Micky (Tuppence Middleton; TVs The Spies of Warsaw) a young woman suffering from amnesia begins a tormented road to recovery having survived a house fire that took her childhood friend's life. Left with terrible injuries Micky struggles to regain her memories and piece together what happened. Soon she discovers that the fire may not have been an accident and that a sinister obsession may have cost her more than she knows. Also stars Alexandra Roach (TVs Utopia) Aneurin Bernard (TVs The White Queen) and Kerry Fox (Shallow Grave) and directed by Ian Softley (Backbeat Hackers).
Micky (Tuppence Middleton; TVs The Spies of Warsaw) a young woman suffering from amnesia begins a tormented road to recovery having survived a house fire that took her childhood friend's life. Left with terrible injuries Micky struggles to regain her memories and piece together what happened. Soon she discovers that the fire may not have been an accident and that a sinister obsession may have cost her more than she knows. Also stars Alexandra Roach (TVs Utopia) Aneurin Bernard (TVs The White Queen) and Kerry Fox (Shallow Grave) and directed by Ian Softley (Backbeat Hackers).
Cranford where all changes and all remains the same. Miss Matty's house is full of life and bustle. Her dream of having a child in the house has been realised in the birth of Tilly daughter of her maid Martha and carpenter Jem. The shadow of the railway still looms but to the relief of Matty and the Amazons the line has been halted five miles outside of Cranford because of Lady Ludlow's refusal to sell her land. Elsewhere Miss Matty's friend Mr Buxton returns to town with his son William and his niece Erminia. Miss Matty decides to introduce them to Peggy Bell a young woman who lives in an isolated cottage with her mother and domineering brother Edward in the hope of building friendships. But when tragedy strikes she comes to believe that she has opened Pandora's box and fears Cranford will never recover.
The Disappeared
In 1987 moviegoers had yet to be crushed under the weight of the 1990s TV remake mania, and Dragnet comes off as fresh and funny. The line between parody and tribute can be hard to draw, but any marginally hip baby boomer who has ever watched Jack Webb's straight-laced Detective Joe Friday caught a glimmer of the comedic vein waiting to be mined beneath Dragnet's gritty Los Angeles streets. Dan Aykroyd plays Joe Friday, the straight-arrow nephew of Webb's iconic cop. This part was made for him (in fact, he's given top writing credit), and under his steely exterior you can tell he's having a ball delivering those rapid-fire recitations of regulations and deadpan expressions of moral outrage. Tom Hanks plays Pep Streebek, the laissez-faire narco agent who is Friday's new partner. Their assignment: bust the Pagans, a wild-and-woolly gang of dope fiends, deadbeats, and beatniks behind a bewildering array of bizarre robberies. Hilarity ensues. Friday and Streebek outfox a corrupt televangelist (Christopher Plummer), bicker over chili dogs and cigarettes, alternately revile and fawn over a porn millionaire (Dabney Coleman), wrestle a 30-foot-long anaconda, and rescue the virgin Connie Swail--the only girl capable of stealing Friday's heart. --Grant Balfour, Amazon.com
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