
Paul Hollywood: The Biography
Book
Paul Hollywood is without doubt the man of the moment in British baking. His luxurious dough recipes...

Mich Turner's Cake School: Expert Tuition from the Master Cake Maker
Mich Turner and Amanda Heywood
Book
The ultimate step-by-step, fully illustrated guide to baking perfection Baking is a hugely rewarding...

Creative Essence: Creatures
Brian Wynia, Andrew Baker, Aris Kolokontes and Ian Joyner
Book
Creative Essence: Creatures features private work from some of the best creature concept artists in...

Heather Cranmer (2721 KP) created a post
May 11, 2020 (Updated May 11, 2020)

CakeUlator
Food & Drink
App
The CakeUlator is a fantastic cake recipe pricing and quoting App that lets you price your cake...

HeroQuest Advanced Quest
Tabletop Game
Advanced Heroquest was a 1989 sequel to HeroQuest, published by Games Workshop. Changes from...

Sweet Temptation
Book
At seventeen-years-old Grace Morgan had managed to live through what would be the worst day of her...
angst hot romance covertocovercafereads

True Love (Songbird, #5)
Book
One night can change everything… Nessa Sloan has been in love with Jimmy Baker since the ninth...
Contemporary Romance

Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2398 KP) rated Halloween Cupcake Murder in Books
Aug 23, 2023 (Updated Aug 23, 2023)
As if often the case with these anthologies, I only read one of the authors. I love the Mrs. Claus series, and this was easily my favorite in the book. The other two were good, although they did leave me with some small questions I wish had been answered. Still, they were good introductions to the characters, as I had no problem following who all the characters are. All three stories kept me guessing until sleuth figured things out. While there’s obviously a culinary theme to the collection, we only get one recipe at the end. If you are looking for some new series, this is a fun way to try three new to you authors. If you are already a fan of these series, you’ll enjoy these between books check ins.

BankofMarquis (1832 KP) rated The Florida Project (2017) in Movies
Feb 18, 2018
These types of films are not usually my cup of tea, and this film was no exception.
THE FLORIDA PROJECT, conceived, written and directed by Sean Baker (who did a similar-type of film about the transgender community, TANGERINE), is about the community of people living just at the poverty line in the shadow of Walt Disney World. These people are constantly scrambling to earn money to eat and live and to pay rent at one of the seedy, rundown motels boarding just outside "the happiest place on earth".
We see this world through the eyes of Moonee - a "precocious" (I would say farel) youth who lives at one of these hotels with her mother, Halley. Moonee runs wild all day, doing whatever she wants and just 'living her life" while her mother hustles to make ends meet - all under the watchful eye of the motel's Manager, Bobby.
There is no real plot to this film. We just follow Moonee and her pals Scooty, Dicky and Jancey as they go about their day getting into misadventures. 6 year old Brooklyn Prince (in her film debut) stars as Moonee and she is an engaging enough presence, but not nearly strong enough to keep my attention for the entire 2 hours of the film - and that's the issue with this film. It relies heavily on the audience's fascination with this 6 year old and I wasn't fascinated enough to watch her for 2 hours.
Much more interesting to me to watch was another new actress, Bria Vinaite as her mother, Halley. I said she spends the film hustling - and I mean that in every sense of the word. Every interaction with another person is laced with the thought "what can I get out of this". She is always working an angle, looking for the quick score. She was a fascinating character, and I would have preferred that she would be the focus of this story.
Overseeing these two - and the other denizen's of his Motel - is Willem DaFoe playing against type as the kindly, caring Manager, Bobby. DaFoe is nominated for an Oscar for his work in this film - and it is strong work (it's good to see DaFoe with something to sink his teeth into), but is it enough for an Oscar? I don't think so. Much like Mary J. Blige in MUDBOUND, I think it is a very good performance, but I kept waiting for the "Academy Award" scene from him, and it just didn't come.
Ultimately, a labor of love for Sean Baker. It looks like a film that was made on a shoestring budget - and I'm sure that was intentional. The look and feel of this film mimics the circumstance that the characters find themselves in - including some "guerilla" filmmaking at Disney's Magic Kingdom itself. He made the type of film he wanted to make.
It just isn't the kind of film I wanted - or am interested - in seeing.
Letter Grade: C+
5 (out of 10) stars and you can take that to the Bank(ofMarquis)