A ghostly gay romance and a play about the double discrimination of being British-Asian and deaf provide some unique insights, while an innovative show about the Manhattan Project and an avant-garde adaptation of a Dalton Trumbo classic inject some anti-war fury into the Fringe. Reviews by Sally Stott, David Pollock and Fergus Morgan
All the Sins Renewed for Season Three worldscreen.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from worldscreen.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
RATING: 8.5/10 Heavy Trip has slowly built its following since its initial limited release in fall 2018, but the doors to a larger audience blew open the following year with its wider release on
Amazon Prime. If you are a heavy metal fan that has been burned by other comedic movies that lazily treated the genre as a joke, rest assured that Heavy Trip not only provides an infectiously uproarious tale, but also treats its musical inspirations with complete reverence. Heavy Trip is a tale of two approaches to comedic film writing. The first two-thirds of the film is a relatable tale of a death metal enthusiast (
Credit: Walter Presents
Walter Presents has given us so much drama from around the globe over the years. Finland hasn’t been a particularly fruitful source to date, which is perhaps surprising given it’s often lumped in with Norway, Sweden and Denmark – all leaders in the crime drama genre. But that lack of recognition looks set to change with not one, but two fantastic Finnish finds: ‘Bullets’ – due out on the WP platform shortly – is a fabulous female led drama, and ‘All The Sins’ is an equally enthralling tale of murder and strange goings-on in a rural religious community in a village near Oulu.