Watched on Channel 4 online.
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Review of Crush
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Review of They Came to a City
It's very stage-y - we won't actually see the utopia, just the faces of the characters talking about it from a weird castle overlooking the wonderful city. They go into it, and then return to the castle to talk about it. The upper class characters mainly hate it, and the working class ones mainly love it. From their descriptions it seems a very limited sort of utopia - clean houses and streets, gardens, and everyone happy in their jobs.
The frame tale is a man and a woman, both in uniform, talking about what England is going to be like after the war, and a stranger (played by J B Priestley, who wrote the play and the film screenplay) comes to describe the story to them.
I couldn't help noticing the accents - which along with the clothes, were the class markers for the characters. The posh accents felt authentic; after all, there's plenty of actual footage of posh people talking from that period, and they more or less all sound like Queen Elizabeth. The working class accents felt wrong - a lot of substitution of "eh" sounds for "ah" sounds - did working class people actually speak like that in the 1940s, or is that just how posh-speaking actors thought they spoke?
Watched on YouTube via Chromecast.
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Review of "Hag-Seed" by Margaret Attwood
Review of "The Historical David: The Real Life of An Invented Hero" by Joel Baden
Thursday, June 25, 2026
Review of The Teachers' Lounge
Watched on BBC iPlayer.
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Review of Corsage
It's just about possible that the film is an alternative account of the known facts (rather than a parallel account) because we are shown Elizabeth increasingly changing places with one of her ladies-in-waiting...so maybe she does commit suicide, and it's the lady-in-waiting who dies in the assassination many years later. Of course the Emperor Franz Josef would have had to been in on this, because although they don't spend that much time together they do occasionally have perfunctory sex, and he would surely have noticed.
Despite the slowness I enjoyed it, particularly the depictions of stultifying court life. Elizabeth doesn't seem to have much fun. I note in passing that although the rooms in the Imperial palaces are very grand, the corridors between them are shabby and cluttered with old furniture. Maybe that's how they were.
Review of "We, The Drowned" by Carsten Jensen
Big saga-type book about the seagoing inhabitants of the Danish town/island of Marstal over the period 1848 to 1945 - largely defined by a succession of wars against first Prussia and then Germany. It's also defined by the age of sailing merchant ships and their replacement by steamships; there are lots of vivid descriptions of how hard and injurious the life of the sailors were.
It took me a while to get into it, and I was a bit confused by shifting narrators, but I ended up enjoying it very much.
Review of "A History of The World in 47 Borders" by Jonn Elledge
Tuesday, May 05, 2026
Review of Rental Family
Watched in the cinema on the Brittany Ferry ship to Santander!
Saturday, April 04, 2026
Review of "Transgressions" by Sarah Dunnant
But then there's a stalker, and the vague threats coalesce into something much darker, and the sleaze migrates from the book-within-a-book to the main narrative, and it went from being something that I read at night to go to sleep to something that I had to avoid reading last thing at night. Trigger warning - there's some rape, but also some hint of rape fantasies too.
There's a small additional pleasure in the technology, which is pre-mobile and pre-web, even though it's by no means a "historical" novel.
Small declaration of interest. I haven't actually met Sarah Dunant, but she is the partner of a member of the Stroud Red Band, so that's sort of connected.

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