Composer and conductor Carl Davis, 1936-2023

RIP CARL DAVIS 1936-2023 On shot lists, bass drums and the perils of projection speeds

theartsdesk Q&A from 2021 with the silent film specialist on shot lists, bass drums and projection speeds

May 2021 should have seen the appearance on Netflix of a new restoration of Abel Gance’s silent epic Napoleon, lasting nearly seven hours and timed to coincide with the 200th anniversary of Napoleon’s death. The release was delayed, but, in anticipation, theartsdesk spoke to the composer and conductor Carl Davis, who has died aged 86.

Paris Memories review - recalling the terror, bit by bit

★★★★ PARIS MEMORIES A survivor refracts 13 November 2015 through her PTSD prism in Alice Winocour's drama

A survivor refracts 13 November 2015 through her PTSD prism in Alice Winocour's drama

People have been making films about the unreliability of memory since, oh, I can’t remember. Often it’s a cue for a genre escapade, but here French filmmaker Alice Winocour gives us a social drama, telling the fictional story of a survivor of the terrorist attacks in Paris in November 2015, which killed 130.

Blu-ray: The Driver's Seat

★★★★ BLU-RAY: THE DRIVER'S SEAT Liz Taylor is superb as a Muriel Spark character

Liz Taylor is superb as a Muriel Spark character searching bomb-haunted Seventies Rome for a dark fate

Liz Taylor’s blowsy late-period persona is finessed to its finest point in this 1974 Muriel Spark adaptation, boldly plugging into the mains of her fragile talent.

Baato review - Nepalese mountain folk await big changes with excitement and anxiety

★★★ BAATO Nepalese mountain folk await big changes with excitement and anxiety

Documentary depicts how modernisation is encroaching on an old way of life

It doesn’t do to be in a hurry in Nepal. In Baato, directors Kate Stryker and Lucas Millard follow Mikma and her family as they travel 300 kilometres from their mountain village in Eastern Nepal to the town of Terai. It takes the best part of a week for the five adults, two boys, and two dogs to walk the narrow paths until they reach the unpaved road where they can board rickety buses or jeeps to complete their journey.

The Beanie Bubble review - an under-stuffed, misshapen product saga

This toy story's script is a waste of a good cast

Another week, another toy story, in the wake of Barbie. And another origin-of-hit-product story, too, after Air. The Beanie Bubble, though, has none of the surprisingly gripping appeal of Nike’s rise and rise via a single trainer design, nor the (sporadic) wit and bounce of Greta Gerwig’s mega-hit. It’s all corporate idiocy, shabby dealings, and misogyny. And failure is nowhere near as fascinating as success.

Talk to Me review - teens tempt fate in Aussie alienation allegory

★★★★ TALK TO ME Teens tempt fate in Aussie alienation allegory from the RackaRacka bros

The RackaRacka bros deliver a bonechilling horror flick

Keeping up with viral teenage trends is nearly impossible – they travel at the speed of light – but here’s a new one, or ancient one given an electronic makeover.

Everybody Loves Jeanne review - charmingly weird romantic comedy

The inner voice made manifest: Céline Devaux's debut feature is funny and touching

Céline Devaux, known for her award-winning short films, wrote, directed and drew the animations for her charming, funny debut feature, which takes the concept of the critical inner voice and runs with it.

Blanche Gardin is brilliant as Jeanne, whose revolutionary invention, a structure that traps and removes microplastics from the ocean - it's called Nausicaa, which doesn't bode well - ends up as a dismal failure at its launch.

Blu-ray: Thamp̄ (The Circus Tent)

Engrossing semi-documentary following a circus in rural India

There are scores of films set in and around circuses. Aravindan Govindan’s bewitching Thamp̄ (The Circus Tent) isn’t like any of them, though I was fleetingly reminded of Jacques Tati’s largely plotless Jour de fête – which also opens and closes with a big top being assembled then dismantled in a small rural community.

My Name Is Alfred Hitchcock review - a sly primer

★★★ MY NAME IS ALFRED HITCHCOCK The master of suspense surveys his cunning craft

The master of suspense surveys his cunning craft from beyond the grave

Mark Cousins pulled off a coup for his latest film history documentary, My Name Is Alfred Hitchcock, by getting the great director to narrate it. In his catarrhal East London drawl, Hitchcock parses dozens of the brilliant visual techniques he used to elicit emotional responses in his movies' audiences, as Cousins cuts rapidly from one memorable excerpt to another. Quite a feat since Hitchcock died 43 years ago.

Oppenheimer review - epic and enthralling study of 'the father of the atomic bomb'

★★★★★ OPPENHEIMER Christopher Nolan puts big bang theory into practice

Christopher Nolan puts big bang theory into practice

With a track record that includes Memento, Dunkirk, Insomnia and Inception, Christopher Nolan is not a filmmaker who could be accused of a lack of ambition, but even by his standards Oppenheimer is a staggering achievement. Its three-hour running time is a little daunting, but it’s as if Nolan is saying if you want to make the most of this trip, you have to make the commitment.