Customer Reviews:
Certainly quirky and inventive.......2008-02-13
Hallam Foe(the unusual name of the central character) is a tale of a troubled grieving teenager living out a classic Freudian Oedipal fantasy. Complete with a wicked Stepmother and the girl of his dreams who just happens to resemble his dead mother (the object of his desires obligingly puts on the deceased's dress at one point), we're definitely not in Kansas anymore. Did Mummy top herself or did the wicked stepmother kill her on the path to Daddy's wealth? Hallam is driven out of his rural lost boys world to scrape a living on the roofs of Edinburgh, continuing his obsessions with spying on the world and sneaking into houses (for goodness sake does nobody fit deadlocks or velux blinds?)
I'm not sure how well the book was translated to the screen- as it's set mostly on the rooftops of Edinburgh I would have fitted it into the quirky Scottish genre inhabited by Iain Banks' "Wasp Factory", or Irving Welsh's "Trainspotting". The online biographies of the author Peter Jinks just place him as living in Sicily with nothing of his formative background. Certainly the adaptation strives to fit the tale into that inventive offbeat Scottish genre.
Unfortunately the abrupt consequence free ending made me reinterpret all the previous flights of fancy as a misogynistic indulgence. Is the idea just to damn the stepmother and the love interest as rampant tarts and the men as their manipulated fools?
However Jamie Bell was convincing in the unusual role. He still likes to demonstrate the athleticism of a grown up Billy Eliot as he leaps up the chimney stacks. And my, Mr Bell, you have been working out- very impressive in the buff! As films go, it was a cut above the current popcorn fodder.
Hallam Troubled ..........2008-01-08
As the previous reviews suggest this is a difficult film to categorise as it simply doesn't know what message it is trying to convey. Is it a psychological thriller? Or is it a study of loneliness and bereavement? Or is it a romance? In many ways it is all of the above as the film explores young Hallam, a troubled, bereaved teenager who is struggling to come to terms with his mother's death. Hallam's behaviour alienates himself through spying, and talent for breaking and entering people's homes, and after an altercation with his stepmother whom he suspects of killing his biological mother, he takes off for the bright lights of Edinburgh. It is here that he develops a fixation and infatuation with the young human resources manager who gives him a job in a hotel. As someone who knows Edinburgh very well it was lovely to see the beautiful city utilized to all its cinematic potential. Particularly striking are the scenes where Hallam navigates the roof tops of the city's old town as he spies on the HR manager. Certainly a film about a peeping Tom is an unnerving and uncomfortable premise, and the treatment of the women as objects held under the male gaze makes it difficult to fully sympathise with Hallam. However ultimately as this is a character study you do come to understand the reasons behind Hallam's behaviour however irrational they might be. This is viewing that will challenge and provoke conflicting opinions: some have loved it, others have hated it. To its credit Jamie Bell does an excellent job as a character that in the hands of a less sensitive actor might have been reduced to a perverted creep. Claire Forlani is also particularly good as Hallam's beautiful, icy stepmother. One word of warning: the ease with which Hallam unpicks the locks of his victim's home is extremely unnerving, and may induce sleepless nights ... Lets hope its not so easy to do this in real life!
A little lost and a little little.......2007-12-12
The story is an oblique one and reasonably well told but.... It gets a bit lost in places and really doesn't know where it is going. It could have been cut down but that would have made it a very small film indeed; so I guess it just needed a bit more content.
Performances were good so no criticism there and overall I enjoyed it but it should have been better.
A good film that could have been great.
Weird but watchable.......2007-12-07
This is probably Jamie Bell's first leading role since Billy Elliott (he has done some interesting character acting in between in films as huge as King Kong) and his acting is the best thing in it. To say be plays a peculiar little perve doesn't do him justice, but, in the end, it's difficult to relay in any other way what this film's about.
This is one of those films where you simply have no idea where it's heading: it starts off as though it's going to be a dark psychological thriller that is bound to end in tragedy, but somewhere along the line it transmutes into something a bit more quirky and whimsical - it wouldn't be too far off to bracket it as a romantic comedy.
It's the story of a troubled young man who becomes a voyeur, clambering around the roofs of Edinburgh and spying through skylights. If films about strange people are your cup of tea, you'll love it. As a character study, it's intriguing...though at times not completely believable.
Definitely worth having a look at, but tricky to pin down.
Product Description
The History Channel's The Spying Game - 8 DVD Boxset
Amazon.co.uk Review
Based on a novel by Alexandre Dumas, La Reine Margot concerns the events behind infamous Massacre of St Bartholomew in sixth-century France. Isabelle Adjani plays Margot, betrothed for political reasons to one man (Daniel Auteuil) by her mother (Virna Lisi), while she is, in fact, in love with another (Vincent Pérez). Despite the bond that grows between the reluctant couple, plots are hatching all over the castle against the royals. Adventurous, exciting, erotic and given strong artistic credibility through its outstanding cast, the film is enthralling and visually sumptuous. Directed by Patrice Chereau, less known outside of France than is the film's producer, Claude Berri (director of Jean de Florette and Manon des Sources). --Tom Keogh
UK DVD:
- Hard Candy [2006]
- Hearts And Bones - The Complete Series 1-2
- Hotel Rwanda
- Housewife 49 [2006]
- Howards' Way - Series 1 [1985]
- I Am Sam [2002]
- I Claudius - Complete BBC Series (5 Disc Box Set) [1976]
- Kidulthood Special Edition
- Lady Chatterley (2 Disc Collector's Edition) [2007]
- Lorna Doone
UK DVD List
UK DVD