife syndrome, anyone?
Choosing Black & White
Marya looks at the best of modern monochrome in this awesome guest post.
Interviews
Gareth Edwards, director of Monsters
Kick-Ass author Mark Millar
Pixar animators Bobby Podesta & Mike Venturini on Toy Story 3
Jay Baruchel & I chat about The Sorcerer's Apprentice & Buster Keaton
Animators from Radical Axis Studios talk Archer, Aqua Teen, and more
Featured
Almost Human
I published an article on anthropomorphised robots in film for The Big Picture Magazine
Animation & Automation
Film International published an essay based on my undergraduate dissertation on the same topic
Yes & Yes
Sarah Von invited me to talk about the freelance writing on her blog, Yes & Yes
Events
Mark Kermode's book tour comes to Glasgow
My first post at Uncultured Critic! I met him on a plane 2 months later.
Glasgow Film Festival
A fun fortnight, particularly the In Person with Kevin MacDonald.
Edinburgh International Film Festival
This year I wrote for the official EIFF website, as well as blogging about it here and for HeyUGuys.
John Green, visited Edinburgh International Book Festival
My favourite and an excellent author finally visited Scotland.
Sheffield Doc/Fest
One of the best weekends of my year - featuring Joan Rivers and Kevin MacDonald.
WonderCon in San Francisco
I had an amazing Easter weekend here with the huge Disney and Pixar panels, press conferences, and meeting Jake Gyllenhaal.
Exit Through the Gift Shop
Rich Hall's How the West Was Lost
This is back on BBC iPlayer & BBC4 for the next week - check it out if you can!
Rich Hall's How the West Was Lost
This is back on BBC iPlayer & BBC4 for the next week - check it out if you can!
My Uncle Oswald and Kiss Kiss by Roald Dahl
Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris
by Patrick Süskind
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz
My recommendation of the year.
by Patrick Süskind
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz
My recommendation of the year.
Labels: 3d, book, edinburgh international film festival, essays, events, feature, film, film critic, internet video, interview, mark kermode, mark millar, news, pixar, review, sheffield doc/fest, wondercon
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Book Review Catch-up: #40 - #43
This follow up to the best-selling, book-of-the-decade-winning The Time-Traveller's Wife was, in many ways, bound to disappoint.
However, even without due consideration of Niffnegger's past achievements, this is a book that lacks internal logic and dances across the threshold between (fictional) reality and fantasy like a kid trying not to step on the cracks. In the former, there was no question that what you were reading could take place, and the fantasy elements were read as true, but here you are never sure how much you are expected to believe. Most of the reader's initial questions are never addressed and the characters settle down in their world, leaving us uninvited.
Though very readable, the questions it raises make it difficult to suspend disbelief.
The best way to describe the ribald antics of Bertie Wooster, tempered by his ever-faithful butler Jeeves, is a romp. I'm constantly taught not to use that word but, like Wodehouse, it's a lexical gift that keeps on giving. Right Ho, Jeeves is a love quadrangle sliced down the middle, a test of Bertie's fashion sense, and a slap in the face for his asserted help and resulting mayhem.
Predictable as ever, there isn't much to be gotten out of this book. But it's as fun and as tongue-lashingly brilliant as only Wodehouse can be.
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz - #43, ★★★★★
The rules of my 50 book challenge have been relaxed a little this month. In a last ditch attempt to catch up I've given in and begun to re-read some favourites I've been dying to get back to. More on this later, but The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao definitely fits this category.
Revolving around a young Dominican boy named Oscar (nicknamed Wao years later for his Wilde-esque vocabulary and, er, mannerisms) and his painful adolescence. Narrated by a Dominican who knows his shit, it's peppered - nay, heavily seasoned - with Spanish slang and a taste of Santo Domingo's history. From Oscar we move on to his sister, Lola, and dying mother, tracing their history back while relating the "Fuku Americanus," or "the Curse and the Doom of the New World" that all Dominicans fear and claim to have been rocked by.
Though trying at times, the Spanish flavour gives it a real kick and Díaz's prose is fresh and oftentimes exhilarating. Having taken its author 11 years to write, it subsequently won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2008. If you read one book I recommend -- please, make it this one.
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For more reviews of books I've read this year, check out the 50 Books page. You can also add me as a friend on Goodreads.
What's the best book you've read this year?
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Review: Burlesque
Whoaa-ohh-ohh-whoa-ohhhhh.
Welcome to your annual fix of musical-diva-drama, drama, drama. Burlesque follows Ali (Christina Aguilera) as she gives up the triflin' life o' small town bar-tending Iowa for the big lights of Los Angeles. Stumbling upon a sexy burlesque club her first night in town, she befriends the Kentucky barman Jack (Cam Gigandet after a turn at Twilight -- but let's admit it, we all remember him best as badboy Kevin from The OC). Abiding by the tried-and-tested Coyote Ugly format - except he's the bashful songwriter and she's the sassy, over-confident hustler, it's a match that's too good to come true.
Impatient, ambitious Ali troops right on up to club owner Tess (Cher) and her right-hand man Sean (the ever brilliant Stanley Tucci) but is swatted away like the irritating fly she is. That is, until a series of lucky moments makes her the star of the club. Obviously.
Replete with massive eyelashes, handfuls of pearls and more twitching bums you can make a grab at, Burlesque is everything it has ever promised. Which is, incidentally, only one moment that is realistically burlesque (thanks to Allan Cumming), and a whole load of Hollywood glamour. As Xtina's film debut it's a good start. Characterisation is fittingly shallow with hilariously poor dialogue and paint-by-numbers writing. However, there are still some good performances and fun musical numbers keep the tempo upbeat and the dazzle razzlin'.
It's an excellent drunk-with-girlfriends movie, and you won't want to miss Kristin Bell's movie-stealing moment with the line of the year: "I will not be upstaged by some chick with mutant lungs!'
Burlesque is out now in the US, and is released this Friday, 17 December in the UK.
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
The Other Guys, part deux
Don't worry, they're not coming out with a sequel. Well, not as far as I'm aware.
Since I reviewed The Other Guys when it was released in October, I thought I'd share the big celebration that its PR company has in store for the DVD release.
I present to you: The WorstAutotuning Attempt At Zeitgeist You Will Ever Hear
Enjoy!
Wait. Are they trolling me or am I trolling you?
P.S. I apologise for my blogging remiss. But not for this. Welcome back to regularly scheduled programming at Uncultured Critic!
Since I reviewed The Other Guys when it was released in October, I thought I'd share the big celebration that its PR company has in store for the DVD release.
I present to you: The Worst
Enjoy!
Wait. Are they trolling me or am I trolling you?
P.S. I apologise for my blogging remiss. But not for this. Welcome back to regularly scheduled programming at Uncultured Critic!
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