banjo
GOSBTS
BBC four, showing an episode of Crackerjack tonight at 19.20.
This was indeed excellent - highly recommended.The English by Hugo Blick with Emily Blunt and Chaske Spencer. Bloody brilliant tv. Rafe Spall puts in a fantastic performance. If this doesn’t win a heap of awards I’ll be amazed.
Swedish crime drama fans are getting a Christmas Day treat this year – a brand new Beck film will premiere on 25th December itself on C More.A reminder, a new series of Beck is on BBC4 at 9.
Can’t wait.Swedish crime drama fans are getting a Christmas Day treat this year – a brand new Beck film will premiere on 25th December itself on C More.
The Death Trap tells the story of Vilhelm Beck – Martin’s grandson – a police officer and on his first internship in the real world.
CrackerjackBBC four, showing an episode of Crackerjack tonight at 19.20.
Been excellent, the 'will they/won't they?' continues and a decent plot.Excellent news, Strike series five – subtitled Troubled Blood – is a four-part series and sees Tom Burke return as Cormoran Strike and Holliday Grainger as Robin.
Sun 11 / Mon 12 Dec
Recommended - quite an insight, though I don’t know how representative.Inside Our Autistic Minds, presented by Chris Packham. Touches on a few recent threads on here. Beautifully, sensitively done. Intensely moving
Watched last episode (6) last night, really good watch.Started watching The Gold on iPlayer, about the £27m gold bullion raid from the Brinks-Mat guarded compound at Heathrow in 1983. I'm a sucker for anything 80s and this has really captured the "look" of the time. Only 1 episode in but its really decent so far. Strong characters, well scripted.
Just looking at the options at the pictures this afternoon and watched the trailer for COW.
Is this a joke? I can't believe what I just saw and reading the blurb I am none the wiser.
93 minutes of a cow.
I've watched some sh1t for 93 minutes in the past, but this is unbelievable.
Has anyone seen it? Why?
(image shows a 90% tomatometer rating)
I have not seen it but my understanding is as to why ? To highlight the pretty sh*t life of a milking Cow, surely ?
Not a chance. I listened to Mark Kermode's review of it, and that was enough for me to give up buying milk altogether (I've since discovered that oat milk is far superior, really really tasty).
So I just watched it on Mubi. It's something. As to what is the point - the given explanation is "This film is an endeavour to consider cows. To move us closer to them. To see both their beauty and the challenge of their lives. Not in a romantic way but in a real way. It's a film about one dairy cow's reality and acknowledging her great service to us.", but essentially it is much like any other nature documentary. What is the point in any of them? It is a largely observational thing. Show the realities or something, show something in it's natural habitat, inform, educate etc.
There's no narration explaining why they do what they do to the cows, you can hear some conversation between the farmers and the vet. It follows 2 cows; one a new born, showing the things it goes through (separation from mother, tagging, horns burned so they don't grow) etc. and a older cow (getting treatment for various issues, and so on). Surprisingly interesting.
I'm not at all one for slating/praising a film if I haven't seen it, but I can't even watch those uplifting videos online about rescue dogs, what they've been through and how immeasurably better their lives are now. She's a superb film-maker (Fishtank, anyone?) and I'm sure it is interesting but not for meI see that Cow is now on iplayer. Here's some of the quotes on it from the film 2022 thread.
(image shows a 90% tomatometer rating)
And my comments after seeing it: