Talking Movies

June 13, 2026

The Nice Guys: 10

Somehow The Nice Guys has reached the 10 year marker at which we can look back and say, yes, this is a classic. Well, duh.

I gave it 5/5 on release almost exactly ten years ago, and then placed it no 2 in my Top 10 Films of 2016. It’s just taken ten years for people to apparently realise, oh hey, this is a pretty good movie. Yes, it is. I’ve watched it not quite ten times, I would say, and it has the re-watchability of the later Mission: Impossible movies. Jackson Healy (Russell Crowe) is the laconic heavy you hire to rough up a creepy pot-dealer, or the PI who’s dogging your footsteps. The PI in question being Holland March (Ryan Gosling), ethically challenged since California introduced no-fault divorce; in that he now searches for missing husbands while their ashes are on prominent display on their widow’s mantelpiece. And when they reluctantly join forces it is a comic double act for the ages.

The Nice Guys probably was the funniest film of 2016. Writer/director Shane Black almost seems to have lost his vim since its undeserved failure, but he was on top form here when it came to absurdist comic routines. There are a number of set-piece bickering arguments that would not be out of place in a Martin McDonagh script; a joy being March’s refusal to give up on the possibility of romance when all the evidence is staring him in the face that he chose a wrong un. The physicality of Crowe and Gosling quite obviously recalls Laurel & Hardy, with Gosling’s scream a particular joy, as well as his attempt to maintain his dignity in a piece of business involving awkward manoeuvres with a toilet door and a gun, and his later attempt to draw attention to a dead body.

In 2021, as it reached its half-life, I compared this film to the work of David Lynch, particularly Lynch’s description of a screenplay as hoarding ideas like a squirrel collects acorns: when you have gathered forty conceits that’s the guts of an eighty minute movie. And it seems to be oddly applicable to Shane Black’s screenplay, where there are many memorable single moments; like discreetly dumping a dead body over a fence only for it to land on an alfresco dinner party in a lower level mansion; that seem like just such conceits. Strung together they make for a very lively movie, if a very un-Lynchian one. Although there is a giant talking bumblebee at one point…

Who knows, maybe the cinematic gods will see fit to grant us a sequel some decade. Until then, may you never see former President Nixon rushing to tell you that everything’s going to be okay.

June 12, 2026

STAR WARS job hunting

The STAR interview technique is well known now, but less well known is its origin. It all began when Luke Skywalker was trying to get promoted in the Rebel fleet. Han Solo helped him hone his giddy enthusiasm down to a more terse professional style.

SITUATION

I was part of a squadron of X wings tasked with destroying the Death Star.

TASK

This involved traversing a heavily defended trench run and launching two missiles at a tiny target while under heavy enemy fire.

ACTION

After the Millennium Falcon partly cleared my way I successfully made the trench run. Based on previous hunting experience I was confident in my ability to hit the target. A mentor suggested I use an older more intuitive approach to targeting than the previous unsuccessful pilots had, and I did; resulting in a direct hit.

RESULT

This started a chain reaction which vaporised the Death Star. I was awarded a medal by my sister for my outstanding performance.

June 11, 2026

Disclosure Day

Steven Spielberg returns to sci-fi, with a film that acts almost as an early 50th anniversary meditation on his Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

Daniel Kellner (Josh O’Connor) has stolen something. And Noah Scanlon (Colin Firth) wants it back, badly. So badly that he’s kidnapped Daniel’s girlfriend Jane (Eve Hewson), and has a platoon of heavies, led by Hettiene Park and Henry Lloyd-Hughes, to force the issue. But Daniel and Eve escape, leaving us wondering what was that mysterious artefact that scared Scanlon so? Meanwhile in Kansas City, ditzy TV weather girl Maggie Fairchild (Emily Blunt) startles her boyfriend Jackson (Wyatt Russell) when she suddenly begins speaking multiple foreign languages, not all of them human. Scanlon is appalled to discover he’s been betrayed by his colleague Hugo (Colman Domingo), who is plotting to bring Daniel in. But Scanlon has the might of the federal government to reinforce his sinister military contractor Wardex. He also has an artefact of his own to track down Daniel…

It is nice to see Spielberg and composer John Williams sally forth once more, for a thirtieth adventure. And there are many hints of earlier Spielberg movies here. The cool palette of Wardex makes one think of the 1990s, but then dreadful CGI animals and a digitally dependent train action sequence drag us into the 2020s; where verisimilitude goes to die. Spielberg in the 21st Century has been notably long-winded. And this feels like there is a taut 100 minute chase and conspiracy movie buried in a 145 minute runtime, where we are meant to ooh and aah at not very special effects, and stroke our chins at the sort of religion v faith musings that LOST took absolutely nowhere too, twenty years ago. Spielberg got David Koepp to write a screenplay from his own treatment, and it is muddled.

