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TL;DR at the bottom Cast: Me (M) and Choosing Beggar (CB) Hey guys, so this is my first experience with a choosing a beggar. I've been a long time lurker, but today I finally have a story to tell. This happened just half an hour ago. For context, I had just been hired a week ago at a movie theatre (I also posted that I had been hired on my social media) and one of the perks we get is that we get these passes that allows us and a guest to see any movie for free. The only requirement being that I am one of the two people who use the pass. We get these passes, usually one or two, with every paycheque (bi-weekly). Pretty sweet perk as I love movies and going to the theatre. Anyway, I was just eating lunch and watching Netflix when my cell phone starts ringing. I look at it and it shows a number without caller id. However, the number looked familiar so I answered and it was a girl I had a crush on in HS (I'm now in my third year of College). I had asked her out, she said, and we parted on good terms, though we never really spoke much after that.
Details: 2013, UK, Cert 15, 101 mins Direction: Kevin MacDonald Genre: Drama Summary: While an American girl is on holiday in the UK, war breaks out forcing her to run for her life. With: Anna Chancellor, George Mackay, Harley Bird, Saoirse Ronan and Tom Holland
The film deserves credit for being beautifully crafted, but it really suffered for leaving out such a strange and fascinating angle of the story. Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2018 Verified Purchase The Lost City of Z is a series of vignettes to illustrate the life of our protagonist. These situations are often interesting scenes, touching on many different aspects of life at the time. But I never found Hunnam intriguing. He plays the same forceful semi-father figure he did in SOA, just this time with a mustache and uniform. In our sequence of scenes I never felt any sort of character development or attachment to his character. The man failed to learn, committing similar mistakes on each of his expeditions all while maintaining an unchanging outlook. Some of these scenes are intriguing, others are not. Had the film delved more into Latin American slavery or the Amazon it could have been amazing, but instead we have our time wasted on astrologers and preposterous arguments over Native Americans' inability to build societies.