Showing posts with label Chris Morris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chris Morris. Show all posts
Sunday, 20 October 2019
The Day Shall Come (2019)
Moses Al Shabaz is a dreamer. An impoverished preacher, he believes in community and has recruited former drug dealers onto the path of righteousness with his collective farm and has a series of madcap revolutionary and religious ideals. But the farm is in danger and his family faces eviction. When a stranger offers cash to help him, he has no idea that his sponsor works for the FBI, who plan to turn Moses into a credible terrorist threat...instead of a man who thinks God speaks to him through animals.
It ought to come as no surprise that, of all his '90s anti-establishment comic contemporaries, Chris Morris has lost none of his bite or his caustic eye for what the powers that be claim to be doing in our name. Unlike his former collaborators who have become the twitterati, firing missives that may criticise the government but ultimately respect the neocon status quo and wish for it to persist, he is still deeply anti-establishment.
Morris knows that the best way to tackle the absurdity of life and get audiences to consider the injustice of the many true-life stories this film is based is to do it through comedy. Like the very best satire, there's a thread of pathos that runs through this to the point where the tears of laughter become genuine tears as you realise the repercussions of so-called intelligence services who have gone from chasing shadows to chasing their own tails.
As this is co-written by Jesse Armstrong, it's perhaps inevitable that comparisons can be found in some of the witty interplay between the various representatives of America's homeland security with the sparky dialogue of The Thick of It and Veep (shows which Armstrong worked on) but there's a sobering darkness at the heart of Morris' work that was lacking in those series from Armando Iannucci, whose politicos retained a likeability despite their many great flaws and terrible actions. Morris reminds us that the dick measuring contests conducted here have terrible consequences for innocents, and innocents in the very truest sense of the word.
In terms of performances, The Day Shall Come belongs to three actors; Marchánt Davis, Danielle Brooks and Anna Kendrick. Davis in particular is a real find. As Moses Al Shabaz he embodies a sense of nobility and naivety that is really charming and deeply affecting. I wish that Brooks, who plays his loving yet long suffering wife Venus, had a little more screen time than she has, because her chemistry with Davis is a joy, but she really shines when she does appear on screen. Lastly, Anna Kendrick is undoubtedly the biggest name in the picture, but there's never a sense of someone slumming it or lending her star power to a little vehicle in her performance as the only FBI agent with anything approaching a conscience, as it is both committed and on the same wave length as everyone else. But in all honesty, no one puts a foot wrong here, it's a very harmonious production.
Tuesday, 28 November 2017
RIP Bill Cashmore
I have just heard from Stewart Lee's latest mailshot that Bill Cashmore passed away on the 9th of November, aged just 56. Cashmore may not have been a household name, but anyone with a keen interest in comedy in the '90s and '00s will recognise his face from his appearances on Lee and Herring's Fist of Fun, and The Day Today and Brass Eye with Chris Morris. More recently, Cashmore entered the world of politics and stood as the Green Party candidate for Chelsea and Fulham at the last election, as you can see in the campaign photo below.
Cashmore's career started out, like many of his contemporaries (including Nick Hancock and David Baddiel) at Cambridge Footlights. From there he appeared in several landmark comedies of the 1990s, as well as straight roles in The Bill, All Creatures Great and Small (as cricketer Fred Trueman, pictured below) Casualty, and Kavanagh QC.
Cashmore also worked in children's TV, writing and performing sketches on the Saturday morning show Gimme 5 and appearing in the 8th series of the cult children's quiz series Knightmare in 1994, where he played several roles; the menacing Snapper Jack the fool taker (pictured below), Honesty Bartram the potion dealer and Bhal-Shebah the Red Dragon, which he provided the voice for.
He was also a travel writer with columns in The Spectator and The Sunday Telegraph and a noted playwright, having penned the award winning Daughter, the much staged Trip of a Lifetime, and An Everyday Actor. His play Him, Her and Them was due to transfer to London's Finbrough theatre at the time of Cashmore's death which came about following an aortic dissection earlier this month.
Here is one of Cashmore's most famous appearances on Fist of Fun, appearing as The Man in the 'The Tortoise and The Man' sketch from series 1
RIP
Cashmore's career started out, like many of his contemporaries (including Nick Hancock and David Baddiel) at Cambridge Footlights. From there he appeared in several landmark comedies of the 1990s, as well as straight roles in The Bill, All Creatures Great and Small (as cricketer Fred Trueman, pictured below) Casualty, and Kavanagh QC.
Cashmore also worked in children's TV, writing and performing sketches on the Saturday morning show Gimme 5 and appearing in the 8th series of the cult children's quiz series Knightmare in 1994, where he played several roles; the menacing Snapper Jack the fool taker (pictured below), Honesty Bartram the potion dealer and Bhal-Shebah the Red Dragon, which he provided the voice for.
He was also a travel writer with columns in The Spectator and The Sunday Telegraph and a noted playwright, having penned the award winning Daughter, the much staged Trip of a Lifetime, and An Everyday Actor. His play Him, Her and Them was due to transfer to London's Finbrough theatre at the time of Cashmore's death which came about following an aortic dissection earlier this month.
Here is one of Cashmore's most famous appearances on Fist of Fun, appearing as The Man in the 'The Tortoise and The Man' sketch from series 1
Friday, 14 March 2014
"We Wanna Be Together!"
If you're of a certain age, this is possibly the best/most memorable advert ever
Mark Williams and Jo Unwin (Mrs Chris Morris)
Wednesday, 27 February 2013
Black Mirror : The Waldo Moment
So, last night saw the end of the second series of Charlie Brooker's excellent Black Mirror. Once again, I enjoyed every single film in the run. But last night's The Waldo Moment seems to have left most people largely unimpressed. And this surprises me.
