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Off Topic The Review Thread

Discussion in 'Queens Park Rangers' started by Stroller, May 27, 2017.

  1. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    It is on IPlayer, cheers. I have a VPN but why would I need one to watch it?

    And where the **** do you get the time to watch every TV series under the sun, sometimes twice, read books, see every live band possible and earn a living?
     
    #4801
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  2. Steelmonkey

    Steelmonkey Well-Known Member

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    Not you ya muppet, Kiwi...you can only watch iPlayer with a UK based IP address - you still have him on ignore so you couldn't see I replied to him too?
     
    #4802
  3. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    Aah. My little blind spot.
     
    #4803
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  4. Steelmonkey

    Steelmonkey Well-Known Member

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    I actually don't know! For a start, apart from this site, I don't do social media...

    I watch TV when I'm away from home working and stuck in digs - if I'm not out for a meal and drinking. I'll squeeze in a couple of episodes of something at the weekend - depending on how the Rs game goes depends if I need some severe violence or something a bit more chilled. I rarely watch live TV anymore.

    Only did 30 gigs last year, that's just over two a month - have 25 booked so far this year, so probably be about the same. We've started adding a couple of theatre trips to that too.

    I don't really read in the winter, normally a pastime I indulge in when sat out in the sun. Not normally a fan of biographies unless I'm really interested in their stories, but apart from that I read all sorts of stuff, hi-brow and lo-brow.

    Life's too short, got to make time to enjoy yourself
     
    #4804
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  5. Stroller

    Stroller Well-Known Member

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    Taboo was great. Jessie Buckley ,:emoticon-0152-heart.
     
    #4805
  6. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    Calm down you old perv.
     
    #4806
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  7. Stroller

    Stroller Well-Known Member

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    The Paddington Bear Experience at County Hall.

    Don't!
     
    #4807
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  8. kiwiqpr

    kiwiqpr Barnsie Mod

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    He probably has no idea how many days there are to Christmas
     
    #4808
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  9. IwasanotherwatfordR

    IwasanotherwatfordR Well-Known Member

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    Anyone seen Mobland on Paramount+ ?

    Quite gripping and violent. Tom Hardy menacingly brooding. Brosnan and Mirren in it too. Worth a watch and I’d say better than Gangs of London, if that’s your sort of thing.
     
    #4809
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  10. Steelmonkey

    Steelmonkey Well-Known Member

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    It's very good, building up to something quite ultra-violent I think!
     
    #4810

  11. IwasanotherwatfordR

    IwasanotherwatfordR Well-Known Member

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    It’s looking that way for sure.
     
    #4811
  12. kiwiqpr

    kiwiqpr Barnsie Mod

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    Gangs of London wasn't that good though was it
     
    #4812
  13. stanleyparkerbowles

    stanleyparkerbowles Well-Known Member

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    Helen Mirren is once again terribly cast and has a ludicrously laughable stupid accent which she cannot carry off and don’t get me started on her part.
    Tom Hardy holds it together though. Without him it would be dire. The man does little wrong
     
    #4813
  14. stanleyparkerbowles

    stanleyparkerbowles Well-Known Member

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    Jessie Buckley Wild Rose Great film
     
    #4814
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  15. Stroller

    Stroller Well-Known Member

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    The magnificent Blue Nile are on TV right now.
     
    #4815
  16. Steelmonkey

    Steelmonkey Well-Known Member

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    Pavillion Theatre, Glasgow tonight for a theatrical production of Dracula.

    Typical Victorian era theatre, closely packed seats, but thankfully no pillars like the Royal, so a clear view to the stage.


    20250507_192323.jpg

    Long show, two and a half hours including interval.

    Very good, atmospheric production well acted by the cast....but only in Glasgow would you get someone heckle Dracula half way through the show! <laugh> at a serious moment of the show, someone started making really loud ghostie noises...the actors on stage looked raging, paused for a few seconds and repeated their lines, immediately followed by ghostie noises again! The actors stormed off stage in a huff and the house lights went up...the culprit and his pal get escorted out along with all their empty cans of Bud <laugh> only in Glasgow on a Wednesday night! Impromptu interval meant that half the audience went to the bar for a top-up, and were still there when the show restarted, so lots of shuffling people trying to find their seats in the dark with lots of tutting from the luvvie brigade - instead of waiting a whole ten minutes for the actual interval!!

    An enjoyable evening
     
    #4816
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  17. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    And back by (un)popular demand - Shakespeare! Saw Much Do About Nothing at the RSC last night. The modern hook was to stage the play (originally set in Messina, Sicily) in Messina FC just after they have won a major European competition (it’s a war originally). The governor becomes the teams owner, the duke the team manager, and the main romantic leads players, the women being a broadcaster and the daughter of the owner. Considerable effort goes into setting up this scenario in the first twenty minutes, including a very clever set, and then it seems to be forgotten about. Which was a shame as it’s an odd play, half comedy half rather nasty about a girl being falsely accused of something and all of the men, including her father and her fiancé, immediately believing she is guilty. It is, of course, unknown whether Shakespeare was making a point or whether it’s just a misogynistic story line. But it worked well in the context of modern footballers, but by that stage the football setting was largely forgotten.

    Enjoyable stuff. Usual Shakespearean guff about hidden and mistaken identities, and the baddie who sets up the heroine has no motivation to do this and then simply disappears, which is odd. Overall well acted and good use of (modern) music.
     
    #4817
    Last edited: May 8, 2025
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  18. Stroller

    Stroller Well-Known Member

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    Do these Shakespeare plays re-imagined in modern settings still use the original language?
     
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  19. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    Yep, or 99% of it. The staging is really just a vehicle for the words. Even Baz Luhrman’s Romeo+Juliet kept most of them intact. The more plays you see the more obvious it is how much he recycled plots and scenarios, the language is the key thing.

    There has always been big editing of the scripts though. Apparently a recent version of Much Ado About Nothing in London dumped a scene that was retained in the version I saw (it wouldn’t have been missed). An unabridged version of Hamlet would be over 4 hours long. Shakespeare was never shy of using 400 words when 4 would do.
     
    #4819
    Last edited: May 8, 2025
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  20. Stroller

    Stroller Well-Known Member

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    Shakespeare is a massive hole in my cultural knowledge/appreciation. We never studied him at school and I've never seen any of his plays live. Such a heathen!

    I did recently watch Branagh's film version of Henry V, which I really enjoyed, but there seemed to be an odd line thrown in for effect that the Bard certainly wouldn't have written, which kind of defeated the object for me. All or nothing, Kenny.

    I recall seeing an American film back in the day called Joe Macbeth, which was the Macbeth story transposed into a US gangland scenario. No Shakespearean language in that.
     
    #4820

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