Showing posts with label Tin Star. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tin Star. Show all posts

Friday, 12 April 2019

Lately I've been watching....


Lots of star ratings and recommendations (or not, in a couple of cases!) of films and TV series I've been watching over the past couple of months, all with trailers.  Most are on Netflix or Amazon Prime, with one or two cinema/network TV iplayer/hulu.  Enjoy!


Film: Vice

Christian Bale stars as Dick Cheney - a film about his life.  Amy Adams plays his wife.  Uncovers oodles of political murk, and will probably confirm much that you might have suspected about the reasons behind the war in Iraq, and the choice of George W Bush for president.  Brilliant, don't miss it; so good I wanted to watch it again the minute it had finished.

5 stars plus ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐




Film: The Mule

Clint Eastwood stars as an grumpy old florist, squeezed out of business by the internet, who is persuaded to work for the Mexican cartel as a drug mule.  Really enjoyed this, and Clint has still totally got it; he's really funny, and it's a great plot.

5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐




Series: Dirty John

Stars Connie Britton (Nashville), Eric Bana, Juno Temple (Vinyl) and Julia Garner (Ozark) - based on a true story, about a middle-aged interior designer who meets a psycho via internet dating.  Excellent stuff, I was engrossed!  And there's a documentary, about the real people.

5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐



Film: The Inventor

I was keen to watch this after seeing Elizabeth Holmes talked about in a programme about the narcissistic personality - it's a documentary about a start-up that was based on ludicrous optimism, catchy phrases and fraud.  Holmes tricked the medical and journalistic world and many generous investors into believing she had made massive steps in revolutionising the early detection of illness, based on quick and easy blood testing.  Eventually, her falsehoods were uncovered by two whistleblowers.  Riveting!

5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐




Series: The Act

I just had to watch this after seeing a documentary about Dee Dee Blanchard and her daughter Gypsy, and the worst case of Munchausen's Syndrome by Proxy that I have ever heard of.  Patricia Arquette plays the deranged Dee Dee, so well.  At the moment I've only seen 3 episodes of the 5 that have been on (I believe there are 8 or 10), but it's completely gripping, as Gypsy begins to realise that she is not as ill as her mother has made out - and so does one doctor.

5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ so far!




Series: Vanity Fair

Really enjoyed this!  William Makepeace Thackeray's classic, set in the time of the Napoleonic Wars, about the life of the 'lively' Becky Sharp, a woman born before her time, and society's conventions.  Stars Olivia Cooke, Frances de la Tour, Martin Clunes, Tom Bateman, with Michael Palin as Thackeray.  Oddly, it uses modern music for the titles and credits, and it totally works; I usually hate that sort of thing.  My only complaint is that it sometimes felt a little rushed; I spoke to someone who has read it, who said that so much was hardly touched on.  It perhaps needed 10 episodes rather than 8.  But it's very good, and made me feel ashamed of myself for never having read it.  This will soon be remedied.

4.5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐




Series:True Detective

3rd season in the show, starring Marshalala Ali and Stephen Dorff, with a three-time zone plot, about a missing child.  Compelling, unpredictable, but really sad; less for the family than the two detectives, whose lives the case changed.  Not quite as brilliant as the first season of this series, but better than the second.  Ali's character path is heartbreaking.

5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐





Film: The House that Jack Built

Serial killer film starring Matt Dillon.  Very good, but exceptionally brutal.  If you don't mind a high level of violence, you'll love it.

4.5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐



Series: Tin Star

Second season of this; Tim Roth is terrific as a former undercover cop still involved with some seriously dangerous people, but without him it would have been a bit forgettable.  Much of it set in an Ammonite community, with which his daughter becomes involved.  Also stars Christina Hendricks (Mad Men), of whom I am a fan.  Definitely worth watching, though not as good as Season 1.

4 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐



Series: Hanna

Joel Kinnaman and Mireille Enos (both The Killing) star, with newcomer Esme Creed-Miles as Hanna, a girl who was given over to a weird eugenics project at birth.  Joel Kinnaman saves her, and the chase is on.  Very good, a tiny bit too unfeasible at times, but hey.  I still really enjoyed it, and it's nicely set up for Season 2 while having a satisfactory though sad ending.

4.5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐



Series: Project Blue Book

Set in the 1950s, about Dr Allen Hynek, played by the always-fab Aiden Gillen, about the real life studies into UFOs - Project Blue Book.  It was good, and very interesting indeed, particularly the way in which information was given to the public.  I'll watch the next season, but I didn't find it terrifically memorable.  I liked it, but that's all.

4 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐



Film: The Dirt

Biopic of Mötley Crüe, taken from their collaborative autobiography.  Fun, and highly entertaining, but far too schmaltzy; watching this, knowing nothing about them, one might get the impression that, for instance, Tommy Lee was an unlucky in love, lovable goofball who adored his parents, and that's all.  A more realistic look at the history of the band might have been better.  The actors were great, though.

4 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐



Film: Knowing

Stars Nicholas Cage.  Starts in the late 1950s, in which some schoolchildren make a time capsule to be opened in the present day.  One child leaves a series of prophecies that, as Cage discovers, have been coming true ever since.  Supernatural, horror, suspense - I liked it a lot.

4.5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐




Film: Her Smell

Elisabeth Moss (Mad Men, Top of the Lake), who I love, stars as the broken down star of a once huge but fading 3-girl rock/punk band.  She is excellent, as ever, and the first half of the film, in which her breakdown is illustrated so brilliantly, was brilliant and cringe-makingly believeable, but I was less impressed by the second half (recovery, coming back to life) - I thought it ended in a bit too much of an HEA sort of way, and wasn't as edgy as the first half.

