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A New Wave Musical and Irish Vampires, Now Available to Stream

A New Wave Musical and Irish Vampires, Now Available to Stream This week’s recommended titles include Breaking Glass, Tweet Boys From County Hell I had a dream recently, of empty luxury condos filled with dandelions. Like, so choked with them that it looked like a pulsing white carpet. And you couldn’t really step anywhere without stirring up cascades of dandelion seeds, and even the slightest movement made you feel like Winona Ryder dancing in the ice-snow in I’ve started going back to in-theater movies. I’m fully vaccinated, but still double-masked because so very many have made grand dramatic pronouncements of exactly who they are in ignoring mask mandates and CDC guidelines. I’m not ready for concessions yet, and my heart is with anyone who loves the movies but is still negotiating what’s safe. I’m happy to keep writing these collections of what all is available at home as long as people still want to read them.

Boys From County Hell Review

Not rated. The vampire film is a difficult one with which to find any new ground to break. Vampires have been a staple of horror movies since the inception of film, and since then they’ve been depicted in just about every way imaginable. The most famous of course are those based on Bram Stoker’s Dracula, from the Bela Lugosi classic and the swagger of Christopher Lee in the Hammer films to the cheesy turn-of-the-millennium “hipness” of Dracula 2000. And yet, despite all the different versions of the Dracula story, film always finds a way to retell the tale, sometimes in wildly divergent takes. That brings us to

Things To Watch: Boys From County Hell

Better Tagline:  My goodness, my hemoglobin. Not So Brief Plot Synopsis: In the quiet town of Six Mile Hill, Eugene Moffat (Jack Rowan) and his dad Francie (Nigel O Neill) don t see eye-to-eye on much. Francie thinks Eugene is an aimless goof-off, while Eugene bides his time messing with the tourists who stop by due to the town s tenuous connection to Dracula author Bram Stoker. But when a freak accident awakens an ancient evil, can father and son come together to save the town? Critical Analysis: Nothing like an Irish horror movie to make you search for the subtitles setting. Writer/director Chris Baugh, adapting his own 2013 short film, may be best known as the director of a handful of episodes of

Ireland readying raft of film shoots after pandemic pause

New projects from Lorcan Finnegan and Martin McDonagh will shoot in Ireland. Author: Esther McCarthy Published: 11 Mar 2021 Ireland’s production sector is gearing up for a busy year after the pandemic slowdown as the film and TV sector aims to strengthen its position as a hub for homegrown and international film and TV production. It comes as this week’s Dublin International Film Festival (DIFF, March 3-14) showcases a notable selection of Irish features, documentaries and shorts. Upcoming projects shooting or preparing to film in Ireland include  Nocebo, the latest feature from  Vivarium writer-director Lorcan Finnegan. Starring Eva Green and Mark Strong, the psychological thriller centres on a fashion designer who suffers a mysterious illness. A Filipino nanny offers to assist using traditional means and reveals a horrifying truth. 

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