Read Up On The Great Gatsby: Great Gatsby Reading List

The Great Gatsby has been released and the roaring 1920s are back in fashion in a big way. We have a reading list for you from the lovely people at Kobo

 

Has Baz Luhrmann stayed true to the book?  To find out if he has captured the essence of the novel it might be time to revisit the classic.

 

Kobo has provided a handful of reads for inspiration and the best bit is you can get them all for under £10.00. All eBooks are available online at www.kobobooks.com and can be read on any mobile, laptop, tablet or eReading device.

 

FICTION

 great Gatsby

 

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Price: 0.98p

 

The story of the fabulously wealthy Jay Gatsby and his love for the beautiful Daisy Buchanan, of lavish parties on Long Island at a time when, The New York Times remarked, “gin was the national drink and sex the national obsession,” it is an exquisitely crafted tale of America in the 1920s that resonates with the power of myth. A novel of lyrical beauty yet brutal realism, of magic, romance, and mysticism, The Great Gatsby is one of the great classics of twentieth-century literature.

This is the definitive, textually accurate edition of The Great Gatsby, edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli and authorised by the estate of F. Scott Fitzgerald.

 

image015

The Waste Land and other Poems by T.S. Eliot

Price: £4.19

 

April is the cruellest month, breeding Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing Memory and desire, stirring Dull roots with spring rain . . . Published in 1922, The Waste Land was the most revolutionary poem of its time, offering a devastating vision of modern civilisation which has lost none of its power as we enter a new century.

 

image016

 

The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway

Price: £5.99

 

Published in 1926 to explosive acclaim, The Sun Also Rises stands as perhaps the most impressive first novel ever written by an American writer. A roman à clef about a group of American and English expatriates on an excursion from Paris’s Left Bank to Pamplona for the July fiesta and its climactic bull fight, a journey from the centre of a civilization spiritually bankrupted by the First World War to a vital, God-haunted world in which faith and honour have yet to lose their currency, the novel captured for the generation that would come to be called “Lost” the spirit of its age, and marked Ernest Hemingway as the preeminent writer of his time.

 

NON FICTION

image017

 

 

Critical Studies:  The Great Gatsby by Kathleen Parkinson

Price:  £4.99

 

Kathleen Parkinson places this brilliant and bitter satire on the moral failure of the Jazz Age firmly in the context of Scott Fitzgerald’s life and times. She explores the intricate patterns of the novel, its chronology, locations, imagery and use of colour, and how these contribute to a seamless interplay of social comedy and symbolic landscape. She devotes a perceptive chapter to Fitzgerald’s controversial portrayal of women and goes on to discuss how the central characters, Gatsby and Nick Carraway, embody and confront the dualism inherent in the American dream.

 

image018

 

Only Yesterday:   An Informal History Of The Nineteen Twenties by Frederick Lewis Allen

Price:  £7.91

 

Hailed as a classic even when it was first published in 1931, Only Yesterday remains one of the most vivid and precise accounts of the volatile stock market and the heady boom years of the 1920’s. A vibrant social history that is unparalleled in scope and accuracy, it artfully depicts the rise of post – World War I prosperity, the catalytic incidents that led to the Crash of 1929, and the devastating economic decline that ensued–all set before a colourful backdrop of flappers, Al Capone, the first radio, and the “scandalous” rise of skirt hemlines. Now, this mesmerizing chronicle is reintroduced to offer readers of today an unforgettable look at one of the most dynamic periods of America’s past.

 

image019

 

The Roaring 20’s And The Wall Street Crash by Nick Shepley

Price:  £2.27

 

The Wall Street Crash was an epic failure of the financial system at the start of the 20th Century, but it alone did not cause the Great Depression. This edition of Explaining Modern History looks at the deeper causes of the crisis. Ideal for GCSE and A Level.

 

This historical book describes Americas entry into the first world war -leaving it the most affluent country the world had ever seen, through the fantasy of American capitalism in the 1920s culminating in an examination of the causes of the Wall Street Crash and the Great Depression and finishing with an assessment of the effectiveness of the government’s economic remedies. All whilst busting myths of the crash of 1929, explaining in very clear terms how it actually happened, and drawing enlightening parallels to today’s economic woes.

