We got the house! 1 Kittiwake Mews is miiine! A kittiwake is a seagull apparently, thats not quite so exciting as it sounds but heh. So yeh after a ew hiccups involving a certain housemate ot knowing for sure whether she wanted to get the house or even stay at uni at all, we signed the contract yesterday, and I wrote a cheque for £600! Ouch! Thankfully Alice is giving me her £300 back on monday, so its not too much of a blow!
I've had such a successful organised few days actually, I booked my interview for BUNAC (an America summer campo scheme), so looks like I'm dedicated to going to America this summer! February 17th is the date, I have to find two references before then which is the hardest part, I've emailed my personal tutor and my head of sixth, and I'm hoping to talk to my managers on monday morning at wor because obviously they are the best reference I can get, as I've worked there with kids for three years and loved every minute of it. So at th moment its just a case of waiting, I started tying to fill in the application form, but I need to go through it with my mum and she's majorly stressed with ofsted atm so I'll have to wait for the weekend for that.
Lectures and stuff started again this week, and they look really interesting, I'm quite excited. But I won't bore you with my nerdiness.
Anyway last night Kayleigh and I went to see Sweeney Todd. I really wanted to go and see it, mainly out of curiosity I think. I'd heard really good reviews and really crap ones. But for me it was just one of those films that I had to see, everyone would be talking about it etc etc. My brief review I gave to my dad was 'bizarre and bloody'.
One of my friends told me 'depp was crap, the story was crap and the ending was crap'. So in response:
1. The cast - With a cast including Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham C
arter and Alan Rickman (as well as supporting roles by Timothy Spall and Sacha Baron Cohen), before I went in I questioned how a film could be bad with a cast like that. Depp was far from crap, I would agree that maybe it wasn't the best I've seen him, for me Chocolat remains his best film, but he played the part well. And his singing was good. Helena B-C was as entrancing as ever, I love that woman, and the relatively small role played by Alan Rickman, was him at his normal high standard (irrelevantly, how sexy is his voice?). For me though, the person that stole the show was Toby, the kid whoultimaely becomes he hero f the story in a twisted way. His acting was brilliant, and if that was his singing voice, he will go far.
2. The Story - I have to admit, the story wasn't the greatest. The general idea of it was fine, Judge kills wife, Barber wants revenge with the side story of his friend falling for her daughter. All fairly standard, obviously in a twisted way, and I don't even object to the human pies aspect of the story. What got me was how, to my mind at least, the story stalled, after the judge got away the first time, the story semed to come to a stand still, and all the other deaths, and the growth of the pie shop, were although necessary in setting the scene, drawn out for far too long to the extent it seemed the film stopped, then restarted.
3. The Ending - Yeah, I think my friend was justified in this. I got confused for a start, where the hell did his wife appear from? And although maybe unnecessary I think they should have tied up the love story, but maybe thats me just looking for a happy ending. I don't know how I would have ended it, and I can't really criticise it sensibly, I was just left feeling a little empty. I think Todd did need to kill Mrs. Lovett, and should have ended up dead himself, but still . . .
Other than that my other criticism would be that it was rather unnecessarily bloody. Granted the blood did look like ketchup but it didn't add anything to the film, other than maybe stamp Burton's authority on it. To me, it would have made more sense to reduce the blood and make it fifteen opening it up to a larger audience.
Having said all that, I did enjoy the film, a
nd I'm really glad I saw it. I wasn't aiming to give it a negative review. I think the musical aspect of it worked really well, I wasn't convinced to start with, but it grew on me, I particularly liked the number where Depp and B-C were at the shop window describing types of meat (lawyer, priest, vicar, poet etc.). The two of them were also incredible opposite numbers, I didn't expect anything less to be honest. But the chemistry between them was perfect.
I also loved, this is me being a geek I expect, but how London was painted in its dark, dingy light. Don't get me wrong, I love period dramas, but too often, its all seen so perfectly, clean etc. When in reality this wasn't the case. I think it painted the picture perfectly, refelected in Todd's little song, which unfortunately I can't find the quote for, going on about how shit London was.
