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Top films to watch on TV this weekend
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Top films to watch on TV this weekend
independent.ie - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from independent.ie Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Written and directed by Susanna Nicchiarelli
Miss Marx, an Italian-Belgian production written and directed by actress-filmmaker Susanna Nicchiarelli, concerns itself with the latter part of Eleanor Marx’s life from the death of her famous father, Karl Marx, in March 1883 to her own suicide in March 1898.
Miss Marx
The film covers certain aspects of Eleanor’s political and public activity, but it leans heavily toward an interest in her emotional life.
Miss Marx is strongly colored by the writer/director’s feminist outlook and tends to project that into (and impose it onto) the past.
Nicchiarelli’s work opens in 1883. Eleanor Marx (Romola Garai), known to her family as Tussy, eulogizes her father (“He died in harness, his intellect untouched”) at her parents’ shared grave in London. Eleanor soon meets playwright Edward Aveling (Patrick Kennedy) at a lecture he is delivering on the poet Percy Shelley (she and Aveling will later co-author a pamphlet on the subject,
London theatre review: Quartermaine s Terms, starring Rowan Atkinson
9th Feb 2013 12:53pm | By Louise Kingsley It’s all smiles and bonhomie in the staffroom after the half term break at a Cambridge school of English for foreigners in the late Simon Gray’s bleakly funny, socially observant play.
Written in 1981, but set a couple of decades earlier, it unwraps, bit by bit, the unhappiness beneath the superficial smiles which ensure that, in very British fashion, the teachers never pry too deeply into the lives of the colleagues they work with every day.
In the course of five scenes covering a handful of years, health declines, marriages break up – and are patched together - a hated elderly parent dies and children become increasingly problematic.
A nice little nasty.
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1/28/2021
Niamh Algar stars as a film censor in 1980s Britain who gets a little too dedicated to her job in director Prano Bailey-Bond s debut feature.
Steeped in the gory look, grimy feel and transgressive spirit of the so-called video nasties from the 1980s, British meta-minded horror movie
Censor offers an admirable pastiche, spiked with black humor. A debut feature for director Prano Bailey-Bond, whose well-traveled short
Nasty covered similar territory,
Censor stars upcoming actor Niamh Algar (
Calm with Horses) as a film censor who notices eerie parallels between a horror movie she s assessing for work and a tragedy from her own past.
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