Sunday, 12 April 2026

Streaming on Netflix - Rod Bishop recommends - DETECTIVE HOLE aka Jo Nesbø’s Detective Hole (Jo Nesbø, Norway, 2026)


Any Norwegian serial killer, police-procedural that uses the German philosopher Martin Heidegger as a running joke, has got to be worth a look.

Tobias Santelmann plays Detective Harry Hole (pronounced Hurl-ah) as a self-loathing, destructive introvert, almost completely lacking in social skills and occasionally suicidal. An alcoholic with a taste for prescription meds, he’s brilliant with forensics and highly skilled at serial killer profiling. It’s the booze that keeps getting him into trouble, causing an on-and-off relationship with his current partner Rakel (Pia Tjelta). It also means he’s constantly in danger of suspension from the police force.

He gradually bonds with Rakel’s 14-year-old son Oleg (Maxime Baune Bochud) and scores big time with the teen by introducing him to the Ramones. Despite the threats of suspension, Harry’s serial killer expertise means the Oslo cops can’t do without him.

Tobias Santelmann as Jo Nesbø’s troubled cop in Detective Hole

His adversary is Tom Waaler (Joel Kinnerman), a seriously corrupt, narcissistic police colleague with a sociopathic idea of social justice. Tom also blames Harry for being drunk and killing Tom’s friend (possibly his lover) in a police car chase. Forced to work together, Tom and Harry have nothing but contempt and suspicion for each other. All this - and more - is revealed in the first episode. Another eight follow. 

Adapted for television by Jo Nesbø from his fifth Detective Hole novel (The Devil’s Star), Nick Cave and Warren Ellis add a brooding original score to the copious collection of songs. The ‘needle drops’ include Iggy Pop, Ramones, Los Lobos, Sex Pistols, Warren Zevon, Donovan, The Doors, Slayer, PJ Harvey, Leonard Cohen, The Falls, Muddy Waters, Elvis Costello, Otis Brown, Tammy Wynette and others.

Jo Nesbø 

At times graphically violent, this crime thriller is set in an often gritty and grimy Oslo. Although many of the tropes are familiar, the psychological character studies are interestingly heightened, and Nesbø has loaded the series with enough Nordic pickled herring plot twists to keep most viewers guessing and absorbed. 

Thursday, 9 April 2026

On Criterion 4K UHD and 2K Blu-ray - David Hare discovers "A perfect rescue of a perfect movie" - TROUBLE IN PARADISE (Ernst Lubitsch, USA, 1932)

 Criterion's new 4K disc of Trouble in Paradise is a giant step up from the screening of a "new" restoration from Universal which I saw back in 2017 at Bologna. It was good, certainly better than the older UK and US Blu-ray discs. But it had quite a few work-in-progress problems. All the opticals - and they are very many - tanked the grain and density. The new print (I recall it was screened on 35) had tramline emulsion scratches through 80% of the picture, and there were sundry other problems. But it was good enough to bring the very youthful house that day to its feet in what must have been for them the first discovery of a total, seamless masterpiece, a perfect movie, and for me, a joyous reunion after first seeing it in a lovely 16mm print at the Trinity Church Wall Street Sunday cine club Screening Nites way WAY back in December 1971.









When Criterion announced this I wondered how much further they might go with restoration. In the interim Universal did a superb 4K restoration of Leisen's 1939
Midnight (another perfect Paramount 30s film) which played to a knocked out full house at Sydney Cinema Reborn back in 2023. That superb 4K was curated from a previously wrongly identified dupe nitrate safety fine grain and other elements which had been lying around mislabelled as safety 35 copies at the Library of Congress until Universal dug it out and discovered to their surprise near-pristine material.
Unfortunately Criterion released a Blu-ray of Midnight only back last year which was hugely underwhelming displaying massive grain reduction to near zero grain, lowered black shadow detail, softer edges and overall a really shitty encode. I had hoped Criterion would release Midnight as a 4K but given such a mediocre master like this what was the point. Maybe someday another label will risk the budget and coax a reliable 4K master for disc encoding out of Universal.
The story for Trouble in Paradise is the total reverse of Midnight. Universal appears to have gone full hog on this and Criterion has stepped up to what looks like a perfect 4K encode with a flawless 4K disc AND Bluray/2K disc. Everything sings. It's unbelievable, especially for a pre-1935 slower-speed-neg-film and faster lenses era.
The softness now is totally supported without a hiccup through the grain which while always visible is a part of the images' "lifeblood." One of the biggest surprises is not a whisper of density bumps in the opticals all of which flow seamlessly. Grayscale is total, whites and deep black perfect, silver and reflective jewellery and glass shimmer with nitrate sparkle.
A perfect rescue of a perfect movie. Essential to life.