Iron Man 3 {Film Review}

This movie couldn’t have any more weight on its shoulders. Not only would it start of blockbuster season of 2013 but will have to follow from The Avengers. That’s a huge task to tackle but Marvel hired Shane Black, writer/director of action films such as Lethal Weapon, The Last Boy Scout and his directorial debut Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. Black seems more of a natural filmmaker than Jon Favreau (if you have seen Bang Bang, you will know that Black and Downey Jr. are a match made perfect). This film is essentially what you’d expect from an Iron Man movie and that entirely depends whether you see it as a good thing or bad thing.

 

Robert Downey Jr. continues to bring such charisma to Tony Stark, he really does make this movie work in terms on rooting for the protagonist. Stark is dealing with a personal issue; since his near death experience in The Avengers, he’s been having post traumatic stress (reference to our feelings after 9/11, even Stark says “hasn’t been the same since New York”). It’s an interesting factor that weighs on Tony Stark’s shoulders, almost identical to his alcoholism in the comics (which I thought it would lead up to it). Though the tone and the way they treat Tony’s PTS is very bi-polar; they bring it up like this will affect him and bring him down, but it then it gets treated as a comedy later in the film and doesn’t really get resolved or goes nowhere. Gwenyth Paltrow finally gets to do something useful as Pepper Potts, she’s essentially the sensible one out of the cast (whether you see that as a positive as a female character or a joy kill for Tony Stark). The rest of the characters are serviceable, Don Cheadle is basically Tony Stark’s Murtaugh (which Shane Black writes brilliantly with Stark and Rhodes) but Rebecca Hall’s character feels more of a plot device than a supporting character. There is not much I can say before ruining the surprise twist but if you have seen the film, you know what I’m talking about. I won’t say much about it but I will say I did not see it coming and I thought it was an interesting twist that was refreshing (though I won’t be surprised that a lot comic book/Iron Man fans will feel the character has been treated in a disrespectful way).

iron_man_three_ver11_xlg

 

The film does contain great set-pieces, especially with the mid-air rescue with Iron Man and Air Force One crew. The final climactic battle scene with the Iron Man suits is really fun to watch and really interesting to see the different type of Iron Man suits Stark had created. Though it’s almost interesting to see what Pacific Rim will be able to deliver in terms of men in iron suits. I was very impressed how much Marvel Studios allowed to have Tony out of his suit for the majority of the running time (same as I was impressed with The Dark Knight Rises on having Bruce Wayne not wear the Bat-suit a lot). It actually showed Tony still being the genius he is on being able to do what he does best without the suit (as Obediah Stane said in Iron Man to scientist having trouble replicating one of Tony Stark’s creations; “TONY STARK WAS ABLE TO BUILD THIS IN A CAVE WITH A BOX OF SCRAPS!”).

 

Although the film doesn’t really soar to the skies as it really just goes on autopilot for the most part. The villains in the Iron Man movies haven’t really been memorable and the villain’s motive in this movie is just being power hungry. Granted Tony Stark finally is given a worthy adversary that isn’t another man in an iron suit (a huge disappointment in Iron Man 2 and a waste of Mickey Rourke’s talent). It doesn’t detract the quality of the movie but there are plenty of other comic book movies that you can compare and they don’t add anything new or interesting to separate itself from the others. Another thing that makes the movie fall apart (almost) is Tony Stark’s thinking has gone backwards after The Avengers; he decides to respond to The Mandarin’s video threats by threatening him and also giving out his home address. Though he is still surprised when The Mandarin does respond by sending attack helicopters to destroy his home and doesn’t have any back-up plan (something you’d think Tony would have been prepared for, as Jarvis mentioned that he has been awake for 72 hours).

 

Overall; a fun sequel to Iron Man and a good start to 2013 blockbuster season. Light-years better than Iron Man 2 but still think Joss Whedon did a better job on writing Tony Stark/Iron Man in The Avengers. Robert Downey Jr. does what he does best and the rest of the cast are having fun with their roles. Shane Black does deliver wit but also the spectacle. It’s a shame it’s just a decent blockbuster than a great one. Your turn Man of Steel!

 

3 out of 5

 

p.s. Stay after the closing credits (but you already knew that, right?)

