Showing posts with label Jeremy Irons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeremy Irons. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 October 2021

Dead Ringers

Year of Release:  1988

Director:  David Cronenberg

Screenplay:  David Cronenberg and Norman Snider, based on the book Twins by Bari Wood and Jack Geasland

Starring:  Jeremy Irons, Geneviève Bujold

Running Time:  115 minutes

Genre:  Drama, thriller, horror


Identical twins Beverly and Elliot Mantle (Irons in a dual role) are both gynaecologists and run a clinic in Toronto.  The Mantles live together and frequently pose as each other.  The more ruthless and callous of the two, Elliot, often seduces his patients and, when he grows bored, allows the more gentle and passive Beverly to adopt his identity to sleep with the women, without them having any knowledge of the exchange.  This works for them until Beverly falls in love with glamorous actress Claire Niveau (Bujold). The relationship begins to drive a wedge between the bothers who soon learn that "separation can be a terrifying experience."

This film marked a change in the career of Canadian director David Cronenberg who made his name with such gruesome fare as Shivers (1975), Rabid (1977), The Brood (1979), Scanners (1981) and Videodrome (1983), before moving to more mainstream work such as the Stephen King adaptation The Dead Zone (1983) and the remake of The Fly (1986).  With Dead Ringers Cronenberg moved into more complex, psychological material, which didn't necessarily fit into any particular genre.  The most traditionally "Cronenbergian" sequence in the film is a very brief scene in which Beverly has a nightmare of himself and Elliot being attached to each other by a thick, fleshy cord, which Claire proceeds to bite in order to separate them.  While this lacks the trademark blood and guts that Cronenberg was known for, it is possibly his most disturbing work.  Jeremy Irons delivers a career best performance with his dual turn as the twin brothers, delineating the subtle differences in their personalities, making each distinct while showing that they are two separate halves of one whole.  The impressive special effects makes the scenes of the two twins together look seamless.  Geneviève Bujold is a little underused, particularly in the film's second half, but she is good as the woman that comes between the twins.  The film takes place mostly indoors, in the spotlessly clean environment of the Mantle's clinic and apartment, which seem almost one and the same, all gleaming metal and soft lighting, and the opulent hotel rooms and expensive restaurants that Claire inhabits.  As the Mantle's mental condition deteriorates, so too does their  living space, buried under increasing amounts of trash and debris.  The film was adapted from a book called Twins by Bari Wood and Jack Geasland  which was inspired by a true story in which identical twin gynaecologists, Stewart and Cyril Marcus, were found dead together in their New York apartment in 1975.  I can't say anything about the book as I've never read it, but the working title for the film was Twins, after the book, but it was changed to avoid confusion with the Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito comedy which came out around the same time.  This is a film which won't be to everyone's tastes, it's slow, and has a strangely alienating quality to it.  Even in the emotional scenes, the way the shots are framed and the scenes performed seem designed to push the audience away rather than draw us in, the sombre classical score by Howard Shore reinforces that feeling.  The film however has a distinctive and impressive chilly atmosphere and will linger in the mind for a very long time after it is over.     



Double trouble:  Jeremy Irons, Geneviève Bujold and Jeremy Irons in Dead Ringers

Friday, 17 November 2017

Justice League

Year of Release:  2017
Director:  Zack Snyder
Screenplay:  Chris Terrio and Joss Whedon, from a story by Zack Snyder and Joss Whedon, based on the comic book series Justice League created by Gardner Fox
Starring:  Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Amy Adams, Gal Gadot, Ezra Miller, Jason Momoa, Ray Fisher, Jeremy Irons, Diane Lane, Connie Nielsen, J. K. Simmons
Running Time:  120 minutes
Genre:  Science-fiction, fantasy, action,

While the world mourns the death of Superman, Bruce Wayne, aka Batman, (Affleck) becomes aware of strange, flying cybernetic alien creatures who are behind a string of abductions in Gotham City and Metropolis.  Diana Prince, aka Wonder Woman, (Gadot)  recognises them as Parademons, the army of the evil multi-dimensional entity Steppenwolf who wants to fid three powerful devices that will enable him to take over the world.  Recognising that Steppenwolf is far too powerful for them on their own, Bruce and Diana decide to recruit a team of superheroes:  Arthur Curry, aka Aquaman, (Momoa), from the undersea kingdom of Atlantis; Barry Allen, aka The Flash, (Miller), who suffered an accident that gave him the ability to move at superhuman speeds, and Victor Stone, aka Cyborg (Fisher), who was cybernetically reconstructed with alien technology following a near-fatal accident.

This is the fifth film in the DC Extended Universe series, based on characters appearing in DC Comics.  Here they seem to be following the Marvel mold, with more humour than usual and also two post-credit sequences.  The DC movies tend to be criticised for being too dark, and while this is still pretty bleak, it is still much lighter than usual.  The first half of the film is putting the team together, and introducing the characters of The Flash, Cyborg and Aquaman into the film universe, previously having only been seen in brief cameos in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016), although of course The Flash is likely to be familiar to viewers through the TV series The Flash (2014- ).  The putting the team together scenes are too long, and Steppenwolf and his plan are all revealed too early and feel like kind of an afterthought and the action scenes don't have the sense of danger necessary to really be thrilling.  The performances are fine, Gal Gadot in particular is fantastic as Wonder Woman, and Ezra Miller is very funny as The Flash.  However, when the team are together and interacting and joking that is when the film really takes off.  The added warmth and humanity in the film is welcome, and point to a very promising future for the franchise.  A truly great movie is waiting to be made with these characters.  This isn't it, but gives cause for hope.

Batman (Ben Affleck), Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot), Cyborg (Ray Fisher), The Flash (Ezra Miller) and Aquaman (Jason Momoa) are ready for action in  Justice League.