SIN Volume 21 Issue 9

Page 26

26  A RT S & E N T E RTAIN M EN T

What’s on in Galway? »» February 18 - March 2 «« By Sarah Gill Blowing off some steam is part and parcel of every student’s weekly schedule and it’s important to spend your time outside the library making some quality memories. Without further ado, let’s get planning the next fortnight...

GROOVY TUESDAY at Massimo - Every Tuesday Having quickly become a staple of every student’s college week, I would be shocked if you haven’t been to Groovy Tuesday yet. Bop along to one of the Westend’s very best boozers Massimo, where the dancefloor is always full and the tunes are always pumping.

SIN Vol. 21 Issue 09

FILM REVIEW: 1917 Alice O’Donnell It seems that as long as there have been wars, there has been the very human reaction to record and recreate moments in memory. From Herodotus’ The Humanities, which described the 5th century BC Greco-Persian wars, to the immeasurable number of modernday books, films and music that are devoted to wars, the history of the arts is seemingly based on the dramatization, commemoration and remembrance of past battles.

action of the film. There are no cuts, no sudden scene changes; we are invited to see the war as these two young soldiers do, to experience the shock and horror without the comforting presence of editing cuts. With a budget of $100 million, the realism of the film is outstanding. In contrast to previous war films, such as the Rambo franchise (1982 – 2019) and Pearl Harbor (2001), which relied heavily on the newly developing CGI to create the chaos of war, the environment of 1917 is set nearly entirely in the real world, with

fluctuates with the levels of tension the audience feels. After some particularly tense few minutes, the audience are given a brief reprieve with the knowledge the characters are safe for the time being. Sam Mendes skillfully manages to not just maintain, but increase the audience’s fears for the two protagonists, while simultaneously not tiring or boring the audience over the two hours. Of course, part of this feat is thanks to the actors. George MacKay and DeanCharles Chapman both shine as young men thrown into the unimaginable,

JOE ROONEY AND PAT MCDONNELL at Róisín Dubh - Friday, 21 Feb Perhaps the names Fr Damo and Eoin McLove will ring a bell? The stars of the legendary TedFest will be taking their comedic stylings to the Róisín for a night full of laughs. If you’re particularly interested, the duo will be hosting a Fr Ted table quiz in Massimo the night prior where I’m sure plenty more laughs will be had.

Image: thisisgalway.ie

MOVIE BUFF QUIZ NIGHT at The Skeff - Thursday, 27 Feb Everyone loves a table quiz - don’t even try to deny it. If you consider yourself something of a film buff, now’s the chance to prove it. With questions on cult classics, modern favourites and old-school Hollywood - there’s something from every genre. Proceeds go to a great cause, so it’s completely worth-while.

Image: The Skeff Late Bar & Kitchen via Facebook

FLEA STYLE MARKET at Galway Arts Centre - Saturday, 29 Feb For all the thrift lovers and sustainable fashion fanatics, Flea Style Market is back and ready for their first market of the year. If you fancy giving your wardrobe a little more individuality, these stalls are jammed full of unique and original pieces.

With the last few years being a centenary of the First World War, a remembrance of the nearly 10 million killed soldiers and widespread devastation for both nature and people, it seems hardly surprisingly that there has been an extra-large volume of works acting out the events of a war which engulfed not only Europe, but the wider world. In this torrent of works (including the biographical Testament of Youth (2014), a remake of Journey’s End (2017) and the science fiction Wonder Women (2017)), it may seem an impossible task for any film maker to find a new angle to depict and view The Great War from. Yet, Sam Mendes, director, producer and writer of 1917, manages to do just that. The film follows a day in the lives of two young English soldiers in the midst of The Great War, Schofield and Blake, who are tasked with the mission to travel through enemy territory in order to stop an attack which will cost thousands of lives. The entire premise of the film already introduces the audience to a rarely seen element of a war-film; fighting to stop the fighting. The film is shot in order to look like it is nearly all one take – the effect is to draw and captivate the audience in the

The film follows a day in the lives of two young English soldiers in the midst of The Great War, Schofield and Blake, who are tasked with the mission to travel through enemy territory in order to stop an attack which will cost thousands of lives. filming locations across Britain being transformed into lunar-esque No-Man’s Land. Without spoiling the film, there is a particular standout presentation of a ruined village illuminated only by the light of dying flares. Scenes such as these, along with ones of abandoned trenches and the desolation of No-Man’s Land are juxtaposed with scenery of great natural beauty, such as orchards and rolling fresh fields. What makes war films like this so rare and noteworthy is that scenes such as these allows the audience to truly grasp how utterly incomprehensible life must have been like for soldiers and civilians in the grip of the war, trapped in a bare and dead landscape. The scenery is well wound up within the plot, and in a similar manner to the juxtapositioning of scenery, the plot too

while a wide cast of famous actors support them, from Andrew Scott to Benedict Cumberbatch to Colin Firth, each themselves only receiving a few minutes of screen time, yet still managing to not only progress the plot, but present individual men trying to do their best in madness. 1917 is currently sweeping the awards (going as far as even having its own “accolades received” Wikipedia page!), and despite still being in cinema, has nearly tripled its original budget. After watching the film, it’s very clear why, with a combination of filmmaking, writing, acting, and locations all endorsing and profiting off each other to create a truly magnificent film. To summarise this review to a few words - I really really liked 1917.


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Articles inside

Travel Junkie: Boston

8min
pages 22-23

Club Spotlight: NUI Galway Athletics Club

9min
page 30

Galway overcome Donegal in Letterkenny showdown

6min
page 29

Film review: The Lighthouse

7min
page 25

Competition: WIN two Clubs’ Ball Tickets

3min
pages 31-32

NUI Galway take home bronze at swimming intervarsities

5min
page 28

The underrated Netflix series most of our friends don’t want to watch

8min
page 24

What’s on in Galway? February 18 - March 2

5min
pages 26-27

The future of cash

18min
pages 12-13

Miss Americana: The Beauty Evolution of Taylor Swift

5min
page 20

2020 Grammy Awards: Pop Princesses Dominate the Style Stakes on Music’s Biggest Night

2min
page 19

Styled by the Show: Why Gossip Girl’s Vanessa Abrams is an underrated style guru

2min
page 21

My Week Without Makeup: 7 Days with My Naked Skin

7min
page 18

Sinn Féin Surge not the end of the two-party system; it’s been gone for decades

5min
page 15

Not your typical Cinderella story

9min
page 14

Why Flirt FM needs more support

9min
pages 16-17

Nominations set to open for Full Time SU Roles

7min
page 4

Good Samaritan aims to aid students’ mental health with free hot meals

8min
page 9

Campus Cairde: Gideon Oluniran

5min
page 10

Epilepsy & Me

7min
page 11

Today FM’s Fergal D’Arcy visits NUI Galway and Flirt FM

5min
page 6

NUI Galway updates students on Coronavirus

6min
page 8

Holocaust survivor gives talk at NUI Galway

6min
page 5

NUI Galway students in action: Continuous efforts made to prevent Galway coast from plastic debris

2min
page 7
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