 

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLorLVa95Xo?list=SPK5HARgNfgj9xRBC52Z7YRIXW2GCD99OT&w=560&h=315]

In a World Film Review | Sundance London 2013

MV5BMjg4MTU2Mjg0M15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwOTE0NDE5OA@@._V1_SY317_CR280,0,214,317_

In A World… takes it’s title from the unforgettable catchline of the late Don LaFontaine, the
voice actor whose deep, thunderous delivery of said line became synonymous with the film
trailers and advertisements we know today. Over news footage of his passing and industry legacy
we are introduced to Carol Solomon (Writer, director and star Lake Bell), a struggling vocal
coach eeking out a career in the Los Angeles vocal performance community and attempting
to emerge from the shadow of her father ‘Sam Sotto’ (Fred Melamed of A Serious Man), the
current ‘King Of The Voiceover’ after LaFontaine’s death. When a major production company
decide to bring back the ‘in a world’ tag to promote their new fantasy blockbuster franchise
Carol decides to throw her hat into the ring of competition against her father and hideously
chauvinistic upstart Gustav Warner (Ken Marino). May the best voice win…

The brilliantly droll trailer for Jerry Seinfeld’s Comedian aside (Google it, trust me) the world of
film trailer voiceovers sound likes an unexpected and unlikely source for a comedy yet it proves
an inspired choice that owes a lot to the talents of it’s leading lady/helmer. In A World… toes
the line with a cliche triumph of the underdog story arc yet breathes fresh life into the formula
with it’s unique spin of genre tropes and uncanny industry insight. It’s a world where words
don’t just speak louder than actions; they are the action and Bell has a lot of fun with the daily
grind of voice artists, their obsessive commitments to their trade (Carol is constantly armed
with a tape recorder for capturing sound bites from various passersby) and even a hysterically
OTT Rocky style training montage. Fledging these ideas out to a 90 minute running time sounds
like an awful stretch but it’s a testament to not just Bell’s handling of the material but to her
central performance that it works as well as it does. Charm can be an easy word to throw around
but she quite frankly radiates the stuff. Carol faces down a lot of problems that seem recurrent
in comedies of this ilk (a fumbling romance with a sound designer is an amusing subplot) yet
Bell never allows her to be swamped by them or cowed into submission. She breezes across the
screen with an elegant but spikey energy that is infectious, spouting off an acerbic, un-PC wit
that gets laughs by the plenty. She’s ably supported by fellow performers, many of them her own
friends and fellow collaborators, who revel in the brilliant, partly improvised dialogue.

In A World… is not breaking any major new ground and if there are faults to be found it is when
the film strays closest to the formula it is gently ribbing. There are no major surprises to which
way Carol’s professional and romantic endeavours will play out and some may bemoan the
seemingly signposted turns her relationship with her father pop up, though frankly the chemistry
between Bell and the wonderfully bemused Melamed is a joy to watch. A climactic monologue
about the role of women in the industry and ‘finding your voice’ is admittedly quite on the nose
though frankly Bell deserves all the credit she gets for creating one of the most likeable leads of
recent memory and not bowing down to the dull and conformed roles that many actresses have to
submit to in the romcom genre. She picked up a Waldo Salt Screenwriting award for her work at
Sundance Utah earlier in the year and hopefully on the basis of this, it won’t be the last accolade
to come her way.

Touchy Feely Film Review | Sundance London 2013

Touchy FeelyWith a number of small breakout films (Humpday and Your Sister’s Sister the most recent) and an episode of Mad Men to her name Lynn Shelton is establishing quite the name for herself

on the American independent film circuit. Her latest work Touchy Feely brings together a cast

of established character actors for a comic drama concerning physical and spiritual health and

fragile family and emotional ties. The plot revolves around two middle aged siblings; Abby

(Rosemarie DeWitt), a carefree massage therapist and Paul (Josh Pais), an uptight and painfully

shy dentist. Both are unmarried; she is passionately in love with her new boyfriend (Scoot

McNairy), he is desperately clutching onto his relationship with his sullen daughter Jenny

(Ellen Page) who spends her time assisting her father at his steadily declining family dentistry.

Dynamics shift when shortly after her boyfriend asks her to move in with him, Abby becomes

completely physically adverse to human contact rendering her useless at her job and wracked

with self doubt. At the same time Paul finds that he is suddenly able to ‘cure’ his patients

crippling tooth pain with seemingly no effort at all…

 

Touchy Feely attempts to find laughs in what is fairly niche subject matter for comedy films.

