Posts Tagged ‘Paul Kaye’
January 10, 2010 - 10:40 am
Quite possibly the worst film I’ve seen. The film features a cast of accomplished so I can only blame the director for the extraordinary performances of wood. The London of the film is cliché (shots of the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace, the flat front of the Houses of Parliament) and the plot is as old as
the hills.
There is zero chemistry between any of the characters and some real cringe worthy and vomit-inducing lines. Also for too long - I wish I could get a refund in the (more) two hours of my life I lost in this absolutely useless chatter.
I wish I could give this movie a negative score. Avoid at all costs.
Amazing.
Tags: Anthony O'Donnell, Brian Cox, Colin Salmon, Drama, Emily Mortimer, John Fortune, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Margaret Tyzack, Matthew Goode, Paul Kaye, Penelope Wilton, Rupert Penry-Jones, Scarlett Johansson, Scott Handy, Selina Cadell, Steve Pemberton, WARNER HOME VIDEO, Woody Allen Posted in 1, Uncategorized |
November 18, 2009 - 1:59 pm
Are you crazy? 56%?
I saw this movie recently and was thoroughly beaten fear. Woody Allen is a genius.
I thought it would be a movie about ‘tennis’ (Wimbledon) - but was informed it was written and directed by Woody, so we really wanted to see. I knew the man was a great
writer, actor, director - but this movie really hits on all fronts.
Brian Cox, the father figure in the film has many lines - but each line is like gold, honey … And that goes for all dialogs. Custom give anything in the story, but I recommend this as a ‘must see’.
Tags: Anthony O'Donnell, Brian Cox, Colin Salmon, Drama, Emily Mortimer, John Fortune, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Margaret Tyzack, Matthew Goode, Paul Kaye, Penelope Wilton, Rupert Penry-Jones, Scarlett Johansson, Scott Handy, Selina Cadell, Steve Pemberton, WARNER HOME VIDEO, Woody Allen Posted in 1, Uncategorized |
October 17, 2009 - 9:24 am
Try as he might, Cliff Starkey (Paul Kaye) can not stay out of trouble. Sleep in his hometown on the English coast, nothing else inspires …
Apart from bowling. Cliff dreams of playing for his country but has always preferred following his own rules much to the disapproval of local club tops protruded.
When Rick Schwartz (Vince Vaughn), a slick American sports agent, Cliff has under its wing, the bad boy of bowls “rock and roll attitude and gestures suddenly scandalous hero into a national icon. Also starring James Cromwell, Alice Evans and comedian Johnny English Vegas.Another race of the mill comedy film with nothing new to show!
Kaye has played a rebelious any brand, trying to fight the powers that be ..! Another seen all the movies and the story line.
If a test boring afternoon, but dont expect anything.Quite really boring … which is a shame given the actors in it.
Tags: Anthony O'Donnell, Brian Cox, Colin Salmon, Drama, Emily Mortimer, John Fortune, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Margaret Tyzack, Matthew Goode, Paul Kaye, Penelope Wilton, Rupert Penry-Jones, Scarlett Johansson, Scott Handy, Selina Cadell, Steve Pemberton, WARNER HOME VIDEO, Woody Allen Posted in 1, Uncategorized |
September 13, 2009 - 6:29 pm
… but with added swearing. A very tedious and boring plot Wil have no doubt worked out within the first 5 minutes and leaves little or no reason to keep watching.
The jokes are a little better, Paul Kay is generally annoying and Johnny Vegas underutilized, the film often depend on their belly laughs, where there is none to be had. It also seems to be set in an alternate universe where the bizarre
general public really care about bowling (with mockup of the cover of The Sun) - they should have had the confidence to go all the way and were armed with machine guns cows parachuting onto the green during the games is their lack of anything approaching realism.
I head to the Blackadder / / Office of Alan Partridge, etc. DVD’s if after a few really fun, stimulating and rewarding contemporary British comedy and avoid this like the plague it is.
Tags: Anthony O'Donnell, Brian Cox, Colin Salmon, Drama, Emily Mortimer, John Fortune, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Margaret Tyzack, Matthew Goode, Paul Kaye, Penelope Wilton, Rupert Penry-Jones, Scarlett Johansson, Scott Handy, Selina Cadell, Steve Pemberton, WARNER HOME VIDEO, Woody Allen Posted in 1, Uncategorized |