Showing posts with label Gary Oldman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gary Oldman. Show all posts

Sunday, December 8, 2019

"The Laundromat"



We watched this movie on Netflix on Friday night.  It was, to say the least, and interesting movie, and I am not sure I can even tell you what it was about.  Money laundering? Corruption in the tangled relationships among lawyers, bankers, and insurance and financial services companies?  Corrupt political systems both here and abroad? It was funny in parts, sad in parts, and it made you feel both angry and helpless against "the system."  It stars Academy Award winners Meryl Streep and Gary Oldman, as well as Antonio Banderas, James Cromwell, and an almost unrecognizable Sharon Stone in a minor role.

WARNING:  If you lean to the right, and like wearing a red baseball cap with gold lettering that promotes a certain political agenda, don't bother seeing this one because you will hate it.  You've been warned.


Two and one-half Stars from The Grandstander.

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Movie Review - "Darkest Hour"



We continued our New Year's Eve tradition - begun in 1990 with "Home Alone" - of going to a movie this past Sunday.  This year, the choice was "Darkest Hour", a biopic about Winston Churchill, starring Gary Oldman as Churchill, screenplay by Anthony McCarten and directed by Joe Wright.  

The movie covers approximately one month in Churchill's life from the time he became Prime Minister in May, 1940 to the eve of the operation to evacuate besieged British troops from Dunkirk in France.  The European mainland was falling to  Nazi Germany, and surely England and the United Kingdom were next on Adolf Hitler's radar.  It was a most critical time in world history.  The British government under Neville Chamberlain was failing, and Winston Churchill became Prime Minister of a coalition, wartime government, and he had no easy task ahead of him.  Not only did Churchill have to deal with the problems of the world, but also with the political realities and sniping from other members within his own government, including King George VI (the same king from "The King's Speech").

Are great men always great, or do they become great under the circumstances in which they find themselves?  This is always a tricky and interesting historical question to debate, and this movie does just that.  It is a terrifically told story, and a beautifully made movie.  Director Wright makes frequent  use of overhead shots and they are very  effective.  However, the real force of this this movie, and perhaps the main reason to see it is the astonishing performance of Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill.


Oldman is an old pro.  He has over ninety acting credits in IMDB - Harry Potter movies, Batman movies, John le Carre heroes, a Planet of the Apes movie, he even once played Lee Harvey Oswald - but this performance is a true tour de force.  They should be engraving his name on that Best Actor Oscar right now.  Simply tremendous.

The movie also stars Kristen Scott Thomas as Clementine Churchill, Ben Mendelsohn as King George, and the  delightful Lily James (Lady Rose from Downton Abbey) as Miss Layton, Churchill's terrorized, steadfast, and loyal secretary.

A terrific movie that is not to be missed.  Four Stars all the way from The Grandstander.