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Movie Reviews

Enola Holmes

Netflix, 2020

Sixteen year old star Millie Bobby Brown is arguably one of Netflix’s most important assets, having risen to superstardom with the smash hit Stranger Things and cementing herself as a teen celebrity powerhouse outside of the show. As her adventures in Hawkins continue to chug along season after season, Brown has attempted to branch out into movies, with a supporting turn in last year’s Godzilla: King of the Monsters and now a starring role in Netflix’s own Enola Holmes. The film follows the relatively family-friendly adventures of the infamous Sherlock Holmes’ little sister – created by author Nancy Springer years after the works of original author Arthur Conan Doyle – as she travels across England in search of her mother, crossing paths with her famous family and a host of characters on the way. In a year deprived of summer blockbusters, Enola Holmes just might be the closest we’ll get to replicating that unbridled fun and joy of going to the movies, even if it is rather disposable at the end of the day.

Enola Holmes’ biggest strength and weakness lies in its tone. The film clearly owes a lot to the likes of Deadpool and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, with the youngest Holmes sibling constantly breaking the fourth wall and addressing the audience directly. It works for the film’s opening scenes when it is used as a clever device to humorously breeze through mountains of exposition and establish all the key players in the case to follow, but it quickly devolves into tedium when Enola starts shooting you looks every five minutes as if she’s checking to make sure you haven’t drifted off. At some points it gets so bad that it almost feels like a Victorian episode of Dora the Explorer with Holmes asking us the audience how we should navigate the plot of the film. The annoyance of these scenes is alleviated greatly by Bobby Brown’s natural charisma and charm as Enola and the fact that the film spends a good chunk of its opening minutes establishing the impact of the mystery on the young detective and getting you along for the ride.

Netflix, 2020

The ride in question isn’t a terribly interesting one to be fair and functions as a sort of light version of a classic Sherlock Holmes case as Enola must unravel the mystery of her mother Eudoria’s (Helena Bonham Carter) sudden disappearance whilst on the run from her oppressive older brother Mycroft (Sam Claflin), who wishes to send her to boarding school to receive a traditional education. Along the way, Enola is entangled with the young Viscount Tewkesbury (Louis Partridge), who is hesitant about taking his father’s position in the House of Lords in order to pass an ambiguous bill that will “change the future of England”. What begins as an intriguing mystery with puzzles and clues for Enola to solve takes a shift into the mundane once Tewkesbury’s involvement becomes more prominent and the film becomes a more generic whodunnit investigation into a mysterious assassination plot on the young politician. It is a shame given the rather interesting mix between Deadpool and the Robert Downey Jr. Sherlock Holmes films that is established early on, which wraps you up and makes you think you’re about to experience something truly different. As it devolves into more generic action set-pieces, the film does retain its sense of fun – arguably shedding its family friendly image with some pretty intense late game violence – but that twinkling of something special is missing and it never really manages to recover, stumbling towards a fairly messy and abrupt conclusion that wraps everything up far too conveniently.

Once again Netflix has spared no expense with their original content, bringing in an absolute smorgasbord of great British talent, from Henry Cavill and Sam Claflin to Harry Potter veterans Fiona Shaw and Helena Bonham Carter. Cavill in particular shines as the legendary detective; giving Sherlock Holmes a far more laidback, less idiosyncratic feel than previous iterations as he watches Enola slowly unravel the clues laid before her, doling out sage wisdom where necessary. It’s such an interesting performance in fact, that I would happily sit through an entire film of Cavill as the sleuth, provided Sam Claflin also returns as his uptight, hilarious brother Mycroft. Claflin, like a lot of the cast, really hams it up as the high-class aristocrat with some serious self-doubts, screaming and carrying on about Enola’s lack of ladylike behaviour in stark contrast to Cavill’s quietness. It’s a brilliant pairing which really serves to flesh out the supporting cast and take some of the weight off of Bobby Brown’s shoulders – not that she can’t carry it. If Stranger Things hadn’t already done it then Enola Holmes certainly establishes Millie Bobby Brown as one of the finest young talents working today, carrying this giant studio picture with ease, hitting all the right emotional beats and really making you care about her, to the point where I welcome the inevitable sequel just on the promise of seeing her on-screen again as Enola.

Netflix, 2020

Enola Holmes might not be the best or most memorable film of the year, but it is a whole lot of fun and that is something that is in high demand during the pandemic this year. It easily stands above the vast majority of content Netflix has released this year, with Millie Bobbie Brown cementing her status as a teen acting powerhouse in the fun, if sometimes uneven romp. Surrounding her with an eclectic British cast with brilliant turns from Sam Claflin and Henry Cavill really adds to the fun factor here and if you find yourself in search of a quick jolt of energy and enjoyment then turn to Enola Holmes for some solid sleuthing adventures.

Netflix, 2020

Enola Holmes stars Millie Bobby Brown, Henry Cavill, Sam Claflin, Louis Partridge, Fiona Shaw, Burn Gorman & Helena Bonham Carter – Streaming on Netflix now.

