Take off into English Teaching!: How to Prepare for Your Secondary Teacher Training Programme
Book
Planning to become a secondary English teacher? This must-have guide contains everything you need to...
Sue Beynon (7 KP) rated The Favourite (2018) in Movies
May 9, 2019
I will probably have to go and get the book it is based on to make any sense of it, from what I have looked at it wasn't really historically accurate in any way, other than the characters existing in real life.
Evaluating Demand-Driven Acquisitions
Book
Evaluating Demand-Driven Acquisitions examines recent research in demand-driven acquisitions in an...
Energy Recovery from Municipal Solid Waste by Thermal Conversion Technologies
Book
This book presents an overview of the technology that allows millions and millions of tons of...
Understanding Your Digital Camera: Art and Techniques
Book
This book has been written for photographers who want to switch their camera off automatic mode and...
Designing User Interfaces for an Aging Population: Towards Universal Design
Book
Designing User Interfaces for an Aging Population: Towards Universal Design presents age-friendly...
HearMeOut-Voice Social Network
Social Networking and News
App
HearMeOut is a voice-based social network that lets you record your voice and be heard. Share your...
Accidentally Wes Anderson
Book
Wes Anderson's beloved films announce themselves through a singular aesthetic - one that seems too...
Gareth von Kallenbach (980 KP) rated The Goldfinch (2019) in Movies
Sep 13, 2019
This film is based on the Pulitzer Prize winning book by Donna Tartt of the same name. I have not read the book so I cannot make a comparison between the two. The director, John Crowley (Brooklyn and Closed Circuit) makes a visually beautiful film. You can tell that care was taken to make the film have a certain feel and texture. The cast is very good, including those mentioned above and Finn Wolfhard, Sarah Paulson, Aneurin Barnard and more. I particularly thought the casting of Oakes Fegley as the Young Theodore and Ansel Elgort as the adult Theodore was particularly good. The story skipped in sequence and you could see the similarity in the two actors as on character. The overall story is original and fascinating. But the film jumped around and made it feel choppy. Also the run time of two hours and twenty nine minutes somehow felt longer than that. The story moved at a snail’s pace and really seemed like it had no direction. Then in the final 10 minutes it wrapped up in a flash.
I thought overall the performances were good and the story was interesting but how it was presented really lacked. It was slow and developed in a non-compelling way. I could definitely see potential but it fell a little short for me. It did make me want to read the book and see how the author meant for the story to be told. I would recommend seeing this in a theater for the cinematography because it was beautifully shot.