The state of your soul and body is a pretty existential place to search for mirth but the film does

make a decent stab at it in its first acts. The performances radiate with a quiet, unfussy naturality

that you can only expect from such a fine ensemble of character actors. Rosemarie DeWitt in

particular is charming and appealing in the latest of small but winning performances including

the titular role in Rachel Getting Married and Josh Pais is great as melancholy personified.

His Paul shuffles, mumbles and grimaces through proceedings to terrifically funny and oddly

moving effect. It’s a role that incorporates a surprising amount of comic physicality into it but all

the better for it. The rare occasions when he manages to force a smile resemble some form of

nervous, childlike glee and he injects a much needed boost of life into the proceedings.

The main issue with the film is it’s elusiveness; everytime you try to close your hand around it

you catch nothing. Shelton’s typical style of character establishment first and improvisation on

behalf of her performers has done her well in the past when focusing on a small, tight band of

characters. Yet in her first ensemble, there’s simply too much for her loose freestyle aesthetic to

cover up. Are we meant to laugh at the portrayal of new age therapy or be in quiet awe of it’s

supposed restorative qualities? The plot threads appear to tie themselves up without getting into

much detail on the subject. We get a substantial supporting role from Allison Janey as Abby’s

fellow healer/confidante in what like and effort to get more of the concepts across but this is

too underplayed to have impact. Whatever you think of new age therapy yourself, watching the

characters fumble loosely with this for 90 or so minutes can’t keep the attention rapt. Matters

aren’t helped by an undercooked subplot concerning Jenny’s misjudged crush on Abby’s

boyfriend. A final act revelation seems to have wandered in unexpected from another film

altogether (although the scene is beautifully shot) and a bonding, out of body experience between

brother and sister seems terribly neat and convenient.

 

Shelton is a great talent and it’s good to see that her scope is expanding yet she needs to maintain

a firmer hand on her material and a balance between the humour and the maudlin in order not

to fall again into this frustratingly ‘grey area’ of tone. Hopefully this is merely a blip in her

otherwise impressive filmography.

The Look of Love Film Review | Sundance London 2013

the look of love filmIn an astonishingly versatile career that has lasted nearly two decades, British filmmaker Michael

Winterbottom has turned his hand to an astonishing amount of challenging and diverse output.

His work has strayed from fiction to factual, between comedy and drama and from light froth

to storms of controversy. His new film marks the fourth collaboration with comedian Steve

Coogan, their most notable so far being 24 Hour Party People, an excellent account of the

Manchester music scene of the late 70’s and early 80’s. Their subject matter this time around

is Paul Raymond, ‘The King Of Soho’, a notorious figure of the British media who starting in

the late 50’s built an empire from his ‘gentleman’s clubs’, pornography publications and real

estate properties to become the richest man in Britain, broke many taboos of the post-war era and

led an extravagant lifestyle both in and out of the public spotlight. Such a divisive and colorful

character seems almost tailor made for a tell all, illuminating biopic; a modern day King Midas

story. Citizen Kane by way of Boogie Nights if you will.

 

 

Soho, 1958: Paul Raymond (Coogan) along with his wife Jean (Anna Friel) open their

first ‘gentlemen’s club’ which allow it’s patrons access to displays of sexuality previously

unavailable due to British law. As the years pass, Raymond invests in multiple properties and

starts his own magazine publications which quickly make him one of the country’s wealthiest

men. However his rise to the top is littered with adversity and tragedy shown through the prism

of the other two key women in his life; Fiona Richmond (Tamsin Egerton), cover girl and

journalist for his Men Only Magazine and Debbie Raymond (Imogen Poots), his utterly devoted

and loving daughter who was destined to take over his empire.

 

 

Raymond’s excessive and colorful lifestyle was no secret to the public at large; he had an

uncanny knowledge of PR and treated his name like a brand. The Look Of Love certainly

succeeds at portraying this lavish and sordid empire in terrific detail. Costume and set designs

are beautifully rendered across the decades that the story spans and it’s quite remarkable that

with a fairly modest budget at the filmmakers disposal, the streets are Soho are convincingly

transformed to their period look. Cinematographer Hubert Taczanowski conjures up a stunning

look for the film. The early 50’s set monochrome sequences morph into a lurid, enticing color

scheme that practically drips off the screen and replicates the grainy film stock feel of the era

that thankfully doesn’t feel forced although a number of flashy edits and montage sequences feel

a tad overdone. Unfortunately it’s in discussing the brilliant visual aesthetic of the film that you

can’t help but notice it coming up shorthand in the emotional department.

