Showing posts with label Karen Gillan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karen Gillan. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 April 2018

Beyond the TARDIS The Circle film review by DJ Forrest



‘The Circle Must Be Broken’

Starring Emma Watson, Tom Hanks, John Boyega and Karen Gillan.
Written by James Ponsoldt who also directed.

Imagine working as a telesales person, going nowhere. Imagine watching your Dad cope with the debilitating disease, MS and know that if he had the insurance, he could get specialist treatment to help him achieve the smallest of goals. Imagine a place, that held everything you would ever need on one campus. Where your social life, home life was dominated by a computer screen, and that everybody who worked there, would be on one massive friend group that you would need to add, to avoid being a cast out.

In a world dominated by social media, where Youtubers give you a blow by blow account of their day, where personal liberties are broken and where there is no such thing as personal space and anonymity, the Circle is a frightening look into a world where Everybody Knows Your Name. Knows your business and invades your private life.

We are all curious about our neighbour; the people we follow on social media and what they are doing in their daily lives. The Eye’s in the Sky are following your every move and even having sex is available for all to see through the use of the watch on your wrist, linked to the cameras in your home.

But that’s the price you pay for being ‘transparent’.

It may save your life if you fall out of your kayak, but its intrusiveness is draining on your time, your family and your friends.

When you become popular within the Circle and your friend who helped get you in, are pushed out of the limelight. When your family refuse to be filmed as they miss their privacy. When your best friend is killed because of the ‘hunt’ you agreed to in order to satisfy those you were converting to your idea. And to save face in front of the man who invented the intrusive little camera and who created The Circle who also put you on the spot.

When you introduce yourself to a mystery man interested in whatever is on his phone, even though it’s only sometime later when you realise who he really is, and he leads you into his world, explaining who he is, what he does, and what The Circle is really all about, do you discover some things about the Circle yourself that make you think.

But then you enter into the entirety of The Circle by making your world transparent – whereby you open yourself to the world, to comments about your physical being – where you’re judged by your actions, be it good or bad.

But, when you’re top of your game, and you turn the tables on the actual people running the show, in front of a live audience and right across the internet, globally – now that’s a game changer.

There’s no guns, no edge of the seat, jump scares. There’s no dramatic car chases – well maybe one, but not in the usual sense. Emma Watson plays Mae, the young telesales operative who through friend Karen Gillan, is given the opportunity of working in The Circle, so long as she passes the interview first.

The Circle was created by forward thinker Tom Hanks, who wanted to give his disabled son something to look at.

A few days ago, on the internet, a young mother was dying of cancer, and her wife asked random people to help complete a bucket list that covered a lot of places in a lot of different countries, and through the power of the internet, many hundreds of individuals added their photos and their stories, making the bucket list something memorable for the family.

That made me think of Hanks’ son in the film, because his father had asked people to add their stories, their photographs, their lives for his son to watch. I can’t remember what his son suffered from, but it was a debilitating disease, as far as I can recall.

The story itself reminded me of the countless nights of catching up with several Youtubers talking randomly about their day, from what they were doing to where they were going, and we’d sit through endless hours and for a while we’d be hooked on the lives of Zoella and Alfie and a pug named Alan!

Once you become transparent, you open your life up to the world. Just like Zoella, and Alfie, and Thatcher Joe, you invite complete strangers to see you from the moment you wake up, to when you clean your teeth before bed. The cameras would be on you throughout your life. They would be there when you visited the bathroom, took a walk in the park, paddled your kayak out in the open water. If you met with family or friends.
It would work against you. It had access to private data. It could track people anywhere, at any time.

It was Big Brother.

It was frightening to think that beyond the CIA and the FBI, that a social interactive media platform could have that much power to do what it wanted, and nobody could stop it. Except when you are able to turn the tables on those who created it.

Karen Gillan’s role was more of a supportive role but she played a fairly rounded character. She was integral to the story and the character played by Watson.

It was one of those films that I’d been toying with watching but wasn’t sure if it was going to be another ‘Perks of Being a Wallflower’ style film, but I’m glad I stuck with it.
The pace never let up once, there were no dips or pauses. Although I’d had the film on in the background while I worked on a 1000 piece cardboard procrastination, I soon put it aside to focus on the film.