But for me the best bit of the whole film, was how beautifully it was shot. I'm not good with technicalities but it reflected the mood and atmosphere of the story perfectly.
So yeh, I'd definitely recommend seeing it, I don't think I'll ever watch it again, but I enjoyed it for a one off.
I've had such a successful organised few days actually, I booked my interview for BUNAC (an America summer campo scheme), so looks like I'm dedicated to going to America this summer! February 17th is the date, I have to find two references before then which is the hardest part, I've emailed my personal tutor and my head of sixth, and I'm hoping to talk to my managers on monday morning at wor because obviously they are the best reference I can get, as I've worked there with kids for three years and loved every minute of it. So at th moment its just a case of waiting, I started tying to fill in the application form, but I need to go through it with my mum and she's majorly stressed with ofsted atm so I'll have to wait for the weekend for that.
Lectures and stuff started again this week, and they look really interesting, I'm quite excited. But I won't bore you with my nerdiness.
Anyway last night Kayleigh and I went to see Sweeney Todd. I really wanted to go and see it, mainly out of curiosity I think. I'd heard really good reviews and really crap ones. But for me it was just one of those films that I had to see, everyone would be talking about it etc etc. My brief review I gave to my dad was 'bizarre and bloody'.
One of my friends told me 'depp was crap, the story was crap and the ending was crap'. So in response:
1. The cast - With a cast including Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham C
arter and Alan Rickman (as well as supporting roles by Timothy Spall and Sacha Baron Cohen), before I went in I questioned how a film could be bad with a cast like that. Depp was far from crap, I would agree that maybe it wasn't the best I've seen him, for me Chocolat remains his best film, but he played the part well. And his singing was good. Helena B-C was as entrancing as ever, I love that woman, and the relatively small role played by Alan Rickman, was him at his normal high standard (irrelevantly, how sexy is his voice?). For me though, the person that stole the show was Toby, the kid whoultimaely becomes he hero f the story in a twisted way. His acting was brilliant, and if that was his singing voice, he will go far.2. The Story - I have to admit, the story wasn't the greatest. The general idea of it was fine, Judge kills wife, Barber wants revenge with the side story of his friend falling for her daughter. All fairly standard, obviously in a twisted way, and I don't even object to the human pies aspect of the story. What got me was how, to my mind at least, the story stalled, after the judge got away the first time, the story semed to come to a stand still, and all the other deaths, and the growth of the pie shop, were although necessary in setting the scene, drawn out for far too long to the extent it seemed the film stopped, then restarted.
3. The Ending - Yeah, I think my friend was justified in this. I got confused for a start, where the hell did his wife appear from? And although maybe unnecessary I think they should have tied up the love story, but maybe thats me just looking for a happy ending. I don't know how I would have ended it, and I can't really criticise it sensibly, I was just left feeling a little empty. I think Todd did need to kill Mrs. Lovett, and should have ended up dead himself, but still . . .
Other than that my other criticism would be that it was rather unnecessarily bloody. Granted the blood did look like ketchup but it didn't add anything to the film, other than maybe stamp Burton's authority on it. To me, it would have made more sense to reduce the blood and make it fifteen opening it up to a larger audience.
Having said all that, I did enjoy the film, a
nd I'm really glad I saw it. I wasn't aiming to give it a negative review. I think the musical aspect of it worked really well, I wasn't convinced to start with, but it grew on me, I particularly liked the number where Depp and B-C were at the shop window describing types of meat (lawyer, priest, vicar, poet etc.). The two of them were also incredible opposite numbers, I didn't expect anything less to be honest. But the chemistry between them was perfect.I also loved, this is me being a geek I expect, but how London was painted in its dark, dingy light. Don't get me wrong, I love period dramas, but too often, its all seen so perfectly, clean etc. When in reality this wasn't the case. I think it painted the picture perfectly, refelected in Todd's little song, which unfortunately I can't find the quote for, going on about how shit London was.
But for me the best bit of the whole film, was how beautifully it was shot. I'm not good with technicalities but it reflected the mood and atmosphere of the story perfectly.
So yeh, I'd definitely recommend seeing it, I don't think I'll ever watch it again, but I enjoyed it for a one off.