 

 

Raymond’s life was not without it’s moments of heartbreak and tragedy and the film doesn’t

shy away from them. The problem is that for the majority of its running time it assumes the

veil of a bawdy, knockabout comedy breezing through the darker and more dubious aspects

of Raymond’s career without much time to absorb the morality or the lack of it. A scene

where he faces allegations that one of his clubs is being operated as a brothel is quite literally

blink and you miss it, as though the filmmakers are worried that you may start to dislike

this man. Montages whip past in a blur stopping to name drop many important events and

accomplishments of Raymond’s eventful life yet we rarely get any heft or scope of these events.

At it’s worst it almost resembles a live action Wikipedia biography page. It’s understandable that

the filmmakers would want to market the film to the widest possible audience by keeping the

appeal broad and the laughs coming. It’s certainly not without it’s funny moments and they are

their best when dark and scathing. The sight of Raymond giving his daughter a line of cocaine

to help her through labour elicits gasps and guffaws in equal measure. Yet the film revels in it’s

comic background to a sometimes overbearing degree. Cameos from the likes of Stephen Fry,

Dara O’Briain David Walliams and Matt Lucas (in a an uncanny portrayal of John Water’s

muse Divine) are distracting and many of them far too fleeting to have any major impact on the

narrative.

 

 

Then there is Coogan himself in the central role of Raymond. Coogan is an undeniable talent

and it can be a pleasure to see comedic actors broaden their range with more straight faced

fare. However as talented a performer as he is Coogan feels miscast in the role. One of the

key problems is that the spectre of his most famous creation, appalling self centred Norfolk

based DJ Alan Partridge, hangs over the performance. Many of Coogan’s mannerisms and

vocal inflections skirt very close to that of Partridge (look out for the scene where he coaches

his dancers through their moves) and it can’t help but pull you further out of the world the

filmmaker’s are clearly working very hard to create. It seems almost churlish to criticise Coogan

for being the gifted comic actor that he is but here the pitch of the performance jars badly, the

character is played so much for laughs that when we step into his darker moments there’s a

distinct lack of empathy. Fortunately many of the supporting performances raise the films game,

most notably from the trio of actresses who play the women of Raymond’s life. Anna Friel is

terrifically steely as Raymond’s first wife; a solid bedrock of support for her husband’s ventures

and she provides one of the genuinely raw moments of drama as their marriage falls apart.

Tamsin Egerton piles on the glamour but is no fool as Raymond’s pin up girlfriend. Imogen

Poots arguably steals the whole thing as Debbie Raymond, pulling off what on paper seems like

a character of contradictions; hedonistic and full of life yet fragile and achingly vulnerable. It’s

the scenes between father and daughter that stick in the mind and hint the most at Raymond’s

softer and more conventional family persona. It’s in these scenes that we perhaps get a clearer

picture of what the film was aiming for before the tone got muddled.

 

 

The Look Of Love is certainly no disaster but given Michael Winterbottom’s terrific range

and style this can’t help but feel incredibly conventional, underwhelming and perhaps only as

substantial as one of its protagonist’s glossy publications. A lot of razzle but not enough dazzle.

 

Interview with May I Kill U? Star Hayley-Marie Axe

What did you think when you read the script?

I was intrigued and I couldn’t put it down. I did the nervous laugh thing that a lot of
people do when they first watch it, because you want to laugh at certain bits that you
really think you shouldn’t.

What made you take the role?

I really like Val’s character because on the outside she comes across as tough, but she
is vulnerable at the same time, which I can relate to. I thought she would be a very
interesting character to play and I could see myself playing her as soon as I read the
script.

Miku-Hayley-MarieAxe-LR1.jpg
Any great on set stories?

We had to go out and practice riding our bikes whilst being supervised and Kevin got
told off quite a bit, I don’t think he did his cycling proficiency at school.

Do you have a favourite genre of film?

Action or comedy….depending on my mood.

How long did the film take to shoot?

About five weeks. Went very quickly though.
What was it like working with Kevin Bishop?

Entertaining.

How do you prepare for doing a film?

I always do lots of research on the team involved so I have an idea of the style, and
even more research on the characters and the story. For ‘May I kill U?’ I read up
on serial killers, rode my bike a lot and chatted up the rather attractive policemen at
Sloane Square station on the way to my audition to ask them questions, and I also had
several conversations with a female officer from my local police station, who was
very helpful.

