LEE (2024)


Remove lens cap………..

This is the story of famed photographer, Lee Smith who went from a successful career as a model to a photographer who took some of the most powerful and vital pictures for Vogue during World War 2.
We are taken through Smith’s transition from model and bohemian artist to her need to help wth the war effort through her striking photography.

Photography has always been one of my one passions, the power and impact of the still image can never be overstated. The photographs Lee captured at the end of WW2 are a poignant. testament to the brutality, the fragility and the resilience of life. These images serve not only to remind us but as enduring records of our shared history. Yet, despite the countless times we are confronted with these reflections of our past, we often turn a blind eye, ignoring their importance.
Lest We Forget.
Nearly 80 years has passed since the end of World War 2 and still, atrocities continue. What is wrong with us? Are we so blind or we are predisposed to destruction, killing, savagery and unspeakable cruelty.

Where is our collective empathy? We feel it when we see these haunting images of violence and suffering, and that is why we need stories like Lee’s. 

The Bohemian years.
Kate Winslet as Lee Smith in Lee
The Bohemian years.
Kate Winslet as Lee Smith in Lee

What drives someone to willingly put themselves in harm’s way to capture a fleeting moment? For Lee Smith, it was a desire to be useful. A gifted photographer, who was living in London in 1945, and felt compelled to contribute in some meaningful way. Determined to make a difference, she approached Vogue with a proposal: to travel to the front lines and document the war’s unfolding events through her lens. As expected, the idea was initially dismissed—it was a man’s world, and assignments like this rarely went to women. But perseverance can achieve remarkable things, and Lee refused to back down. Eventually, her persistence paid off, and she made her way to Germany, where she captured on film the final days of World War II.

Alex Garland’s recent Civil War is also about reportage, with the photographers being non-biased, non-partisan, simply determined to capture an honest record of the events unfolding. 

War photographers are just that. Witnesses.
They venture into places most people would avoid at all costs, even soldiers if given a choice, to take pictures, to remember, to make a record, to bear witness.

Picture this.
Kate Winslet as Lee Smith in Lee
Picture this.
Kate Winslet as Lee Smith in Lee

Kate Winslet is truly a national treasure and it seems another Oscar nod could be on the horizon for the great actress. She is consistently brilliant, always bringing believability and honesty to her work. She never fails to imbue her characters with three dimensions, a true humanity that always feels layered and lived in.

The rest of the cast are, without exception, fabulous. Alexander Skarsgard shines as Roland, Lee’s great love, while Josh O’ Connor delivers a gentle and compelling performance as Antony who interviews Lee in her later years. Andy Samberg takes on the role of  David Scherman, Lee’s fellow photographer and friend,  and brings his usual charm to the role. Marion Cotillard as her friend, Solange with grace and elegance and the rising French star, Noemie Merlant impresses as Nusch Eluard. Special mentions go to Samuel Barnett and Andrea Riseborough as Audrey Withers and Cecil Beaton of Vogue London respectively, who both have a blast with their character work.

The film is based on a 1995 biography, The Lives of Lee Miller and the mighty Alexandre Desplat is on soundtrack duties, again delivering a beautiful score.

The director, Ellen Kuras makes her feature film debut with confidence and clarity. She has been in the film business for a while primarily working as a cinematographer for the likes of Spike Lee (on He Got Game, Summer of Sam and Bamboozled), Ted Demme (on Blow), Jim Jarmusch (on Coffee and Cigarettes) and Michel Gondry (on both Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Be Kind Rewind). She had previously worked with Kate Winslet on Eternal Sunshine and long term associations can lead to great trust and a shorthand that have the potential to create special works.

The film took 8 years to make. Years ago Ellen Kuras read a book about Lee Smith and sent it to Winslet. Sometime later when Winslet started developing a movie project about Smith she asked Kuras to direct it and now the world gets to know and see who the talented and brave Lee Smith was.
And so they should.
This is an important film about standing up for something honourable.
We all need a bit of this in our lives.

Replace lens cap…..

See it now at a cinema near you.

116 Minutes

EMILY (2022)

Emily film poster


Great art can come from or be springboarded by great heart-break. That’s the premise that Australian actor Frances O’ Connor delivers in her directorial debut in this semi-fictional, partly dramatised version of the last few years in the life of the great English writer, Emily Brontë.

Having seen the film I thought it time to actually read Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights and so the next day I bought it from my favourite local bookshop, The Best Little Bookshop in Town (if you’re ever in Cronulla, Sydney, Australia please check it out, it’s a great bookshop) and I am enjoying it so far. I love it when one medium takes me to another.

Oliver Jackson-Cohen and Emma Mackey in Emily.

Oliver Jackson-Cohen and Emma Mackey in Emily.

This film focusses on Emily and is held together brilliantly by an amazing central performance by Emma Mackey, her portrayal traverses the emotional landscape with depth and daring. Also starring Oliver Jackson-Cohen as William Weightman who Emily becomes involved with, Amelia Gething playing her younger sister Anne Brontë, Alexandra Dowling as older sister Charlotte, Fionn Whitehead as brother Bramwell, the mighty Adrian Dunbar (“Mother of God”) as the father, Patric and Gemma Jones as Aunt Branwell. Everyone is committed, talented and all give great performances. Being directed by an actor definitely helps the process.

Adrian Dunbar, Gemma Jones, Emma Mackey and Amelia Gethin in Emily

Abel Korzeniowski musically scores the film beautifully, at times wistful and others heart wrenchingly so. 

What is it with violins and their ability to connect to and express the feelings and emotions of the heart? Is there an instrument that does specifically that any better? Think of Itzhak Perlman’s playing on John William’s soundtrack to Schindler’s List. Heartbreaking.

The line is fine. Too much and it spoils, too little and it fails to garner an emotional response but just right….. Korzeniowski treads the line with grace and beauty.

The Brontë sisters.

The Brontë sisters.

Emily is known in town as ‘the strange one’ as her thinking lies outside the box and this is ultimately where her genius comes from. She writes poems that are lauded by her brother Branwell, her sisters and the local curate. Her father doesn’t know what to do with her and Emily becomes a teacher at a school before eventually finding it all too much and returning to the family home. She falls in love with the local Curate, William who is filled with confusion, and inner conflict and thus there the drama lies.

Deftly written and directed by Frances O’ Connor it tells of Emily’s short but passionate life utilising known events and imagined situations to dramatise her life.

Brilliant, moving and poetic this is a worthy addition to the mythology and history of the Brontës.
See it.