Trancers 4: Jack of Swords (1994)
Movie Watch
Jack is now back in the future. He had since lost Lena, and finds out that he's lost his other wife...
Savage justice (2022)
Movie
A recovering opoid addict wreaks vengeance on the dealers responsible for selling the drugstore...
Hello Down There (1969)
Movie
Comedy adventure with songs. An inventor must live with his family in an underwater house to save...
Me, Myself and I
TV Show Watch
“Me, Myself & I,” starring Bobby Moynihan, is “a single-camera comedy examining one man’s...
comedy
Outlander
Book
"Scotland's answer to Game of Thrones". (Herald). THE FIRST NOVEL IN THE BESTSELLING OUTLANDER...
Whatchareadin (174 KP) rated The Ex in Books
Aug 5, 2019
Thank you to my Bookaholic friends for suggesting this book to me. This is the first book I have read by Alafair Burke and I can't wait to read more.
Imagine what you would do if you were accused of a crime you know you didn't commit. But all signs point to you. How can you handle it? What if your ex-girlfriend is the one who is representing you, do you think that would be a good idea? Jack Harrison seems like your typical guy, living his life and minding his business.
This book really touched me from start to finish. I had to know if Jack was really guilty or if someone was framing him and why would they do that? Jack is a man without too much in his life. It's just him and his daughter and his best friend. Why would his risk losing what little he had to get back at a man, whose son killed his wife.
Even though Olivia knew Jack 20 years ago, does she know the man today? Is she able to put aside their differences and see the evidence for what it is? You will have to read the book to find out.
Awix (3310 KP) rated Hello Down There (1969) in Movies
May 10, 2020
The list of people involved in this movie might lead one to expect something at least mildly interesting: Jack Arnold made many interesting SF B-movies, one of which (Creature from the Black Lagoon) featured co-director Browning in the title role; the cast list includes Randall, Leigh, Dreyfuss, and Roddy McDowell. And yet it feels almost aggressively anodyne and bland, horribly calculated, and made to TV-standard production values. Even when it was made this probably only appealed to the most undemanding viewers; nowadays it exerts a weird fascination if only as a relic of an unrecognisable sensibility.