Do you think horror and comedy naturally work well together?

Yes I think horror and comedy can work really well together-particularly dark
comedy, and there is a place in the market for it.

Do you think that the roles for women in film are improving?

Yes, I think roles for women are improving, but there are still many more roles for
men than there are for women.

What’s next for you?

I’m currently playing Katia in the action web-series ‘Next Global Crisis’, and Delilah
Crunch in the spin off ‘The Fail-Safe Sisters’.

 

Olympus Has Fallen | Film Review

olympushasfallenAs the tattered flag of the USA is flung aside by the North Koreans during their attack of the White House, the President of the USA is taken hostage, his son goes missing and America’s prized nukes become their very own weapons of mass destruction. 

 

Olympus Has Fallen (the code word for the White House) is the scene of a merciless shoot-out between the Secret Service and North Koreans and only Mike Banning (Gerard Butler), can save the day.

 

A disgraced former presidential guard, Butler’s on a one-man mission to save the President (Aaron Eckhart), his son, and to stop the terrorists from obtaining the three passwords to detonate America’s web of nuclear subheads.  

 

Directed by Antoine Fuqua, in the 13 minutes it takes the North Koreans to take over the White House (and a whole two minutes before the Army intervenes) the unwavering attack echoes the tragic scenes of 911 as a bomber plane whistles past high-rise offices and clips the Washington Monument before it comes crashing to the ground.

 

The film’s release is also at a somewhat ironic time as the hostilities between the two nations in our current world are also surfacing.

 

Intelligent and co-ordinated, the attack is played out with militant efficiency as innocents and secret agents’ bodies pile up on the lawn of the Presidential building and inside one of the safest places in the USA.

 

The light and sound effects on the big screen will leave you feeling shocked and impressed at the same time.

 

With its twists, split-second timing and traitors, Olympus Has Fallen has all the ingredients of a Hollywood action movie and at times, picked up on the comedic lines of Bruce Willis in the Die Hard sagas.

 

When the Defence Secretary Ruth McMillan (brilliantly played by Melissa Leo) is kicked and punched to the floor – a tad uncomfortable to view– she asks the president how her hair looks and when Banning calls his nurse wife to ‘check-in’, they both skirt around the truth and say they’ve had busy days.

 

At times the plot was a little contrived and the continuity was lacking. Banning, who no longer worked by the President’s side, was still able to gain access to the White House security systems and files, just as well really.

 

And as the guns blaze and Banning’s driving to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, his smooth face cuts to a stubbly square-jaw line in the next scene.

 

Overall, Olympus Has Fallen is an impressive action movie despite its recurrent plot line favoured by Hollywood directors.

 

And the inclusion of Morgan Freeman, the Speaker of the House who by default becomes the unlikely Acting President, is a sure fan-pleaser.

 

Butler provides the eye-candy, the North Koreans are the baddies and America is hailed as an undefeatable nation.

 

May I Kill U? Film Review

kevin bishop may i kill uI had no idea what to expect from May I Kill U? I thought it was a horror but googled it to learn that it was also a comedy and had noted British comedian Kevin Bishop in it. In fact this black comedy is sharp, dark and incredibly funny.

The film is also a modern take on society. It has a young police officer (Kevin Bishop) who becomes a social media literate vigilante serial killer. Quite a mouthful. He announces his kills on Twitter and asks his ‘fans’ advice on killing methods and who he should kill. It is a witty and smart take on modern society and crime.

The killer is very polite. Asking his victims if he can kill them and only doing so if they give him their permission. He announces certain areas crime free zones and warns there is a death penalty if this is broken. He bumps off drug dealers, people traffickers, wife abusers and thieves.

Director Stuart Urban previously directed a brilliant feature-length documentary, I Am Not Dead, about his father, a Polish Jewish doctor, who escaped the Nazis and the Soviet Union.

Frances Barber is excellent as the bitter mother who Bishop still lives with and Hayley-Marie Axe puts in a great performance as Bishop’s partner in the police force. The script is very well written, making the film a funny and modern comedy. Go see.

Runtime: 90 mins
Directors: Stuart Urban
Cast: Ali Craig, Frances Barber, Hayley-Marie Axe, Jack Doolan, Kasia Koleczek, Kevin Bishop, Rosemary Leach