Arionel vargas biography of christopher
•
DVD Review: 'Love Tomorrow'
See filled article recoil CineVue
Gravity, Agricultural show To Live A Pestilence, Seduced & Abandoned: that week's original films
Gravity(12A)
(Alfonso Cuarón, 2013, Us) Sandra Bullock, Martyr Clooney. 91 mins
A silent picture to heal your belief in joint effects, 3D and big screen in community, Cuarón's vastness movie arrives here already heaped put together well-earned adulation. Like, hold, Avatar fend for Toy Book, it actually does enlarge the frontiers of what cinema crapper do; different from them, Gravityis set emergence, or virtuous least bypass, the shrouded in mystery world. Representation story evenhanded admirab
•
Love Tomorrow
Scraping around the hidden freelance dance world of London, neither of them is employed at the moment. One has had her hopes broken by injury, the other by the natural transience of existence for the itinerant young dancer for hire. Oriel, a mercurial Cuban lothario, has a great brush-off line: “My visa expires in two weeks, so I probably won’t see you again.” Delivered with a rueful twinkle, it captures the allure of a life where people are constantly in transit, in their imaginations and in reality, forming professional intimacies unique to dancing, but on which not too many personal stakes should be placed.
The risk looks considerable in casting two ballet dancers in the leading roles, rather than actors who dance: for this is not an orthodox love story but one where both Oriel and Eva have arresting secrets to keep. They meet in passing on the London tube escalator, he swarthy and twinklingly on the make, she ash-blonde, with a shuttered face. The story blooms into what appears to be a predictable romance, sun melting ice, but then takes a sudden and thought-provoking turn, which
•
Love Tomorrow, Raindance Film Festival
Indeed, it’s unusual to see a dance film being made at all, let alone picked for a celebrated indie film festival like Raindance this year - and still less being named yesterday the best UK Feature of the 2012 festival. But Love Tomorrow, which is now seeking a distributor for general release, has a genuine delicacy and elusiveness that makes it a naturalistic riposte to the merchants of OTT grand Guignol.
The risk looks considerable in casting two ballet dancers in the leading roles, rather than actors who dance
Where Black Swan purported lasciviously to be about the jungle life inside a great world ballet company, this is a story about two people who happen to be dancers, neither of them employed at the moment. One has had her hopes broken by injury, the other by the natural transience of existence for the itinerant young dancer for hire. Oriel, a mercurial Cuban lothario, has a great brush-off line: “My visa expires in two weeks, so I probably won’t see you again.” Delivered with a rueful twinkle, it captures the allure o