The Scotsman

ALSO SHOWING

- General release

Nope (15) JJJJ

Nope, the latest film from Jordan Peele, begins with a scene that could have come out of a particular­ly brutal prequel to The Planet of the Apes. It’s the late 1990s and a sitcom about a family with a pet chimp turns bloody on set when its primate star attacks the cast. We see almost nothing, but the implicit revolt of an exploited animal offers something of a clue to the larger themes teased out by Peele as he mashes together several genres within a Twilight Zone-esque premise set on the fringes of the movie industry.

That setting isn’t random. After the garbled Us saw Peele struggle to weave a multitude of provocativ­e ideas into a halfway coherent story, Nope seems intent on taking us on a full-blown cinematic ride, one with an intriguing meta quality that pulls the curtain back on the cost such rides sometimes entail.

Reuniting with Peele for the first time since Get Out, Oscarwinne­r Daniel Kaluuya stars as OJ Haywood, the proprietor of a ranch and horsewrang­ling business that he’s recently inherited from his father (Keith David). Along with his sister, Emerald (Keke Palmer), they supply horses for films, TV shows and commercial­s, but as the film opens the business is struggling and there have been weird goings-on at the ranch, starting with their father’s mysterious death six months earlier and continuing with power outages and disappeari­ng livestock. Then there’s the strange light show coming from the neighbouri­ng ranch...

If this sounds cryptic that’s partly the design of the movie, even if the trailer gives away a chunk of the puzzle by revealing the specific sub-genre Nope is operating in. No spoilers here, but that’s also a bit of a ruse since Nope’s success doesn’t hinge on keeping its first big reveal a secret. Indeed, the goofy jump-scares and jokey dialogue that initially seem to let the air out of the film after the wonderfull­y creepy opening act starts to feel more like a way for Peele

to acknowledg­e his concept's more shopworn aspects so he can skip past all the obvious comparison­s to Spielberg and M Night Shyamalan and get on with telling the story he wants to tell.

Just what that story is, is a little harder to nail down. It builds up an impressive head of steam as an increasing­ly tense sci-fi horror spectacle, but it also seems to be a movie about the power of looking and, especially, the power a camera has to both capture reality and erase it. Nope’s second half revolves around the characters’ own attempts to document the mystery at its heart on film, an endeavour fraught with violence and danger. What follows isn’t some didactic message movie, though, but a sly revolt against the oppressive­ness of that history.

Peele has brilliantl­y repurposed the iconograph­y of some of Hollywood’s most beloved genres to create a broad-appeal blockbuste­r with a different point of view. Movies can look like this too, Nope seems to be saying. Get used to it.

General release

Where is Anne Frank (PG) JJJJ

As you might expect from a film entitled Where is Anne Frank, oppression is also one of the big themes running through this intriguing animated retelling of the Anne Frank story.

Directed by Waltz with Bashir's Ari Folman, and pitched at YA audiences, it’s built around a fantastica­l conceit in which Kitty – the imaginary friend to whom Anne addressed her diary – comes to life, steals the diary and ends up wandering around modern day Amsterdam, oblivious to Anne's fate.

What she finds instead is a city where refugees are being denied sanctuary yet Anne is deified, something Folman uses to make blunt but effective points about the lessons of her young life being forgotten by an adult world too concerned with her value as a tourist attraction.

 ?? ?? Daniel Kaluuya as horse trainer OJ in Jordan Peele’s Nope
Daniel Kaluuya as horse trainer OJ in Jordan Peele’s Nope

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