Author name: Ian Robinson

Favourite books from 2016

I only managed to get through 16 books in 2016. I had to do some very early starts (03:30 four days a week) in day job for a few months and it turned my brain to mush. That’s all sorted now, so hopefully I’ll get more reading done in 2017. From the books I did read here are my top five. These would have been up there even if I read 50 books this year.

Speak – Louisa Hall. View on iBooksAmazonAudible

The Watchmaker of Filigree Street – Natasha Pulley. View on iBooksAmazonAudible

Join – Steve Toutonghi. View on iBooksAmazonAudible

The Big Picture – Sean Carroll. View on iBooksAmazon

Europe at Midnight – Dave Hutchinson. View on iBooksAmazon

Sully film review

 

I liked Sully: Miracle on the Hudson a lot more than I thought I would. It’s a dramatisation of the events that happened in January 2009 when US Airways Flight 1549 had to land on the Hudson River in New York after a bird strike damaged both engines shortly after takeoff. The actual flight time for Flight 1549 was only 208 seconds (3 minutes and 28 seconds), and the film is 96 minutes long. The flight scenes are repeated several times, but even so, there is a lot of additional time to fill.

The bulk of the film is taken up by the National Transport Safety Board (NTSB) investigation, flashbacks to when Captain Chesley Sullenberger was learning to fly (including a similar incident in a Navy Phantom jet), and the reaction of Sully and the crew on being thrust into the national spotlight. I thought the flashbacks and the scenes were Sully was thinking about what might have happened if he hadn’t decided to ditch in the Hudson River were great. All the flight scenes in the film are excellent. Including those showing crashes that Sully imagines. I want a flight simulator that’s as good as that! The only disappointing part was the CGI of the water splash on one shot of the plane skidding on the water.

The NTSB investigators are depicted as very aggressive and as if they are looking to blame the pilots for the loss of the aircraft. I don’t know if the original investigators were that aggressive. I doubt it. But it probably had to be done to inject drama into the film for the non-flight scenes. Sully is worth seeing. See it in iMAX or MAXX if you can. Just for the flight scenes over New York alone. I rated it 8/10.

We need to fight for the future

It’s been a weird year from a politics point of view. The Brexit vote was a disaster for the UK and the world in general in my opinion. That was followed up by Trump winning the USA Presidential election. Both results allegedly due to people feeling left out of the way the modern world is changing. So they voted for campaigns led by two groups of mostly rich white men who couldn’t be more removed from the people affected by globalisation. The blue collar jobs that have moved from the UK and USA to Asia are not coming back. They will be taken by machines. Irrespective of where they happen to be situated.

It’s striking that many of the hangers-on and fellow travellers of the Brexit and Trump camps are anti science, anti women’s rights, evidence deniers, who promise the Earth then deliver little. They must be resisted.

I’m an internationalist. The Brexit supporters may get the UK out of the EU, but they’ll never get the European ideals out of me. The values of the European project and the Enlightenment are worth fighting for and will triumph in the end. But we must do it by educating people for the 22nd century and the change that ubiquitous smart manufacturing and machine learning will bring in. People will need to do other jobs that the machines will not do better. We should start by giving everyone a good basic income that they can live comfortably on. Then they can work on things that make them happy. Including looking after the planet and other people.

Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children film review

misperegrinsLoads of spoilers below.

Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children is pretty standard stuff. All competently done if familiar to films that have gone before. The most interesting aspect was how existing in the 1 day time loops where the children live for protection means that they never get to grow up and experience life. I’d wonder if it was worth it. Samual L. Jackson does a lot of monologuing and I couldn’t help thinking about Frozone talking about that topic in The Incredibles. There is also a nice Jason and The Argonauts fighting skeleton section done with modern techniques. I rated it 6/10.

It’s worth getting an AppleTV just to run Magic Fireplace

Magic Fireplace icon

You can’t beat a good fire as the nights draw in. Unfortunately I don’t have a good fire. I do however have an AppleTV, an HD television, and a good sound system. So I can have a digital fire. Using the fabulous Magic Fireplace App from Jetson Creative. It displays one of 20 different HD videos of fireplaces. With a pleasing wood burning sounds. Perfect for dark evenings on the sofa with a book and a big mug of tea. Video below.