Monday, 6 April 2026

CINEMA REBORN and PERSIAN FILM FESTIVAL AUSTRALIA Present Tributes to Bahram Beyzaie Iranian Filmmaker (1938-2025)

 

Thursday, 2 April 2026

On Blu-ray - David Hare finally comes round to appreciating TEA AND SYMPATHY (Vincente Minnelli, USA, 1956)

Below are four screen shots from the sublime "Shadowy glade" climax of Minnelli's 1956 adaptation of the Robert Anderson play, Tea and Sympathy. It's both this sequence and the extraordinary colour photography by John Alton, one of several pictures he shot for Vincente Minnelli during the fifties, that finally won me over, especially in this new 4K scan and Blu-ray from Warner Archive.






In fact it's taken me literally sixty years to finally come around to any sort of appreciation for the movie, so long has it has been a subject of disdain for me, perhaps thanks to skewed perspective.
Alton's single light source setups and Minnelli's Scope staging emphasize shadow, background and peripheral enclosure as much as they do the players. In this sequence it finally dawned on me that the subject of the movie is not only, as I always persisted in thinking, John Kerr's character Tom's "closeting and/or guilt resulting from the social constrictions of 50's America. In fact the substantially larger and ultimately more tragic core of the drama is Deborah Kerr's superb Laura, clad throughout the picture in shades of burnt orange, ginger and rustic warmth, a futile beacon of affirmative life against the grey and white suburban drudgery and conformity of 50s bourgeois America. Indeed the colour play in these Minnelli melodramas is easily the equal of Sirk's at Universal, although Sirk often extends the colour play to sets, decor and staging with coloured lights much as post expressionist painting.
If there's a real cry for acknowledgment and passion from a stranded soul buried in the daily inertia of suburban college town 50's America, it's not only John Kerr's Tom, with his affection for the classics and the piano and the light touch of his loafers. But also from the figure of Laura, left unsatisfied at the end. This penultimate sequence really delivers what must have been profoundly personal material for Minnelli himself, given his own bi- (or more majorly gay) sexuality and the trajectory of his professional life before and after Garland.
The new Warner Archive derived from a 4K scan and regrade is predictably a thing of staggering Eastman (via proprietorial "Metrocolor") beauty.

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

CINEMA REBORN – CLASSIC ASIAN FILM-MAKING - PEKING OPERA BLUES (Tsui Hark, Hong Kong, 1986) + THE WIFE OF SEISAKU (Yasuzo Masumura

 Two of the most renowned names in Asian filmmaking will be represented in Cinema Reborn’s 2026 programme.

Peking Opera Blues – IFC Center

PEKING OPERA BLUES (Tsui Hark, Hong Kong, 1986)

‘As a director and producer, [Tsui] Hark has emerged as the most influential figure of the [1980s], a virtuoso of high-speed narration and optical panache … at his best, as in the period comedy Peking Opera Blues, his interlocking machinery of cues and responses induces a euphoria in which one is happy to mistake the screen’s leaps and convolutions for a semblance of reality.’Geoffrey O’Brien, The New York Review of Books

Set in 1913, after the fall of China’s last imperial dynasty, Tsui Hark’s vibrant action-comedy follows three young women – a cross-dressing spy (Brigittte Lin), a musician and courtesan (Cherie Chung), and an aspiring actor (Sally Yeh) – who become entangled in a political conflict. Forming an alliance with a guerrilla fighter (Mark Cheng) and a disillusioned soldier (Cheung Kwok Keung), the group enacts a plan to protect the democracy of the fledgling Chinese Republic.

Showcasing Tsui at the exhilarating height of his powers, Peking Opera Blues is an enigmatic, richly layered and wildly entertaining opus that director Quentin Tarantino has declared ‘one of the greatest films ever made.’

Introduced by Dylan Cheung at Ritz Cinemas and Cecilia Tsan at Lido Cinemas.