4 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐



Series: Love

In its third season, it's a romantic comedy set in LA, totally not my usual thing, but I've been enjoying it.  It's very current and witty, if you can get past the two main characters being really irritating (the female, Mickey, is horrible) and saying 'cool' every five minutes.  That sounds as if I should hate it, but it's surprisingly good.  I like watching a couple of episodes before I go to sleep at night, or if I can't be bothered with anything heavy.

4 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐





Film: Aquaman

4 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Ludicrous fantasy about a man who is half human, half Atlantean - but great fun and very watchable.  Aside from anything else, it's worth watching for the glory that is Jason Momoa!



Film: The Highwaymen

Kevin Costner and Woody Harrelson star as two old timer cops on the hunt for Bonnie and Clyde.  The scenery and authenticity of life in Depression-hit America kept me watching, but the film didn't really grab me as I expected it to.  I actually fell asleep during the last 20 minutes.  It was just okay; I wouldn't not recommend it but I found it a bit repetitive and it kind of missed the mark for me.

3 stars ⭐⭐⭐



Series: The Widow

Kate Beckinsale stars as a woman whose husband was supposedly killed in a plane crash over the Congo jungle.  Then she sees him in a video, years later...
The plot is interesting, but this wasn't for me.  Beckinsale is incredibly wooden and the dialogue is flat and unrealistic.  A show that should have been great, but we abandoned it during episode 3.

2 stars ⭐⭐




Saturday, 18 November 2017

Anything But Books ~ fun blog tag thingy from @ShelleyWilson72 and @BrizzleLass





I'm pleased to take part in one of those random questions things, after being tagged by writer pal Shelley Wilson ~ you can read her post HERE.  She in turn was tagged by Claire from BrizzleLass Books ~ I shall tag a few people later, too...

 Q1. Name a cartoon that you love.

There is no finer cartoon than South Park, ever.   I've watched some of them nearly as many times as I've watched The Walking Dead....  I have Eric Cartman on my mantelpiece and keyring!




Q2. What is your favourite song right now? 

I don't listen to the radio/watch music channels and have no idea what the popular music is these days, because about ten years ago I reached the point when I find chart/pop music mostly abhorrent (if you're younger than forty-five: you'll get there too, I promise!).  In our house we listen to all sorts.  Yesterday it was Rosemary Clooney.  Lately, there's been a fair bit of AC/DC.  Can never have too much.  😉

Film from 1970s of Let There Be Rock, which is one of my all time AC/DC faves... (note a few hours later: just found out that Malcolm Young has died...)



Q3. What could you do for hours that isn’t reading?

Watch The Walking Dead.  Can and DO!

 

Q4. What is something that you love to do that your followers would be surprised by?

I'm always stumped by questions that ask me to reveal something fascinating about myself.  I am possibly the most unfascinating person I know.  I've done a whole bunch of stuff but nothing I would want to put in a blog questionnaire.  Mostly, I just write.  And read, and watch telly.  Okay.  My husband says that doing the washing is my hobby.  It's true.  I get a little bit excited when, say, I come home from a rare few days away and there are at least four loads to do.  I love having all our clothes and bedding washed and ironed at all times.  There.  Told you it wouldn't be very interesting.  And ps, it's the only domestic chore that I do much of!

Q5. What is your favourite, unnecessarily specific thing to learn about?

History.  I read lots of non-fiction history, as well as the sort of historical fiction that teaches you about a time period (not the women in long dresses/castles/period unspecified historical romance type!).  I also watch lots of historical documentaries, read articles, etc.  Wish I'd developed the interest earlier and become a learnéd historian, or something.

Q6. What is something unusual you know how to do?

It’s not particularly unusual but (as per Shelley's answer), it's about the only thing I can do well that not everyone can.  I am very good at stuff like logic problems, and games on my tablet that require logic, like backgammon and Plague Inc.

Q7. Name something that you’ve made in the last year.

Made?  I don't make anything, except the bed!  I'm not arty.  I heat food rather than cook.  A friend came to stay for three nights last May, and I was panicking over what the hell I was going to give her to eat.  My sister has just stayed for three nights, too, and it was great, because she has the same attitude as me.  She had fish fingers and broccoli, every night.

Q8. What is your most recent personal project?

I became a vegan a few months ago.  I did so because I don't want to support the animal agriculture industry, which is the responsible for most of the destruction of the Amazon rainforest and, thus, a whole other bunch of crap things that are happening to the planet.  

 Watch....




Q9. Tell us something that you think of often.

My dad, who died in September.  Sorry, don't want to bring the mood of the post down, but it was my immediate answer.  And they're often happy thoughts, remembering all the lovely things about him.




Q10. Tell us something that’s your favourite, but make it oddly specific.

I will do as Shelley did, and name my current favourite TV shows.

The Walking Dead - of course!  A link to the many blog posts I've written about it HERE.

The Deuce ~ fabulous series set in early 1970s New York.  James Franco, nuff said. 😋 Read more about it HERE


Currently watching Mindhunter, terrific series set in 1977, in which two FBI agents visit lots of serial killers....

Just finished watching Tin Star with the fabulous Tim Roth playing an alcoholic cop who you loathe more and more as the series unfolds...



I'm tagging....

(Please don't feel obliged to do this, it just means I'm suggesting it to you!) 
 

My sister, Julia
My friend Andrea, because she has recently started up her blog again.
Book blogger chum Liz
Book blogger chum Abbie
Writer chum Georgia