On the JoBlo Movies YouTube channel, we will be posting one full movie every other day throughout the week, giving viewers the chance to watch them entirely free of charge. The Free Movie of the Day we have for you today is the comedy The Beat Beneath My Feet, starring Luke Perry. You can watch it over on the YouTube channel linked above, or you can just watch it in the embed at the top of this article.
Directed by John Williams from a screenplay by Michael Müller, The Beat Beneath My Feet has the following synopsis: A painfully shy teenage boy with secret but grand rock and roll aspirations lives with his single mum in a flat in South London. Into the flat below moves an anti-social, former Rock God who faked his death eight years ago. The teenage boy works out who the mysterious neighbour is and blackmails...
Directed by John Williams from a screenplay by Michael Müller, The Beat Beneath My Feet has the following synopsis: A painfully shy teenage boy with secret but grand rock and roll aspirations lives with his single mum in a flat in South London. Into the flat below moves an anti-social, former Rock God who faked his death eight years ago. The teenage boy works out who the mysterious neighbour is and blackmails...
- 5/25/2023
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
Gem Wheeler Mar 9, 2017
Prime Suspect 1973's second episode ramps up the tension while maintaining the same period charm as the series opener...
This review contains spoilers.
See related The Walking Dead season 7 episode 12 review: Say Yes The Walking Dead season 7 episode 11 review: Hostiles And Calamities The Walking Dead season 7 episode 10 review: New Best Friends The Walking Dead season 7 episode 9 review: Rock In The Road
The investigation into Julie Ann Collins’ murder continues in Prime Suspect 1973’s second episode, while, far from the police’s notice, the bank robbery planned by Clifford Bentley and his sons enters its early stages. Eddie Phillips, Julie Ann’s boyfriend, has still not been traced after his escape from hospital, and Di Bradfield’s questioning of the young man’s associates isn’t getting very far. An interview with the smooth-talking Dwayne Clarke (Thomas Coombes) is obtained through collaboration with undercover officer, Duke...
Prime Suspect 1973's second episode ramps up the tension while maintaining the same period charm as the series opener...
This review contains spoilers.
See related The Walking Dead season 7 episode 12 review: Say Yes The Walking Dead season 7 episode 11 review: Hostiles And Calamities The Walking Dead season 7 episode 10 review: New Best Friends The Walking Dead season 7 episode 9 review: Rock In The Road
The investigation into Julie Ann Collins’ murder continues in Prime Suspect 1973’s second episode, while, far from the police’s notice, the bank robbery planned by Clifford Bentley and his sons enters its early stages. Eddie Phillips, Julie Ann’s boyfriend, has still not been traced after his escape from hospital, and Di Bradfield’s questioning of the young man’s associates isn’t getting very far. An interview with the smooth-talking Dwayne Clarke (Thomas Coombes) is obtained through collaboration with undercover officer, Duke...
- 3/9/2017
- Den of Geek
Profound changes in attitudes to marriage, money, sex and social etiquette create an array of pitfalls for Austen updaters such as Joanna Trollope
Informality
To the fan of the original Sense and Sensibility, it is a little shock to be told that Austen's Mrs Dashwood has become "Belle" Dashwood in Joanna Trollope's newly published updating. A little later, we find that the modern version of Colonel Brandon is called "Bill". Naturally, these characters must be given the forenames that Austen never revealed. In this little matter we see the lost layers of formality on which the drama of Austen's dialogue depends. Marianne's sisters think that she must be engaged to Willoughby because he calls her by her first name. When everybody's first name is available to everybody (a man calls his mother-in-law "Abi"), how can surprising familiarity be signalled?
Engagement
The plot of Sense and Sensibility (1811 version) requires Edward...
Informality
To the fan of the original Sense and Sensibility, it is a little shock to be told that Austen's Mrs Dashwood has become "Belle" Dashwood in Joanna Trollope's newly published updating. A little later, we find that the modern version of Colonel Brandon is called "Bill". Naturally, these characters must be given the forenames that Austen never revealed. In this little matter we see the lost layers of formality on which the drama of Austen's dialogue depends. Marianne's sisters think that she must be engaged to Willoughby because he calls her by her first name. When everybody's first name is available to everybody (a man calls his mother-in-law "Abi"), how can surprising familiarity be signalled?
Engagement
The plot of Sense and Sensibility (1811 version) requires Edward...
- 11/2/2013
- by John Mullan
- The Guardian - Film News
So, if you do a quickie scan of the ol' Amazon these days, you're going to notice an entire trend of classics being B-movied for our appreciation. The Wizard of Oz -- with zombies. Huckleberry Finn -- with zombies. I like zombies, but c'mon. "So You Think You Can America's Got Zombies." Let the trend end. Pride and Prejudice and Zombies wasn't even that fucking great. What I can best say about Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters is that at least it's not more fucking zombies. Aside from that .... yeah, bring on Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter. At least that seems a little original.
I like what Winters did with the overall mythology. Essentially, the world's been flooded and all the aquatic creatures have become bloodthirsty and violent. Not just squids and giant sharks, but actually guppies and catfish and such. So all of Britain has actually become a series of islands,...
I like what Winters did with the overall mythology. Essentially, the world's been flooded and all the aquatic creatures have become bloodthirsty and violent. Not just squids and giant sharks, but actually guppies and catfish and such. So all of Britain has actually become a series of islands,...
- 1/17/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
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