Tag Archives: Josh Stamberg

The Time Traveler’s Wife. Television Series Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 9/10

Cast: Rose Leslie, Theo James, Everleigh McDonell, Gui Agustini, Natasha Lopez, Jaime Ray Newman, Michael Park, Caitlin Shorey, Desmin Borges, Marcia DeBonis, Peter Graham, Kate Siegel, Josh Stamberg, Jason David, Brian Altemus, Shawna Hamic, Spencer House, Taylor Richardson, Finn Brown, Carol Mazhuvancheril, Chelsea Frei.

From The Time Machine to Doctor Who, Time travel has intrigued us, thrilled us, and at times left us breathless with excitement and rigid with fear for generations. From book to audio dramas, from theatre to cinema, and across every language possible, the interest in the ability to travel through Time and perhaps put right the wrongs of our generation, is a palpable conceit that is embraced by all despite knowing it is a physical impossibility.

WandaVision. Television Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * * *

Cast: Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Bettany, Kathryn Hahn, Teyonah Parris, Josh Stamberg, Randall Park, Kat Dennings, Evan Peters, David Payton, David Lengel, Amos Glick, Selena Anduze, Julian Hilliard, Debra Jo Rupp, Jett Klyne, Asif Ali, Ithamer Enriquez, Emma Caulfield Ford, Alan Heckner, Zac Henry.

It is fair to insist beyond unreasonable debate that the two Avengers’ films, Infinity War and Endgame, were such behemoths, both in terms of box office performance and providing the type of thrill that has rarely been captured inside a cinema, that it might be suggested by some that no matter what Marvel put out in Phase Four of their ongoing pursuit of graphic novel turned visual entertainment illustrious dominance, it has already reached its zenith.

James Bond: Thunderball. Audio Drama Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 7.5/10

Cast: Toby Stephens, Tom Conti, Alfred Molina, Janet Montgomery, John Sessions, Lisa Dillon, James Callis, Josh Stamberg, Ian Ogilvy, John Standing, Janie Dee, Julian Sands, Nigel Lindsay, Matthew Wolf, Alan Shearman, Darren Richardson, Aaron Lyons, Simon de Deney.

A film that suffers under the weight of its writer’s history is one that finds itself developing the human disorder of duel personality, and whilst Thunderball is film that sparks the imagination, it also leaves the fan wondering how the series could hope to capture the brilliance of the previous film, Goldfinger.