Monday, 23 June 2025

Row (2025)


Premiering at the 2025 Raindance Film Festival, 

Row is written and directed by Matt Losasso.

It tells the story of a woman washed ashore in a blood stained boat as part of a doomed trans-atlantic World record attempt. While she has survived, her three shipmates are missing and presumed dead. She attempts to piece together her fractured memories.

The premise of this film is a good one and it does create an effective claustrophobic atmosphere of the cabin fever that takes hold of the shipmates in treacherous waters. However, these confinements are also restrictions and with a young cast trying their best, they are unfortunately let down by a quite a damp script which falls too swiftly into cliché and signposted direction of narrative flow.



This is a pity as the potential is clearly apparent with little nods to the work of John Carpenter and his evocative scores and economical storytelling, and yet that is all this film is, wanting to be something more than it is.

Female lead, Bella Dayne, is lacking in her conviction of performance sadly when the film desperately needs a strong one for the stakes required and with the whole narrative upon her shoulders. Sophie Skelton (Outlander) shows some brief spark in her time onscreen. 

For something so tense the pace is incredibly plodding and pedestrian. No rhythm or tension is apparent, perhaps the writer-director could have done with a polish of his rudderless script. 

It is frustrating when funding goes to films such as this, when the message is not clear and nothing new is being spoken of and with an overlong run time, this film really needed to have a good pay-off which unfortunately when it arrives it is with as little fanfare as the two hours that preceded it and lacks any sort of resolution for the tested audience.

Shot without any invention or colour, this is a film that is unwittingly all at sea.

Row receives its World Premiere on 21st June at 33rd Raindance Film Festival

Row has been nominated for four awards at the festival: Best Performance in a UK Feature (Dayne), Best UK Feature, Best Director of a UK Feature (Losssso) and Best UK Cinematography.

My thanks to Strike Media for the screener link 

Thursday, 12 June 2025

Brian Wilson (1942-2025)



Brian Wilson, who passed away Wednesday at the age of 82, leaves behind a musical legacy that is untouchable in the pantheon of pop and rock and roll music.

Wilson, the songwriter and composer, of the five piece California band that brought surf culture to the wider popular attention and was a competitive contemporary of Lennon-McCartney during the British invasion of the mid-1960s.

Wilson, was a writer of huge acclaim and mainstream appeal, jaunty numbers that were talking about surfing, driving and having girlfriends. It was music for the teenager and young adult hot off the heels of Chuck Berry's hooks, the Beach Boys spoke for people from 'Little Deuce Coupe' and 'Fun Fun Fun'


He made California a destination for the globe, a place to aspire to visit. I remember seeing an interview with Billy Corgan (The Smashing Pumpkins) and he said, 'Brian Wilson should be paid royalties by the state of California, for the work he has done for the state'

Listening back to his catalogue over there is just a wave of joy and exuberance from the beginning - 'Surfin USA', 'Barbara Ann' and the jam nature of 'I Get Around', the jaunty nature of the works coupled with the nature of being young.

While Wilson would write at a clip unmatched, his attention to composition and complex arrangements were gaining traction. By the time Pet Sounds arrived in May 1966 a reaction to the Beatles' Rubber Soul; he had incorporated a wall-of-sound reminiscent of Phil Spector but the key was partnering with advertising writer Tony Asher as the lyricist. The lyrics while sentimental when married with Wilson's sound were a match made in heaven - the key change in 'God Only Knows' remains something from another dimension.

It is of course a shame that Wilson's dependency on psychedelic drugs curtailed his creative juices, yet the works still come and remain totems that soundtrack the summer as well as that inevitable question of growing old from 'Sail on Sailor' and 'Do It Again'

For me personally, Brian Wilson has been with me always. I worked overseas in a Catalan resort and many a time at the end of the shift I would listen to the Best of the Beach Boys and eventually Pet Sounds in its entirety; it became one of the touchstones works of my impressionable coming of age. I came out of my shell during those summers and the positive mindset that Wilson's music gives you is a jolt of lightning through your veins.

As with anything, it is a shame when someone you admire passes but his work remains and to enjoy. While people dream of better times and time of peace, just think of 'Good Vibrations' and 'Smile'.

Monday, 9 June 2025

The Bones of Chester - MJ Lee

 


Third book in DI Emma Christie series by prolific MJ Lee

Returning for the third book in the series, MJ Lee again writes a pulsating book set in and around the historic city of Chester

DI Emma Chrisite, is again tasked with a troubling case after human remains are found near a landmark in the Cheshire city. After an autopsy and inspection by pathologists, it is determined that the remains are from three different female skeletons.

Christie, must contend with office politics and the police hierarchy who want her to fail and have the men pick up the pieces. With her diligent and devoted team, they set about trying to find out firstly who the women are who have been buried and who did the heinous acts of maceration - the removal of flesh from human bones. 

Based around the mythic folk tale of Santa Muerte, who speaks to our villain; the plot revolves around the disappearance of young girls on two specific dates every calendar year. This nugget of truth amidst a fictitious tale helps somewhat ground it in reality - this is helped by Lee writing the discombobulating effect of the politicking in her job. Not to mention, her ongoing care for her ailing father and ex-super cop who is battling Alzheimer's at home.

That facet of the narrative is dealt with delicately, as the father's back story is slowing growing along with the history of the original crime gang family - the Gilligan's from Liverpool - who are always sniffing about. Another thing sniffing, is that familiar rat Gavin Newton, the journalist with no morals and even less ethics. 

A familiar trait of Lee's books is that the first half of the book seems to tread water in narrative construction and obstacles for our protagonists as if it is going uphill to reach a summit. Then when it reaches that summit, the downhill portion is all-go, thrill seeking page turning of the highest order.

Highly recommended for fans old and new, a book to get your teeth into. The fourth book cannot come soon enough.

The Bones of Chester is a self-published book by Author MJ Lee and available on all formats now.