This was a weekend of two halves, on Saturday I felt fine
and had my morning walk, watched some crows, spent time on the garden doing the G2 crossword, catching
up on the papers and other reading.
Later I watched The Limehouse Golem, which I really liked. Bill
Nighy is investigating a series of ghastly murders in Victorian London, which
are being blamed on a golem. There may
also be a connection with another case, where a wife is accused of murdering
her husband. The five main casts members, Bill Nighy, Olivia Cooke, Douglas
Booth, Daniel Mays and Sam Reid are great, and the story is like a big puzzle
piece and I didn’t guess the twist until the very last second, defo want to
watch it again to see if I could have worked out the twist earlier.
And I got three numbers in the Lotto draw, but on Sunday I felt
all ill, a dicky tummy and a little nauseated. So, I spent much of the day in
bed recovering, I think all the hot weather had just gotten to me, reading
comics, drawing some sheep for my nephew and watching the first two episodes of
season three of Shooter and The Ritual.
The film Shooter wasn’t bad, but it fitted in a lot of plot detail
and didn’t have too much room left for character detail, which is where the tv
series comes into its own, as it has plenty of room to explore the characters and
for us to get to know them. This combined with the ultimate soldierness of lead
character Bob Lee Swager and the overarching conspiracy (aka Atlas) behind the scenes,
makes, for me, a great TV show.
Season three picks up straight from season two (because Ryan
Phillippe broke his leg while filming season two and they couldn’t complete filming
the last two episodes of season two!) as the Solotov storyline is concluded and
it looks like Bob Lee’s life is back to normal, until he finds out that there
may be a link between his father’s death and Atlas.
Originally, I thought The Ritual would be a cross between The
Descent, Stag, The Blair Witch and The Blair Witch Project and I was kinda
right, as it’s about a group of friends who go on a trip to a remote location to
commemorate their recently decreased friend and get into otherworldly trouble. Rafe
Spall, Arsher Ali, Robert James-Collier and Sam Troughton play the friends and do
a great job of showing the friendships and the strain caused by the recent
death and the film slowly ratchets the tension until the supernatural is fully
in your face. A great horror flick.
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