Tag Archives: Tom Hopper

SAS: Red Notice. Film Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 5/10

Cast: Sam Heughan, Hannah John-Kamen, Ruby Rose, Andy Serkis, Tom Hopper, Tom Wilkinson, Owain Yeoman, Ray Panthaki, Noel Clarke, Anne Reid, Jing Lusi, Sarah Winter, Caroline Boulton, Richard McCabe, Douglas Reith, Dylan Smith, Attila C. Arpa, Aymen Hamdouchi, Grant Crookes, Tim Fellingham, Roderick Hill, Ty Hurley, Martin Angerbauer, Kevin Ezekiel Ogunleye, Karoly Baksai.

In the best laid traditions of James Bond, Her Majesty’s Government, and the Secret Services, it takes a psychopath to catch a psychopath, however the instrument of such bluntness is a cold steel walnut going up against a fragile glass hammer when it comes to penetrating the exterior of the film lover, especially when such a tale is presented without the humour of 007 or the best laid plan of a worthy adversary.

Terminator: Dark Fate. Film Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Cast: Linda Hamilton, Mackenzie Davis, Natalie Reyes, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Edward Furlong, Gabriel Luna, Tom Hopper, Cassandra Starr, Brett Azar, Diego Boneta, Tabata Cerezo, Steven Cree, Pete Ploszek, Enrique Arce, Mario de la Rosa, Christine Horn, Samantha Coughlan, Rochelle Neil, Stephanie Gil, Claudia Trujillo, Fraser James, Arlette Torres, Kacy Owens.

A good franchise never knows when to quit, there is always another element to the story, another piece to the puzzle that can be stretched out to its limit and leave the dedicated and the devoted hanging on the hope of another instalment to come.

I Feel Pretty. Film Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 5/10

Cast: Amy Schumer, Michelle Williams, Tom Hopper, Rory Scovel, Adrian Martinez, Emily Ratajkowski, Aidy Bryant, Busy Philips, Lauren Hutton, Sasheer Zamata, Angela Davis, Caroline Day, Anastagia Pierre Friel, Gia Crovatin.

When the message is absolutely spot on, when the meaning is clear and embracing and yet the scrawl of writing in which it appears dominates and without favour, you tend to forget the significance, the power of what is being said and instead you focus upon the negative. It is not right of course, it is unashamedly poor form to do so, but in the end being human is all we are, and whilst I feel Pretty is a laudable idea, noble even, the near cliched way it was handled leaves it as a film to be admired from a distance but avoided at all costs up close and personal.