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Mr Nice (2010)
Director: Bernard Rose
Movie review
From Time Out London
Bernard Rose’s career has included urban horror (‘Candyman’), historical biopic (‘Immortal Beloved’) and Hollywood satire (‘Ivansxtc’). Perhaps the eclecticism of Howard Marks’s life appealed: the UK’s most notorious fugitive dope smuggler-turned-counterculture mascot has transgressed legal, territorial, social and ethical boundaries for decades. Even so, this adaptation of Marks’s autobiography – a student staple throughout the land – struggles to capture the sheer breadth of his life.From the Welsh Valleys to Oxford’s spires, European autobahns to Afghan poppy fields, MI6 contacts to IRA comrades – Rose’s script can’t be accused of staying put, even if it leaves out the East End gangsters and Filipino brothels of the book. And you can understand why he opts to make his hero the eye of this storm, eschewing Marks’s series of aliases for a more consistent persona. But Rhys Ifans’s performance is perhaps too consistent: whether playing young or middle aged, he maintains a lopsided, mischievous ease.
Rather than riotous picaresque, the result is more like a meandering shaggy dog story. Rose’s gimmicks have limited success: Marks’s pre-dope life is in black and white, and he’s often interpolated, Forrest Gump style, into archive. Any gains in authenticity, however, are countered by the technique’s often lacklustre execution. There’s diverting support from David Thewlis, who gives IRA captain and Marks accomplice Jim McCann a sense of knockabout danger; Chloe Sevigny, like most biopic WAGs, has little to do but fret as Howard’s partner, and does so in a dodgy English accent.
Author: Ben Walters
Time Out London Issue 2094: 7 - 13 October, 2010
User reviews of this film
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- Live From ... said...
- Posted on Oct 29 2010 22:15 Have to disagree with the main review. I found this an endearing portrait of an interesting man. It's told a little tongue in cheek, and is not expected to be taken too seriously, you can definitely smell a few porkies. I loved the depiction of the period - this film spans the globe and never seems to feel like your on a set, or there's a car or phonebox out of place. Rhys Ifans meets the role of his destiny with aplomb, but it is right that he doesn't suit the younger Marks. I can understand if Jim McCann has a few issues with the portrayal, but David Thewlis is excellent. Overall loved it, but I was expecting to.
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- Paul said...
- Posted on Oct 12 2010 22:47 Better than expected and a fun story of perhaps a past and forgotten world. More sympathetic towards Howard now than before.
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- MagicShroom said...
- Posted on Oct 07 2010 12:17 I liked this film - very different and a good laugh.
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Cast & crew
Director: Bernard Rose
Cast: Rhys Ifans, Chloë Sevigny, David Thewlis
Genre(s): Comedy
Rated: 18
Duration: 121 mins
UK Release: Oct 8 2010
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