2point4 Children - Season 8
TV Season
2point4 Children is a BBC television sitcom that was created and written by Andrew Marshall. It...
Doctor Who - Season 4
TV Season
The fourth season of British science fiction television series Doctor Who began on 10 September...
Galaxy Note8
Tech Watch
The Samsung Galaxy Note 8 (marketed as Samsung Galaxy Note8) is an Android phablet smartphone...
The Staircase
TV Show
The Staircase is a 2004 French television miniseries by Jean-Xavier de Lestrade documenting the...
The Staircase
Babe in the Woods
Book
It’s September 1995, the first year of the rest of Hadley Todd's life. After living in Los...
Women's Fiction
Lyndsey Gollogly (2893 KP) created a post
Oct 1, 2022
Ultimate Fan 101: Tupac Edition
Music and Entertainment
App
The BEST 2Pac App made for the fans by the fans. All you need to stay connected and entertained....
Emma @ The Movies (1786 KP) rated Happy Death Day (2017) in Movies
Sep 25, 2019
Groundhog Day, but a little more kick ass. Theresa wakes up on her birthday on Monday, September 18th in a strangers bed... well you get the idea. She runs through her day, but instead of heading to the tunnel that led to her death the night before (tonight?) she heads back to her sorority house where, you've guessed it, she gets murdered.
As she loops through her birthday over and over she gets to know Carter, the guy who's bedroom she keeps waking up in, and he encourages her to try and work out what's going on in the hopes that she might be able to change the outcome.
Yet another one that I hadn't seen anything about until a couple of days before I saw it... and you know what? It was really entertaining. It's down as a slasher movie, but there's a bit of everything in it. I jumped in my seat, which doesn't happen very often. I just really enjoyed it. I was so wrapped up in it that I didn't even see the twist coming.
My only quibble, and this really isn't a major thing (I noticed it, so for me to do that I guess it is a little bit major), was when she was admitted to hospital. Her professor/doctor/lover (talk about conflict of interest) says that she's showing signs of trauma, which as we and she knows is because of how she died in the last loop. If she's showing signs of that trauma, and she says that she's feeling weaker with each loop... then... well... how does she make it too the end of the movie? Admittedly she's going to be running on a lot of adrenaline, but... well, it bugged me a little.
The Letters of T. S. Eliot: v. 4: 1928-1929
Book
Volume 4 of the letters of T. S. Eliot, which brings the poet, critic, editor and publisher into his...