Don't Let My Past be Your Future
Book
Harry Leslie Smith is a British stalwart; he is a survivor of the Great Depression, a Second World...
Ross (3284 KP) rated The Kid Who Would Be King (2019) in Movies
Feb 19, 2019
The plot is fairly standard Arthurian legend - boy pulls sword from stone and seeks to unite his enemies behind him in battling against forces of evil. The film does this with full knowledge and gentle telling of the actual legend, and doesn't look to be a re-telling, rather a modern day "second coming of Arthur".
There are plenty of laughs throughout the film, with a typical British flavour.
There is also action aplenty with some really powerful battle scenes and excellent SFX.
Director Joe Cornish (of Adam & Joe fame - there is also a nice cameo from Adam Buxton in the film) does a fantastic job of telling the story through the eyes of a child but without it being patronising or twee.
The cast are superb, with the young Merlin really being a star (and creepily like a young Joe Cornish). While I enjoyed Patrick Stewart's role as Merlin, I felt it added less gravitas than I think was intended and wasn't really necessary, the young incarnation perfectly playing the role himself.
A great, fun and thrilling adventure.
Margot Asquith's Great War Diary 1914-1916: The View from Downing Street
Michael Brock and Eleanor Brock
Book
Margot Asquith was the wife of Herbert Henry Asquith, the Liberal Prime Minister who led Britain...
The Flame Bearer
Book
The brand new novel in Bernard Cornwell's number one bestselling series on the making of England and...
Grumman F6f Hellcat, Vol. 1
Book
Grumman F6F Hellcat was one of the best fighter aircraft of the World War Two era and the most...
The Secret Diaries of Charles Ignatius Sancho
Book
MEET CHARLES IGNATIUS SANCHO: HIS EXTRAORDINARY STORY, HIDDEN FOR THREE HUNDRED YEARS, IS ABOUT TO...
Historical fiction Georgian England Slavery
David McK (3425 KP) rated The Blooding (Matthew Hawkwood, #5) in Books
Jan 30, 2019
I say mostly as, for approximately the first half, the novel actually flits back and forth - almost chapter about - between current events and those of Hawkwood's childhood (also in the States).
I also have to say that, as the series has progressed, it has seemingly moved further and further away from it's original Bow Street Runner in the Regency period: moving closer, perhaps, in mold (IMO) to the classic Sharpe stories of Bernard Cornwell, and - as a consequence - becoming in danger of losing it's own flavour that originally made it stand out.
Having said that, however, this - I felt - was an improvement on the previous book, which I personally struggled somewhat to connect with.
The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill: Defender of the Realm, 1940-1965
William Manchester and Paul Reid
Book
"Masterful ...The collaboration completes the Churchill portrait in a seamless manner, combining the...
Charles Dickens
Book
An exuberant and entertaining biography of Charles Dickens that captures the essence of the great...
De Gaulle: The Man Who Defied Six US Presidents
Book
After watching a D-Day film, do youwonder why no French units took part in the invasion of their own...
Lee (2222 KP) Feb 19, 2019