Film

What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases


Derek (2008)

Director: Isaac Julien

Average user rating
No reviews

Movie review

From Time Out New York

Derek Jarman, queer provocateur and one of British cinema’s most fearless directors of the past 40 years, rightfully receives the hagiographic treatment in Isaac Julien’s slender portrait. Julien, a friend and admirer of Jarman’s whose own calling-card project, Looking for Langston, was released the same year as Jarman’s The Last of England (1988), anchors his doc around a previously unaired interview that Derek coproducer Colin MacCabe conducted with Jarman in 1990, four years before his death. Most of Julien’s original material consists of Tilda Swinton, Jarman’s muse who made her screen debut in his Caravaggio (1986), solemnly wandering the streets of London and reading in voiceover segments of “Letter to an Angel,” her tribute to the director published in the Guardian in 2002.

But where angels go, trouble follows. On the page, Swinton’s elegy is moving; hearing her deliver phrases like “but our souls droop without the bittersweet touch of something we might recognize,” the effect is fruity and turgid. Julien even includes a few scenes of himself walking through his subject’s archives, affectedly flipping through pages of Jarmania. The presence of both the Oscar-winning actor and Julien doesn’t come across as necessarily narcissistic, but maddeningly aimless and distracting. With less of Swinton swanning around, we could have seen more clips from Jarman’s oeuvre, like his heady, underappreciated Wittgenstein.

Author: Melissa Anderson

Time Out New York Issue 662: June 5–June 11, 2008


What do you think?
Post your review now

clear rating
Min 1 star. Zero stars will be treated as unrated.

*mandatory fields


Cast & crew

Director: Isaac Julien

Duration: 76 mins

US Release: Jun 6 2008




Top Stories

Ridley Scott interview

Ridley Scott interview

Director Ridley Scott tells Cath Clarke why he's making a science fiction comeback

Cannes Film Festival 2012: half-time report

Cannes Film Festival 2012: half-time report

Dave Calhoun reports on the hits, misses and a shocking new masterpiece from Michael Haneke

Wes Anderson interview

Wes Anderson interview

Cath Clarke talks to the director of Cannes's opening film

Open-air movies in London

Open-air movies in London

Cath Clarke rounds up this summer's crop of outdoor film screenings

The 100 best French films

The 100 best French films

In honour of Cannes, we reveal the best French films of all time

Ken Loach interview

Ken Loach interview

Ken Loach talks to us about his Cannes Film Festival entry 'The Angels' Share'