Unleashed 4:Speak Evil
Book
From the winner of the Blue Peter Book of the Year Award comes the fourth book in the unmissable...
Music Therapy in Schools: Working with Children of All Ages in Mainstream and Special Education
Jo Tomlinson, Philippa Derrington, Amelia Oldfield and Frankie Williams
Book
The majority of music therapy work with children takes place in schools. This book documents the...
Masterful Marks: Cartoonists Who Changed the World
Book
No one has told the story of comic art in its own medium, until now. In Masterful Marks, top...
Good Kings, Bad Kings
Book
'My first week I learned that people refer to ILLC as "illsee". Emphasis on 'ill'. The Illinois...
Gran Torino (2009)
Movie Watch
Clint Eastwood, the Academy Award-winning director of Million Dollar Baby and Unforgiven and...
Kate (493 KP) rated The Case Of The Bad Twin in Books
Jun 30, 2020
When I read the blurb it seemed like a book I would normally read and it was a mystery but as I mentioned it was for a younger audience. So I would recommend the book to the audience it was aimed at. It was an easy reading book.
I still got into the book as I kept guessing who the perpetrator was and therefore it did turn into a page turner for me.
I learnt more about the characters as the book went on and my thoughts on them changed.
This book was part of a series and the only reason I didn't read the other books in the story was because it was bit too young for me.
I like more adult crime/mystery books.
I received a complimentary copy of the book from the author via Voracious Readers Only.
Billy Gibbons recommended Outskirts of Love by Shemekia Copeland in Music (curated)
LeftSideCut (3778 KP) rated Wrong Turn (2003) in Movies
Mar 4, 2021
The cannon fodder teenagers in this are also pretty standard, with the exception of the two leads played by Eliza Dushku and Desmond Harrington. They don't come across as the usual empty headed victims that make stupid decisions, and as a result, it's easy to become invested in their fight for survival.
This first entry in the franchise is a far cry from the more digital looking, torture porn leaning sequels, and boasts some decent practical gore. The designs of the mountain men are suitably unsettling, thanks to Shane Mahan and Stan Winston, and it's easy to see why Thee Finger became something of a horror icon following this film's release.
Wrong Turn won't set your world aflame, but it's a competent and watchable horror that stands well on its own, and is a pretty fun, especially when compared to it's plethora of shitty sequels (the second one isn't too bad to be fair...)