Emma (519 KP) rated Wonder Woman (2017) in Movies
Feb 10, 2020
We decided to watch it tonight. I happened to enjoy the first quarter of the movie, I love Greek mythology so it appealed to me. However why they felt to make the movie so long and drawn out I don't know. In the first half I liked wonder woman, women's solidarity and all that haha, but by the second half I wanted her gone. She annoyed the crap out of me. Everyone raved about the scene in no mans land, I found it ridiculous.
And who on earth thought of casting David Thewlis as Ares god of war. I mean really? REALLY?! I love the guy but come on, marvel have Chris Hemsworth as Thor, he's literally a god in day to day life. DC decide on the nerdy dark arts teacher.
Think I'll stick with marvel in the future.
Race the Darkness (Fatal Dreams #1)
Book
IF HE LOSES, SHE DIES Her voice haunts his thoughts; her whispers fill his days But when he...
Adult Paranormal Romance Suspense Thriller
Position Among The Stars (2010)
Movie
Position among the Stars, the final part of a trilogy, follows the award- winning documentaries Eye...
A Natural Woman
Book
A memoir by the iconic singer-songwriter chronicling her story from her beginnings in Brooklyn...
The Chocolate Lady (94 KP) rated The Lost Diary of M in Books
Oct 7, 2020
John Gabriel Borkman
Henrik Ibsen and Frank McGuinness
Book
John Gabriel Borkman, wealthy, powerful, revered, sacrificed love for success and was handsomely...
Virtual Mom: Happy Family 3D
Games
App
This game is a variant of Virtual DAD, and just as fun! Virtual In the midst of a hectic urban...
games
We Were the Salt of the Sea
Book
Truth lingers in murky waters… As Montrealer Catherine Day sets foot in a remote fishing...
Awix (3310 KP) rated Phantom Thread (2017) in Movies
Feb 9, 2018 (Updated Feb 9, 2018)
Daniel Day-Lewis plays an obsessional creative genius who throws himself completely into his work and is very demanding of everyone around him, and is occasionally prone to hallucinating dead family members (so perhaps this role was less of a stretch for him than many).
Initially this comes across as a slightly so-what romantic drama about the relationship between a powerful, privileged man and a much younger woman, with him as a manipulative user and her, essentially, as a victim, but it eventually turns into a dark and even slightly twisted tale of what it sometimes takes to make a relationship work.
Day-Lewis is good, obviously, but so is Vicky Krieps as the woman in his life; presumably it's only her obscurity that's kept her from getting awards nods as she is really as good as he is.
Probably not for everyone, but Paul Anderson's most satisfying and accessible film for some years.



