Friday 19 April 2024

Under the Skin | review by Jacob Edwards

This review originally appeared in TQF65 (December 2019).

Out from under but still only skin-deep.

Under the Skin features Scarlett Johansson as a vulnerable yet predatory alien whose dark incomprehension of the world sets up a contrast by which director (and co-writer) Jonathan Glazer sets out to capture something of the human condition. Whether Glazer achieves this is debatable. Assuredly his film encapsulates the best and worst of the arthouse experience.

An art film owes no debt to the mass market. Thus it need not make the sort of expository concessions that serve so jarringly to insult the intelligence of those who possess any. Under the Skin exemplifies – at least at first – the virtues of storytelling without pandering. Johansson’s alien nature; her taking on of human form; the first hints of her purpose: these elements are established subtly and without dialogue in the first tenth of the film. All talk thereafter is naturalistic, existing not for the viewer but rather the characters. (Indeed, many of the conversations were unscripted and captured by hidden cameras.) Glazer paints a motion picture and trusts that his audience will learn by osmosis. Compared with the dross so stiltedly put out by Hollywood movies, this is good. It is refreshing to interpret a film obfuscated not by formulaic contrivances but rather the unapologetic intent of the production to walk its own path, alone.

But even if the destination is not rigidly defined, an art film does owe to its smaller, more discerning audience the impetus to go somewhere. By most definitions Under the Skin fails to do this. Glazer conveys an impression, a mood, yet he leaves too many questions unanswered; worse, he leaves us with no real desire to have them answered. Under the Skin is based on the eponymous book by Michel Faber. Whereas the story in written form evinces distinct themes and a clear narrative, the cinematic rendition is just as clearly (and quite pointedly so) art for art’s sake, not the viewer’s. We discern the intent of Johansson’s alien, but not her motivations. We sense her straying from this purpose, but know not why. We see her striving to understand, to blend in, perhaps to become human, and yet even as she does so her faculty for human facsimile appears to diminish. And throughout it all her sinister motorcycling compatriot races gratuitously around the countryside, adding atmosphere but little else to events as they unfold. For all the film’s artfulness there is no closure.

An art film may take certain liberties with its audience’s time and forbearance. Lack of catharsis notwithstanding, Under the Skin does this to good effect. Lingering shots of the Scottish countryside and of Johansson driving the city roads convey a bleakness, a loneliness, an apartness more powerful than could be achieved within the tight editing of mainstream releases. The use of little-known (and in many cases unknown) actors lends a human realism to the world through which Johansson’s character moves, and provides a perfectly non-Hollywood backdrop against which to portray and play out her alien experiences. Johansson’s acting is exemplary, again making full use of the latitude afforded by Glazer’s direction and the art-focused house rules. Her disassociation; her hesitations in searching for the correct response; her mechanical processes and deliberate imitations: all of these present compellingly as the inner/outer workings of an alien wilfully if uneasily subsumed by her human form, while to those around her never marking her as anything more than a disturbed young woman to be either helped or exploited. For appreciation’s sake, if not necessarily enjoyment’s, Johansson’s performance gives some justification to Glazer’s relentlessly cinematographic leanings.

Less resolute, less satirical than the book from which it is so loosely adapted, Under the Skin takes up none of Faber’s preoccupation with environmental degradation and the ethics of industrialised livestock production (direct reference to which is omitted save for one gruesome, visceral snippet). The film is evocative, to be sure, yet on a narrow, personal level and with sufficient ambiguity to have been identified at once as an exploration of feminism, immigration, sexual and racial politics, rape culture, existentialism and twenty-first century humanity. Like any piece of art, Under the Skin can be whatever the viewer makes of it; to those who prefer a slightly less nebulous approach, it is something of an ordeal. Stylish visuals aside, Glazer makes his point until it becomes well and truly blunted. Pure cinema? A mind-melting masterpiece? Of sorts. But if it were hanging in an art gallery, chances are only someone like Johansson’s alien would stand there staring at it for upwards of ninety minutes. Jacob Edwards

Tuesday 16 April 2024

47 by Walter Mosley (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers) | review by Douglas J. Ogurek

An alien among the alienated: young adult novel puts sci-fi twist on slave story to comment on freedom and equality.

In Walter Mosley’s young adult novel 47, a slave story collides (or intertwines) with colourful little people, ghouls, lasers shot out of eyes, and magic devices. 