Categories
Movie Reviews

Charlie’s Angels (2019)

Columbia Pictures, 2019

Of all the franchises begging to be brought back to the silver screen, Charlie’s Angels was not one that was high on too many people’s wish list. The early 2000’s films featuring Drew Barrymore, Lucy Liu and Cameron Diaz were fine enough action films, if somewhat disposable, but the chemistry of the core cast was enough to leave most with fond memories of the franchise. Enter the 2019 reboot/sequel starring Kristen Stewart, Naomi Scott and newcomer Ella Balinska; a surprisingly fun, upbeat action film that ultimately succeeds thanks to solid performances from its core trio and by never taking itself too seriously. Whilst its message of “girl power” is a little ham-fisted and unsubtle in its delivery, and the plot is about as cookie cutter as it gets – straight out of 2000’s action cinema – there is never a dull moment and for a Charlie’s Angel movie released in 2019, that’s far better than what was to be expected.

The “angels” are a team of female super spies from around the world coordinated into one cohesive task force called the Townsend Agency, led by the ever present, yet never seen “Charlie”. Beneath Charlie are his lieutenants – all codenamed “Bosley”,- just to be intentionally confusing – men and women from intelligence operations around the world who act as direct liaisons to the agents in the field and mentor them through their rigorous training process. When the agency receives a call from Elena (Naomi Scott) about the potential weaponising of Callisto, the renewal power source she has created for boss Alexander Brock (Sam Claflin), it sets off a chain reaction of mayhem as multiple parties vie for control of the device. Bosley (Elizabeth Banks) sends in two of her top agents to protect Elena and prevent anyone else from getting their hands on the device; Sabina (Kristen Stewart) and Jane (Ella Balinska), and what follows is a series of twists and turns, all fairly predictable, as the three girls learn to work together and become a sisterhood in order to save the day.

Columbia Pictures, 2019

Charlie’s Angels really shouldn’t work as well as it does and that success all comes down to the script, written by Banks (pulling triple duty by also starring and directing). She mixes the early 2000 tropes with a 2019 view on women – confident, self-assured spies who can do anything and get the job done – to great effect. You understand that these women are trained killers and the world is at stake yet it’s all just so ridiculous and fun, as the whole team slings one-liners at each other whilst they escape numerous close encounters with evil henchmen. Whilst the script is solid in the way it handles the tropes of the genre and its humour, it falls down in the story, which is simply plot development after plot development to put the spies in a variety of fun locations or situations. It doesn’t make sense and is full of loop holes and leaps in reality which just aren’t justifiable. It’s the kind of film that would rather hit you with a montage of random girls doing activities like riding horses or surfing to portray the message that girls can do anything, rather than spending the time to build up a story that makes a bit of sense and shows that these girls are actually in danger of not making it out alive. It doesn’t derail the show as it’s clear from the opening scene that this is not in any way going to be a serious film, but it just would go that extra mile to raise the stakes and allow for some investment in the characters beyond their surface level personalities.

Banter is the name of the game here and while the interplay between the cast makes the film, the characters are surprisingly one note, barely going beyond surface level or digging into anybody’s motives or psyche. Having said that, there are no weak links in the cast and everybody plays their characters competently enough. Kristen Stewart shows a new side of herself that audiences may be taken aback by, as the spunky spy Sabina, easily the most energetic member of the cast, showcasing a mix of deadpan and wisecracking comedy that will no doubt surprise. She’s come a long way since her Twilight days, appearing in a host of indie dramas over the years since the monster franchise wrapped up and her re-entry to mainstream blockbuster cinema is a breath of fresh air. There’s still that same brooding somewhat closed-off energy that remains from Twilight but the role is perfect to show off her other talents, both action and comedy, and this should go a long way to boosting her prominence in more blockbuster work, should she choose to go that route.

Columbia Pictures, 2019

Naomi Scott gets the most traditional story arc of anyone in the film as Elena, going from timid whistleblower to reasonably competent super spy, but it all feels so rushed, with the transition happening in less time than the film takes to bust out an Ariana Grande song (of which there are many). Scott is the audience surrogate here, showing us the mysterious Townsend Agency from an outsider’s perspective, but there’s only so long you can watch her open mouthed look of surprise before it gets stale. She’s fine in the role and won’t be going anywhere, coming off a solid year between this and the recent Aladdin reboot. Ella Balinska rounds out the core trio as the emotionally shut-off lone wolf Jane, a former MI6 operative turned angel who must learn to trust her teammates if they have any hope of succeeding. She’s surprisingly the strongest of the trio, really selling herself as the emotionally damaged spy who has clearly suffered in her former job. Her arc feels the most earned and while it is not as central as Elena’s it is surprisingly emotional and cathartic and Balinska hits all the beats surprisingly well, considering this is one of her first big roles.

At a time when theatres have been mostly dominated by drama and horror, Charlie’s Angels provides a high-octane shot of adrenaline: full of big, bombastic, explosion-filled set pieces and zingers a-plenty. Whilst the story won’t set the world on fire and the characters are all a bit one-note, the cast playing them is clearly having so much fun that it becomes infectious. The jokes land when they need to and the pace moves at a clip, making this an easy, breezy enjoyable time at the movies or a shot of fun at home on a boring Sunday afternoon.

Columbia Pictures, 2019

Charlie’s Angels stars Kristen Stewart, Naomi Scott, Ella Balinska, Elizabeth Banks, Patrick Stewart & Sam Claflin – In cinemas now.