Music of the Renaissance

Music of the Renaissance
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Verdi: La Forza del destino
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Killer Net [1998]
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Customer Review: killer net is addictive !!!!
Great acting. The film is 3 hours long but it really will not feel like it. It is brilliant. You really feel for the characters. This is full of suspense and twist. The film follows all the characters and pieces things together perfectly. It makes you look at internet games in a different way. The question is will they actually make this game ? I hope so in a way (just for fun obviously). It is a film that i found myself asking… If only !!! you will see what i mean when you watch it. This will not dissapoint.
Customer Review: Interesting mid-nineties retrospective
I remember seeing this when it was first screened and it was great to watch it again 10 years on. It centres around a bunch of flat-sharing students in mid-nineties Brighton who, amongst the usual things, like to spend their spare time messing about with the internet. They discover from a dubious source an internet game called Killer Net, which although coming from the US features a conveniently local setting and real-life characters. As the plot progesses the game proceeds to become even more disturbingly lifelike as a real murder is commited exactly as featured in the game. The plot is a little disjointed, but its still an interesting retrospective on mid-nineties Brighton and student life, with scenes featuring rave clubs which were at their peak at the time, the fashions of the day, and obviously the early days of the internet. Broadband and camcorders were then still a twinkle in Microsofts eye, and in order to communicate with someone live online you really did need to do some major surgery to your hard drive. Oh and you could also quickly run up a £1000 telephone bill too. The cast features Paul Bettany, and Emily Woof, plus a young Zoe Lucker who later appeared in footballers wives!

Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851) was not only Britain’s greatest painter but arguably the finest landscape and marine painter ever. Turner was enormously prolific, producing some 550 oil paintings, over 2,000 highly detailed and finely finished watercolours, and some 30,000 works on paper. His bequest to the nation of much of this output is without doubt the greatest artistic legacy ever bestowed upon the United Kingdom. It is housed in Tate Britain, London.

Doctor Who - The Five Doctors [1983]

Doctor Who - The Five Doctors [1983]
Yes, The Five Doctors is the one that gathers together Hartnell, Troughton, Pertwee, Baker and Davison, dumps them on some moorland and lets some of the Doctor’s greatest enemies take potshots at them. Except, of course, that William Hartnell had sadly passed on by the time this series was made in 1983 (although his replacement Richard Hurndall does an excellent job) and Tom Baker was only featured as a patched-in cameo, apparently prevented from joining in by a temporal thingummy. However, this kind of creakiness comes with the territory and is soon forgotten. The assorted incarnations of the Doctor (together with a scattering of assistants) are drawn together through time and space to battle Daleks, Cybermen, Yeti–those weird androids which keep jumping into the air and disappearing–and many other old foes. They realise that they’re on their home planet of Gallifrey and must eventually deal with the legacy of Rassilon, founder of the Time Lords. It’s all great fun, of course, and the excellent chapter points on this DVD compensate for the rather self-indulgent lack of editing. –Roger Thomas
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Customer Review: Fun x 5!
The Five Doctors was originally broadcast on the 25/11/1983. It was the 20th anniversary special of the series and was what usually would be 4 25 min episodes in 1 90 min movie lenght episode. It see’s a powerful timelord (not tellin who!) gather the 5 incarnations of the Doctor (Peter Davison, Jon Pertwee, Patrick Troughton, Richard Hurndall, Tom Baker and William Hartnell) and a variety of companions that include Tegan (Janet Fielding), Turlough (Mark Strickson), Sarak Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen), Brigadier Lethbridge Stewart (Nicholas Courtney) and Susan (Carole Ann Ford) in the Death-Zone, a sort of Gallifreyan theme-park were either the innocent or the guilty are put to the test of survival. The 5 Doctors all try to reach the tomb of Rassilon (a great timelord god!) to try and find the answer to the mystery. Of course it won’t be easy, along the way there are Cybermen, a Dalek and a Yeti and that sort of feeling you get when you feel your being watched! An absolutely great Doctor Who story and a must have for Doctor Who fans!
Customer Review: A HELL OF A LOT OF FUN!
“The five doctors”, it`s not the most amazing doctor who story ever, but it`s alot of fun. Let me start with the bad points: 1. The absence of Tom Baker (however at least they got unseen footage of him in it) 2. The dalek only appears for about two minutes. 3. Susan twisting her ankle is totaly unnecessary That done and dusted, bring on the good points: 1. Richard Hurdnall does a good job portraying the first doctor. 2. The awsome battle between the Cybermen and the raston warrior robot. 3. Peter Davison, Patrick Troughton and Jon Pertwee on screen together. (such a shame Tom Baker isn`t there though.) 4. The whole yeti scene. I won`t spoil it for those who haven`t seen it. There are no extras but “the five doctors” remains a great buy. Bon Apetite!

L?bo; Magalh?es - Sacred Choral Works
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THE TURNER SOCIETY

The Turner Society was founded in 1975 on the bicentenary of the birth of J.M.W. Turner RA to promote interest in the life, work and influence of Britain’s greatest painter.

It offers a full programme of events. These include lectures by leading experts on the artist; visits to the Clore Gallery for the Turner Collection in London; and trips to important private collections not generally open to the public.
http://www.turnersociety.org.uk/events.htm

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