Exhilarating. Johnny Depp shines once again. I loved it. A very enjoyable night at the movie theater.
If anyone ever films Dickens (again), they need to hire the guys that did the CGI London for this movie!!
Exhilarating. Johnny Depp shines once again. I loved it. A very enjoyable night at the movie theater.
If anyone ever films Dickens (again), they need to hire the guys that did the CGI London for this movie!!
A return to Nathan Zuckerman, hero of old. Just as neurotic, but now bitter, old, despairing, and at the end of things. Impotent in more ways than (the literal) one.
Interesting juxtaposition between the defeated Zuckerman being written by a Roth at the top of his game.
If you had read the previous Zuckerman books, I don’t see how you can pass this one up. It’s not a smash hit the way other recent Roth books have been (American Pastoral, I Married a Communist, Plot Against America = all great) — and it’s no Sabbath’s Theater — but it’s got some nice closure on the NZ story.
The previews for this movie didn’t thrill me and I’m happy to report I was proven wrong. Well acted, well directed, and quite thoughtful. Nice to see Tom Hanks having fun again. Although if I were Emily Blunt I’m not sure I would have taken that part: a real waste of her acting skills.
And holy crap does Philip Seymour Hoffman just blow this thing right out of the water: he’s top notch here!
a.k.a. “Cuirt an Mhean Oiche” by Brian Merriman.
A bawdy Irish poem. Lots of fun.
(By the way, Ciaran Carson is an accomplished poet in his own right, as well.)
Book 4 of “A Song for Fire and Ice”.
I had forgotten how great this series is (let’s see, I read Book 3 in…2003, woah). As with other fantasy series of similiar ilk, there are many, many storylines with a whole cacophony of important players. There’s sure to be at least one or two characters you’re interested in following. I am loving Arya’s storyline the most, although I do have a soft spot for the Kingslayer. (Don’t you picture him as a strapping gent, like Mads Mikkelsen or Heath Ledger…)
My other mainstay fantasy series has hit a rough patch given that Robert Jordan died recently without completing it… I’m sure there are bereft readers all over the world on that one! I hope there are no worries on that count here!
Two divergent storylines that eventually come together: a) conjoined twins (now separated) experiencing freedom from institutions for the first time and b) a Russian peasant girl at sea in a world of poverty and war.
Slapstick and comedic. I continue to be impressed by Pierre’s ability to write for ANY voice: this is a complete departure from his previous (Booker-prize winning), and very dialectic, Vernon God Little. Not a departure, however, in its brusque, harsh humor. I enjoyed it.