Screens once only in each city. For links to each theatre’s

bookings and session times and to read superb programme notes by Rachel Ho Click here.

Yasuzo Masumura – Windows on Worlds

THE WIFE OF SEISAKU (Yasuzō Masumura, Japan, 1965) 

...And from Japan comes a film by the largely unknown director Yasuzo Masumura, a film which in critic Tony Rayns program notes advises us that, with the recent discovery of Masumura’s work and the restoration of his work being undertaken by his distributor Kadokawa The Wife of Seisaku (Seisaku no Tsuma) will soon be known as a 1960s’ classic.”

Set against the backdrop of the Russo-Japanese War and expressing a strong critique of militarism, Yasuzō Masumura’s piercing melodrama is a major work from a long-overlooked director. Wakao, who collaborated with Masumura on twenty films, is a particularly commanding presence, bringing a fierce intensity to the tightly controlled narrative.

Introduced by Jane Mills at Ritz Cinemas and Grant Watson at Lido Cinemas.

Co-presented by The Japan Foundation, Sydney.

Screens once only in each city. For links to each theatre’s bookings and session times and to read superb programme notes by eminent British critic and scholar of East Asian cinema, Tony Rayns Click here.


CHARITABLE DONATIONS

Since our inception supporters have continued to ensure that the annual season is able to present the very latest and very best international and Australian film restorations.

Tax deductible charitable donations have enabled us to keep our admission charges to regular Ritz and Lido prices (with the lowest student concessions of any similar film-related event). We have once again set up a page via the Australian Cultural Fund to receive donations of any size, large or small. You can find it IF YOU CLICK ON THIS LINK

More news soon…

Tuesday, 31 March 2026

The Current Cinema - The Editor talks to Jim Jarmusch about his new film FATHER MOTHER SISTER BROTHER

 This interview was recorded on 1st April 2026.



GG: Good to see you again.

JJ: We’ve met before?

GG: I suppose I could say I’m surprised you don’t remember, but it was maybe your first brush with European celebrity at the Mannheim Film Festival in 1980. You screened Permanent Vacation and I saw it and invited it to the Melbourne Film Festival.

JJ: Now I remember…. How did the screening go?

GG: You never sent the film. You gave it to the Australian Film Institute for a season of New York Independents they ran. Lindsay Smith put it all together.

JJ: Oh… now I remember. Lindsay, huh? He used to spell his name L-I-N-Z-E-E. 

GG: Right. I suppose the AFI must have offered you more money than the MFF which offered only honour and glory in those days.

JJ: I know you are joking. Nobody paid you anything to screen your film in those days. Festivals and everyone else thought, as you said, you should be grateful for their attention.

GG: Things have changed.

JJ: Not everything.

GG: That’s right. You have just done another ‘film a sketches’  as the French called them. Did you like all those films made by the French and the Italians in the 60s and 70s when people like Godard, Pasolini, Truffaut, Visconti, Fellini, Louis Malle, Roberto Rossellini, Polanski, Wajda and more made episodes?

JJ: Loved ‘em. Really smart. Did you see Rogopag? Rossellini, Godard, Pasolini and someone else. RO – GO – PA-G. Who was the final G? 

GG: Ugo Gregoretti. Never heard of again. I often wondered though whether Mystery Train started out as a movie where you were going to intercut the stories but instead just kept it as three separate ones.

JJ: I don’t remember.

GG: So why another film a sketches at this time.

JJ: Well I wanted to make a movie about just how complicated families can be in all their rich diversity and finally it came down to something about a dad with a secret, a daughter with a secret and a brother and sister who uncover a secret. There you are …and Bob’s your uncle.

GG: Very witty. The common element joke about the fake or not Rolex watches was rather good and in each there are also the skateboarders and some jokes about plumbing and the local water.

JJ: Hey you picked that up? Well done.

GG: Too easy. I did like the moment when Tom Waits as the apparently somewhat befuddled father in the New Jersey episode assures his two children that he’s not taking any drugs and then reels off  the names of about fifteen drugs he’s ‘not taking’. 

JJ: Yes. Tom enjoyed doing that scene.

GG: Waits was one of your early stalwarts, a go to for you? By that I mean do you write parts that you know he’ll fit like a glove. 

JJ: Well as I said once before, Tom and I have a kindred aesthetic… An interest in unambitious people, marginal people. 