The script has some utterly daft moments of implausible escapes, the character of Maggie is introduced as annoying and goes downhill from there, and the ending seems utterly detached from reality. In the age of AI and fake news, it is simply not believable that Disclosure Day would play out as depicted here. Oddly enough the most interesting part of this enterprise is not even Spielbergian, but rather his contemporary David Cronenberg. Scanlon can use his artefact to dive into the minds of other characters, to interrogate, and bend them to his will. This, and Jane’s visceral resistance to it, is the strongest aspect of the movie, and has a distinct flavour of Scanners to it. Spielberg’s camera remains mobile, and there are any number of delightful sequences, but he was never a strong writer, and that still hasn’t changed.

As fun as it is to see Spielberg’s sinister federal agents in black cars menacing reluctant everyman heroes one more time, this largely disappoints.

2.75/5

June 10, 2026

Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Top 5 Giles Episodes

Filed under: Talking Television — Fergal Casey @ 6:29 pm
Tags: , , ,

Anthony Head is dead at 72, so I thought it would be fitting to gather together some highlights from his career-defining role as Rupert Giles.

Head had wonderful line deliveries, comic reactions, and emotional moments throughout the seven seasons of Buffy. Whether it was muttering to himself “Do you like my mask? It raises the dead. Americans!” in ‘Dead Man’s Party’, offhandedly snapping “Oh do shut up, Andrew” when the ‘guestage’ complains of the basic lack of respect he is afforded in Chez Summers, incredulously repeating “Wake up in a coma?!” to Cordelia’s zinger about his constant concussions, or his perfect surprised line about the gratitude of children en masse when the graduating class of Sunnydale High votes Buffy the singular title of Class Protector.

5 The Dark Age

We had glimpses of the ruthless side of Giles, such as threatening Principal Snyder. (And these were mere hors d’oeuvres for his clear-eyed smothering of Ben seasons later) But this episode of flashbacks fleshed out the black magic background of the rebellious youth, running away from his Watcher fate and rejoicing in the nickname Ripper.

4 Band Candy

Ripper Revisited! As it were. As all the adults in Sunnydale revert to their teenage selves from some cursed candy the wise Watcher becomes his obnoxious teenage self. Smoking constantly, listening for just the right guitar sound in classic rock, and, um, setting up a payoff for some episodes later when Buffy can hear her mother’s thoughts on what she got up to that night. On the hood of a car. Twice.

3 Revelations

There were a number of episodes in which Giles and Buffy were disappointed in each other, but this one stands out because it also features another recurring theme – authority figures talking down to Giles. (And oddly enough most of those figures end up dead, many by being eaten) In this episode Serena Scott Thomas is a fake Watcher who unsettles Giles, before Buffy blindsides him entirely by having hidden the returned Angel from him for weeks on end.

2 Passion

Having been hurt by Miss Calendar, “I’m sorry you felt betrayed” “Yes, well that’s one of the unfortunate side effects of betrayal”, Giles was finally ready to forgive her when the recently de-souled Angel fatefully intervened. And in a sequence of operatic cruelty Angel broke into Giles’ house and laid a trail of rose petals up to her corpse to build Giles up for the mother of all falls.

1 A New Man

When E4 re-ran all of Buffy during COVID, I found myself still remembering lines of dialogue heard 18 years earlier. Specifically, “Hey, picked up a tail” “Yes, just a little one. Hurts when I sit” For this is the episode where a depressed Giles is transformed into a demon. There is a peerless moment when Giles sees the abrasive Professor Maggie Walsh, and jumps out of his car to scare her, before getting back in and returning to his important investigations. All ending with Buffy recognising Giles; because only he could look so annoyed with her.

