The Monogram Murders
Agatha Christie and Sophie Hannah
Book
The new Hercule Poirot novel - another brilliant murder mystery that can only be solved by the...
Corsets and Crinolines
Book
In this classic book, Norah Waugh explores the changing shapes of women's dress from the 1500s to...
Girls Will be Boys: Cross-Dressed Women, Lesbians, and American Cinema, 1908-1934
Book
Marlene Dietrich, Greta Garbo, and Katharine Hepburn all made lasting impressions with the cinematic...
National Geographic: The United States of America
Reuel Golden, David Walker, Jeff Klein and Joe Yogerst
Book
Travel through time and across the country with this state-by-state tour of the United States over...
Photography history
Berlin Alexanderplatz
Book
The great novel of 1920s Berlin life, in a superb new translation by Michael Hofmann Franz...
The Cairo Trilogy
Book
Naguib Mahfouz’s magnificent epic trilogy of colonial Egypt appears here in one volume for the...
The Rite Of Spring by Igor Stravinsky
Album
This programme brings together the three great ballets which Stravinsky composed for Russian...
Tracing Your Coalmining Ancestors: A Guide for Family Historians
Book
In the 1920s there were over a million coalminers working in over 3000 collieries across Great...
Kim Pook (101 KP) rated Chicago (2002) in Movies
Jul 31, 2022
I'm sure most of you have seen this movie by now, but for those that haven't ill do my usual overview of the movie before my final review at the end.
So the movie is set in 1920s Chicago, we see someone hiding a gun and washing blood from their hands, clearly a murder has just taken place and we are treated to a rendition of "all that jazz", whilst a character named Roxie is having a steamy session with a guy. Once the musical number is over, the session turns violent and Roxie shoots the guy, thus landing herself in jail. The rest of the movie is Roxie trying to proof her innocence with musical numbers randomly mixed in.
Unlike other musicals, it's not really characters suddenly breaking into song as such, but it's the characters putting on show numbers in Roxies imagination (or at least I think, but there are times when performances suddenly start and Roxie wasn't in the scene, so who knows). Once you get past the random performances it is a pretty good film, I never found myself bored watching it and the songs are catchy with fantastic performances by all.
War is War: By Ex-Private X
Book
Alfred Burrage's War is War is his sincere and successful attempt to record his experiences as a...