It’s currently on Netflix, it’s well worth a watch, even if you do have it on in the background for the first half of the film.

    

Saturday, 29 November 2014

Beyond the TARDIS Not Another Happy Ending by DJ Forrest


Writer David Solomons
Director Ian McKay
Released 30 June 2013 (Edinburgh Film Festival)
11th October 2013 UK
8th August 2014 US

Having already seen Karen Gillan’s performance as Jean Shrimpton in ‘We’ll Take Manhattan’ written and directed by Ian McKay, and already a fan of Amy Pond in Doctor Who, I knew I wouldn’t be disappointed by Gillan’s performance in ‘Not Another Happy Ending’.  Filmed mostly in Glasgow, plus a few surprisingly familiar local areas to me, I settled down to watch the film.  One thing I can say about this film, is that it’s bright and colourful, and even when Gillan’s character Jane Lockhart is going through a bout of writer’s block, everything is still brightly coloured, unlike the usual run of the mill Scottish films that show a starker, bleaker outlook on the city.  So this was a total breath of fresh air. 

The story is a romantic comedy about a writer Jane Lockhart played by Karen Gillan who develops writers block as she can’t write when she’s happy, and a publisher Tom Duvall played by Stanley Weber who has to invent ways of keeping her unhappy so that she will finish the book.  But the more he tries to make her unhappy, the more he finds he can’t get her out of his head and ultimately falls in love with her, but it’s not all plain sailing, love never is – apparently! 

Tom Duvall has another reason for pushing Lockhart to finish the novel.  Jane is his only client and he needs her in order to not become bankrupt.  But Jane, disliking the way that Tom operates, and he does come across as a very arrogant Frenchman decides that she would be better off with a more reputable publishing firm. 

Desperate in a way to put a wedge between her and Duvall, Lockhart writes the final chapter and destroys the one character in the story who meant anything to her, and that’s where it starts becoming an all too familiar picture for me.  I’ve been in exactly the same situation as Lockhart and felt the wrath of the character as I conveniently threw a curve ball, in other words, you do something so completely different to how that character should react, just so you can end that chapter. Bad idea.

Enter Darsie.  Now this in itself is when I got excited as I whooped at the screen, much to the annoyance of others watching the film with me.  I should really watch films on my own!
Darsie is the character that Lockhart creates in the novel.  She is only seen by the writer and because of that it’s often mind blowing when they’re having a conversation, or sharing chocolate.  I’ve never shared chocolate with my character, perhaps I should start that!

I could see myself a lot in the times when Lockhart spoke with her fictitious character Darsie.  It’s that moment that you know you’re on a level par with your character, when they’re that real you could almost touch them and feel their physical presence. 
But why I whooped is that the character is played by Amy Manson, and being the geek that I am and knowing in a way I should really have classed this as a Connection rather than a Beyond the TARDIS review, Amy Manson played Alice Guppy in Torchwood – ‘Fragments’. 

The film was partly funded through a crowd funding project on Indiegogo website, and raised over $22,000.  I remember reading about it in the local newspaper as a few scenes were filmed around Moffat area, as Gillan was reported to have stayed in one of the local hotels in the town.  I’m not sure if they were looking for Extra’s too for the film or whether they were only looking for funding. 

So of course during the portion of the film where Jane Lockhart fled Glasgow for some quiet time in an empty cottage in the middle of nowhere, the location looked awfully familiar, so familiar that it took another family member to have me pause the film and go frame by frame to see if he recognised the buildings in the background.  (So if you’re reading this Ian McKay I’d really love to know whereabouts in Dumfries & Galloway you filmed the white cottage).

The film is available on Netflix but I’d like to own it on DVD as I’d like my own personal copy.  It’s a wonderful, light-hearted comedy with down to earth characters including Gary Lewis who plays Jane’s Dad Benny.  I have to say I didn’t like Henry Ian Cusick’s character Willie Scott, but then I think you weren’t meant to like him much really.

If you’re tired of the ‘shoot em up’ films or the sci fi and just want an afternoon film which is light viewing and doesn’t require too much of a CSI whodunit kind of story, then watch ‘Not Another Happy Ending’ you won’t be disappointed.  I wasn’t.