June 9, 2026

Filed under: Uncategorized — Fergal Casey @ 4:08 pm

*

What is this faint light? An eerie green glow

Rainy afternoon, of insipid June

The sun comes out now, but tis all too late

All soaked to the skin, with our clothes too thin

*

To hide from the rain, to hide from the sun

One needs a big hat, and act the bridge troll

Concrete cannot drain, gutters all overflow

Rooves too hot for cat, trees too short to shade

June 3, 2026

NCH 2026/2027

Filed under: Talking Music — Fergal Casey @ 5:52 pm
Tags: , , , ,

A matter of days after Jonas Alber conducted Mahler’s titanic 5th symphony to a packed house, and with John Adams’ pulsating Harmonium still to come as the grand finale of the 2025/2026 season, here comes the announcement of the NCH’s 2026/2027 line up. These are some season highlights.

SEPTEMBER

Friday 11th

Mahler’s 2nd Symphony

NSO

***

OCTOBER

Friday 2nd

Tchaikovsky’s 1st Piano Concerto & Rachmaninov’s 3rd Symphony

NSO & Emanuil Ivanov

Friday 9th

Haydn’s 22nd Symphony & Mozart’s 17th Piano Concerto & Mozart’s 41st Symphony

NSO & Jonathan Bliss

Saturday 10th

Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos 1-6

Bach Collegium Japan 

Friday 23rd

Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez & Falla’s Interlude and Dance from La Vida Breve & Ravel’s Bolero

NSO & Thibaut Garcia

***


NOVEMBER

Friday 6th

November Dukas’ The Sorcerer’s Apprentice & Korngold’s Violin Concerto & R. Strauss’ Also Sprach Zarathustra

NSO & Bomsori

Tuesday 10th

Beethoven’s Coriolan Overture & Beethoven’s 1st Piano Concerto & Beethoven’s 5th Concerto

Camerata Ireland & Barry Douglas

Friday 13th

November Elgar’s Cello Concerto & Sibelius’ 7th Symphony & Grieg’s 1st Peer Gynt suite

NSO & Daniel Muller-Schott

Friday 27th

Britten’s War Requieum

NSO & NSC

May 24, 2026

Miscellaneous Movie Musings: Part LXII

As the title suggests, so forth.

The Grand Hitchcock Homage

Well, don’t I feel like a right gobdaw now. In 2014 I reviewed The Grand Budapest Hotel thus “Anderson showcases an unexpected flair for blackly comic suspense”, with Willem Dafoe’s menacing pursuit of Jeff Goldblum in mind. And now on YouTube I fall over a video putting that sequence side by side with the same sequence in Torn Curtain. Which makes it seem a good deal less of a bravura sequence, being stolen bravura. I hadn’t really liked Torn Curtain for its brutal quality when I saw it and so hadn’t revisited it and thus fell for this outrageous rip-off/homage hook, like, and crocheted sinker.

A retired host named Doll

It is time to once again agonise over who should play Happy (Hank) Doll in the entirely speculative film trilogy based on Jonathan Ames’ LA noir novels. Re-reading the first one made me wonder – who could play this part? A 50 year old red-haired lean permastoned 6 foot 2 inches half-Irish half-Jewish ex-cop ex-NCIS PI, with a penchant for books, meals of tinned fish, gherkins, sauerkraut, and wearing the same outfits on rotation. Oh, and a dog called George. I had discarded potentials like Robert Downey Jr, Jason Schwartzman, Patrick Stewart and Russell Crowe, to end up with Ryan Gosling as first choice, with John Krasinski as backup. Later I decided that Stephanie Beatriz seemed perfect for the tough bartender with an on and off, mostly off, involvement with our hero. But then The Engineer threw in a suggestion from left-field – Conan O’Brien. He has the height and the hair and the physique, and could pass as younger than his years. And now we have proof of concept, his dramatic turn in If I Had Legs I’d Kick You. No gurning, no joking, just playing it straight, quiet, defeated. And, in one scene, using his great height to seriously menace a disruptive patient in the clinic into leaving. Yes, yes, there are possibilities. Conan O’Brien needs a PI badge, people.

