A Schoolboy's Wartime Letters: An Evacuee's Life in WWII - A Personal Memoir
Book
This funny, fascinating journal follows the development of a boy and his changing attitudes during...
Murder Most Unladylike: A Murder Most Unladylike Mystery
Book
When Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong set up their very own secret detective agency at Deepdean School for...
Land of Lisp: Learn to Program in Lisp, One Game at a Time!
Book
Lisp has been hailed as the world's most powerful programming language, but its cryptic syntax and...
Prussian Blue: 12: Bernie Gunther Thriller
Book
Bernie Gunther returns in the twelfth book in the Sunday Times and New York Times bestselling...
They are Trying to Break Your Heart
Book
In 1994, Marko Novak's world is torn apart by the death of his best friend. Kemal Lekic, a young...
In the Name of the Crown
Book
In the Name of the Crown takes us on a journey through the 17th century. It begins with the trial...
Abraham Polonsky: Interviews
Book
Abraham Polonsky (1910-1999), screenwriter and filmmaker of the mid-twentieth-century Left,...
Safe Planet: Renewable Energy Plus Workers' Power
Book
What is the greatest challenge facing humanity this century? The answer is, how we can produce the...
Kim Pook (101 KP) rated I See You (2019) in Movies
Oct 12, 2020
Anyway, when the movie properly starts we are made aware that the husband and wife are having marital problems due to the wife having an affair. At work the husband is placed on the case of the missing boy from the start of the movie, and at home strange things are happening, windows are being broken, photos going missing, TV is turning on by itself and it is evident that someone or something is watching the family.
The first half of the movie is showing the strange things happening, whilst the second half of the movie is dedicated to explaining what is going on and quite frankly I lost interest very quickly.
I found the movie rather boring and uninteresting. The acting throughout was very wooden for the most part, which was very surprising for Helen Hunt as I've always found her good, but it seems her acting skills have withered away over the years. The music they tried too hard to make it sound eerie, that it just ended up sounding like it was put together by a trainee and to top it off nothing in the movie made sense. Overall it was awful, I was time watching the whole time wondering when it would be over.
Leanne Crabtree (480 KP) rated Devil May Care (The Veil, #2) in Books
Jan 11, 2021
Charlie/Muse suffered terribly at his hands as we see in flashbacks and even her demon is afraid of the sick demon so it's a terrible struggle for Muse to know he's back and hunting for her. Eventually, though, they come face to face and she's transported back to the Netherworld. Bad news in the fact she's in Damien's clutches but good news in the fact she can now find Stefan.
Things don't always go to plan, though, and we have a lot of struggles in the demon realm as they try to figure out how to get themselves back across the Veil and stop Damien
It was action packed but I missed Stefan for a lot of the book. Gone was the protective, fun guy we met in the first one. His demon has taken over and he's not as carefree as he used to be. It's definitely a bit of a rollercoaster this one.
Off to start book three to see if Stefan can control his demon half once more.