Search

Search only in certain items:

40x40

Ducklady (1174 KP) rated Labyrinth (1986) in Movies

Aug 25, 2019 (Updated Aug 25, 2019)  
Labyrinth (1986)
Labyrinth (1986)
1986 | Adventure, Fantasy
David Bowie (0 more)
Baby kidnap (0 more)
Dance, magic, dance
Its one of those movies that you love as a child and when you come back to it as an adult you realise how messed up it is haha. I love singing along to the songs, but the orange hairy puppets still freak me out. David Bowie is fantastic as the goblin king if you order all the child marriage/kidnap and turn baby into a goblin thing. Overall, fun movie and a timeless classic.
  
    Deception

    Deception

    Philip Roth

    (0 Ratings) Rate It

    Book

    'This swift, elegant, disturbing novel...stands at the extreme of contemporary fiction' New York...

    La Triviata (1982)

    La Triviata (1982)

    (0 Ratings) Rate It

    Movie

    Violetta meets Alfredo and quickly falls for him. After the lovers run away together, they live in...

This is only a fairly short book with a limited focus, but nevertheless I found it very interesting. It's odd really, because opinion on the subject tends to be so polarised that it's easy to lose sight of a few simple facts and some of what Ashdown-Hill presents here should really be so obvious! For starters, for all the association of Bosworth with Richard III he didn't know it was going to happen and obviously didn't go in 'knowing' that he was going to be defeated - hindsight may be a great thing, but not if you want to look at historical events in context!

The Portuguese marriage proposals was something that I did know about, but here it's presented so logically it makes absolute sense. The chosen bride was a princes of Portugal, with a Spanish Infanta also in the playing as a reserve option. Both of these princesses were descended from the legitimate and senior branch of the House of Lancaster! Furthermore, it seems that a Portuguese marriage was also in the offing for Elizabeth of York. That being so, the letter supposedly written by her (reported by Buck, but now seemingly lost) makes more sense as does the confusion over Richard II wanting to marry Elizabeth, his niece, which never made any real sort of sense as, if we accept the truth of the Eleanor Butler pre-contract, then the children of Edward IV by Elizabeth Woodville were undoubtedly illegitimate, so there would be absolutely no point in Richard marrying her. On the other hand, Elizabeth and her sisters were the closest things available to Royal Princesses to be traded on the dynastic marriage market.