Hints and tips:
Related Special Reports
...Danny Galbraith, St Bartholomew’s School...
...But the human throwbacks do bring to mind the famous warning of Jurassic Park: That’s how it always starts....
...Monster is less interested in how people contradict each other than what some notice and others do not. On-screen, adults can be oblivious....
...She is unsure what to do next, appalled by the killing of Black Florida teenager Trayvon Martin and worried about her elderly mother. This first act can feel uncentred....
...(And star Danny Kaye would make several visits to the city.)...
...“Do you remember who won best film the year before last?” (The answer: Coda, which may underscore her point.)...
...(And this is why you do need to have seen the first film.) We meet Chalamet’s plucky young duke Paul Atreides again, now hiding out among the native Fremen of resource planet Arrakis....
...The result surely needs to do more than simply restate Hannah Arendt’s familiar idea of the banality of evil, itself now 60 years old. The film often does....
...Lord Neuberger, Former President of the UK Supreme Court Professor Philippe Sands KC Professor Sandra Fredman, University of Oxford Richard Hermer KC Danny Friedman KC Anthony Metzer KC Jon Turner...
The urban body double for cities such as New York and Washington DC is very much a star in its own right too
...Still, themes do emerge. One is daredevilry. We read of lunacy on ski slopes; peril at Mexican rodeos....
...Later, during their secret, sexless pseudo-engagement, he tells his frustrated girlfriend they can do “other things”. That often means critiquing her fashion sense....
...The rest of the cast do well channelling the crackpot audacity....
A muse to the greats of Italian film’s Golden Age, this urban beauty continues to inspire cineastes
...Do I sound like a relic if I gripe that the most magical moment is still clearly “Pure Imagination”, centrepiece of the 1971 movie adaptation, revived here? Probably. I’m also right....
...Carefully consider the pros and cons of the increase in this sort of content What do you see as the dangers of ‘self-diagnosis’ of mental health conditions? Danny Galbraith, St Bartholomew’s School...
...It all adds up to something not so unlike one of the competing hair-dos: ornate, effortful and niche, but oddly hard to take your eyes off. ★★★☆☆ In UK cinemas from June 9...
...Referring to the article, distinguish between circadian and ultradian rhythms Danny Galbraith, St Bartholomew’s School...
...To what extent do side effects undermine the effectiveness and appropriateness of schizophrenia medication? Danny Galbraith, St Bartholomew’s School...
...(I do not say that as a fan of Shyamalan.) But the film reaches higher ground than either. If the writing flirts with archetypes, it upends them too. There are frictions of race, class and generations....
...The film can be such fun, you feel a killjoy for having to say that diminishing returns do later set in, as the tone turns curdled and one-note....
...After establishing the bond between Góngora and Urrutia, there are scenes of anguish, the kind that could feel exploitative, but here do not....
...“The thing Len says a lot is do big things,” Cohen said. “He likes scale. He wants us to do those things. The working model is . . ....
...Using differential association theory, suggest how this might reduce crime in the long-run Danny Galbraith, St Bartholomew’s School...
International Edition