Quote the Keanu Cut

The Engineer denies that he re-watches movies much, even though we watch Heat, it seems, on a yearly basis. One of these rewatchings raised the question of whether it was really possible to imagine Keanu Reeves in the role that Val Kilmer ended up taking. (Reeves had famously committed to playing the Dane onstage during the production window) The answer was yes, with one caveat. It was hard to imagine Keanu doing Kilmer’s burst of rage at Ashley Judd when he trashes their kitchen and shouts at her. Not that Keanu hasn’t shown his villainous capabilities in The Gift, and later The Neon Demon. It was just hard to imagine him, in 1995, doing that scene. But then a few months ago an article in the Atlantic made me think of the flipside of this. There is a line from Heat, which I am almost certain would be far more frequently quoted now than it is, if it had been delivered by Keanu rather than Kilmer – “For me, the sun rises and sets with her, man…” 

May 17, 2026

Filed under: Uncategorized — Fergal Casey @ 10:04 pm

>

It must have been an awful sight,

To witness in the dusky moonlight,

While the Storm Fiend did laugh, and angry did bray,

Along the Railway Bridge of the Silv’ry Tay,

Oh! ill-fated Bridge of the Silv’ry Tay,

I must now conclude my lay

By telling the world fearlessly without the least dismay,

That your central girders would not have given way,

At least many sensible men do say,

Had they been supported on each side with buttresses,

At least many sensible men confesses,

For the stronger we our houses do build,

The less chance we have of being killed.

May 10, 2026

Too Cool for Film School: Ne Plus Ultra

Filed under: Talking Movies — Fergal Casey @ 8:40 pm
Tags: ,

I have previously written about my disdain for the state of mind I dubbed Too Cool for Film School. Well, its ne plus ultra has definitively arrived at the BFI.

Great Expectations: British Postwar Cinema, 1945-1960. What a title. What an era. Where to begin? 12 films, you say. 12 films. Only 12 films? Oh gosh, where to begin? What films would I love to splash up on the big screen at the Southbank? The Lavender Hill Mob! Don’t get carried away with Ealing… The Cruel Sea. Ice Cold in Alex. Room at the Top. The Red Shoes. Black Narcissus. Okay, some more Ealing – Kind Hearts and Coronets. Whiskey Galore! Sink the Bismarck! Mustn’t forget the titular Great Expectations. The Third Man, British enough? Maybe not. Brighton Rock, then. I’m All Right, Jack. Phew, almost forgot the Boulting Brothers. 12 films. Oh, but what I had to leave out. An alternative 12 would be just as good – A Night to Remember, The Colditz Story, The Titfield Thunderbolt, Passport to Pimlico, The Sound Barrier, Private’s Progress, Seven Days to Noon, Brief Encounter, The Entertainer, The Blue Lamp, The Ladykillers, Dracula, The Quatermass Experiment. Damn, I’ve left out all Olivier’s Shakespeare films. This is bloody hard work.

Actual programme: 

Hell is a City. Hunted. The Three Weird Sisters. The Fallen Idol. Train of Events. The Happiest Days of Your Life. Mandy. Turn the Key Softly. The Yellow Balloon. The Flying Scot. Time Without Pity. Never Let Go.

Further Reflections on World Book Day

Filed under: Talking Books — Fergal Casey @ 8:23 pm
Tags:

A final entry in an unexpected series for World Book Day musing on the failures of inculcating a reading habit.

I’m not sure, Alfred, but perhaps, just perhaps, it was the fact all their parents were dead that made me hate Jane Eyre so much.

The Telegraph the other day blared a report exposing the blindingly obvious that has been hushed up for years: Streaming works. It is actually not inclusive and progressive at all to take the finest young minds of a socio-economic class that can’t escape the public education system and hobble them for life by forcing them to sink to the level of their semi-literate peers. I can remember the frustration in national school of having to wait for someone to slowly, word by painful word, almost sounding out each letter, nevermind syllable, read aloud whatever the teacher had asked them to.

And yet… when we got to secondary school our chosen texts were a forced march thru Victorian sententiousness. I can’t help but feel much prejudice has been instilled against the Victorians as a result of this. Religion in the Nineteenth Century for instance is regarded, par Dickens and the Brontes, as being a parcel of humbug, hypocrisy, and hate. Because of course where are the Abolitionists in the reading material furnished forth for impressionable minds? Nowhere. Unfortunately hateful people found a home in religion, because they always go where they intuit power. Trade a collar then for a lanyard now…

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