Testing Ulysses posting to WordPress

ulysses-macUlysses is a nice macOS and iOS application for writers. I prefer Scrivener myself for writing articles and fiction. But Ulysses can also post to WordPress Blogs. I’ve recently been having a few niggles with Blogo my WordPress posting app of choice. Weird text editing glitches and stuff. So I’m thinking of starting to use something else. So this post is a test to see what posts with images and links look like when composed and posted from Ulysses.

The Girl With All The Gifts film review

The Girl with All The Gifts film poster

Spoilers aplenty below.

I never jumped on the zombie apocalypse train when it left the station a few years ago. It was fully laden though as plenty of others did jump on. Witness the popularity of TV shows like The Walking Dead, and films like 28 Days Later and World War Z. I did jump on the zombie comedy film train though, with the films Shaun of the Dead and Zombieland.

It won’t come as a surprise, after that preamble, that The Girl with All The Gifts is a film in the zombie genre. Although the zombies are called hungries in the film, and the book. The book is how I came to the film. I read it last year after it was highly recommended on several Sci-Fi blogs. I liked it a lot. Both the book and the film script were written in tandem by M.R. Carey. They tell the story of Melanie (played by Sennia Nanua in the film), who is one of a group of children being held in a military base and research centre in England. Here they are taught, while strapped into wheelchairs that are pushed into the classroom, by a sympathetic teacher called Miss Justineau (Gemma Arterton). They are also used in medical research by a team led by Dr. Caldwell (Glenn Close) who are trying to find a cure or vaccine for the fungal infection that turns people into hungries. Turns out the children are from mothers who were infected before the children were born, and have a less damaging version of the fungal infection. A sort of symbiotic relationship with it. So they are neither human or hungries. But something different, and new. Melanie is very smart and quickly learns and remembers things she is told or sees.

The military base they are in gets overrun by hungries and Melanie, Miss Justineau, and Caldwell escape in an armoured truck with two soldiers, Sargent Parks (Paddy Considine) and Private Gallagher (Fisayo Akinade). They plan to drive towards another military base but the truck is damaged and they have to continue on foot through the hungries’ infested suburbs of London. Melanie starts to play an important role in helping the group navigate the dangerous streets. The hungries don’t attack anyone already infected with the fungus, so Melanie is able to move amongst them safely. The film is actually a coming of age story as Melanie comes to realise that she, and other feral children who are like her, are the future of humanity as they can coexist with the fungal infection. She takes actions to ensure that she and the other children survive.

I liked the film a lot. The book has more detail and exposition, as you would expect. But the film is good in its own right. The performance by Sennia Nanua as Melanie is fantastic. And she is ably supported by the four other principle cast members. The depiction of post-apocalyptic London is very well done. As are the hungries. The music is very suspenseful. In lots of scenes it is just shifting harmonic tones, but it’s very effective. I loved the ending to the book, and it’s there unchanged in the film. You should definitely go see this, then read the book if your haven’t already. I rated it 8/10.

Anthropoid film review

Spoilers below.

Anthropoid is a slightly harrowing account of the Czech resistance attempt to assassinate the Nazi commander Reinhard Heydrich in occupied Prague in 1942.

It tells the story of a pair of Czech resistance fighters, trained by the British in UK, who parachute back into Czechoslovakia with the orders to link up with the resistance in Prague and carry out their mission. There are other pairs who parachute in from the same plane. These other missions are not covered in the film but several of the parachutists are in the last third of the film when they are all reunited in Prague after their missions are over. The film has the drama, peril, and violence you would expect from one that depicts an authoritarian occupying force, without many scruples, who are looking within the general populace for resistance fighters. During some of the tense scenes my heart was racing. The first film since Room that has evoked such a response. In other scenes showing torture by the SS I was very uncomfortable about what I was seeing on screen. Harrowing.

Technically the film is excellent. A great depiction of 1940’s occupied Europe. The cinematography is great. The special effects and makeup are very good too. I don’t recall the music. The film isn’t a bundle of laughs, but as a resistance and Nazi occupation war film it is very good. Recommended. Rated it 8/10.

Outlook cloudy

I used to be an IT infrastructure person. I selected and installed the first Microsoft Exchange mail system in the large company I was working in during the mid 1990’s. I championed and introduced VMware as the virtualisation platform of choice in a different job in the mid 2000’s, before moving on to a technology innovation role to identify and champion new technologies.

