"The Girl With All The Gifts" / "Wonderman
It goes without saying that filmmakers’ takes on the "Zombie
Apocalypse", vary widely, from the cheap and nasty to the broadly comical,
blatantly political and gravely sophisticated. Colm McCarthy’s "The Girl With All The Gifts" (written
by Mike Carey, adapting his own novel) falls into the latter category, although
many of the familiar tropes are securely in place – head-splattering gunshots, desolated
urban landscapes, spurious scientific explanations etc.
The focus, however, is on the eerily centred child, Melanie, wonderfully
played by Sennia Nanua, whom we first encounter in a secure research facility,
along with dozens of other young virus-carriers; as well as Glenn Close’s ruthless scientist, Paddy Considine’s
hard-assed guard/soldier and Gemma Arterton as her much-loved teacher, Miss
Justineau. Needless to say, they soon find themselves on the road, in search of
salvation.
Were it not for the robust language, and the customarily ridiculous
level of gruesomeness, this might almost be a children’s film, since Melanie is
the primary heroine/villain, and it is the discovery of other children amongst
the zombified (or, rather, fungus-infected) hordes which leads the narrative
into unexpected territory. McCarthy
makes good use of his transformed locations (including, apparently, my home
town of Stoke-On-Trent, which will have needed little work done), and there are
even hints of dark humour as Considine’s Sgt Parks gradually rediscovers his
humanity.
The heart of the piece, though, is the relationship between Melanie and
Miss Justineau, which is beautifully handled; and it is this which gives "The Girl With All The Gifts" the
edge over most entries in this over-subscribed genre.
"The Girl With All The Gifts" |
A more playful eeriness was, of course, the hallmark of the
work of Roald Dahl, whose centenary was celebrated in Cardiff, the town of his
birth, recently. The highlight was the huge “City Of The Unexpected” extravaganza, which saw dozens of Dahl-themed
characters and vignettes taking over the city-centre; although the excellent weather
led to vast crowds, which were largely unmarshalled. A more contained and satisfying
spectacle was “Wonderman”,
a show at the newly-opened Tramshed
venue, in which Gagglebabble
conflated several of Dahl’s sinister stories for adults, in their unique gig-theatre
style. A great success, despite a few sound problems.
A Giant Peach at Cardiff Castle |
Labels: british theatre guide, cardiff, cinema, film, national theatre wales, review, roald dahl, theatre, zombies
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