The Mosquito Coast (Weir, 1986): Prince Charles Cinema, 6.05pm
This 35mm presentation is also screened on October 11th. Tonight's screening feratures an introduction by Elena Lazic of Animus Magazine.
Time Out review:
Given that Paul Theroux's harrowing tale of jungle craziness is one of
the least filmable properties of recent years, Peter Weir's river journey to
the heart of darkness works considerably better than one might imagine.
Meticulously translated from the book, Mosquito Coast charts the
mental decline and fall of idealistic inventor Allie Fox, who drags wife
and family to the jungles of Central America in a doomed effort to
bring ice to the natives. Although it's too long, with Weir attempting
to negotiate too many psychological bends in Paul Theroux's River of No Return,
the director still manages to conjure out of the breathtaking landscape
a genuine whiff of mental and physical hell, and in so doing draws from
Harrison Ford a tour de force performance as mad Allie. Indeed, this is Ford's movie: Helen Mirren's
flower-child-gone-to-seed wife and son Charlie (River Phoenix), the heart and
voice of the novel, are mere jungle shadows in comparison. Wherein lies
the film's major flaw; for try as he might, after a lifetime playing
the ultimate hero, Ford finally fails to convince as the ultimate
villain, particularly when he's back battling natives à la Indiana
Jones. A brave and serious piece of film-making, nevertheless.
Don Atyeo
Here (and above) is the trailer.
No comments:
Post a Comment