Martin Edwards's Blog, page 282

August 29, 2010

Moon: review


Moon is an interesting science-fiction thriller from last year, directed by Duncan Jones – who turns out to be Zowie Bowie, son of the legendary David (who wrote that great song 'Life on Mars', of course.) The film stars Sam Rockwell as Sam Bell, while the marvellous Kevin Spacey voices 'Gerty', Sam's robotic computer sidekick.

Sam works for Lunar Industries, a company apparently doing good work for the climate, and is engaged on a three-year contract to work in splendid isolation (apart from ...

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Published on August 29, 2010 19:02

August 28, 2010

Dashiell Hammett


I like this blog to range widely in the crime genre, and to cover 'forgotten' books and authors as well as the big names. One of the stars whose name I've rarely mentioned is Dashiell Hammett, but that isn't because I don't admire his work. On the contrary.

I've read, I think, all his books, and I have to say that one I definitely enjoyed was The Dain Curse, which is sometimes dismissed by critics as a bit of a mess (perhaps the reason for this is that it was originally written for 'The Black ...

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Published on August 28, 2010 18:26

August 27, 2010

The Edukators


Over the lifetime of this blog, there have been a few typos, but The Edukators is not one of them - nor is it a dig at declining educational standards. This is a German language film, which I watched with the benefit of sub-titles. It was a hit at the Cannes Film Festival and is directed by Hans Weingartner.

The set-up is intriguing: the film opens with a wealthy family returning home to find that their lovely house has been turned upside down, and a message has been left for them by the...

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Published on August 27, 2010 16:07

August 26, 2010

Forgotten Book - The Scarf


I've mentioned before the guilty pleasure I take from the twisty mysteries of Francis Durbridge, and my latest contribution to Patti Abbott's series of Forgotten Books is his 1960 book, The Scarf. I read it immediately after the new Kate Atkinson, and of course Atkinson is a much finer literary stylist than Durbridge. But he really could tell a story.

This isn't a Paul Temple thriller – the detective work is done by Detective Inspector Harry Yates of the Hertfordshire CID, a rather...

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Published on August 26, 2010 18:57

August 25, 2010

Forgotten Music - Ask Yoursefl Why


My choice this month for Scott Parker's Forgotten Music series is a film song that I fell in love with in my teens. It's written by the brilliant French composer Michel Legrand, with lyrics by the accomplished duo Marilyn and Alan Bergman (whose more famous songs include 'The Windmills of Your Mind' and 'You Don't Bring Me Flowers'.)

This song was written for a movie called La Piscine, about which unfortunately I know nothing. The vocals were done by Sally Stevens, and although Barbra...

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Published on August 25, 2010 16:54

August 24, 2010

Adrian Magson


I was very pleased the other day to receive a review copy of Adrian Magson's new novel, Death on the Marais. It's the first in a new series set in France and featuring Inspector Lucas Rocco, and it's due to be published by Allison & Busby (who also publish my Lake District Mysteries) on 6 September. I gather that a follow-up title is due to appear in 2011.

In this story, set in 1963, Rocco discovers the body of a murdered woman – in a military cemetery and wearing a Gestapo uniform. It's an...

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Published on August 24, 2010 17:50

August 23, 2010

The Longevity of Detective Fiction


An interesting feature of Rupert Penny's The Talkative Policeman, which I mentioned the other day, was his introductory note, in which he expounds on what he sees as the lack of longevity of the detective story: 'The detective shall find his grave at last as surely as the lifeless flesh he theorised upon.'

He identifies Holmes as the sole exception to this: he and Watson 'are, first and foremost, characters, and the rest is incidental. At a guess, it is not impossible that Lord Peter Wimsey...

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Published on August 23, 2010 17:47

August 22, 2010

Gaslight


Patrick Hamilton was surely one of the most interesting British writers of the first half of the last century, and it has often surprised me that, for all the critical interest in the man and his work (there are two excellent biographies, plus an interesting memoir by his brother Bruce, himself a crime novelist of some distinction), Hamilton is seldom mentioned in histories of British crime fiction. Yet he is an important figure.

One of his greatest successes was the play Gaslight, which in...

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Published on August 22, 2010 19:20

August 21, 2010

John Humble and the Hoax Ripper Tapes

When I lived in Leeds for a couple of years in the 70s, the Yorkshire Ripper was at work, and my abiding memory is of how the serial killings terrified so many people, and interfered with the lives of so many women who were afraid to walk some of the city's streets. It was a grim time, and there was real cause for celebration when, at long last, the police finally caught Peter Sutcliffe.

Arguably, his arrest was delayed by the hoax letters and tapes sent to the police and which set them off...

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Published on August 21, 2010 19:16

August 20, 2010

Diva: movie review


More than 25 years ago I watched the cult movie Diva, a French language film made in 1981. With the passage of time, I'd forgotten the details of the story-line, but I did at least recall that I'd rather enjoyed it, so I decided to give it another go.

I'm glad I did. It's a gorgeously made film, and it has a complicated plot, with perhaps too many turns for plausibility. This isn't, first and foremost, a realistic film, but rather a movie that is stylish and studded with memorable scenes and s...

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Published on August 20, 2010 19:56