Whilst I admit it wasn't the strongest of the three this time around, or indeed as strong as the first series of three, it is still an enjoyable piece with a strong message, well told.
Firstly, this is a story that goes back to the start. The world of The Waldo Moment is not too far from that of the first ever Black Mirror, The National Anthem, in that they're both closer to the here and now and ingrained in the present reality than most Black Mirror films. Its inception can also be traced to 2008 and a despairing column of Brooker's in The Grauniad, in which he posited the notion that Boris Johnson's bizarrely successful journey to office was something like a cartoon being elected purely off the back of it being cute and funny and ultimately the kiddies favourite. But before that it can be traced back even further, to 2004/5, when Brooker along with Chris Morris first came up with the notion of just such a thing for their brilliant sitcom Nathan Barley. It was a notion that was ultimately discarded, but proving no good ideas go to waste, Brooker resurrected it here. Throw in some clear contempt for such depressing 'comedic' fayre as Bo Selecta (that bear that interviewed celebs and got a hard on) and the notion of voter apathy and celebrity culture and you have The Waldo Moment.
Its these last ingredients were the film actually shines. Brooker pinpoints the lunacy of a society who can recognise and be won over by an animation on TV than a genuine professional and hard working MP. Yes, Brooker depicts these MP's as nothing more than a smooth Tory in a suit and a young Labour woman who knows standing this time around will just be a stepping stone, but at heart these are people willing to do the job and listen to the voters. Apathy may be on the increase and the system may well be wrong but, as the Tory has it "It built these roads", at its core there are values that should not be forgotten or dismissed, you do so at your peril. By chucking them over purely in favour of something populist and created from little more than absurdity, spite and vulgarity, you have a change based on nothing, and a void allows cruelty and greed to step in as we see in the film's closing moments over the credits.
Perhaps where The Waldo Moment failed to click is in presenting the audience with anything remotely solid and sympathetic to engage with. The lead role, the failed comic behind Waldo, is shown to be a depressed bitter and cynical mad who failed to achieve his potential. But he's also a callous and calculating man too, so there's little to pity even when he realises just how out of hand his creation cum monster has become. A scene with him tearfully ringing an ex at the start simply isn't enough character background. His angry tirade that the current system is shit is one I cannot find argument with, but the fact that there's so blatantly little in place to compete with it, and the truth that his own fury is so utterly empty, is perhaps more telling and ultimately it leads to the film's bleak pay off. It's just a shame the inherently unsympathetic character set the wheels in motion before realising that, and that he didn't have an alternative.
But then Black Mirror isn't about providing an alternative is it? It's about being so utterly 'black', providing a pessimistic view of the world we live in now and the world we are about to live in.
Whilst I admit it wasn't the strongest of the three this time around, or indeed as strong as the first series of three, it is still an enjoyable piece with a strong message, well told.
Firstly, this is a story that goes back to the start. The world of The Waldo Moment is not too far from that of the first ever Black Mirror, The National Anthem, in that they're both closer to the here and now and ingrained in the present reality than most Black Mirror films. Its inception can also be traced to 2008 and a despairing column of Brooker's in The Grauniad, in which he posited the notion that Boris Johnson's bizarrely successful journey to office was something like a cartoon being elected purely off the back of it being cute and funny and ultimately the kiddies favourite. But before that it can be traced back even further, to 2004/5, when Brooker along with Chris Morris first came up with the notion of just such a thing for their brilliant sitcom Nathan Barley. It was a notion that was ultimately discarded, but proving no good ideas go to waste, Brooker resurrected it here. Throw in some clear contempt for such depressing 'comedic' fayre as Bo Selecta (that bear that interviewed celebs and got a hard on) and the notion of voter apathy and celebrity culture and you have The Waldo Moment.
Its these last ingredients were the film actually shines. Brooker pinpoints the lunacy of a society who can recognise and be won over by an animation on TV than a genuine professional and hard working MP. Yes, Brooker depicts these MP's as nothing more than a smooth Tory in a suit and a young Labour woman who knows standing this time around will just be a stepping stone, but at heart these are people willing to do the job and listen to the voters. Apathy may be on the increase and the system may well be wrong but, as the Tory has it "It built these roads", at its core there are values that should not be forgotten or dismissed, you do so at your peril. By chucking them over purely in favour of something populist and created from little more than absurdity, spite and vulgarity, you have a change based on nothing, and a void allows cruelty and greed to step in as we see in the film's closing moments over the credits.
Perhaps where The Waldo Moment failed to click is in presenting the audience with anything remotely solid and sympathetic to engage with. The lead role, the failed comic behind Waldo, is shown to be a depressed bitter and cynical mad who failed to achieve his potential. But he's also a callous and calculating man too, so there's little to pity even when he realises just how out of hand his creation cum monster has become. A scene with him tearfully ringing an ex at the start simply isn't enough character background. His angry tirade that the current system is shit is one I cannot find argument with, but the fact that there's so blatantly little in place to compete with it, and the truth that his own fury is so utterly empty, is perhaps more telling and ultimately it leads to the film's bleak pay off. It's just a shame the inherently unsympathetic character set the wheels in motion before realising that, and that he didn't have an alternative.
But then Black Mirror isn't about providing an alternative is it? It's about being so utterly 'black', providing a pessimistic view of the world we live in now and the world we are about to live in.
Sunday, 24 February 2013
Jam Doctor
My favourite sketches from Jam featuring David Cann as a doctor. Weird and wonderful, and typical Chris Morris
Wednesday, 20 February 2013
Stuffing Johnnie Walker
From Chris Morris' contentious, offensive and downright hilarious short lived Radio 1 series...
Apparently Walker found this hilarious. Which is a relief!
**No Johnnie Walker's were harmed during the posting of this blog**
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