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MT 18 January 2015

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VIII This Week maltatoday, Sunday, 18 January 2015 IN CINEMAS TODAY St James Cavalier Valletta Tel. 21 223200 Winter Sleep (15) 18:30 Met Opera Matinées 2015 - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Le Nozze di Figaro 14:30 Embassy Cinemas Valletta Tel. 21 227436, 21 245818 Taken 3 (12A) 10:30, 13:40, 16:10, 18:40, 21:10 The Hobbit: Battle of the Five Armies (12A) 10:30, 14:00, 18:00, 21:00 Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb (PG) 10:00, 12:15, 14:30, 16:45, 19:00, 21:15 Exodus: Gods and Kings 3D (PG) 14:15, 17:30, 20:50 Simshar (12A) 10:00, 16:00, 18:25, 20:55 Unbroken (15) 10:30, 15:00, 18:00, 20:55 Eden Cinemas St Julian's Tel. 23 710400 The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (12A) 14:30, 18:00, 21:10, 22:15 (3D) The Imitation Game (12A) 14:00, 16:20, 18:40, 21:05, 23:35 Paddington (U) 14:20, 16:30, 18:40, 20:50, 23:05 Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb (PG) 14:10, 16:25, 18:40, 18:45, 20:55, 23:10 Annie (U) 14:00, 16:25, 18:50 Exodus: Gods and Kings 3D (PG) 14:30, 17:40, 20:45, 23:50 Unbroken (15) 14:30, 18:05, 20:55, 23:45 Mr Turner (12A) 14:30, 18:00, 21:00 Into the Woods (PG) 14:30, 18:20, 21:05, 23:40 '71 (15) 21:15, 23:30 CitizenFour (18) 14:00, 16:20, 18:40, 21:00, 23:30 Nightcrawler (15) 14:00, 16:20, 18:45, 21:10, 23:40 Taken 3 (12A) 14:00, 16:20, 18:45, 21:15, 23:45 Black Sea (15) 14:00, 16:25, 18:50, 21:10, 23:25 Empire Cinemas Bugibba Tel. 21 581787, 21 581909 Exodus: Gods and Kings (PG) 10:35, 13:55, 17:50, 20:45 Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb (PG) 10:25, 12:30, 14:35, 16:40, 18:45, 20:55 The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies 3D (12A) 11:00, 14:00, 17:45, 20:40 Unbroken (15) 11:00, 14:05, 17:55, 20:45 Taken 3 (12A) 10:45, 13:30, 15:50, 18:10, 20:50 Into the Woods (PG) 10:30, 13:30, 16:05, 18:40, 21:15 Black Sea (15) 10:35, 13:35, 16:00, 18:25, 20:50 Films about the creative process are taking centre stage at this year's Oscar race, and first out of the gate for us to consume is acclaimed British director Mike Leigh's bit- tersweet biopic Mr Turner, in which Timothy Spall gives a growling but ultimately humane performance as the titular English landscape painter. While we have yet to get Birdman and Whiplash – which concern the neuroses of contemporary actors and jazz musicians, respectively – Mr Turner raises the bar quite high. The film depicts the final quarter of Joseph Mallord William Turner's life, as he slowly but surely begins to chip away at the artistic establish- ment of Victorian Britain. Respect- ed by his artistic peers at the Royal Academy of Arts, the unmarried painter endeavours to break new ground in landscape painting – breaking free from vulgar represen- tation in favour of a more elemental approach which eventually led to the Impressionist revolution, as well as planted the seeds for abstract art. Meanwhile, however, he is just a jobbing painter and a flawed hu- man being, left in the care of his determined trooper of a father, Wil- liam (Paul Jesson) and his devoted but neglected housekeeper, Hannah Danby (Dorothy Atkinson), whom he exploits sexually with nary a sign of guilt. Far from being a buttoned-up BBC period piece, Leigh's film works in deliberately messy chi- aroscuro. It is unsentimental in its treatment of both its setting and its characters, as even the most outwardly 'aristocratic' of locales is shaded by hints of grime. There's no space here for pretty frocks and pol- ished Keira Knightley cheekbones, though the landscapes that inspire Turner's best work are given that awe-inspiring due. This is not to say that the film is dour. Like its perma-sneering and corpulent protagonist, it's possessed of a wry and mischievous humour – puncturing the pretentions of the social elite with relish… each gag building up slowly but surely. If it has any grand claims to make, the film is about the last dying gasp of the 19th century, with Turner's experimental efforts viewed with suspicion by the cultural establish- ment, while Turner himself looks upon with disgust at the invention of photography, which he claims will "ruin" him. But more than any- thing, the film is a deeply intimate portrait of a stubborn pioneer who is lovable, but not necessarily lov- ing – as his hard done by devoted housekeeper would attest to. True to Mike Leigh's artistic programme, consistent since he first appeared on the scene in the 1970s, to depict the dirty, 'kitchen sink' undercurrents of everyday life, Hannah Danby's treatment betrays the injustice and hypocrisy of the Victorian age. She's often seen hovering at the peripheries of the frame, studiously ignored by the supposedly enlightened souls that visit Turner's abode. Where most biopics insult our intelligence by shoehorning the life of a complex and great person into the corny fairy tale dynamic of a blockbuster melodrama, Leigh doesn't shy away from showing us the ugly paradoxes that are also an integral part of a quietly revolution- ary character like 'Mr Turner'. By Teodor Reljic Not painting by numbers ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ TURNER PRIZE ★ ★ ★ ★ TURN OF THE SCREW ★ ★ ★ TURNING HEADS ★ ★ TURN AWAY ★ TURD MR TURNER (12) ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ FILM J.M.W Turner was inspired to paint The Slave Ship (1840) after reading Thomas Clarkson's The History and Abolition of the Slave Trade. Though slavery had been abolished by the British Empire since 1830, Turner and a number of other contemporaries believed the practice should have been abolished across the world. In fact, the painting was unveiled to coincide with a meeting of the British Anti-Slavery society. The episode that inspired the painting stands as a harrowing example of the dehumanising nature of the slave trade. In November 1781, the captain of the slave ship Zong ordered 133 slaves to be thrown overboard, so as to claim insurance payments. Turner round: Timothy Spall gives the performance of a lifetime as the pioneering British painter J.M.W Turner

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