ChatterBank14 mins ago
"Confetti"? Too widely dispersed and messy.
Saw this film last night and was perusing the Internet Movie Database this morning where I located this opinion of it (paraphrased by me):
"The weddings in the end were quite entertaining , but the journey to them was painful A mixture of comedy actors from channel 4 and BBC2 produced another British comedy with out any laughs...What is happening to the British film industry , every time I go to see the latest offering I come away very disappointed..."
I'd give "Confetti" 6/10, personally...not bad, but I don't care if I never see it again. Regarding the first sentence, I believe the complete reverse to be true, and there were a few laughs, but I agree wholeheatedly with the remainder of this person's statement.
I get annoyed - and embarrassed - with contemporary British filmakers as I think they're trying too hard to create films with a broad (ie transatlantic) appeal in a quest for profit and approbation, and are not being parochial enough in trying to capture the essence of our humour. Which can travel well if delivered with conviction - like American humour for example.
A huge % of good films these days are European, Eastern and, yes, American; North and South. I'm rather glad Britain has a legacy of Ealing comedies, Powell and Pressburger, Lindsay Anderson, Ken Loach, Mike Leigh et al for example, but when does the renaissance of consistent British high-quality film-making begin?
I'm not a cultural jingoist (a great film is a great film... from wherever); I'm just culturally smarting a bit and don't want us to be a laughing stock for all the wrong reasons!
Anyone else got (strong) opinions about this?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by ScreaminTree. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Personally it's each to their own, if you don't like a film, you don't like a film and that is that. I doubt we will ever achieve the great heights of the Carry On era though, but at least they are preserved for our future prosperity.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.