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The Wood for the Trees: One Man's Long View of Nature
Book
From one of our greatest science writers, this biography of a beech-and-bluebell wood through...
![The Wood for the Trees: The Long View of Nature from a Small Wood](/uploads/profile_image/1c8/6bc7b402-643c-4d01-be2c-3a3f070bc1c8.jpg?m=1522329814)
The Wood for the Trees: The Long View of Nature from a Small Wood
Book
From one of our greatest science writers, this biography of a beech-and-bluebell wood through...
![The Assault on International Law](/uploads/profile_image/ee0/e12254ce-8feb-46dd-a189-7b3cf0b08ee0.jpg?m=1522354707)
The Assault on International Law
Book
International law presents a conceptual riddle. Why comply with it when there is no world government...
![English Cathedral](/uploads/profile_image/0d2/26c722a8-ba44-4774-9b92-9703ae4d60d2.jpg?m=1522336991)
English Cathedral
Martin Barnes and John Goodall
Book
Among the most magnificent buildings of England are its Anglican cathedrals, great symbols of...
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Beacon Technologies: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Beacosystem: 2016
Stephen Statler, Anke Audenaert, John Coombs and Theresa Mary Gordon
Book
Learn the key standards-iBeacon, Eddystone, Bluetooth 4.0, and AltBeacon-and how they work with...
![Real Women, Real Leaders: Surviving and Succeeding in the Business World](/uploads/profile_image/8c0/682177f0-b1bd-441d-b2cc-2844dac308c0.jpg?m=1522325656)
Real Women, Real Leaders: Surviving and Succeeding in the Business World
Kathleen Hurley and Priscilla Shumway
Book
Plan your path to leadership with insight from real women at the top In Real Women, Real Leadership,...
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Notorious: The Immortal Legend of the Kray Twins
Book
Ever since the Kray twins invited John Pearson to write their 'official' biography more than forty...
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Charlie Cobra Reviews (1840 KP) rated Shaft (2019) in Movies
Jul 7, 2020
After a failed assassination attempt, Maya Babanikos (Regina Hall), his wife, leaves Shaft (Samuel L. Jackson) and takes their son, John "JJ." Shaft Jr., to raise on her own. 25 years later, Karim (Avan Jogia), a childhood friend of "JJ"'s, dies of a heroin overdose. JJ who is a cyber security expert and FBI Agent concludes he must have been murdered. After being violently ejected by drug dealers when investigating who sold the heroin that killed his friend; he is left with no other recourse but turn to his father, Shaft, for help.
This movie was a lot different from how I remember the last one which came out in 2000. I remember that one being more serious and more thriller, where they were trying to catch the bad guy. This one seemed to make too light of the action but did deliver on the laughs occasionally. Also I don't remember the last film being as "adult" when it came to language or nudity either, but I like how the movie acknowledged the main characters dialogue when his son tries to talk like him. Jessie Usher was very funny as JJ but I personally felt that he was trying to act like Nick Canon, which if that's what they were going for, they could have got him instead. It's an ok movie if your looking for something funny with action and don't care about things like story telling, plot, and the characters walking around with "plot armor". All in all, this movie was good but nothing special, I would just wait for it to go to dollar movies, red box or Netflix instead of wasting money at the movies. Of course if you need your fix of Samuel L. Jackson, then you might want to give this movie a shot. I remember the last one being a lot better. I give this movie a 5/10.
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/d81/63dd3617-1a88-48b3-b112-36a8f7f1dd81.jpg?m=1593055998)
Charlie Cobra Reviews (1840 KP) rated Krypton in TV
Jul 7, 2020
After a failed assassination attempt, Maya Babanikos (Regina Hall), his wife, leaves Shaft (Samuel L. Jackson) and takes their son, John "JJ." Shaft Jr., to raise on her own. 25 years later, Karim (Avan Jogia), a childhood friend of "JJ"'s, dies of a heroin overdose. JJ who is a cyber security expert and FBI Agent concludes he must have been murdered. After being violently ejected by drug dealers when investigating who sold the heroin that killed his friend; he is left with no other recourse but turn to his father, Shaft, for help.
This movie was a lot different from how I remember the last one which came out in 2000. I remember that one being more serious and more thriller, where they were trying to catch the bad guy. This one seemed to make too light of the action but did deliver on the laughs occasionally. Also I don't remember the last film being as "adult" when it came to language or nudity either, but I like how the movie acknowledged the main characters dialogue when his son tries to talk like him. Jessie Usher was very funny as JJ but I personally felt that he was trying to act like Nick Canon, which if that's what they were going for, they could have got him instead. It's an ok movie if your looking for something funny with action and don't care about things like story telling, plot, and the characters walking around with "plot armor". All in all, this movie was good but nothing special, I would just wait for it to go to dollar movies, red box or Netflix instead of wasting money at the movies. Of course if you need your fix of Samuel L. Jackson, then you might want to give this movie a shot. I remember the last one being a lot better. I give this movie a 5/10.
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/2a2/12a9482d-403f-46fb-adfe-cad7a70c02a2.jpg?m=1575571265)
Sarah (7798 KP) rated Bombshell (2019) in Movies
Sep 12, 2020
This is a powerful film in more than one way - powerful story, powering acting and powerful in it's way of highlighting a very real problem. The acting is tremendous by everyone involved, even those with smaller bit parts like Kate McKinnon, Alison Janney etc, they all shone with whatever they had to work with. The three leads, Theron and Robbie especially, were brilliant. I'll admit it took me a while to get used to Theron's prosthetics and voice, and to be frank whilst I rate Nicole Kidman as an actress, her botox and far too smooth skin with an inability to emote really lets her down. And then there's John Lithgow too, he's faultless and nails that slimy yet charming and likeable character that Ailes is portrayed as being.
The main thing that let this down was the beginning. The direct address to camera/breaking 4th wall might have worked in The Big Short for writer Charles Randolph, it really didn't work here. It was no doubt meant to lighten the mood and provide some comic relief as it did in TBS, but here it just felt inappropriate. This is a serious issue and a serious story, and shouldn't be made light of.
Once it gets over this initial blip, this film really gets going. I was gripped by this fascinating story that I didnt know a huge amount about and this was helped by the decent pace and under 2 hour runtime - have filmmakers finally realised a film doesn't have to be over 2 hours to be good?!
Whilst 'enjoyed' isn't probably the right word considering the subject matter, this is a fantastic and powerful film. I found it gave me a massive sense of empowerment and if it hadn't have been for the initial blip in storytelling device, I wouldve rated this higher.