1951 novel by Daphne du Maurier
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Daphne du Maurier (1907-1989) was an English novelist and playwright whose gothic romance works have been described as “moody and resonant." Many of her novels and short stories have been adapted into films including: Rebecca, Frenchman's Creek, My Cousin Rachel, The Birds, and Don't Look Now. For Further Reading: Daphne du Maurier Mistress of menace Daphne du Maurier, 81, Author Of Many Gothic Romances, Dies How Daphne du Maurier became Hitchcock's favourite author October is the perfect time to delve into all things spooky. So this month, we're talking about the women who give us goosebumps. Some are real-life creators of spine-chilling works of fiction. Others are the subjects of frightening folklore. Either way, these Scream Queens are sure to give you a scare. History classes can get a bad rap, and sometimes for good reason. When we were students, we couldn't help wondering... where were all the ladies at? Why were so many incredible stories missing from the typical curriculum? Enter, Womanica. On this Wonder Media Network podcast we explore the lives of inspiring women in history you may not know about, but definitely should. Every weekday, listeners explore the trials, tragedies, and triumphs of groundbreaking women throughout history who have dramatically shaped the world around us. In each 5 minute episode, we'll dive into the story behind one woman listeners may or may not know–but definitely should. These diverse women from across space and time are grouped into easily accessible and engaging monthly themes like Educators, Villains, Indigenous Storytellers, Activists, and many more. Womanica is hosted by WMN co-founder and award-winning journalist Jenny Kaplan. The bite-sized episodes pack painstakingly researched content into fun, entertaining, and addictive daily adventures. Womanica was created by Liz Kaplan and Jenny Kaplan, executive produced by Jenny Kaplan, and produced by Grace Lynch, Maddy Foley, Brittany Martinez, Edie Allard, Lindsey Kratochwill, Adesuwa Agbonile, Carmen Borca-Carrillo, Taylor Williamson, Sara Schleede, Paloma Moreno Jimenez, Luci Jones, Abbey Delk, Hannah Bottum, Lauren Willams, and Adrien Behn. Special thanks to Shira Atkins. Original theme music composed by Brittany Martinez. Follow Wonder Media Network: Website Instagram Twitter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Send us a Text Message.Being single — whether it's a temporary identity or permanent — is valid life choice, but it doesn't often feel that way in our society. Living a romantic life can mean being part of a couple, and also includes being unpartnered, child free, parenting a pet, and falling in love with yourself. Some brave real life artists and fictional characters of the 19th and early 20th century managed to create this type of life, and while you shouldn't need to be a courageous soul to pull it off, these romantic stories and movies about their lives are encouragement to live our lives out loud.https://www.confessionsofaclosetromantic.comMovies/ShowsThe pace of this movie is glacial at first and the frames and acting very mannered, but you quickly fall in love with Cynthia Nixon as Emily Dickinson in A Quiet Passion.The Brontë sisters Confidential! Tarnish and all.This is a very corny trailer from way back in the early 90s but it really sums up the Edith Wharton story well.My Cousin Rachel is all sorts of suspenseful and intense and Rachel Weisz is utterly compelling in her role as an independent widow trying to find her way in 19th century England.A Quiet Passion and the real Emily DickinsonWild nights — Wild nights! Emily Dickinson's love lifeOf course if you're lucky you can visit the Brontë parsonage in Haworth.What Edith Wharton taught me about marriageSupport the Show.If you enjoyed this episode, please click share in your podcast app and tell your friends! Thanks for listening!
Rael's musical background, rooted in classical training, began at the age of 6. He graduated from the Tonmeister Course with First Class Honors, winning both available prizes for composition. Rael has worked on a variety of roles in film, including: Composer, Music Producer, Orchestrator, Music Editor, Music Programmer and Session Musician. Rael's film work includes: Les Miserables, Alan Partridge, Suite Française, My Cousin Rachel, Oasis: Supersonic,, Mrs. Harris Goes To Paris, The Sound Of 007, Role Play, and Seize Them. Rael's television work includes: Sherlock, Ill Behavior, Harlots, The Salisbury Poisonings, The Kings, and Ten Percent.
