Maggie Gyllenhaal and “The Honourable Woman”

January 12th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

This Christmas, at my request, I was given the DVD box set of the BBC Two mini series “The Honourable Woman” which was screened in the summer of 2014.

This weekend, Vee and I started to watch the series and we were very impressed by the performance of American actress Maggie Gyllenhaal in the eponymous British role.

So it was great to see this morning that Maggie has won the Golden Globe  for Best Actress in a Mini-Series or TV Movie.

Footnote: We eventually viewed the eight episodes in four sittings over just five days because the mini-series is so good. It is densely plotted, excellently scripted, brilliantly acted and superbly shot.

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A review of the film “Taken 3”

January 11th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

Liam Neeson can act (think “Schindler’s List”) and late in years has become a surprise action hero, but “Taken 3” [my review here] should be the end of this franchise.

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Do you like films that have a political theme?

January 11th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

As regular readers of NightHawk will know, I’m a big film fan. I enjoy most genres except horror and (usually) musicals. I’m very interested in politics, so I’m attracted to movies with a political setting or a political subject.

I’ve devoted a section of my web site to such political films and reviewed 67 of them here.

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100 radical heroes who changed Britain

January 10th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

I was brought up and educated in Manchester which I left at the age of 23. I regularly return to the city where one of my favourite locations is the People’s History Museum.

The museum has been hit by funding cuts and, as a way of raising new funds, it is inviting funders to sponsor one of 100 radical heroes who changed Britain at a cost of £3,000 a time. It’s a great list – see it here.

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My first experience of an audio boom courtesy of the TSI

January 9th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

I’ve recently been appointed by Ofcom to chair the Consumer Forum for Communications and the Trading Standards Institute – a valued member of the CFC – kindly gave me a minute to make what they call an audio boom.

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The love that lasted 65 years before they died only days apart

January 9th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

It’s a story that sounds too romantic and tragic to be true.

The wife of a World War Two veteran who left his nursing home to go to France for D-Day commemorations has died just days after her husband.

Bernard Jordan sparked a police search when he left the care home in Hove to join fellow veterans in June.

Irene Jordan, 88, died on Tuesday – a week after her husband. They were married for more than 65 years.

You can read more about Bernard and Irene here.

Posted in British current affairs | Comments (0)


Why 2015 will be longer than 2014

January 8th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

No – it’s not a leap year.  But this year is to last a second longer than 2014.

The decision was made this week by the International Earth Rotation Service (IERS). A leap second is to be inserted at the very end of 30 June.

Why? All is explained here.

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#jesuischarlie – remembering the Paris victims

January 8th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

  • Charlie Hebdo editor and cartoonist Stephane “Charb” Charbonnier, 47
  • Cartoonists Jean “Cabu” Cabut, 76, Bernard “Tignous” Verlhac, 57, Georges Wolinski, 80 and Philippe Honore, 73
  • Economist and regular magazine columnist Bernard Maris, 68, known to readers as Uncle Bernard
  • Mustapha Ourrad, proof-reader
  • Elsa Cayat, psychoanalyst and columnist, the only woman killed
  • Michel Renaud, who was visiting from the city of Clermont-Ferrand
  • Frederic Boisseau, 42, caretaker, who was in the reception area at the time of the attack
  • Police officers Franck Brinsolaro, who acted as Charb’s bodyguard, and Ahmed Merabet, 42, who was shot dead while on the ground

Source: “Le Monde” newspaper and other French media

And, of course, the policewoman shot today.

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A review of the film “The Theory Of Everything”

January 7th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

This is an amazing story rendered in brilliant fashion with a simply outstanding central performance.

Read my review here and then go see the movie.

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How concerned should the world be about North Korea?

January 7th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

There is a tendency – perhaps encouraged by the recent comedy movie “The Interview” – to treat North Korea as a bit of a joke. But it poses a serious threat to South Korea and the wider world, as underlined by today’s item in the “Guardian” newspaper:

“South Korea has claimed that North Korea has a 6,000-member cyber-army dedicated to disrupting its military and government. The figure is a doubling of its earlier estimate that the North had a cyber warfare staff of 3,000.

Seoul’s defence ministry said in a report that Pyongyang may also have gained the ability to strike the US mainland because of its recent progress in missile technology, which was demonstrated in five long-range missile tests in 2009 and 2012, and is advancing in efforts to miniaturise nuclear warheads to mount on such missiles.

The US accused North Korea of a cyber-attack on Sony Pictures over a movie depicting the fictional assassination of the North’s leader, Kim Jong-un. North Korea has denied any involvement in the hacking of tens of thousands of confidential Sony emails and business files.

Former South Korean defence minister Kim Kwan-jin said in 2013 that North Korea was operating a cyberwarfare staff of 3,000. The South has accused the North of conducting at least six high-profile cyber-attacks since 2007 and many more unsuccessful attempts to infiltrate the computer systems of businesses and government agencies.

The Korean peninsula is still in a technical state of war because the 1950-53 Korean war ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty.”

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