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Adam Kimmel
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I agree, it was ridiculous. My heart sank when she climbed into the car and they drove off into the sunset together. He should have just tossed her out at high speed for her involvement in her son's death in the first place.

John Vernon - a much underrated and badly-used actor. Brilliant in Charley Varrick.

It leaves it open to a sequel, with one character saying to another "I LIKE those odds" or words to that effect.

We almost bought Broadbent's old house in Acton - the owner told us about buying it from him and how Broadbent had only partly knocked through to the back room from the front room 'cos he was between jobs and ran out of money. Last year I ran into Broadbent at a cinema, and made the mistake of telling him this. It

I enjoyed this right up until the last episode, which absolutely sucked, as people stood around having flashbacks and Rampling's character becomes so inconsistent and the writing of it so unstable, it's amazing she doesn't combust right there and then.A really disappointing let-down.

I saw this in the cinema, as an opener for "Spinal Tap". Quite terrible in a fascinating way (and cheap-looking) but it did have one of the best and most underrated character actors in it, Anthony Zerbe. He made up for a lot.

Although I can appreciate the subject matter, I find Sufjan Steven's vocal style too detached and, from song to song, samey, to engage me emotionally. For me, the rawest

A pity - I saw this at the London Film Festival and, to my surprise, really enjoyed it. I'm not a huge Smith fan (I once worked at a West End theatre where she was appearing, and the backstage whispers were not fond of her) but I thought it was a really good, fun, sharp adaptation.

I haven't seen a Haneke film I've remotely liked yet - not for want of trying - and this doesn't look like it's about to change my mind.

Got to agree here. I hadn't heard the phrase "torture porn" when I saw this film, but it was definitely what was going through my mind while watching it. I actually found it really dull and fast-forwarded through a lot of it (also full of stupid plot holes and contrivances - they leave the villain alive - can't

Shanks!!!! Oh my god, I haven't seen that since I was about 12 - it came and went in our local cineplex with a wonderfully unsettling poster, and then was shown on TV. I remember being disappointed at the time, but would love to see it again!

I never realised that he'd been in so much! I saw him in "The Other Guys" and thought, "Hey! I wondered what had happened to the brother from 'At Home With The Braithwaites"!". AND he was married to Ruth Gemmill? She's not only gorgeous, she's a criminally underrated actress.

At Home with the Braithwaites - a brilliant, brilliant show.

Agreed - a disappointment, with ham-fisted "dramatic" reveals, character U-turns and, as the review states, a lot of people just standing around for a lot of the time. Apparently it's debut was the highest rated programme on Channel 4 ever, but it's hard to see why and harder to imagine it maintaining those levels.

Absolutely loved Undiscovered Country when it came out, even going to the cinema to see it (a rare treat). It worked on so many levels. I haven't seen it since but really must revisit it.

I went to Glastonbury in 1995, and it was one of greatest times of my life, mainly because of Brit Pop and the feeling that you were witnessing something pretty big and fresh, and I've never been so close to the zeitgeist in my life. All weekend it was Oasis, Dodgy, Sleeper, Elastica, Portishead, Pulp (who I missed)

Having seen the other two films on DVD, I went to see this in the cinema. The reviewer is right - it doesn't have the high-points of the previous two, but is a weird, warped, disorientating trip in its own right. I've now bought the previous two on DVD and when this one comes out on DVD, I'm going to sit down for a

Yes, unfortunately he seemed to think so, too.

I felt they were sympathetic - they had a nice, mis-matched, tentative romance going on and they were both very sweet. It was when they died that I remember thinking, "Ooookay, then: all bets are off".

I watched this mainly for Elaine Cassidy, who I'd seen in another TV drama (playing Hitler's niece) in which she'd impressed me. I wasn't quite ready for the change in genre, but greatly enjoyed this. The only problem for me was that, when the killer is revealed, my reaction was "Seriously?? Wasn't there a more