In the 1950s, Tim Barlow lost his hearing while testing artillery for the British Army. 20 years later, he became an actor! Marty and Scott check out Tim's best, worst, last, and first films in a strictly audio medium. Ironic? Perhaps. Awesome? Always.My Cousin Rachel (2017, Dir. Roger Michell)The Eagle Has Landed (1976, Dir. John Sturges)Privates on Parade (1983, Dir. Michael Blakemore)Hot Fuzz (2007, Dir. Edgar Wright)Follow us on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or Amazon Music.Visit us at slackandslashpod.comEmail us at slackandslash@gmail.com
After we both had a great reading year in 2023, we're excited about all the bookish discoveries we'll make in 2024. In this episode we chat about our reading intentions for the coming year, the books we're looking forward to, what we'd like to read more of, and why we started the year with a bunch of short reads (short books for the win!). Books mentioned in the episode
Matt and Daryl return with the second half of Weisz City, kicking off with the 2017 film, My Cousin Rachel. For this episode, the boys were graced with the presence of film and television journalist, Clotilde Chinnici. She's ace. You can find her work over at Screenrant, Live For Films, Little White Lies, Next Best Picture, and a host of other sites. Please VOTE for which actor will be covered in the next season of the podcast here. You can find all season artwork designs (from the ridiculously talented Stephen Trumble) on our Teepublic store. We also have our intro themes and interludes over on Bandcamp. The intro theme was performed by Daryl Bär and produced by Mike Hall. Please drop us a Five Star Review us at Apple Podcasts, or a Five Star Rating on Spotify. Find us on Twitter and Instagram (@ispauldanook), and drop us an email at ispauldanook@gmail.com
Michael's film work as DP includes: Let Me Go, Carmilla, and A Christmas Carol, along with the documentaries: McCullin, Pavarotti, and The Beatles: Eight Days A Week - The Touring Years. Michael's 2nd unit DP work includes: Rush, In the Heart Of The Sea, Ali And Nino, My Cousin Rachel, and Radioactive. Michael's television work includes: Riviera, Strike Back, We Hunt Together, Citadel, and One Piece.
Step back in time to the golden age of radio as Vintage Classic Radio proudly presents "My Cousin Rachel," a captivating radio play written by the renowned Daphne du Maurier. On this week's Sunday Night Playhouse, airing on September 7th, 1953, audiences will be transported into a world of mystery and intrigue, brought to life by a stellar cast led by the iconic Olivia De Havilland. Join us as we follow the gripping tale of Philip Ashley, portrayed by Olivia De Havilland, whose world is shattered by the sudden demise of his beloved cousin Ambrose. Set against the backdrop of the picturesque villa in Florence, Italy, Philip arrives too late, only to find Ambrose's cryptic letter hinting at his torment and his belief that his wife, Rachel, played by De Havilland, was responsible for his untimely death. Ambrose's beautiful and enigmatic wife, Rachel, a double widow, arrives in England a few months later, unsettling Philip's suspicions with her charm and grace. As Philip grapples with his distrust, an unexpected emotion begins to take hold - love. Has Rachel truly ensnared his heart, or is her allure merely a facade hiding a sinister agenda? This Vintage Classic Radio production boasts stellar performances by a talented cast that includes: Olivia De Havilland as Rachel as Philip Ashley as Ambrose Experience the seductive power of love and deception in "My Cousin Rachel," as timeless performances and Du Maurier's masterful storytelling weave a tale that will leave you questioning motives and unraveling truths. Tune in to Sunday Night Playhouse on Vintage Classic Radio where we bring to life timeless classics of the golden age of radio from the 1930s to the 1960s.
Last week, we discussed Daphne Du Maurier's novel My Cousin Rachel. Today, we thought it would be fun to look at the 2017 film adaptation, starring Rachel Weisz and Sam Claflin. Recommended in this episode: Nineteen Claws and a Blackbird UP NEXT: Rosalind Ashe's Moths Buy Toil and Trouble here!
DEAD AIRWAVES EPISODE 53 Not after Midnight by Daphne du Maurier Read by Louella Richardson Dame Daphne du Maurier, Lady Browning,[1] DBE (/duː ˈmɒrieɪ/; 13 May 1907 – 19 April 1989) was an English novelist, biographer and playwright. Her parents were actor-manager Sir Gerald du Maurier and his wife, actress Muriel Beaumont. Her grandfather was George du Maurier, a writer and cartoonist. Although du Maurier is classed as a romantic novelist, her stories have been described as "moody and resonant" with overtones of the paranormal. Her bestselling works were not at first taken seriously by critics, but they have since earned an enduring reputation for narrative craft. Many have been successfully adapted into films, including the novels Rebecca, Frenchman's Creek, My Cousin Rachel and Jamaica Inn, and the short stories "The Birds" and "Don't Look Now". Du Maurier spent much of her life in Cornwall, where most of her works are set. As her fame increased, she became more reclusive. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mslade/message
Phillip has lived with his guardian Ambrose Ashley on Ambrose's manor in the English countryside since Philip was a child and his parents' death left him orphaned. Philip's idyllic life is upturned, however, when Ambrose leaves for Italy, where he meets a mysterious woman named Rachel and swiftly marries her. Things take a dark turn when Ambrose dies suddenly–leaving letters behind that suggest perhaps Rachel was to blame. Following the tragedy, Rachel travels to the manor house, where she further turns Philip's life upside down. But the question remains: is Rachel a scheming villain or an innocent widow? In this episode, we're discussing Daphne Du Maurier's My Cousin Rachel (1951). Recommended in this episode: The Righteous Gemstones UP NEXT: My Cousin Rachel (the 2017 film adaptation) Buy Toil and Trouble here!
