Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts
Wednesday, 3 December 2014
Film review: Hello Carter (15)
Hello Carter
(15) 81mins
★★✩✩✩
According to the support notes to this film, Londoner Anthony Wilcox sold his house and spent a year writing the script for Hello Carter, his full directorial debut.
Tuesday, 25 November 2014
Film review: Paddington (PG)
Paddington
(PG) 95mins
★★★★★
Clear the decks, grab the children, make a note - there's a new tradition elbowing its way into Christmas schedules.
Tuesday, 18 November 2014
Book review: How We Got To Now, by Steven Johnson
BOOK
How We Got To Now
Steven Johnson (Penguin)
★★★✩✩
The world is rich with academics with a good turn of phrase exploring the history of ideas and innovations, making the mundane endlessly fascinating.
How We Got To Now
Steven Johnson (Penguin)
★★★✩✩
The world is rich with academics with a good turn of phrase exploring the history of ideas and innovations, making the mundane endlessly fascinating.
Labels:
book,
how we got to now,
innovation,
penguin,
review,
reviews,
science,
spiral notebook,
steven johnson
Tuesday, 11 November 2014
Film review: Third Person (15)
Third Person
(15) 137mins
★★★✩✩
There's something wrong here. You ask yourself, how come something that reeks of quality, with a quality cast and a quality writer-director reprising - structurally at least - his finest hour, feels so limp and insipid?
Labels:
adrien brody,
film,
james franco,
liam neesom,
mila kunis,
olivia wilde,
paul haggis,
review,
reviews,
spiral notebook,
third person
Monday, 10 November 2014
Book review: The Story Of The Human Body, by Daniel Lieberman
The Story Of The Human Body
Daniel Lieberman
(Penguin)
★★★★★
This book was published in October. It has taken me several weeks to complete. This could be for two reasons.
Daniel Lieberman
(Penguin)
★★★★★
This book was published in October. It has taken me several weeks to complete. This could be for two reasons.
Labels:
biology,
books,
daniel lieberman,
evolution,
harvard,
health,
penguin,
review,
reviews,
spiral notebook,
the story of the human body
Wednesday, 5 November 2014
Stage review: The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time, Gielgud Theatre
The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time
Gielgud Theatre
★★★★✩
The torment of living in a world that is threatening, jagged and strange is given full expression in this inventive and intelligent adaptation of Mark Haddon's award-winning book.
Monday, 27 October 2014
Stage review: Shakespeare In Love, Noel Coward Theatre

Noel Coward Theatre
★★★★★
The genius conceit of Shakespeare In Love - plunging the young Bard into the sort of fictional, farcical world that he might have concocted - is endlessly delicious.
Thursday, 23 October 2014
Stage review: Neville's Island, Duke Of York's Theatre

Duke Of York's Theatre
★★★✩✩
Rain pours down on a verdant inlet and the perfume of pines fills the auditorium. Stormy camps, reluctant kindling and a fragile grasp on fortitude.
Wednesday, 15 October 2014
Film review: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (12A)

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
(12A) 101mins
★★✩✩✩
When mindless Megan Fox thinks about the loss of her father and her role in the whole Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle circus, her eyes tell a story.
Tuesday, 14 October 2014
Book review: More Fool Me, by Stephen Fry

Stephen Fry (Penguin)
★★★★✩
Oh, Stephen. Oh, deliciously wicked Stephen. What troubles come your way and how quickly they pass on by. For yours is a life of ineffable privilege and Houdini sleight.
Labels:
book review,
memoir,
more fool me,
penguin,
reviews,
spiral notebook,
stephen fry
Wednesday, 8 October 2014
Film review: Effie Gray (12A)

(12A) 108mins
★★★★✩
If Effie Gray lacks the emotional release that the painstaking accumulation of frustrations appears to demand, it is perhaps testimony to the artistic courage of script writer Emma Thompson (who also stars).
Tuesday, 7 October 2014
Film review: Filmed In Supermarionation (PG)

(PG) 119mins
★★★★✩
Thunderbirds visionary Gerry Anderson railed against the limitations of puppetry.
Wednesday, 1 October 2014
Book review: The Sense Of Style, by Steven Pinker

Steven Pinker (Allen Lane)
★★★✩✩
Steven Pinker is an dazzling thinker, an excellent writer and a brilliant matchmaker of the two - marrying complex ideas to simple English.
This has not happened by chance. He has studied hard to make his writing appear easy and now wishes to share his learning.
Labels:
allen lane,
book,
language,
linguistics,
review,
reviews,
spiral notebook,
steven pinker,
the sense of style
Tuesday, 30 September 2014
Stage review: Great Britain, Haymarket

Theatre Royal Haymarket
★★★✩✩
All the ills, woes and scandals of Britain's tabloid press are distilled, mixed with bile and chucked at the audience of the Haymarket with infectious glee in Richard Bean's state-of-the-nation farce.
Tuesday, 16 September 2014
Book reviews: Scarcity, The Gods Of Guilt, The Young And Prodigious TS Spivet

Sendhil Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir (Penguin)
★★★✩✩
The authors have a "big idea", another in the newly popular field of behavioural economics. The nudgers and freaks are joined by the lackies - those who live with scarcity.
Thursday, 11 September 2014
Film review: A Most Wanted Man (15)

(15) 122mins
★★★✩✩
Director Anton Corbijn's sombre spy film is dressed in graffitied concrete, kebab shop neon and cold steel blue.
Wednesday, 10 September 2014
Art: How Turner squared up to the oblong tendency

Tate Britain
For the longest time pictures were brick-shaped. Photographs in an album and portraits on the wall were often pre-figured to the Golden Ratio, that pleasing aspect that had mathematical as well as aesthetic qualities.
Labels:
art,
exhibition,
JMW Turner,
late turner,
review,
reviews,
spiral notebook,
tate,
tate britain
Monday, 8 September 2014
Art: Clare Woods on her commission for London's river services


Cranky and Idler may sound like sneaky nicknames for your deadwood colleagues but in the hands of artist Clare Woods, they are shimmering takes on the River Thames.
Labels:
art,
art on the underground,
blackfriars,
clare woods,
isle of dogs,
piers,
review,
reviews,
river thames
Thursday, 21 August 2014
Film review: Lucy (15)

WHAT'S ON
Lucy
(15) 89mins
★★★★✩
Nothing in Lucy feels particularly new. It doesn't require a great deal of brain capacity to spot the references - 2001, Limitless, The Matrix, Inception.
Labels:
brain,
film,
julian rhind-tutt,
luc besson,
lucy,
morgan freeman,
review,
reviews,
scarlett johansson,
sci-fi,
spiral notebook
Film review: The Rover (15)

WHAT'S ON
The Rover
(15) 108mins
★★★✩✩
Guy Pearce is mad, bored and has nothing to lose. Well, he has one thing to lose and that's his car (not the Rover of the title, sadly). When the dusty Aussie emerges from a roadside bar and sees criminals making off with his wheels, he finds a purpose that makes him less bored but more mad.
Labels:
australia,
david michod,
film,
guy pearce,
review,
reviews,
robert pattinson,
spiral notebook,
the rover
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