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I once got upgraded when flying to New York from Heathrow T4. Walked in to the lounge behind Yoko Ono. She was only there because the Concorde Lounge was being refurbished at the time. So I got bumped up a grade but still only rubbed shoulders with the famous because they were slumming it!
I could happily live out the rest of my life on bread, cheese and wine. Doesn't matter if the cheese is hard or soft, creamy or crumbly, mild or sharp, odourless or rank. I do draw the line at Casu Marzu though.
Let us mourn the demise of Ned Stark, Hand of the King.
All hail Joffrey Baratheon, first of his name, Lord of the Andals and of the First Men, and Ser Loras, who commands the Kingsguard from across the Narrow Sea. We wish them good fortune in their quest for a new Hand.
Pedantry alert! Although the song is credited to the Beatles (and the composition to "Lennon-McCartney"), Yesterday was composed and the original recording played exclusively by Paul McCartney. The rest of the band disliked it. In fact, "Yesterday" is not really a Beatles song.
I always thought - wrongly as it turns out - that the dirt track on stilts over the Hogarth Roundabout was opened by Jayne Mansfield. It was the one over the Chiswick Roundabout a bit further west that she opened, as reported in this dated but charmingly misogynist YouTube clip:
Hard Truths is full on Mike Leigh, who specialises in these bleak domestic dramas. He assembles a cast without having a script, which then emerges through months of rehearsal. The performances are outstanding. Somehow he makes these stories of people's empty lives entertaining and even funny. The man's a genius.
Like many on here I remember him from his earlier days, up to "Blood on the Tracks" - one of his very best. Can't wait to see the film.
Couldn't believe the reaction from the scholarly establishment in 2016 when he won the Nobel Prize for Literature. There is more poetry in "Desperation Row" than they have produced in their entire careers.
That's a fair point, dmm. Until you pointed it out, I had not seen my potential inconsistency. In mitigation I would say that (leaving aside a few contemporary headbangers) the Nazis are universally condemned as evil, whereas the Catholic church purports to be a force for good. Conclave is a story of unscrupulous power politics in an institution which claims to be holy, caring and compassionate. The Nazis never claimed to be any of these things.
Conclave and films like it (The Two Popes, Doubt) rely on putting lipstick on the pig. They ultimately try to find the good in the Catholic church. Zone of Interest doesn't look for good in the Nazis. Everyone knows there isn't any.
So agree about Zone of Interest - one of the best films I've seen in years. Both it and Anatomy of a Fall star the incomparable Sandra Hüller. and both were nominated at last year's Oscars.
I had my doubts about Conclave - I don't think a truly degenerate institution like the Catholic Church should be played for entertainment - but the film looked stunning. A certainty for Cinematography.
It's hard to disagree with the thoughts expressed in that quote but surprising that they came from devout Anglican and self-described "Christian Apologist" C.S.Lewis.
Oh I do so agree. All variations of "to be honest", "if I'm being honest", "I have to be honest", and their bastard cousin "I'm not gonna lie". Meaningless verbal chewing gum. At the Rooney/Vardy libel trial, a witness began answering a question with the words "I'm not gonna lie...". The judge immediately interrupted with "I should hope not. You are in a court of law!"