
Because of You
Book
London 1978: eighteen-year-old Hannah Stein arrives in London from her native Sweden. The city is...

The Executioner of St Paul's: The Twelfth Thomas Chaloner Adventure
Book
The plague raging through London in 1665 has emptied the city. The only people left are those too...

The Grandmothers
Book
Four novellas by Doris Lessing, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, that once again show her...
The War of the Worlds and the War in the Air
Book
With an Introduction and Notes by Dr Andrew Frayn, Lecturer in Twentieth-Century Literature and...

Hunters in the Snow
Book
After his death, a young woman returns to her grandfather's farm in Yorkshire. At his desk she finds...

British Theatre Companies: 1965-1979: Cast, the People Show, Portable Theatre, Pip Simmons Theatre Group, Welfare State International, 7:84 Theatre Companies
Book
This series of three volumes provides a groundbreaking study of the work of many of the most...

Frank Turner recommended Standing On A Chair by Beans On Toast in Music (curated)

Matthew Krueger (10051 KP) rated The Satanic Rites of Dracula (1974) in Movies
Nov 23, 2020
The plot: British-made chiller about a blood-thirsty count who takes up residence in modern London to develop a new strain of bubonic plague, with the evil intention of annihilating all life on Earth.
Work began on what was tentatively titled Dracula is Dead...and Well and Living in London in November 1972.
The film itself is a mixture of horror, science fiction and a spy thriller, with a screenplay by Don Houghton, a veteran of BBC's Doctor Who. This is the problem its trying to be more sci-fi and a spy thriller than horror.
This was the final Hammer film that Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing would make together. The two stars would eventually reunite one more time in House of the Long Shadows, ten years later.
A huge let down.

Awix (3310 KP) rated Enola Holmes (2020) in Movies
Sep 24, 2020
Doesn't really bear much resemblance to the original canon, nor to the realities of Victorian London or much else, really: there isn't a great deal of detecting going on, but there is a lot of earnest messaging about finding your own path and giving the patriarchy a good kicking. Has clearly had some money spent on it; Brown has a certain presence and Cavill, while arguably miscast, is less problematic than you might expect. For a film which appears to be aimed at a fairly young audience there are some moments of surprisingly nasty violence, but on the whole it's fairly inoffensive. I imagine members of the target audience will probably enjoy it a lot more than me; I think I'll be sticking with Young Sherlock Holmes when I'm in the mood for this sort of thing.

A Bleaker Predicklement
Games
App
The year is 1884 and Victorian London is ready for the greatest Adventure ever told. Part story,...