Friday 9 July 2010

Ultra Culture Cinema #03: Mother


Deadly bitter rival movie blogger Charlie Lyne from Ultra Culture this week invited us all round to his place (I'm assuming he lives at the ICA, it's the only place I've ever seen him) for the third in an increasingly numerically sequential series of film screenings and pre-show entertainment. This month the film was Joon-ho Bong's murder-mystery Mother, which stalkers of The Incredible Suit will remember I saw at the London Film Festival last year.

My worthless opinion of the film hasn't changed - it's still too long and drags in parts - except that I neglected to mention a quite brilliant sequence involving a close-up of some fingertips and a puddle of water. If any of the Hitchcock comparisons Mother has attracted are deserved, that bit is the most Hitchy by far. I also failed to notice how good the score is the first time round, which makes me a pretty shoddy film reviewer even by my own low standards.


But Ultra Culture Cinema is as much about the experience as the movies. The random gift-giving continues - those of us who have loyally attended every screening were rewarded with a KitKat each (only two fingers, the tight bastard) - and the charmingly ill-prepared games are entertainingly baffling. When you can win a director's entire back catalogue by dropping a golf ball onto a piece of paper from a distance of about four inches you know you're not on University Challenge.

We were also entertained by magician Chris Cox, who got plenty of LOL-mileage from his surname and awkwardly failed to magic the clothes off an attractive lady, although he did convince her to remove her scarf.

The hopefully-now-mandatory introductory video, though, was the highlight, and these short films are fast becoming surreal mini masterpieces to be held in the same esteem as Pixar's pre-feature shorts. This one featured Some Guy from Some Indie Band and I'm pretty sure it hides a deeper allegorical meaning but I'll leave you to work out what it is.



Finally, anyone who doesn't bother reading the pass notes given out at each screening is a massive nob.

Next month's film is a secret that only The Incredible Suit and several hundred other people know, but trust me when I say that if you've got a family funeral, hot date or job interview to attend on the evening of Wednesday 25th August you should cancel it now.

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3 comments :

  1. Not noticing the sound is a good thing when reviewing a film as is not noticing the camerawork. The better the technique of the film maker the more you are drawn into the story. A first rate film needs to be seen twice by a critic; first as sheer entertainment and then again to see how it was done.

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  2. The Expendables premieres on 1st August and Salt on 17th August. All I can discover about 25th August is that Ben & Jerry are hosting an ice cream event on Clapham Common which I guess involves alfresco licking and swallowing. Business as usual then.

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  3. Mother, your notes inform, is played by a South Korean Zoe Wannamaker called Kim Hyung-Ku. I suppose this is a round about way of explaining that she relies on talent rather than good looks or perhaps a father in the business to open doors. Sam Wannamaker rebuilt The Globe. I wonder what Kim's father did.

    I wonder if Bong said "Cue Ku" on set?

    There is twaddle a plenty, but
    most of all, with regard to the head banner of this blog, I want to know if Mother's terrible scarf is made of sufficient lycra to provide the promised 1%?

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