Tonight was my first experience of new Curzon Millbank cinema with a free screening of Fair Game and I will certainly not hurry back. One assumes a brand new cinema will be comfortable … but no. There is not much of an incline so a tall person can easily ruin your view of the screen, insufficient leg room, drinks holders are at the back of the chairs (whose stupid idea was that?) so you keep banging your knees and the seats are uncomfortable (made me feel like I was on an aeroplane). My biggest complaint was that the air conditioning was on full blast so I was freezing!
The cinema was just over 50% full and I was with sitting amongst p*ying customers (I felt like an intruder

) and had to endure trailers before the film.
There was a Q&A after the film with the screenwriters which was interesting but one of them held the microphone too far from his mouth and kept mumbling so I missed loads of what he said. Some insightful questions from the audience and I was surprised to learn it was a struggle to make this film with the extensive research required and the financial difficulties when they lost studio backing.
As for the film itself, it was OK but not brilliant. I was not aware of the story and it was well told with a good mixture of drama and thought provoking material. It was a bit slow to get going and the hand held camera movements become irksome after a while. I particularly enjoyed the use of news footage and original recordings which added authenticity. Penn's performance was excellent and Watts did well but I don’t think the movie explored her character enough. I’m not sure if it was intentional or not but she felt a bit robotic. The supporting case felt underused.
A shocking story successfully translated from script to screen with some astonishing revelations about US policy making. 7/10.