![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/df5/bf9dbe24-a42f-4ec6-94fe-ab1f3b404df5.jpg?m=1522361176)
Awix (3310 KP) rated For Your Eyes Only (1981) in Movies
May 10, 2019
Roger Moore's search for a missing component of a missile defence system (it's a Maguffin) takes him all around the Med and up into Italy; highlights include various inventive chases and other set pieces - everyone seems to be trying hard to do something original, which is nice. Also includes a scene where Bond rebuffs a hot young blonde who turns up in his bed, possibly the most out-of-character moment in the entire series. The lack of a really memorable villain also counts against it, but this is still possibly the best of the Moore Bonds, and the best of the decade.
![My Heart is Bleeding: The Life of Dorothy Squires](/uploads/profile_image/9a2/f3f71407-9192-40b0-a498-cfbfb599a9a2.jpg?m=1522332702)
My Heart is Bleeding: The Life of Dorothy Squires
Book
As a young girl toiling in a South Wales tin works, Dorothy Squires dreamt of being a singing star,...
![Break Point: The Inside Story of Modern Tennis](/uploads/profile_image/1e4/0e0d8346-0e3f-4ae4-b4b5-98cefbc201e4.jpg?m=1522329057)
Break Point: The Inside Story of Modern Tennis
Book
NOW WITH A NEW CHAPTER This is a special era in the history of tennis. The physicality and skill, as...
![Germinal](/uploads/profile_image/652/e70178e8-e111-4d4a-91e8-ffe8d2b11652.jpg?m=1522341740)
Germinal
Book
Considered by André Gide to be one of the ten greatest novels in the French language, Émile Zola's...
![Through a Glass Darkly](/uploads/profile_image/9cd/461bdda2-bd3c-410c-bec3-e1996923d9cd.jpg?m=1611704294)
Through a Glass Darkly
Book
As opulent and passionate as the 18th century it celebrates, Through A Glass Darkly sparkles with...
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/b26/4fceea14-87e1-4455-b98c-cda626154b26.jpg?m=1549634223)
Gareth von Kallenbach (971 KP) rated Mr. Holmes (2015) in Movies
Aug 6, 2019
We first see Sherlock Holmes (Ian McKellan) in a train voyage with a package, and we don’t know to or from where he’s going or why.
The entire movie is full of flash backs and multiple time frames of the same mans life, as he tries to piece together memories that seem to lie just beyond his ability to recollect
Holmes has retired from his detective business and is cared for by widowed housekeeper Mrs. Munro (Laura Linney) and her young son Roger (Milo Parker).
Roger is quick witted and interested in anything Holmes might be able to teach him, and throughout the movie their relationship moves from one of strained and grumpy acceptance (on the part of Holmes) to one of grandfatherly love. It is a beautiful relationship that develops between the two, and makes the near -disaster that occurs at the end of the film even more heart wrenching.
It is of utmost importance to Holmes that he remember the details of his last case, 30 years prior, that apparently caused him to close up shop as a detective and retire to the coast. The trip we see him on in the opening scene turns out to be a trip to Japan to meet with Mr. Umezaki (Hiroyuki Sanada) who helped him search for, and ultimately find, a plant (prickly ash) said to have curative powers for memory problems.
Holmes plays both the role of his younger self and as the 93 year old man with advancing Alzheimer’s very very well. I believed the character as a 60 year old and just as much as a 93 year old.
The film felt a little bit long, and there were a few slow spots but overall it flowed very well despite all the jumping around in time & place, and it wove together the stories past & present to tell a cohesive and interesting tale. It built relationships between the main characters and I could see the bond between Holmes and Roger, and even the somewhat prickly Mrs. Munro growing throughout the film.
I would give this film 4 out of 5 stars.
![Aiming High: The Life of Ski and Travel Pioneer Erna Low](/uploads/profile_image/618/f6280df1-397b-4a99-8d0e-66b59aa53618.jpg?m=1522337041)
Aiming High: The Life of Ski and Travel Pioneer Erna Low
Mark Frary and Roger Lloyd Pack
Book
Erna Low, born in Vienna in 1909, was instrumental in starting what has become a multimillion pound...
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/c74/d8277c53-81ff-4d2c-8007-2bac329f4c74.jpg?m=1553205006)
David McK (3222 KP) rated Live and Let Die (James Bond, #2) in Books
Jan 30, 2019
You used to say live and let live
(you know you did you know you die you know you did)
But in this ever changing world in which we live in
Makes you give in and cry ...
Live and let die ..."
(cue guitar riff)
With that out of the way - Paul McCartney and Wings, later covered by Guns 'N Roses - Live and Let Die is the second James Bond book by Ian Fleming, but the eighth film in the series, and the first to star Roger Moore in the lead role.
And reading it with contemporary eyes, boy has it aged. Quite different than the movie - although the key elements (vodoo, Baron Samedi, Solitaire, American southwest setting) are intact, it can also be quite uncomfortable reading this with modern sensibilities, particularly in how Flemings (and Bond) treats the female characters, and in how the Harlem culture and denizens are portrayed.
Allowances must be made, I suppose, for the time period in which it was written ...
![Shooting 007: And Other Celluloid Adventures](/uploads/profile_image/dd7/cc7b8c34-f66a-48c4-8676-6f73a0810dd7.jpg?m=1522323831)
Shooting 007: And Other Celluloid Adventures
Book
In Shooting 007, beloved cameraman and director of photography Alec Mills, a veteran of seven James...
Merchants and Explorers: Roger Barlow, Sebastian Cabot, and Networks of Atlantic Exchange 1500-1560
Book
In the early sixteenth century, a young English sugar trader spent a night at what is now the port...