Boogie Woogie
Gillian Anderson, Alan Cumming, Heather Graham, Danny Huston, Jack Huston, Christopher Lee, Joanna Lumley, Simon McBurney, Meredith Ostrom, Charlotte Rampling, Amanda Seyfried, Stellan Skarsgård, Jaime Winstone
A savage, sexy art world satire, with an all-star cast.
Featuring a stunning international cast engaged in an alarming array of wicked behaviour, this ensemble drama pushes buttons and boundaries. Adapted by Danny Moynihan from his own novel, Duncan Ward’s daring and accomplished debut circles heartless agents, self-seeking artists, corrupt dealers and sexual predators of all persuasions, through escalating crises and towards a shattering conclusion.
2009 Archive
Festival Diary: June
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Comments
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#1 Mairi Fraser / Friday 26 June, 2009 / 22:10 GMT
#2 B HB / Saturday 27 June, 2009 / 17:17 GMT
#3 Paul Laird / Saturday 27 June, 2009 / 17:38 GMT
Unless one defines daring as persuading Jamie Winstone to show us her boobs...oh, but she did that in last years disappointing Brit-flick "Donkey Punch". Perhaps then by daring we mean encouraging a fine actor like Danny Huston to give us a caricature of the caricature he played in "Ivans XTC" is that daring or simply a criminal use of one of the best actors of our time?
I don't know that anything here was daring...we've seen these sort of satirical looks at the world of Artistic endeavor before in "Pret" and "The Player" and both of those films were genuinely daring and accomplished. There was no new ground broken here.
Accomplished doesn't just mean having lots of big names in a film. If that was the case then "Independence Day" would have been hailed as an "accomplished" piece of film making instead of as a big budget toy advert.
Accomplished doesn't just mean having lots of big names in a film. If that was the case then "Independence Day" would have been hailed as an "accomplished" piece of film making instead of as a big budget toy advert.
Maybe the fact that the YBA provided us with a real-life, technicolour satire on the savagery of the Art world means that this film already feels dated...whatever the reason this is not a film that anyone associated with it should take any pride in.
The over-riding emotion is that this was a film made for the people in the film not for an audience.
#4 Leona Campbell / Sunday 28 June, 2009 / 08:46 GMT
The fact that none of the characters are especially likeable is disappointing as some start out a little likeable and loose it very quickly.
All in all not my most enjoyable movie of this years festival.
#5 Hans von Tostov / Sunday 28 June, 2009 / 18:00 GMT
The humour wasn't laugh-out-loud at all times, but was continuously present, and brought very much to life by brilliant performances from a wonderful cast.
I highly recommend this film. Thank you, Edinburgh!
#6 Paul Laird / Monday 29 June, 2009 / 14:15 GMT
that review was almost as pretentious as the film itself.
Well done.
Paul
#7 Hans von Tostov / Tuesday 30 June, 2009 / 08:51 GMT
But yet he does not adhere to his own dictum. Like the barbarian who must seek to destroy that which he doesn't understand, he follows his unqualified (by his own admission) criticism with criticism of another's comments. When did this person become the arbiter of Art and Criticism?
It's so easy to find fault in art, and so very difficult to create it. I would like to know what Paul has accomplished that qualifies him to write off a film as unaccomplished. Oh, but he is not in any way qualified.
"Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent," Ludwig Wittgenstein.
#8 Karen Lonie / Wednesday 15 July, 2009 / 06:57 GMT