Tag Archives: Alais Lawson

Domina. Series Two. Television Drama Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 8.5/10

Cast: Kasia Smutniak, Matthew McNulty, Darrell D’Silva, Christine Bottomley, Ben Batt, Claire Forlani, Alex Lanipekun, Ewan Horrocks, Alais Lawson, Liah O’ Prey, Joseph Ollman, David Avery, Hannah Chinn, Benjamin Isaac, Joelle, Mia Jenkins, Isabelle Connolly, Ethan Moorhouse, Nathan Welsh, Yuliia Sobol, Fabrizio Romagnoli, Alexandra Moen.

Domina. Television Series Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Cast: Kasia Smutniak, Matthew McNulty, Liam Cunningham, Alex Lanipekun, Peter Campion, Colette Dalal Tchantcho, Christine Bottomley, Liah O’Prey, Ewan Horrocks, Earl Cave, Roland Litrico, Ben Blatt, Alais Lawson, Naike Anna Silipo, Kevin Lettieri, Darrell D’Silva, Claire Forlani, Lex Shrapnel, Emma Canning, Anthony Barclay, Finn Bennett, Claudia Stecher, Beau Gadson, Meadow Nobrega, Enzo Cilenti, Melodie Wakivuamina, Youssef Kerkour, Salvatore Palombi, Pedro Leandro, Liam Garrigan,  Isabella Rossellini.

Collateral, Television Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Cast: Carey Mulligan, Jeany Spark, Nicola Walker, John Simm, Nathaniel Martello-White, Ahd, Billie Piper, Kae Alexander, Hayley Squires, Judy Namir, Ben Miles, Orla Brady, Rob Jarvis, Mark Preston, George Georgiou, John Heffernan, Shawn Dixon, Lati Gbaja, Buppha Witt, Molly Simm, Nicola Duffett, Kim Medcalf, Vineeta Rishi, Siobhan McSweeney, Guy List, Richard McCabe, Tom Turner, Jacqueline Boatswain, Robert Portal, Alais Lawson, Brian Vernal, Deborah Findlay, Nick Mohammed, Tony Way, Alex Reid, Adrian Lukis.

Journey’s End, Film Review. Picturehouse@F.A.C.T., Liverpool.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 8.5/10

Cast: Asa Butterfield, Sam Clafin, Paul Bettany, Tom Sturridge, Toby Jones, Stephen Graham, Robert Glenister, Nicholas Agnew, Miles Jupp, Theo Barklam-Biggs, Jake Curran, Andy Gathergood, Rupert Wickham, Jack Holden, Tom Ward-Thomas, Derek Barr, Jack Riddiford, Elliot Balchin, Alais Lawson, Adam Colborne, Rose Read, Harry Jardine.

It is not the battle itself, the moment when it all ends and the tears shed, it is the reassurance of existence, even in the most inhospitable of places, of the dirt, the mud and the endless torture of waiting for an attack, it is in the moments before, the quiet and the damned making themselves known and invading the final private thoughts of those who understand that the battle, but not the war, is lost