To rescue Kahlo from the clutches of the corporate art market, we need to acknowledge the overt and covert political dimensions of the work, demands GAVIN O’TOOLE
The Wave (15)
Directed by Roar Uthaug
4/5
Nowadays, state-of-the-art movie magic and, too often, stars rather than actors, propel disaster movies towards cliche.
Armed with a strong screenplay, excellent players, stunning locations and potent special effects Norwegian director Roar Uthaug deserves praise for this revitalised genre thriller.
After working at the early-warning centre in the small mountain-surrounded community of Geiranger, geologist Kristian Eikjord (Kristoffer Joner) is about to move his family to Stavanger where he has a new executive job.
At the last moment, however, abnormal geological readings cause him to turn back from the Stavanger ferry. Which is fortunate since his suspicions prove true when a horrifying mountain slide triggers a giant tsunami that engulfs the community.
While Eikjord’s last-minute rescue of his wife and son from a flooded hotel basement may be predictable it is still eminently scary and fine portrayals from unfamiliar actors and escalating suspenseful direction add to the plentiful nerve-scraping tension and thrills.
Review by Alan Frank
The Idol (PG)
Directed by Hany Abu-Assad
4/5
After his thrillers Omar and Paradise Now won awards, Palestinian director Hany Abu-Assad switches genres with this charming biopic of underdog Gaza-born singer Mohammed Assaf who, in finest feel-good tradition, went on to win the Middle Eastern television singing competition Arab Idol.
The narrative arc is simple and direct.
A 10-year-old Assaf (Qais Atallah) has a beautiful singing voice.
Motivated by his tomboy 12-year-old sister Nour (Hiba Atallah), Assaf and two young friends form an aspirant band with homemade musical instruments, acquire genuine musical instruments through dubious dealings and local fame follows — until Nour dies.
In 2012 teenager Assaf (Tawfeek Barhom) decides to enter the televised talent show Arab Idol — and makes it to Cairo with a fake passport and a stranger’s audition ticket and underdog-to-star fame follows.
Assad endows the sequences of the plucky youngsters’ rise to local fame among the chaos of Gaza with unexpectedly endearing Ealing Films-style charm.
Mohammed’s subsequent against-the-odds stardom is pleasingly charted if essentially in predictable Hollywood style — but definitely audience pleasing.
We’re told it’s “based on a true story” — usually meaning facts have been altered for a better storyline — here the caveat “certain scenes have been fictionalised” is added. Interesting — and honest too.
Review by Alan Frank
ANDY HEDGECOCK is astonished by a portrait of contemporary Greece, complete with political protest, organised crime and people trafficking, told from the point of view of — wait for it — runaway poultry
LEO BOIX, ANGUS REID and MARIA DUARTE review Night Stage, Two Women, Kim Novak’s Vertigo, and Fuze
GORDON PARSONS is blown away by a superb production of Rostand’s comedy of verbal panache and swordmanship
The Star's critics ANGUS REID, MICHAL BONCZA and MARIA DUARTE review Hot Milk, An Ordinary Case, Heads Of State, and Jurassic World Rebirth