If I was working in a company now in an infrastructure role I would have as much as possible of the server infrastructure off premise in the public cloud. I’d only have servers on premise, or in private cloud or a 3rd party data centre, if the data was too sensitive for a public cloud service. And in that scenario I’d adopt a hybrid cloud model with all the data I could have out on public cloud servers, with just the sensitive data on the in house part of the hybrid cloud. The public cloud services I’d use would be Office 365, Microsoft Azure, maybe Igloo for Intranet services, Slack for messaging, and Airwatch for endpoint device management. If any email accounts were mission critical I’d put them on the lowest spec Exchange Server possible in house as part of a hybrid deployment of Office 365.

The IT budget I controlled would be spent on having good redundant Internet connections and giving the users the choice of device they want to use. Be it Mac, Windows PC, iOS or Android tablet, iPhone, or Android phone.

Hell or High Water review

Spoilers below.

Hell or High Water is a modern western film. With all the things you would expect in a western, but with current setting. Events play out in rural Texas. Chris Pine plays Toby who is divorced from his wife and estranged from his two sons. His recently deceased mother has left him a ranch on which oil has been discovered. Problem is that his mother was in debt to the local Texas Midland Bank and they are going to foreclose on the loans if they are not paid back very soon. So money is needed quickly or the oil rich land will be lost.

Toby, and his career criminal brother Tanner (Ben Foster), embark on a series of early morning bank robberies of Texas Midland Bank branches in order to get the money to pay back the bank. Nice twist. Banks bleeding the people dry is an overarching theme of the film. All the robberies are small so don’t interest the FBI. They do interest the soon to retire Texas Ranger Marcus (Jeff Bridges) though, and he and his partner Alberto (Gil Birmingham) go on the trail of the robbers. Jeff Bridges plays his role in a nice gnarly way. And has a good rapport and banter with Gil Birmingham’s character.

The film has everything you would want from a western. Even a modern one. Dusty sunlit Texan vistas, bank robberies, a posse like band of locals going after the robbers, a shoot out, a good sibling story with a sacrifice, nostalgia for a time that has passed, and a moral message about generational poverty and the role of banks. I liked it. Rated 7/10.

Café Society film review

Spoilers below.

Café Society is a very Woody Allen film. Even by Woody Allen film standards. If you like them you’ll probably like this. But I doubt you’ll class it as a great Woody Allen film. It’s not as good as last years Irrational Man for example.

The plot is a bit thin. It tells the story of New Yorker Bobby (played by Jesse Eisenberg) who goes to Los Angeles in the 1930’s to live and work the Hollywood scene. His uncle Phil (Steve Carell) is a successful talent agent to several film stars. Bobby falls for Phil’s assistant Vonnie (Kristen Stewart) but she is in a relationship. Later that breaks up and she and Bobby become an item. But there is a twist, that I won’t detail as it would be a major spoiler, and it doesn’t work out. Bobby returns to New York to run a night club that his gangster brother has taken ownership of by nefarious means. Bobby meets Veronica (Blake Lively) in the club one night and they marry.

The story unfolds as the lives of the main characters intertwine over the years. And with the FBI investigating Bobby’s brother. To an electrifying end! There isn’t a big climax. The characters lives have ups and downs and go on after the end of the film. Well, for most of them anyway.

From a technical point of view the film is good. The script is typical Woody Allen fare. The delivery in the first half is a bit fast and staccato maybe. There is a narration at points through the film (done by Allen) that I found a bit jarring. Breaks the 4th wall and violates the show don’t tell maxim. The cinematography is sublime. As are the sets and costumes. The 1930’s Art Deco leaps from the screen. I rated it 7/10 on IMDB. For comparison I rated Irrational Man 9/10 last year.

Time for a stupidly big iPhone

Apple hold their annual iPhone event this week. I get a free upgrade on my mobile account on 26th September. I was at the opticians last week. Turns out these three things are actually related.

My optician recommended that I get new varifocal glasses that have a +1 decrease in the prescription strength for viewing things close up. Like an iPhone. I was going to do this. At the very high cost of £595 for the pair of lenses. Advice on Twitter was that varifocals are a pain so I started to have doubts.

iOS on iPhone has a zoomed mode that basically makes everything on the screen bigger. For use in situations exactly like the one I was having to get varifocals for. I have an iPhone 6s now. Apple will release iPhone 7 Plus and probably ship it on 23rd September. I can upgrade just after that. I’m thinking of getting the bigger model and using it in Zoomed mode. It’ll basically show the same amount of stuff on screen as my iPhone 6s in standard mode. But everything will be bigger. And won’t have to hold it at arms length to focus on it!

iPhone 6S in Zoomed mode
iPhone 6S in Zoomed mode

I’m running my current iPhone in Zoomed mode for the next few weeks as a test. If the rumours about the iPhone 7 Plus are true it’ll also be a bit of a speed demon with a great camera.

