Issue 41 / 2012
www.guestlist.netFILM 23 7
THE DARK
The quality of Christopher Nolan's CV is unrivalled by almost all of his peers, and the third installment in his superlative Batman series can very proudly takes it's place next to Inception and The Dark Knight as one of the London- born directors finest pictures. Tough, taut and ruthlessly engaging, The Dark Knight Rises sees Christian Bale don the Batsuit for what could very well be the
It seems that Christopher Nolan has finished out his time with this icon in the only way he could based on where it began.
KNIGHT RISES 20th July
last time as the treacherous Bane drags the caped crusader out of retirement. The stakes are huge as Bane threatens to destroy Gotham City, and Anne Hathaway isn't
matters as the rather kickass Catwoman. A suitably epic conclusion to one of the most entertaining franchises in recent memory.
afraid to complicate
ELECTRICK CHILDREN
First-time director Rebecca Thomas's ELECTRICK CHILDREN is an indie coming-of-age tale with a twist. It follows Mormon virgin Rachel (Julia Garner), who one day finds herself inex- plicably pregnant after listening to a forbidden tape of The Nerves' Hanging on the Telephone. Facing a forced marriage, she hits the road in search of the singer on the tape, con- vinced he has made her pregnant through music. Lost in Las
Director: Rebecca Thomas. Starring: Julia Garner, Rory Culkin, Bill Sage, Billy Zane, Liam Aiken. USA 2012. 95 mins.
Vegas, she falls in with a bunch of slacker skaters led by Clyde (Rory Culkin). Rachel finds herself entering a very different new world in this thoroughly entertaining road trip played out to the coolest soundtrack you'll hear this summer.