
Mysterium: A Psychic Clue Game
Games and Entertainment
App
The official adaptation of the famous board game Mysterium! *** IMore: "If you've played Mysterium,...

Scores & Video – soccer live
Sports and News
App
Scores & Video is not just another live score app. Our ambition is to create the best second screen...

Syberia 2 (FULL)
Games and Entertainment
App
Following Syberia's resounding success with players throughout the world, Benoît Sokal invites you...

Lightbot Jr : Coding Puzzles for Ages 4+
Games and Education
App
Apple Features, in over 100 countries: *Best New Apps and Games* *Best for Learning to Code* ...

SCRABBLE Premium for iPad
Games and Entertainment
App
CONNECT WITH FRIENDS. PLAY WITH WORDS. Get a game of SCRABBLE going with just about anyone – or...

LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated Lesson of the Evil (2012) in Movies
Nov 15, 2021
Takashi Miike's 𝘛𝘩𝘦 𝘎𝘶𝘦𝘴𝘵 - which, yes, is every bit as messy and overstuffed as that sounds; though I fear that if this were leaner you could miss out on the finer details like the weird German folklore stuff or the fleshy gun with the talking eyeball. The third act here is better than anything in even 𝘈𝘮𝘦𝘳𝘪𝘤𝘢𝘯 𝘗𝘴𝘺𝘤𝘩𝘰, probably the greatest thing Miike has ever done - just as demented, tasteless, and perfectly staged as reported plus it lasts around a solid, uninterrupted 45 minutes. Simultaneously fun and hard to watch in the sense that you can't believe that not only are they actually going for this, but they're going for it *hard* (given the director, I'd expect no less). I'm confident in saying this has the most straight-up brutal use of the shotgun in film history that I've seen. Hideaki Ito is flawless as this fucked-up closet psychopath who just bleeds raw antihero charisma, this kind of character can tire so easily but him and Miike sell it in full - partly because (and this is one of the things I love most about Miike) there's zero pretension to be found here. The precise type of ethically repugnantly, formally playful, feverish trashy thrills you'd expect out of this are exactly what you get - no clichéd moral handwringing or bullshit pulled punches you see in a lot of Western cinema for this genre. This is the real shit, another bonafide cult classic from one of the masters. Plus it's generally bizarre as hell, too.

The Midwife of Auschwitz
Book
Auschwitz, 1943: As I held the tiny baby in my arms, my fingers traced the black tattoo etched...

Jenelyn's Journey: The Werewolf of Wittlich
Book
Read the intriguing first book in the Jenelyn's Journey series to explore different countries and...
Travel Mystery Supernatural

Merissa (13298 KP) rated The Scent of a Storm in Books
Dec 8, 2021 (Updated Jul 9, 2023)
One thing that seems easy to forget is not everyone in Germany thought Hitler was doing the right thing; not everyone belonged to the SS. This book paints the picture of what it was like for those who tried to live as best they could before they were unwillingly drawn into the middle of events that would change their lives forever.
The hardships told in this book sound like fiction; terrible, horrible fiction, which makes it even harder to understand when you realise circumstances like those mentioned were 'normal'.
Whilst the whole book is brilliantly written, I preferred it when Annie and Werner were young, even though the conditions were heartbreaking. When it changed to the more recent time, I felt like I'd lost something. That is the way of war, I guess. I just wanted more than I received.
For anyone with an interest in the history of WWII, especially if you are interested in the German perspective, then this is definitely one for your bookshelves. Highly recommended by me.
* A copy of this book was provided to me with no requirements for a review. I voluntarily read this book, and the comments here are my honest opinion. *
Merissa
Archaeolibrarian - I Dig Good Books!
Dec 8, 2021

A Peculiar Combination
Book
The first in the Electra McDonnell series from Edgar-nominated author Ashley Weaver, set in England...