
Eltiempo.es+
Weather
App
Find out the weather wherever you are with Spain’s leading weather forecast application. On the...

Weather HD+
Weather and Travel
App
Weather HD+ provides you the real weather information by various vivid animated icons and sounds. On...

Wind Map: 3D Hurricane Tracker
Weather and News
App
- see Live Hurricanes, Typhoons and Cyclones - Watch the wind currents (LIVE) - satellite images for...

Aerofly FS 2 Flight Simulator
Games
App
DESCRIPTION Aerofly FS 2 lets you explore the world of flying in a quality never seen before. Fly...

Holistic Management: A Commonsense Revolution to Restore Our Environment
Allan Savory and Jody Butterfield
Book
Fossil fuels and livestock grazing are often targeted as major culprits behind climate change and...
Nitrogen Management in Crop Production
Book
One of the main approaches for safeguarding food security, sustainable development has increased...

Jesters_folly (230 KP) rated Pontypool (2009) in Movies
Jun 7, 2020
Pontypool takes ‘Outbreak’ and ‘Zombie’ movies and adds a nice little twist. The majority of the movie is set in the confines of a small radio station and the three leads are fed information via phone calls and police broadcasts which means that they and therefore the viewer doesn’t see what is happening in the town. The film handles this restricted setting well, slowly building up the atmosphere and tension felt by the three main cast members and playing on Grant’s lack of ‘Small town experience’.
Unlike a lot of zombie movies, Pontypool doesn’t have a lot of visible blood and gore, having most of the violence described instead of shown. This makes the one or two violent scenes even more meaningful as they aren’t just there for the sake of the gore but do actually add something to the atmosphere and story, this is also helped by the fact that we don’t knowingly see a zombie until past the half way point.
Pontypool is an interesting, atmospheric film that relies on story over the need for effect, not only due to any budget restrictions but also because that is what the type of story it is trying to tell.

Gentleman and Players
Book
Audere, agere, auferre. To dare, to strive, to conquer. For generations, privileged young men have...

Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2412 KP) rated The Drowning Sea in Books
Jun 23, 2022
Since I’ve enjoyed the first two books in this series, I was curious to see where the series was going to go in this book. Once again, the writing was atmospheric and made me feel like I was there with Maggie. The characters are well drawn, although I did have a little trouble keeping all the relationships of the villagers straight. Still, I loved getting to spend time with the core cast again. Unfortunately, the pacing of the book was off, lagging at times in the middle and leaving us with a weak climax, although the climax did answer all our questions. The book is written in present tense, and it took my brain a bit to adjust to that. Most of the story is told from Maggie’s first-person point of view, but we do get some chapters from other characters’ points of view to help flesh things out. Fans of the series will be glad they picked up this book.

Murder in Rose Hill
Book
Midwife Sarah Malloy and her private detective husband Frank discover that the cure is worse than...