The tale begins with 170-year-old first-person narrator 47 revealing that he’s going to reflect on his experiences as a slave in 1832. This framing device strengthens the author/reader connection, reinforces the authenticity of the tale, and lends the novel a genuine “Let me tell you a story” feel.

The story takes place at the Corinthian Plantation, where a slave named Flora (aka Big Mamma) has managed to keep protagonist 47 – that’s his slave name – free from the brutality of the slave life by limiting his milk and meat intake and therefore stunting his growth. Finally, they can no longer sustain the charade, so fourteen-year-old 47 gets sent over to the slave cabin. There he gets to know his fellow captives, including compassionate leader Mud Albert, the biggest and strongest slave Champ, and 84, a justifiably surly female. The slaves fear the killing shack, where Master Tobias Turner’s sadistic plantation overseer Mr. Stewart tortures slaves.

The most influential character that 47 meets, however, is Tall John, another fourteen-year-old boy who claims to be from “beyond Africa” and who shakes things up when he arrives at the plantation. John, with his copper skin and silver tongue, is a confident young man and a benevolent figure able to disarm the nastiest master, the angriest slave and even vicious animals. 47 gradually learns more about Tall John’s origins and his yellow bag of curious objects. Eventually, the story introduces otherworldly malignant forces into 47’s world.

One wonders whether putting a sci-fi spin on a slave story detracts from the seriousness and rawness of that period. At times, the novel feels as if a Star Trek episode crash-lands in the middle of 12 Years a Slave. Then there’s the other side of the argument. Perhaps Mosley reflects the quest for freedom from slavery when he adds the sci-fi element. Which is brilliant. 

Despite this debate, Tall John’s message of self-empowerment will lead 47 to question how he sees himself and others, encouraging him (and hopefully Mosley’s young readers) to not think of himself as above or beneath others but rather as their equal. Moreover, since narrator 47 is 170 years old, it seems that he represents not just an individual but also an entire culture.

47 also illustrates Mosley’s strength at revealing just the right amount of detail to plunge the reader into the story without becoming overwhelming. Examples include the smells of sweat and vomit in the slave cabin, or the description of one slave’s brown and broken teeth. He also captures the slaves’ differing responses to their captivity; while some are compassionate, others seek to inflict on others the same indignities they’ve had to suffer. Douglas J. Ogurek ****

Monday 15 April 2024

Geethanjali Malli Vachindi | review by Stephen Theaker

A much more stylish sequel to the 2014 Telugu film Geethanjali, this 15-rated horror comedy from first-time director Shiva Thurlapati introduces us to an unattractive, middle-aged street food vendor hoping to persuade the military father of his very young girlfriend that he’s a catch worthy of her, even though he obviously isn’t. To this end, he proudly declares that within a year he will be respected by everyone, that they’ll all be calling him “sir”: he is about to star in a film! Unfortunately, the purported director – played by Srinivasa Reddy, returning from the first film – has no film in the works, and has in fact been bilking the vendor to support himself and his two writers.

Sunday 14 April 2024

Civil War | review by Stephen Theaker

Kirsten Dunst plays Lee, a celebrated and determined photojournalist who hopes to get one last photograph of the US president before his inevitable execution by rebels from the Western Alliance, who are closing in on Washington. Texas and California fight together in the alliance, the traditionally Republican and Democrat states setting their differences aside to depose what the director has called in interviews a fascist president. I don’t think that’s spelt out as clearly on-screen, though I saw it in 4DX and it’s easy to miss dialogue when the fans are blasting away. We do learn that he disbanded the FBI and ordered airstrikes on US citizens, and that something called the antifa massacre happened. Florida has also seceded, and the Portland Maoists are among those taking their guns to the White House. The president is in it so briefly and yet played so perfectly by Nick Offerman that Ned Beatty’s record could be under threat.

Friday 12 April 2024

Firewalkers by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Solaris) | review by Stephen Theaker

This review originally appeared in Interzone #288, September–October 2020).

Another short book exploring the effects of global warming. In this possible future, the equatorial region of Africa might be the centre of a ever-expanding desert, but it was still the most convenient place to build Ankara Achouka, an anchor for the space elevator to the Grand Celeste, a colony ship up in orbit.

