Cyprus Today

Review of the latest releases

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NIGHTMARE ALLEY

(15, 150 mins) Thriller/Romance. Bradley Cooper, Cate Blanchett, Toni Collette, Willem Dafoe, Richard Jenkins, Rooney Mara, Ron Perlman, David Strathairn, Mark Povinelli, Holt McCallany. Director: Guillermo del Toro. Showing now in UK & Ireland cinemas

IN THE misery-soaked opening section of Guillermo del Toro’s noir thriller, adapted by the Oscar-winning Mexican director and Kim Morgan from William Lindsay Gresham’s 1946 novel, a booze-sodden, retired mentalist warns the slippery anti-hero to steer clear of clairvoyan­ce.

“No good comes out of a spook show,” he blathers, hungover.

His lamentable warning falls on deaf ears, on screen and off.

The charlatan protagonis­t falsely communes with the dead to exploit paying customers’ grief and del Toro tethers a starry cast, including Bradley Cooper, Cate Blanchett, Toni

Collette and Willem Dafoe, to a tawdry tale of duplicity and avarice that runs dry of tension before the tangled plot enters its third languid hour.

This Nightmare Alley doesn’t have to jump through censorship hoops like the 1947 film version headlining Tyrone Power as the seedy carnival worker destined for an almighty fall from grace.

Here, a teasing glimpse of full-frontal male nudity in a steaming bathtub and some suggestive soaping secure a 15 certificat­e almost as much as spurts of stomach-churning violence including an inglorious end for a live fowl and a human skull crushed in queasy closeup.

Fantastica­l, otherworld­ly elements, a signature of del Toro’s earlier work including Pan’s Labyrinth and The Shape Of Water, are all smoke and mirrors and the con feels like it may be on us to muster concern for underwritt­en doomed characters as that headless chicken comes home to roost.

Cooper lacks menace and is, to quote Collette’s bogus medium, simply “easy on the eyes, honey”.

Thankfully, Blanchett slinks delectably through the second half as a femme fatale psychologi­st, who has accumulate­d enough personal secrets about her clientele to keep herself in velvet capes until the soft lighting dims.

Stanton Carlisle (Cooper) joins a carnival run by Clem Hoatley (Dafoe) and learns tricks of the trade from fading double act Zeena and Pete Krumbein (Collette, David Strathairn).

The newcomer beguiles naive showgirl Molly Cahill (Rooney Mara) and the lovebirds run away from Clem, and the protection of strong man Bruno (Ron Perlman), to establish themselves as a speciality act at the Copacabana club in Buffalo, New York.

A diabolical deception involving Dr Lilith Ritter (Blanchett) and her former patient, powerful industrial­ist Ezra Grindle (Richard Jenkins), is a swindle too far for Stanton.

“If your foot slips, we both fall,” Lilith sternly reminds the chancer.

Nightmare Alley seduces the eyes with glorious production and costume design but the heart goes a-wanting, despite simmering sexual tension between Cooper and Blanchett (“I know you’re no good. I know that because neither am I!”)

Pacing is pedestrian and only shifts out of first gear in a breathless closing act that serves its just desserts chilled and with a grimace.

BOLSHOI BALLET LIVE: JEWELS (Certificat­e TBC, 145 mins)

Showing now in UK & Ireland selected cinemas

A LIVE broadcast of George Balanchine’s jeweltheme­d triptych — Emeralds, Rubies and Diamonds — set to the music of Faure, Stravinsky and Tchaikovsk­y respective­ly, performed on the stage of the historic Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow.

Music director Pavel Sorokin brings each colour-coded piece vividly to life with the help of set designer Alyona Pikalova and costume designer Elena Zaitseva.

Together, they evoke the elegance of Paris, the relentless energy of New York and the imperial splendour of St Petersburg.

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