My Twitter Account has been deleted – Resolved

Update: seems I wasn’t the only one to have this happen. Account reappeared after about 6 hours. Seems okay now.

Someone deleted my Twitter account about 18:00 UK time today. It wasn’t me. I’ve contacted support. Hopefully they can get it back. If not I’ll start a new one. I have a backup of all the Tweets up until a few months ago.

Culture Consumed 17

I’ve stopped doing aggregate Culture Consumed posts and started doing individual posts. I’ve had this post sitting since the Culture Consumed 16 post. Posting this final one for completeness. Just to record what I read and watched.

The Watchmaker of Filigree Street – Natasha Pulley. Enjoyable Victorian steampunk, sci-fi story. I enjoyed it.

Zoolander 2 – A sequel to the excellent Zoolander. It was harmless and made me laugh a good few times. Rated it 7/10.

Brooklyn – Beautifully shot and poignant story about emigration from Ireland to Brooklyn in the 1950’s. Rated it 7/10.

The Revenant – I hadn’t planned to see this but ended up I had too after the awards it received. It has excellent cinematography. But its basically misery porn. Rated 7/10.

Down Station – Simon Morden. A portal to another world story that turns into a magic and fantasy story on the other world.

Hail, Caesar! An excellent tale of a 1950’s Hollywood cinema boss, Eddie Manix, trying to keep the studio churning, and the stars in and out of the gossip columns. It’s really good. Rated it 8/10.

The Divergent Series: Allegiant The third film on the Divergent series. I liked it a lot more than others it seems. Does what you’d expect. Post apocalyptic world, shinning futuristic cities, explanation on why Chicago is isolated. I bought it on iTunes. Rated it 7/10.

Spotlight Story about the Boston Globe journalists who uncovered the huge sexual abuse crimes of the Catholic Church in Boston. Good film. It won Oscar for best picture. I’d have given it to Room or The Big Short before this. I rated it 7/10.

Sing Street A fun romp about a teenage band in 1980’s Dublin. I Rated it 7/10.

How To Be Single – I laughed at this a lot in the cinema. Cheered me up no end. Must watch it again. Gave it 8/10.

iOS App equivalents for Mac Apps I use

I regularly use 70 different Apps on my Mac. With the advent of iPad Pro there has been a lot of talk about using one as a Mac replacement. It’s also possible that I may have to use a Windows PC in work at some point. Could an iPad Pro give me the apps I really like, if I can’t use the Mac versions in that scenario?

The table blow shows the 70 Apps I use and what iOS equivalents I have, to could get. Not to bad actually. Nearly a 1:1 ratio of Mac app to the same iOS App. I could survive on iOS if I had to. Luckily I don’t, and can choose OSX or iOS depending on circumstance.

Mac AppiOS AppNotes
1Password 61Password
Airmail 2Spark
Audio Hijack
AutomatorWorkFlow
BBEditTextTastic
BlogoBlogo
Citrix ReceiverCitrix Receiver
CodeRunner
DailyHours
DashDash
Day One ClassicDay One
DictionaryWordFlex
DM1DM1
DropboxDropBox
DropTaskDropTask
DVD PlayerVideos
EvernoteEvernote
Fantastical 2Fantastical
GarageBandGarageBand
Google ChromeSafari
iA WriteriA Writer
iBooksiBooks
iMovieiMovie
iTunesApple Music
KeynoteKeynote
KindleKindle
Logic Pro XGarageBand
MailStewardLiteCan archive mail on Mac periodically
MapsMaps
Marked 2
MessagesMessages
Microsoft ExcelMicrosoft Excel
Microsoft OutlookMicrosoft Outlook
Microsoft PowerPointMicrosoft PowerPoint
Microsoft WordMicrosoft Word
MoneyWizMoneyWiz
NotesNotes
NumbersNumbers
OmniFocusOmniFocus
OmniGraffleOmniGraffleDifferent. The Mac version is better
OmniGraphSketcherOmniGraphSketcher
OmniOutlinerOmniOutliner
OmniPlanOmniPlanDifferent. The Mac version is better
OmniPresenceOmniSync Server
PagesPages
Papers 3.4.3Papers
Parallels DesktopRemote Desktop to VM could be used. Azure Maybe
Patterns
PCalcPCalc
PDF ExpertPDF Expert
PhotosPhotos
PixelmatorPixelmator
PocketPocket
PopClipBuilt into iOS
ReederReeder
SafariSafari
ScappleiThoughts
ScrivenerScrivener for iOS is in beta
ShazamShazam
SlackSlack
SoulverSoulver
TextExpanderTextExpander
Toolbox for KeynoteExists for iOS if I want it
TransmitExists for iOS if I want it
TweetbotTweetBot
UlyssesUlysses
Vellum
WunderlistWunderlist
Xcode
Xojo 2016

