Tag Archives: John Noble

The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It. Film Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 7/10

Cast: Patrick Wilson, Vera Farmiga, Ruairi O’Connor, Sarah Catherine Hook, Julian Hillard, John Noble, Eugenie Bondurant, Shannon Kook, Ronnie Gene Blevins, Keith Arthur Boldon, Steve Coulter, Vince Pisani, Ingrid Bisu, Andrea Andrade, Ashley LeConte Campbell, Sterling Jerins, Megan Ashley Brown, Mitchell Hoog, Paul Wilson, Charlene Amoia.

The darker the days, the more we seem to look to omens, signs, and wonders to see us through our existence. We may believe we have reached a point in our evolution, in our collected history and ability to weave stories, that the unexplained is by its own insistence, is rationalised, efficiently excused, and our reasoning enhanced…and yet there are mysteries that continue to confound, that cannot be explained by cold logic, nor blamed upon human irrationality.

Fringe: Series 1-5. Television Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 9/10

Cast: Anna Torv, Joshua Jackson, Jasika Nicole, John Noble, Lance Reddick, Blair Brown, Michael Cerveris, Kirk Acevedo, Seth Gabel, Leonard Nimoy, Ryan McDonald, Marl Valley, Michael Kopsa, Lily Pilblad, Ari Graynor, Eugene Lipinski, Jared Harris, Sebastian Roche, Shaun Smyth, Kevin Corrigan, Georgina Haig, Meghan Markle.

Cult Science-Fiction television is arguably, in its own way, far more satisfying a pastime in which to get the brain moving and stirring the what-if of imagination than by being sucked into the daily routine of gameshows, celebrity gossip and the intrigue of the soap opera digest.

Legends Of Tomorrow: Series Three. Television Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 9/10

Cast; Caity Lotz, Brandon Routh, Victor Garber, Maisie Richardson-Sellers, Franz Drameh, Amy Louise Pemberton, Tala Ashe, Nick Zano, Dominic Purcell, Arthur Darvill, Jes Macallan, Hiro Kanagawa, Adam Tsekhman, Courtney Ford, John Noble, Neal McDonough, Matt Ryan, Billy Zane, Bar Paly, Celia Massingham, Isabella Hofmann, Graeme McComb, Benjamin Diskin, Luke Bilyk, Geoffrey Blake, Lovell Adams-Gray, Johnathon Schaech, Wentworth Miller.

Passionate irreverence and satire are to be applauded when offered to an audience in the knowing wink and smile that is hoped to produce a smile. It is the acknowledgement that taking life so seriously can be harmful to the soul, and if that satire and cheeky impudence is aimed at yourself, then it makes the experience of the artistic intent, all the greater.