Anne Billson on film
Anne Billson riffs on the art and business of film-making
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The three-act story seems natural. But so many blockbusters, like the new Mission Impossible, would be better off without part three
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Science fiction isn't all 'talking squids in space'. And its creep into mainstream cinema is everywhere from Never Let Me Go to Midnight in Paris | Anne Billson
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Film blog I know Twilight is awful, but …
Anne BillsonTwilight caters to the sexual fantasies of teenage girls. I'm not saying in a good way, but there's not much else at the cinema that does, writes Anne Billson
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Forget all the collapsing staircases, revolving rooms, daft CGI and haunted hair-dos. You barely need to show anything to make a truly petrifying ghost movie
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The Da Vinci Code, of course, is full of Leonardo, but I prefer my Last Supper posed by beggars, as in Viridiana
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I'd like to see action films regress to an epoch when swords were as prevalent as guns, or hop forward to a time when firearms don't work, writes Anne Billson
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Anne Billson: By warning us in advance that Bruce Willis or Tom Cruise isn't going to save the day, Lars Von Trier's Melancholia joins the fine tradition of films that preview their own coming attractions
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Long takes make the viewer an active participant rather than a passive sponge, encouraged to scour the frame, or worry about what might enter into it, writes Anne Billson
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If a female contract killer isn't prepared to smuggle herself into the villain's lair disguised as a scantily clad hooker, the movie world isn't interested
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Someone (but not Anne Hathaway) needs to stick up for the girl geek, a social group so under-represented in movies it's almost extinct
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Anne Billson: I'm no purist, but it really takes me out of a film to hear the Narnia kids saying 'Sorted!' or Alice in Wonderland using terms like 'bonkers'
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Anne Billson: Adopting another's identity is seen as a melodramatic trick of the movies, like the evil twin in soap operas – but aren't we all imposture experts?
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Star ratings may be massively popular, but since when did liking or not liking become the standard by which a film should be judged, asks Anne Billson
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An eyepatch indicates the wearer has been in the wars or had his eye pecked out by a hawk like axe-hurling Kirk Douglas in The Vikings
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The Beaver isn't the only movie that should have taken the horror route – so many comedies are just a sliver away from being terrifying psycho thrillers
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A well-turned phrase can go a long way towards cementing a movie's cult status, but Apocalypse Now marks the point at which film quotes became self-conscious
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Anne Billson: Horror movies no longer make me feel queasy, but sentimental ones can reduce me to jelly
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Anne Billson: Short hair on female characters is usually a humiliating punishment – and a small step to alien, monster or homicidal maniac
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Anne Billson: We're like demented twitchers, ticking off movie titles – but how many of these films do we actually need to see?
Why restyle Great Women of History as cockamamie feminist role models?
Anne Billson: Did Bette Davis live and die in vain? I want Wallis Simpson in all her adulterous, Nazi-loving glory – even if it makes her a bitch