My Oscar picks

You won’t be surprised to hear that I’m not a member of the Academy, and therefore don’t have a vote in the Academy Awards. Or Oscars as they are also known. But if I did this is how I’d vote. Order as specified on the Oscars website.

Actor in a Leading Role – Leonardo DiCaprio
Actor in a Supporting Role – Christian Bale
Actress in a Leading Role – Brie Larson
Actress in a Supporting Role – Alicia Vikander
Animated Feature Film – Inside Out
Best Picture – Room
Cinematography – The Revenant
Costume Design – Mad Max: Fury Road
Directing – Lenny Abrahamson for Room
Film Editing – Stephen Mirrione for The Revenant
Foreign Language Film – No pick as I’ve not seen any of them
Makeup and Hairstyling – Siân Grigg, Duncan Jarman, Robert Pandini for The Revenant
Production Design – Colin Gibson, Lisa Thompson for Mad Max: Fury Road
Sound Editing – Mark Mangini, David White for Mad Max: Fury Road
Sound Mixing – Chris Jenkins, Gregg Rudloff, Ben Osmo for Mad Max: Fury Road
Visual Effects – Andrew Whitehurst, Paul Norris, Mark Ardlington, Sara Bennett for Ex Machina
Music (Original Score) – John Williams for Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Writing (Original Screenplay) – Alax Garland for Ex Machina
Documentary (Short Feature) – No pick as I haven’t seen any of the nominees
Documentary (Feature) – No pick as I haven’t seen any of the nominees
Short Film (Animated) – No pick as I haven’t seen any of the nominees
Short Film (Live Action) – No pick as I haven’t seen any of the nominees
Music (Original Song) – No pick as I haven’t heard any of the songs
Writing (Adapted Screenplay) – Emma Donoghue for Room

Keyboard for use with iPad Pro

I love my Matias keyboards. But they are too heavy for portable use with iPad Pro. I’m not sold on the Apple Smart Keyboard for iPad Pro. Instead I will get an Apple Magic Keyboard to use with it. It will be cheaper, lighter, won’t drain the iPad Pro battery, and allows the iPad and keyboard to be further apart. Which will be better for getting a good typing position.

And I might get one of these in the future.

Update: Got it. It was the right choice.

Apple Magic Keyboard
Apple Magic Keyboard

Culture Consumed 16

Hot on the heels of the stupidly long Culture Consumed 15 post, here is what I’ve read and watched so far in 2016.

Joy – The latest film from the ensemble that gave us Silver Linings Playbook and American Hustle. David O. Russell directs with Jennifer Lawrence, Bradley Cooper, and Robert De Niro all back. De Niro was in American hustle but was uncredited. The previous too films from this team were brilliant. Joy is good but I don’t think it’s as good as those other two. It does have some good dramatic, comedic, and surreal moments. I’ll certainly be buying it to keep for future watching. Time will tell how it stands up beside Playbook and Hustle. Looking forward to more films from the same team. I rated it 7/10.

The Danish Girl – The story of Danish artists Lili Elbe (née Einar Wegener) and Gerda Wegener. With Lili Elbe being the first woman to have sexual reassignment surgery (SRS). I thought the story of Gerda Wegener was the more interesting one. About how appreciation of her art changed after she started painting portraits of Lili. Alicia Vikander was spectacular in the part. Eddie Redmayne portrayed Lili. I thought his performance in the last quarter, when Lili was undergoing surgery, was a bit too much like his Stephen Hawking performance. Still good. But Alicia Vikander was the stand out for me. I rated it 7/10.

