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Bruce Robinson (1) (1946–)

Autor(a) de The Peculiar Memories of Thomas Penman

Para outros autores com o nome Bruce Robinson, ver a página de desambiguação.

13+ Works 1,326 Membros 25 Críticas 4 Favorited

Obras por Bruce Robinson

Withnail and I {screenplay} (1995) 183 exemplares
Withnail and I [1987 film] (1987) — Director/Screenwriter — 134 exemplares
The Killing Fields [1984 film] (1984) — Screenwriter — 82 exemplares
Paranoia in the Launderette (1998) 57 exemplares
The obvious elephant (2000) 57 exemplares
Jennifer 8 [film] (2000) — Director/Screenwriter — 22 exemplares
Harold and the Duck (2005) 4 exemplares

Associated Works

Still Crazy [1998 film] (2005) 31 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome canónico
Robinson, Bruce
Data de nascimento
1946-05-02
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
Groot-Brittannië
País (no mapa)
Groot-Brittannië
Local de nascimento
London, England, UK
Locais de residência
Broadstairs, Kent, England, UK
Herefordshire, England, UK
Educação
Central School of Speech and Drama
Ocupações
film director
screenwriter
actor

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Bruce Robinson verwerkte zijn eigen kinderleed in een extreem geestig en aangrijpend verhaal. Mislukt als auteur werd hij scenarioschrijver. Met zijn vierde script oogstte hij succes: het scenario voor The Killing Fields ontving een Oscar-nominatie. In Engeland werd Robinson bekend door zijn cultfilm Whitnail and I, en De merkwaardige herinneringen van Thomas Penman werd er zo’n grote bestseller dat de paperback zonder titel op het omslag kon verschijnen.

Membros

Críticas

Thomas Penman grows up in a house where “there was a constant smell of meat cooking” and his grandfather “rode the toilet like a horse, facing the wall, and crept around in the attic with his penis out.” This is the first page, so you know the book is going to be good. And it doesn’t disappoint.

There are secrets in the house. About Thomas, but he doesn’t learn that for a while. His grandfather, despite his creeping about and massive pornography collection is perhaps his only confidant in the place. He’s kind to Thomas, and always tells him the truth.

Thomas soils his pants willfully and daily – until he decides to stop. Adolescence comes quickly. “One afternoon he was out drowning flies when he realised he was in love with Gwen Hackett.” And as Thomas matures, stops pooping his pants, making bombs, searching obsessively for his grandfather’s porn collection, Gwen Hackett, against all odds, comes to love Thomas.

Things are complicated in the house and between his parents. Tomas eventually learns the secret they’ve been keeping from his, just as his grandfather nears death and his relationship with Gwen takes a turn.

This is a wonderfully good and searingly serious and funny coming of age story.
… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
Hagelstein | 7 outras críticas | Feb 17, 2024 |
“I’ve got a bad feeling about this. And I've been doing this too long to be wrong.” — Andy Garcia’s John Berlin

There is a quiet and haunting quality to this crime mystery which begins during the opening credits and is sustained to the very end. Andy Garcia rarely gets the spotlight he deserves but his low-key yet unmistakable charisma blends perfectly with the subdued thriller elements of this engrossing whodunit. As the lonely cop who leaves Los Angeles for the smaller Eureka after a messy divorce almost destroys him, Garcia excels. He seems to completely understand that this is a mood piece rather than an action thriller.

Uma Thurman, too often the centerpiece of Tarantino’s high octane and violent films, is marvelous here in the much quieter role of a shy blind girl who is as vulnerable to a serial killer as she is to Garcia’s unexpected attentions toward her.

John Berlin (Garcia) hasn't even clocked in when a body in the Eureka dump leads to a startling and more gruesome discovery: Garcia believes the body parts belong to one of the “Jennifers” of a serial murderer’s killing spree which has baffled law enforcement. But his view is not embraced. Even his old pal, portrayed by Lance Henrikson from Chris Carter’s Millenium, doesn't see the connection, and the new kid on the block must battle resentment to his presence, and the skepticism about his investigation as he tracks a killer.

Uma Thurman is wonderful as the blind Helena; the only person to have “seen” the serial murderer. Most of the best scenes in this film are in fact between Thurman and Garcia, who play well off of each other. The score by Christopher Young and intermittent songs by artists like Lenny Welch augment John’s growing love for Helena, and his fear for her life.

Kathy Baker, as John’s old pal Erikson’s wife, and John’s big sister of sorts, lends nice support in her role. Garcia’s cop is more like a C.S.I. than an action hero, lending a certain depth to his character. Director Bruce Robinson also wrote the screenplay for Scott Rudin’s production.

While Jennifer 8 becomes somewhat implausible towards the conclusion, as Director, Robinson never allows the atmosphere waver. The elements of snow and rain and nighttime are used to help create that atmosphere. Many loved this film and its atmosphere, but not all. Critics and moviegoers alike had strong reactions to this film on both ends of the star rating. Having seen this originally on the big screen in a theater, the chemistry between Garcia and Thurman, and a mood captured and maintained, made this one a big success as far as I was concerned.

Fans of the original C.S.I. from television will recognize elements and a mood sometimes found within that show. But Jennifer Eight was filmed years before. The final shot brings the viewer back nicely to the reason they’ve hung around till the end. If you like to pick apart plots, you probably won’t enjoy this as much as those who lean towards atmosphere. The R rating the film originally got stems from a couple of brief shots of Thurman topless in a bathtub, to highlight her vulnerability when a killer is nearby. Garcia and Thurman make a nice couple here, and the believability of their romance overcomes a few plot problems to make this a quietly terrific film.
… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
Matt_Ransom | Dec 1, 2023 |
His theories are ludicrous – he doesn't so much ignore Occam's Razor as tie it to a weight and dump it in the Thames – but there's a small degree of amusement to be taken in that, and some of the historical detail is genuinely interesting. If you can ignore the sanctimony.
 
Assinalado
m_k_m | 4 outras críticas | Mar 10, 2023 |
So badly written I was surprised the author is not an American ;) One of few books on JTR I will hesitate to ever read again. Someone punch the author.
 
Assinalado
ErikIancovici | 4 outras críticas | May 12, 2022 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
13
Also by
1
Membros
1,326
Popularidade
#19,390
Avaliação
3.9
Críticas
25
ISBN
87
Línguas
7
Marcado como favorito
4

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