Content Provider: Selected Short Prose Pieces, 2011-2016
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Over the last five years, often when David Mitchell has been on holiday, the comedian Stewart Lee...
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The story of the Good Samaritan is probably the most famous in the Bible, and yet it has been...
The News Quiz: Eight Episodes of the Topical BBC Radio 4 Panel Game: Series 88
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In his first series, Miles Jupp is in the chair for eight episodes of BBC Radio 4's ever-popular...
A Party with Socialists in It: A History of the Labour Left
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For over a hundred years, the British Labour Party has been a bastion for working class organisation...
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'Bernie Sanders has changed US politics forever' Owen Jones Bernie Sanders stormed to international...
Awix (3310 KP) rated Peterloo (2018) in Movies
Nov 9, 2018 (Updated Nov 9, 2018)
Not quite as punishingly didactic as it sounds, but this may not have been intentional: what may also have been an accident is how close the film frequently comes to being actually quite funny. There are some spectacular wigs and hats, startling accents, and very broad performances from most of the cast - it almost feels like a parody of a bad costume drama in places. There's a scene where a family of semi-literate mill-workers pause to discuss the economic effects of the Corn Laws in some detail, mostly for the audience's benefit, while another scene arguably recycles a Monty Python gag. Casting someone from Blackadder as the Prince Regent was probably a misstep, too.
Still, it all reeks with conviction and moral outrage, and in the end the Peterloo massacre itself is staged quite well - though I still think it could have been handled slightly more cinematically. This is the movie equivalent of someone who hands out the Socialist Worker in the street: the intentions are so laudable that you kind of feel obliged to indulge the earnest lack of self-awareness. Looks quite good too.