Europe in AutumnDave Hutchinson. The first in the Europe series of books. I’d seen people I trust sing the praises of this book a lot last year. So I bought a copy and finally got round to reading it just before Christmas. It’s very good. Literary writing without being too heavy. I was wondering why it was classed as science fiction for 90% of the book. But at the end it becomes clear. This would be a great intro for anyone who thinks Star Wars when science fiction is mentioned. I have the sequel here to read. Looking forward to it. Recommended.

The Hateful Eight – The latest Tarantino film. It’s too long. It’s violent. It’s what you would expect. A tendency to monologuing in dialogue. The music is good. I rated it 5/10 at the time. On reflection it’s probably a 6/10.

Blue Jasmine – Woody Allen’s 2013 release. With an Oscar winning performance by Cate Blanchett. Justifiably so as well. It’s a great performance in a good film. The rest of the cast are great too. Plus the cinematography and music are top notch. Gave it 8/10.

Serena – I’d been wanting to see this for a while. Mainly on the back of the Jennifer Lawrence & Bradley Cooper partnership. No David O. Russell or Robert De Niro involvement in this film though. It’s not the stinker some of the reviews would have you believe. The ending was a bit shocking to me. I rated it 8/10.

Legend – Marie Lu. The first book from the Legend YA trilogy. It’s more YA than The Hunger Games, and a bit shallow. Okay but not something that gripped me. I have the two others in the trilogy to read sometime later this year.

The Good Dinosaur – I only saw this in the cinema due to a power cut and I needed something to do. It was the only film starting just after the time I got to the cinema. A Pixar animation film that had many issues during production it seems. The world building and rendering in it are stunning. I’m still not sure if it was all rendered and not a mix of live action and animation. The story was just okay. The power cut was more exciting. Sparks erupting from an arcing overhead electric pole 100 metres up my street. Fire engines arriving and everything. Worth seeing the film for the visuals though. Rated it 5/10.

Room – This is one of the best films I’ve seen in a long time. It’s not the film you would think it is from the description. It is not a horror film. It is not a explicitly sexual or violent film, although there is some of both of those. It is a film about a 5 year old boy, and his mother, discovering the world after she was held captive for 7 years. So the boy has always been a captive. He only knows about Room where they live. Until he turns 5 and his mother starts to tell him about the outside world. I cried, laughed, and at one point my heart rate must have been up at 140 bpm. The performances by Brie Larson as the mother and Jacob Tremblay as the boy are remarkable. I was fully invested in the characters. Hence the heart rate thing. The supporting cast are also great. See this when you can, either in the cinema or when it comes out for home viewing. It was easy to rate this 9/10. Came very close to being a 10. Again; it’s not the film you think it is.

The 5th Wave – A new YA focused sci-fi, alien invasion franchise. It’s all done competently enough. But it is very formulaic with character types lifted straight out of the YA fiction construction kit. It has generated $84M from a production budget of $38M, so I expect the sequels will be made. I will go see them as the film is not a disaster. I rated it an average 5/10.

Speak – Louisa Hall. I saw this mentioned on Twitter by Adam Roberts. Had a look at the blurb and it looked interesting so got the sample. I liked that so I decided to get the audiobook. It’s amazing. Both the book itself, and the audio presentation. The story is about AI but it is told via six very different narrative arcs ranging from a pilgrim diarist on her way to America in the 17th Century, Alan Turing penning letters to the mother of a friend, two developers of AI systems, the wife of one of them, and the thoughts of an AI doll with fading batteries. All the arcs are relevant and they come together nicely. Destined to be a classic I think. The audiobook edition has 6 different actors narrating the different story arcs. A fabulous example of how an audiobook can enhance the written version.

The Big Short Can a film make you root for financial traders and market analysts who foresaw the 2008 housing crash in the USA, and who bet that it will happen in order to short the market and make money? Yes. Bankers are just above slime moulds on the likability scale. But at the end of the day they are just people. And if they are interesting people then their story will be interesting. The characters in this film are. I really liked it. It breaks the fourth wall quite a lot and this usually makes me twitchy. But it works in this. I thought Steve Carell’s character and performance was great, although the whole cast is good. Vinnie Daniel politely asking the auditors to leave Mark Baum’s office is brilliant. And easy 8/10 rating.

Dad’s Army – A reboot of the 1970’s British TV series. Many people are questioning why. It was okay. As good as the original. One good thing is a more prominent role for the women of the village. Felicity Montagu is fantastic as Captain Mainwaring’s wife and head of the local ATS platoon. And Cathering Zeta Jones is great in it. It was good fun. Gave it 6/10.

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