Month: October 2005

  • The Ringer

    The Farrelly brothers certainly have managed to offend various people over the years with their brand of humour. This is taken to the extreme in the forthcoming The Ringer, which they’ve executive produced. Essentially they’ve gone out on a limb to try to make it as hard possible to like a film – at least…

  • The Man Who Smiled

    The latest Henning Mankell novel’s recently been published, but it’s not actually his latest book. It just happens to be one that’s out of sequence. Actually, we’ve had loads of Mankell novels out of sequence, but this one jumps back quite a few years and characters who were last known to be dead are suddenly…

  • Ducktastic

    So where do we begin with Ducktastic? It’s a new play written by the guys who wrote The Play What I Wrote about Morecombe and Wise. It revolves around someone who was previously “the biggest breakfast time magician on the Vegas strip” and who performs magic with a duck flavour (not in the Chinese “duck”…

  • Beethoven Downloads

    This article (free subs. reqd.) about the BBC’s Beethoven downloads really annoys me. Not the article itself, but the words and thoughts of John Whittingdale of the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee. It seems that the record companies are still annoyed that the BBC actually gave away some music free. These were recordings of…

  • Lord Of War

    Now here’s a curiosity. If you happen to see a little of the trailer, or happen upon the poster for Lord Of War on the tube you might be forgiven for thinking that this is some kind of Con Air 2 – Nic Cage in a big action movie. But that’s not remotely the case.…

  • Heroes

    It’s ages since I last went to the theatre, and that would have almost certainly been a freebie from my friend Simon who works for a theatre marketing company. Yesterday, I read an interview with Richard Griffith in The Observer. He’s in a new play called Heroes, a translation by Tom Stoppard of a French…

  • SF In London

    I popped along to this after work, and was reminded once again that I don’t read enough SF. The discussion was getting very interesting before I had to leave for my next busy Monday night engagement.

  • Free Cowboy Junkies Music

    Salon have a free download of a track from the latest Cowboy Junkies album available. You will have to watch an ad if you’re not a subscriber. Uncut magazine also has a track from the same new album cover-mounted this month. But not having the CD with me, I can’t tell you whether it’s the…

  • Alex Cox

    I’ve just noticed that filmmaker Alex Cox is blogging again. A while back, he used to write a weekly column for the BBC film website. He kept a weekly update of how his filmmaking was going. But probably due to the political nature that his life tended to take, he was removed, and the diary…

  • Two Great Titles For Autobiographies

    My Rise to Obscurity by a Mexican actor named Del Zamora and If I Don’t Write It, Nobody Else Will by Eric Sykes.

  • The Weekend Papers

    So how many DVDs did you pick up this weekend. I got East Is East in The Guardian, Indochine in The Independent and Rogue Trader from The Mail On Sunday (sorry sorry sorry). I didn’t get Cabaret from The Times because I’ve already had that free from a paper before. I may have missed the…

  • The Plot Against America

    The only Philip Roth book I’d read before this was The Human Stain, which ultimately I found unsatisfying. I haven’t been to see the film. But when this came out in hardback a year ago it was so well reviewed that I thought that the man who’s regarded as one of America’s greatest living novelists…