Tag Archives: Gerran Howell

McDonald & Dodds: Clouds Across The Moon. Television Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 8.5/10

Cast: Tala Gouveia, Jason Watkins, Max Bennett, Gerran Howell, Charlie Chambers, Liv Sacofsky, Danyal Ismail, Pearce Quigley, Claire Skinner, Joanna Riding, Joan Iyiola, Stefan Adegbola, Grace Francis.

There is a subsection of the police procedural crime fiction that the armchair detective will rave about, as if solving a murder wasn’t good enough for them, that they can battle their own wits against the investigator in charge, it is when the villain is so conniving, so  devious in their passion to prove they are just as clever as the one chasing them, if not more so, the complications presented to the viewer are boundless and enthralling to decipher.

Catch-22. Television Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * * *

Cast: Christopher Abbott, Kyle Chandler, Daniel David Stewart, Rafi Gavron, Graham Patrick Martin, Kevin J O’Connor, Austin Stowell, Jon Rudnitsky, Gerran Howell, Tessa Ferrer, Lewis Pullman, Grant Heslov, Jay Paulson, Domenico Cuomo, Giovanni Stocchino, Pico Alexander, George Clooney, Giancarlo Giannini, Hugh Laurie, Julie Ann Emery, Ian Toner, Viola Pizzetti, Valentina Belle, Martin Delaney, Elisa Menchicchi, Valentina Ruggeri, Francesca Turrini, David Power, Salvatore Scarpa, Marilena Anniballi, Joe Massingill, Josh Bolt, Alex Beliglia Zampetti, Joseph Millson, Giacomo Rocchini, Sara Pallini, Anthony Skordi, Massimo Wertmuller, Nicola Goodchild, Harrison Osterfield, Jamie Blackley, Peter Guinness, Jackson Bews, Shai Matheson.

Queen And Country. Film Review. Picturehouse@F.A.C.T., Liverpool.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 8.5/10

Cast: Callum Turner, Caleb Landry Jones, Pat Shortt, David Thewlis, Richard E. Grant, Vanessa Kirby, Tasmin Egerton, Aimee-Ffion Edwards, Sinéad Cusack, David Hayman, John Standing, Brian F.O’ Byrne, David Michael Claydon, Julian Wadham, Tom Stuart, Alfie Stuart, Gerran Howell, Simon Paisley Day, Maria Flacau, Constantin Florescu.

The life of Bill Rohan was always going to be exceptional, especially when he is the alter ego of British film maker John Boorman, it just always seemed a shame that the account of his life seemed to stop in mid flight in the superb 1987 British film Hope and Glory.