GG: Except in Father, Mother Sister Brother there’s a trick ending…

JJ: Agree that was a bit odd ….but the ep lacked oomph until that moment…

GG: Yes you couldn’t really get why the two middle-aged kids had decided to pay a visit. It’s one of three stories about families set in three different parts of the world. The backblocks of New Jersey, a nondescript part of Ireland and Paris. You do get around. One other common trope is the overhead shot of the tables and the food and drink. It’s sort of an abstract image you use to denote time passing.

JJ: Yeah

GG: In the Irish story the food on the table doesn’t seem to disappear. Nobody seems to actually eat anything. Is that so that the mother can give them a doggy bag to take home..

JJ: That’s right…

GG: Was the Irish story located somewhere else when you first wrote it…

JJ: Not really. I think all three have a universal quality …but then reality intrudes and you have to follow the money and go where all those thirty or forty executive producers lead you.

GG: Like Ireland. You never filmed there before?

JJ: Never.

GG: So why this time?

JJ: Come on. Irish film money is excellent. They really want major filmmakers to go there. They were happy I was willing to go as well.

GG; Did they ask if you had an ‘Irish story’. Irish in quotation marks.

JJ: I said sure I’ve got this great story about a mother who sees her two daughters once a year. It’s very Irish. 

Vicki Krieps, Cate Blanchett, Charlotte Rampling
in the Mother story

GG: Was it cast before the Irish money came through?

JJ: I don’t quite recall the timing… but I know I always wanted Cate Blanchett… and Vicki Krieps has been in my sights since Phantom Thread…  and I always remember the way she responded when she was asked about the MeToo movement and said “Maybe it's very European, but I always see both sides. I feel very sorry for the people who have been harassed, but I also feel very sorry for the people who have lived a life where they have been harassing people.”

GG: Wow…an exact quote. You don’t think she should have had an Irish accent…or indeed any of the three women, including Charlotte Rampling, should have had Irish accents?

JJ: Didn’t worry me …and nobody in Ireland mentioned  it after the film won the Golden Lion at Venice. 

GG: The Paris episode is the most enigmatic. The others are about reunions but this one focuses on discovering something secret. 

JJ: Yes. It’s the one I most enjoyed making. What’s not to like about making a movie in Paris almost like the New Wave guys did way back. Shooting in the streets, natural dialogue, unknown actors…and you’re in Paris for a month or so.

GG: Good to catch up.

JJ: You too. Stay safe…

Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Possibly Soon at the Cinema or possibly on Apple TV - From New Zealand - David Hare recommends DEAD MAN'S WIRE (Gus Van Sant, USA, 2025)

Al Pacino

Three actors on a telephone hammering out life and death: Al Pacino, Bill Skarsgard and Dacre Montgomery from Gus Van Sant's new picture,
 Dead Man's Wire, based on the real-life kidnap and holdup of a loan shark’s son by Tony Kiritsis in Indianapolis 1977. Lumet's justly famous 1975 movie Dog Day Afternoon seems to also forecast the same mode d'emploie by the real-life Indiana kidnapper two years' later which is the basis for Gus' movie. 

Bill Skarsgard

Without wishing to stretch too far into the winds of metacinematic narrative with history, the reprisal of Pacino in this superb new movie makes it impossible to miss a now totally alienated America in the thrall of late era Death-cult Capitalist greed and mindless International land-grab wars. Gus really gets the era and tone just as firmly as he gets the past with all his humanity at his disposal to make us care about these people. A lot. 

It's a real joy to see Gus out again in a picture that's entirely cut to his cloth with all the illustrious tics of his own style and mise-en-scene in play. Sequences of highly agitated long take shouting-out drama within four walls and a telephone start to give way to moments of apparent serenity before the next storm in Austin Kolodney's terrific screenplay. Just as "Kiritsis"/Skarsgard seems to catch each small concession in his baroquely insane negotiations with the FBI and Police to reach apparent short term agreements, Gus pumps a key music track each time into the audio to create an orgasm-like hold-still meditation on all-these too-brief moments of satisfaction. The score is a vibrant '70's hip compendium knockout curated by Danny Elfman. 

 

Dacre Montgomery

The picture had not yet had a general release in this territory since its debut at Venice last year until this January. May the gods of success attend to this terrific movie penned so movingly and richly by a real movie hero of mine so long absent since his last great work.