Hollywoodgate (2024)

Written for RAF News August 2024

Days after the United States’ withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, Egyptian filmmaker Ibrahim Nash’at immerses himself in their deserted military base in Kabul and its new inhabitants—the Taliban air force regiment.

Taking its name from the compound in which most of this documentary is shot, the Taliban forces first appear like kids who have been left home alone, playing dress-up in US military gear and shooting their guns at the surrounding mountains, propping open the automatic gates to this former CIA stronghold in case they get locked out.

Following the new head of Afghanistan’s air force, Mawlawi Mansour, we watch as they excitedly poke around the gym equipment, talking about how they will train their army here. They rustle through crates of expired medical supplies that could have massively helped the ailing population, and delight in the array of abandoned and sabotaged aircraft that they are determined to fix up. Multiple Black Hawk helicopters, B-35 bombers, and fighter jets are found partly dismantled, the base filled with over $7 billion in American weaponry.

Lacking rudimentary education, the promises of restoring the base and aircraft appear like self-deluding wishes and puffed-up propaganda, but the reality of their competence is shocking. There is a feeling that maybe these officials aren’t being serious or aren’t to be taken seriously—but this will change.

Mansour doesn’t appear too menacing, but then he knows there is a camera on him. Moments of darkness are heard in his values, while the camera is instructed to be turned off at other times. Even though director Nash’at has been granted access, there is an unbelievably palpable tension and unease throughout. Many moments are captured in which veiled threats are made to him. At one point, someone warns that ‘the little devil’ is filming, but is reassured with: ‘if his intentions are bad, he will die soon.’

A fly on the wall in a house of spiders, Hollywoodgate is equally fascinating and frightening.

Sleep (2024)

Review for RAF News July 2024

A professional actor and his pregnant wife are safe-proofing the house and changing their lifestyle – not just preparing their home for the baby on the way, but fortifying against something far more sinister that haunts their nights.

Sleep, the Korean horror debut of Jason Yu, opens appropriately with the sound of deep, guttural snoring. The culprit is Hyun-su (the late Lee Sun-kyun), an Oscar winner who now sits bolt up right at end of the bed muttering that “someone is inside”, panicking wife Soo-Jin (Jung Yu-mi) to high alert before he cosily returns to sleep. 

There is a deft mix of dark humour and creeping dread, that eases the tension with perfectly timed comic relief, especially as Hyun-su’s nighttime escapades become more unpredictable and violent: one scratching fit early on leaves gashes in his face. When he starts to sleepwalk and roam about the apartment, they begin to fear for the safety of Pepper, their little Pomeranian, as well as the unborn baby.

An executive by profession, Soo-Jin is a pragmatist and so she waves off her mother’s spiritual notions and instead meets every potential hazard with a solution, beginning with a trip to the sleep clinic. Here they will learn that Hyun-su’s nocturnal activities are all symptoms of a stress induced sleep disorder, but the question is whether they can help before he does anything drastic.

Sleekly made with a style that complements its suspenseful turns and moments of gore, Sleep sets its story up neatly and commits to its level of escalation. A fun and sometimes wince inducing horror that does a great job of treading the line between heightened reality and the supernatural.

Hounds (2024)

A father, perpetually down on his luck, ropes his son into a job that will spiral into chaos in this tense Moroccan crime thriller.

Hounds opens appropriately, but nonetheless upsettingly, at the end of a dog-fight in which Dib (Abdellatif Lebkiri) sits collapsed by his bloodied and lifeless canine. Believing that the victor and his crew have cheated, it sparks a desire for vengeance in which no-one is without fault – there are no ’good’ people.

Jailbird Hassan (Abdellatif Masstouri) is eager to make money however he can and so takes Dib up on his offer to kidnap one of the crew, taking along his more streetwise and cautious son Issam (Ayoub Elaïd). But when the rental car for the job is delivered and is coloured red, apparently a bad omen, things are not destined to be that easy. There is a knowing black-humour that accompanies the more grim turns as the assignment becomes more involved.

Set in the darkly-lit underbelly of Casablanca, there is a grittiness that envelopes our men on a mission as they become more entangled: each situation hairier than the last, each hurdle that much higher. Hassan and his son will have to avoid the police, the rival crew and any potential onlookers as they scramble to fix their predicament. All of this whilst plagued by superstition.

Over the course of this one crazy night it will become clear that the central duo are the titular hounds, the underlings employed for the dirty work. The impressive cast are made up of non-actors, giving an authenticity that is helped by the documentary shooting style.

A simple, lean and suspenseful debut film from writer-director Kamal Lazraq.

La Chimera (2024)

Written for RAF News May 2024

Freshly released from jail in Tuscany, an Englishman wanders back into the company of his friends, a disreputable but loving gang of grave-robbers lead by his uncanny gift for dowsing.

Arthur (Josh O’Connor) has an aura that attracts people, this in spite of his demeanour which is largely aloof if not cagey. Grieving the loss of his girlfriend and without a job or place to go, he finds himself staying with the mother of his absent partner Flora (Isabella Rossellini) in a ramshackle palace frequented by her army of daughters, as well as Italia (Carol Duarte), one of her least talented students.

Tone deaf but undertaking vocal coaching, Italia stays in the house, curiously observing Arthur and carrying out the housework apparently in aid of her tutelage: “to exercise the voice, you must first exercise the body”. A convenient method of teaching that saves Flora from having to pay a maid.

With segments shot on 16mm, or in a wacky altered frame rate, La Chimera has many playful affectations but it never feels forced. Classical music provides interstitials filled with cutaways that are observational and dreamlike, like long-forgotten memories. There is a vibrance to the picture, not only in its colour but in the life that it depicts. Each character with their wild uniqueness emerges naturally from this world, which in case you were interested is the small commune of Riparbella sometime in the 1980s.

Just like his grave-robbing gang – the so-called ‘tombalari’ – desperate to have Arthur’s guidance, pointing the way to underground chambers filled with undiscovered relics, La Chimera is funny and charming. In fact their humour and attitude is deeply infectious, and it is a pleasure to spend time in their company. A wondrous and whimsical experience.

Io Capitano (2024)

Written for RAF News April 2024

Two Senegalese teenagers risk life and limb to travel across dessert, ocean and hostile territory to get to Europe, where they think their dreams will be realised.

Seydou (Seydou Sarr) lives with his mother and sisters but spends most of his time with cousin Moussa (Moustapha Fall). They play football, exclusively wearing an assortment of faded European team’s kits throughout the film, but their passion is in music, which they write and perform together a cappella with friends on the street.

Though the two boys seem happy with their lot, buzzing with a contagious cheerfulness, they have been sneaking out to work on the sly, stashing away earnings until they have enough to runaway from home, and embark upon an impossible journey to Italy – entrusting their lives to various criminals and gangs who promise anything for enough money.

Matteo Garrone, the film’s director is Italian, and so the motive here seems pretty clear: not only to humanise the immigrants that arrive in the country, but to appeal for empathy on what we will soon learn is a death-defying journey where practices of kidnapping, torture and slavery are commonplace.

There is a rich and diverse score to Io Capitano, which at times carries a bluesy soulfulness that can fill you with hope for what could be the adventure of a lifetime for two young boys. This will grow darker as the reality sets in, but it never loses its rich, West African voice.

The heart of the film lies with Seydou, who appears in turn confident and fearful, uncertain of the huge decision he is making, but able to focus on the hurdle that lies directly infront of him. Although it could be easy to make this a bleak and gruelling watch, Sarr’s performance along with the film’s tone, makes this thrilling and hopeful. 

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