22 August 2004

Cinema, SAG Archive

bon voyage

Jean-Paul Rappenau’s film ‘Bon Voyage’ was great entertainment. The film is about a group of French people coming to terms with the Nazi occupation of Paris in 1940.

Movie stars, spies, government ministers and jailbirds collide in a panoramic gridlock.

Cinema, SAG Archive

before sunset

I checked what was on. I was in the mood for a love story, to be more precise, an intelligent love story.
It was an easy choice. It has to be Richard Linklater’s ‘Before Sunset’!

I had seen ‘Before Sunrise’

Cinema, SAG Archive

mean girls

The scenario to the new American teen comedy, ‘Mean Girls’, directed by Mark S. Waters, is the period of transition that teenager Cady Heron (Lindsay Lohan) goes through when she starts at an average American school campus.
Cady has been

Cinema, SAG Archive

mother

The British drama ‘The Mother’, directed by Roger Michell from a script by Hanif Kureishi and starring Anne Reid in the main role as May, really got to me.
‘The Mother’ had the perfect formula for drama. We have a

SAG Archive, Theatre

blasted

The late Sara Kane’s ‘Blasted’ is one of the most powerful anti war dramas that I have seen.
The scenario….Ian, a middle-aged journalist, and Cate, a friend twenty years younger, are having a torrid encounter in a hotel room where

SAG Archive, Theatre

bombshells

Caroline O’Connor received a deserved standing ovation on the opening night of her one woman show ‘Bombshells’ at the Seymour Centre.
‘Bombshells’, written by Joanna Murray-Smith, is a Melbourne Theatre Company production, directed by its Artistic Director Simon Phillips, which

SAG Archive, Theatre

mr bailey’s minder

The Stables’s current production, Debra Oswald’s ‘Mr Bailey’s Minder’ was a journey worth the taking.
The journey starts when a young, rough as guts woman Therese (Kate Mulvany) takes on the job of being the carer of incorrigible artist, Leo

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