Monday 8 April 2024

Twisted Metal, Series 1 | reviewed by Stephen Theaker

A Peacock original in the United States, PlayStation adaptation Twisted Metal took quite a long time to reach the UK, where, ironically, it joined Xbox adaptation Halo on Paramount+. Personally, I’ve been Xbox-exclusive ever since my PlayStation 3 got the yellow light of death, but I have a soft spot for Twisted Metal, from the original PlayStation. It wasn’t a complicated game: you chose a themed, armoured, battle-ready car, entered an arena, and fought against several other cars until one emerged the winner. Twisted Metal Black: Online was one of the first console games I ever played online, as part of a beta testing programme. The series petered out in 2012, presumably because its ideas were so easily merged into other car games. For such an old, dormant series to be adapted for television might seem a bit surprising, but books much older than that are adapted every year. I take it as a sign that this wasn’t produced simply for the sake of corporate synergy, but because people looked at the game and its concepts and thought it would make a good tv show. I think they were right. It’s a lot of fun!

Friday 5 April 2024

Every Day, by Jesse Andrews (Orion Pictures et al.) | review by Stephen Theaker

This review originally appeared in TQF65 (December 2019).

“A” is a being of unknown origin who wakes up in a different human body every day, one that’s about the same age as A. When asked if he or she is a boy or a girl, later in the film, A says, “Yes.” I suppose it doesn’t make sense to talk about being male or female if you don’t have a body. Or, to put it another way, in a male body A is male, and in a female body A is female, rather like Doctor Who.

Monday 1 April 2024

Femlandia, by Christina Dalcher (HQ) | review by Stephen Theaker

In the very near future, the American economy collapses and society follows suit. Trying to keep her 16-year-old daughter Emma safe from marauding men, Miranda, a formerly well-off woman, heads for Femlandia, the all-female radfem colony co-founded by her mother, Jennifer Jones. That might sound like the set-up for a feminist book, and it certainly has feminist elements (and a feminist author), but ironically I think anti-feminists might enjoy it more.

Friday 29 March 2024

Earwig by B. Catling (Coronet) | review by Stephen Theaker

This review originally appeared in Interzone #284, November–December 2019).

The cover of this short novel has traps for the unwary reader. Despite the artwork, the book does not feature a cat-faced girl, nor does the girl listen at walls with a glass. And do not read the cover flap, which provides a synopsis of the entire novel.

Monday 25 March 2024

Immaculate | review by Stephen Theaker

Sydney Sweeney, who also produces, plays Cecilia, a young American woman whose church has closed due to lack of attendance. Surviving a childhood accident on an icy lake left Cecilia convinced that God has a plan for her, so now she travels to an Italian convent to take her vows and become a novitiate. The work is hard, physically and emotionally: the rules are strict and the nunnery offers end-of-life care to those who require it, including patients with severe dementia. But Sister Cecelia is a true believer in the power of religion and she really takes to life in the convent. She even makes friends, like fellow nun Sister Gwen (Benedetta Porcaroli) and suspiciously charming priest Father Sal Tedeschi (Alvaro Morte).

Friday 22 March 2024

She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, Season 1 | review by Stephen Theaker

This review originally appeared in TQF73 (April 2023).

Jennifer Walters is a lawyer who gains the power to transform into She-Hulk, thanks to her blood being mixed with that of her gamma-infused cousin, Bruce Banner. This television version of her story is largely based on the Dan Slott run of She-Hulk comics, where she works as a lawyer with superhuman clients, but it retains the fourth-wall breaking of the earlier John Byrne run. Tatiana Maslany plays the lead.

Wednesday 20 March 2024

Positive: A Novel by David Wellington (Harper Voyager) | review by Douglas J. Ogurek

More than a mark: lesson on compassionate leadership disguised as zombie story.

During his westward journey, exile Finnegan (aka Finn) encounters a large sign that says, “The world takes.” It’s a fitting summary for the post-apocalyptic world he traverses, a world full of zombies and even more dangerous predators of the human variety. 

Monday 18 March 2024

Hell to Pay by Matthew Hughes (Angry Robot) | review by Stephen Theaker

Chesney Armstruther should be having the time of his life. The events of the two previous novels in the To Hell and Back trilogy (The Damned Busters and Costume Not Included, reviewed in TQF37 and TQF48 respectively) left him with superpowers, a nice girlfriend in Melda McCann, lots of money, and a cigar-smoking, weasel-faced, wish-granting demon at his beck and call. Plus, thanks to meeting a version of Jesus from an earlier draft of the universe, he’s now free of the autism that had previously bedevilled his interactions with other humans. But he isn’t really any happier. He might understand people’s emotions better now, but that doesn’t mean he knows what to do about them. Previously, he was at least happy within his areas of certainty, his pools of white light, but now it’s all grey areas.

