Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

March of the Penguins (U)<br/>Calvaire (18)<br/>After Midnight (15)<br/>Scorched (12A)<br/>Crying Fist (15)

Anthony Quinn
Friday 09 December 2005 01:00 GMT
Comments

March of the Penguins (U)

After all the hype, this epic wildlife documentary is the biggest disappointment of the week: though the footage of emperor penguins struggling against the Antarctic weather is extraordinary, its impact is diluted by inordinate length and the tackily anthropomorphic commentary.

Calvaire (18)

A bizarre Belgian horror, mixing up elements of Deliverance-style inbred rural violence and, somewhere in there, religious allegory. On his way to a gig, a fifth-rate chanteur is stranded and soon finds himself the focus of some disturbing fantasies. Deep gruesomeness ensues, but so does some very strange, very bleak comedy; and, having spent part of my childhood in Belgium, I'm inclined to think it's not so far from the truth.

After Midnight (15)

This Italian romantic tragicomedy concerns two men, a car thief and a film-obsessed nightwatchman, who are rivals for the love of a girl in a fast-food joint. A dreary voiced-over commentary offers platitudes on the mysteries of love and story-telling. It manages to be whimsical and pompous, naive and knowing - quite a feat, really.

Scorched (12A)

Why, oh, why can't lovely, perfect Alicia Silverstone find a vehicle worthy of her? On paper, this multiple-heist comedy must have looked OK; in practice, it isn't one 10th as sharp or original as it needs to be, even without the handicap of John Cleese at his most obtusely humourless. I would support legislation to stop Alicia doing this sort of thing.

Crying Fist (15)

Two men seek redemption through boxing: one, a faded champion with a broken marriage, the other a delinquent who never made peace with his dead father. Ryoo Seung-wan's film gets off to a cracking start and has some great ideas (including one of the most startling deaths I've seen), but takes too long to reach a dispiritingly mushy denouement.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in