I am a sucker for passion in movies, and these scenes from Becoming Jane have to be some of my absolute favorites. I think that this entire film is just a great example of how to show a love story without being trite or frilly.
Check 'em out!
-E
Showing posts with label England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label England. Show all posts
22 March 2011
28 February 2010
Who's the Silver Fox?
MARTIN MCDONAGH that’s who!
In an attempt to stray from my academic endeavors (aka, writing a bunch of term papers on Irish cinema and drama) I have taken to oogling at the very lovely man that is Martin McDonagh.
You can’t deny his appeal, interwebs. You just can’t.
It all started quite innocently, I swear. We’ve been talking about him in class for the past few weeks, and naturally the attractive jokes/comments began to arise from the female students.
And then I started writing my paper on The Pillowman (only one of the best plays ever. and I mean ever.) My intentions were strictly studious until I started researching essays in the lovely book that is “Martin McDonagh, A World of Savage Stories.”
I feel like my infatuation with him could eventually pose a problem to my academic focus, but until I start to develop a strong guilt complex, I am going to marvel in the lovely man that is an aesthetic combination of Anderson Cooper and James Dean.
Check him out.
-E
27 February 2010
Belfast, Baby!
Not gonna lie, interwebs, all of the recent dissident IRA activity in the North made me a little anxious/nervous/excited for our trip to the UK today.
The morning started early. Very early. And I think I’ve decided that one of the worst feelings is walking past a good quality cafe that’s closed, only to buy shitty coffee at a Centra and walk back to find the good quality cafe is finally open. That’s right, interwebs -- we had to be on our bus at 8:00AM. AM. That is not kosher.
The ride was good in that we all slept, and I had a moment where I felt like the psycho in Six Shooter and just randomly burst out “SHEEP” in the middle of conversation.
First things first, we went on this epically long mural tour through the Catholic side, then the Protestant side. Not gonna lie, I found it all amazingly fascinating, but it was freaking freezing (there was still snow on the mountains) and wouldn’t have minded staying on the bus. But nooooo ... you get the real experience when you can’t feel your face in the wind.
Then we went to the Transport Museum which was pretty sick because, ya know, the Titanic was made in Belfast. AND there were trains. Lots and lots of trains! We got to play and run around and feel like boxcar children and it was basically amazeballz ... and inside.
Next came lunch in a pub and the subsequent Ireland-England rugby match (of which I only watched the last 13 minutes). In lue of the game, Jaime, Emma, Kerry, Luca, John and I went walking through the City Centre and rode the FERRIS WHEEL! That’s right -- Belfast has a ferris wheel inspired by the London Eye (which is also amazeballz). And when I say we all went, I mean Kerry, Emma, Luca and I went because John and Jaime were scared. To put it bluntly, it was stunning. To see a city with such visible barriers and divides were really fascinating. It’s nothing like Dublin or any other place I’ve been.
On a heavier note: Belfast is definitely not the city I was expecting it to be. Honestly, it didn't feel like must of a city. Similarly to how Pyongyang is supposedly a "fake city," there is something about Belfast that just didn't feel real. City Centre was alive and kicking, like Grafton Street or O'Connell, but as soon as you walked out of that zone, we were met with artillery lines, a mortar wall, and military police. It's as if the entire city is all a charade.
On a heavier note: Belfast is definitely not the city I was expecting it to be. Honestly, it didn't feel like must of a city. Similarly to how Pyongyang is supposedly a "fake city," there is something about Belfast that just didn't feel real. City Centre was alive and kicking, like Grafton Street or O'Connell, but as soon as you walked out of that zone, we were met with artillery lines, a mortar wall, and military police. It's as if the entire city is all a charade.
Top Moment --
(in a Belfast pub)
John: Well maybe one day there will be a unified Ireland.
John: Well maybe one day there will be a unified Ireland.
Me: I’m pretty sure you don’t want to say that here. Just a thought.
So, until the next time I go to a still politically unstable country/province/state ...
-E
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