Friday 15 March 2024

Chilling Effect by Valerie Valdes | review by Stephen Theaker

This review originally appeared in Interzone #284 (November–December 2019).

Eye-catching cover art by Julie Dillon gives a good idea of what’s inside: goofball space opera with a more serious protagonist. She is Captain Eva-Benita Caridad Alvarez y Coipel de Innocente, who hasn’t spoken to her family in years, since the awful incident at Garilia. She owns a slightly old-fashioned spaceship, La Sirena Negra, a keep-your-mouth-shut present from her estranged spaceship-dealer father, and we meet her just as she and her crew run into even more trouble than usual.

Saturday 9 March 2024

The Parades | review by Stephen Theaker

After a huge earthquake hits Japan, a 35-year-old single mother and journalist, Minako (Masami Nagasawa), drowns in the subsequent tsunami. Not that she realises at first. She wakes up on a beach strewn with wreckage and of course her first thought is to find Ryo, her seven-year-old son. Rescue workers ignore her questions. So do survivors, and a colleague from work. The first person to acknowledge her is her colleague’s daughter – because the little girl died too. Later, as Minako searches through the rubble, a young man, Akira (Kentarô Sakaguchi), calls to her from his van. He can see her, and she can touch his arm. She’s in such a state that he offers her a lift to where he is staying, a cosy outdoor bar in a little fairground in the middle of nowhere. He tells her it’s a gathering place for people like them, by which he means those who died with regrets and aren’t ready to move on.

Friday 8 March 2024

Fugitive Telemetry by Martha Wells (Tordotcom) | review by Stephen Theaker

This review previously appeared in Interzone #290-291 (March-June 2021).

The rogue SecUnit (an android "made of cloned human tissue, augments, anxiety, depression, and unfocused rage") returns for Fugitive Telemetry, its sixth adventure, though to its own slight discomfort it is somewhat less of a rogue than before. Now it has friends, and its friends have expectations. So when a murder is apparently committed on Preservation Station, a place where such events are extremely rare, SecUnit is expected to help. There is some discomfort on the station about having a former murderbot on board, but its new friend Mensah has enough sway to override objections.

Wednesday 6 March 2024

Cackle by Rachel Harrison (Berkley) | review by Douglas J. Ogurek

Aimless woman desperate for a man finds mysterious woman desperate for a friend in dully taught lesson on female autonomy.

Cackle is a call for women to stop kowtowing to men and to develop their own voices. Unfortunately, excepting a charming spider and some unruly teens, the story isn’t all that interesting.

Monday 4 March 2024

Lisa Frankenstein | review by Stephen Theaker

1989: the unfortunately named Lisa Swallows (Kathryn Newton) has a new home and a new school. When Lisa was a little younger, her mum was killed by an axe murderer. Her dad has now married Janet (Carla Gugino), a nasty piece of work who thinks very little of Lisa. Stepsister Taffy (Liza Soberano) does her best to be nice but isn’t very good at it. After another girl deliberately gives Lisa a spiked drink at a party, and her science lab partner sexually assaults her, she takes a shortcut home through her favourite graveyard. She wishes she could be with the subject of her favourite bit of statuary, a piano player who died young in 1837 (Cole Sprouse, one half of the little kid in Big Daddy).

Friday 1 March 2024

Black Adam | review by Stephen Theaker

This review originally appeared in TQF73 (April 2023).

Archaeologists in the country of Kahndaq, currently in the grip of a private security company, discover the tomb of an ancient hero. Betrayal leads mercenaries to the scene, but when Black Adam awakes, they die, most violently. The film then follows Black Adam as he connects with his country's current inhabitants, fights its occupying force, and battles a quartet of Justice Society members, sent from the US to bring him in line.

Monday 26 February 2024

Madame Web | review by Stephen Theaker

Madame Web has been given a lot of stick for being a bad superhero film, which in my view is a complete misunderstanding of what it is. It’s not a superhero film at all, it’s a comedy horror thriller that takes place in a superhero universe. Comics readers are very used to this kind of thing, but it seems to have baffled some filmgoers. Imagine a Final Destination film, but where nearly all the heroine’s psychic visions are of the same disaster: an evil Spider-Man type called Ezekiel murdering everyone he gets his hands on, in one location after another. Admittedly, he is the film’s weakest link (the animation of his movements looks clumsy, and it sounds as if his dialogue has been dubbed by someone else), but, overall, like Morbius, the film is very far from being the complete disaster that some would have you think.