Make way for a new woman in black. She's in mourning, but she won't let that stop her! My Cousin Rachel (2017) Dir. Roger Michell. Adapted by Michell from Daphne DuMaurier's novel of the same name. Starring Rachel Weisz, Sam Claflin, and Holliday Grainger. That's So Gothic releases episodes on the first and third Thursday every month. Email sogothicpod@gmail.com. Follow Chance and Amanda on Letterboxd @mrchancelee and @mcavoy_amanda. Instagram @sogothicpod Closing music "Gothic Guitar" by Javolenus 2014 - Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial (3.0)
On Today's Quiz there will be lots of TriviaTime for 20 new questions on this trivia podcast! Enjoy our trivia questions:Which married couple starred in 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf' in 1966?What is the only Spanish speaking country in Africa?Which word describes the rate of increasing change of a body's velocity?Sam Darnold has performed in which two nationally televised sports?Which English novelist wrote Rebecca, My Cousin Rachel and the short stories "The Birds"?What Central European county's native name translates to "Eastern Realm"?Which expensive spice is obtained from the flower of the crocus, 'Crocus sativus'?To whom did Apollo give the power of prophesy, coupled with the curse of never being believe?In Stranger Things, Hawkins is located in what state?How many movements in total are in Vivaldi's Four Seasons?Which peace treaty was signed at the end of World War I?Into which vitamin does the liver convert carotene?If you liked this episode, check out our last trivia episode!Music Hot Swing, Fast Talkin, Bass Walker, Dances and Dames by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Don't forget to follow us on social media for more trivia:Patreon - patreon.com/quizbang - Please consider supporting us on Patreon. Check out our fun extras for patrons and help us keep this podcast going. We appreciate any level of support!Website - quizbangpod.com Check out our website, it will have all the links for social media that you need and while you're there, why not go to the contact us page and submit a question!Facebook - @quizbangpodcast - we post episode links and silly lego pictures to go with our trivia questions. Enjoy the silly picture and give your best guess, we will respond to your answer the next day to give everyone a chance to guess.Instagram - Quiz Quiz Bang Bang (quizquizbangbang), we post silly lego pictures to go with our trivia questions. Enjoy the silly picture and give your best guess, we will respond to your answer the next day to give everyone a chance to guess.Twitter - @quizbangpod We want to start a fun community for our fellow trivia lovers. If you hear/think of a fun or challenging trivia question, post it to our twitter feed and we will repost it so everyone can take a stab it. Come for the trivia - stay for the trivia.Ko-Fi - ko-fi.com/quizbangpod - Keep that sweet caffeine running through our body with a Ko-Fi, power us through a late night of fact checking and editing!
Neill MacColl is the eldest son of folk pioneers Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger and the half brother of Kirsty MacColl. He is also a musician, songwriter and producer in his own right. He has produced albums for many artists including Bombay Bicycle Club, where Neill eldest son Jamie is the guitarist, and toured as a seasoned session guitarist with artists such as David Gary, David Gilmour, Jesse Buckley and Nadine Shah. He has composed for film and TV, films such as Fever Pitch, 24/7, Far From The Madding Crowd and My Cousin Rachel. He also wrote and recorded an amazing album with me called Two, as well as writing songs such as Heart Shaped Stone for the Crown Electric album and the song Me For You on my latest record Night Drives. In this episode he gets quite vehement about cushions, and talks of being in the wilderness as his most at home place. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Subscribe to Quotomania on Simplecast or search for Quotomania on your favorite podcast app!Daphne du Maurier (1907–1989) is one of the best-loved authors of popular fiction of her generation. Her novels established her as a master storyteller, but she also wrote plays, short stories and biographies. Haunting and atmospheric, her work occupies a unique place in 20th century literature, appealing to a broad audience yet worthy of literary merit. Daphne du Maurier's first novel, The Loving Spirit, was published in 1931 to critical acclaim. She married Major Frederick Arthur Montague ('Boy') Browning in 1932 and had her first daughter, Tessa, in 1933. Her frank biography of her father, Gerald: A Portrait (1934) shocked some of her father's admirers but also gained her recognition as a talented writer. In 1936, publication of Jamaica Inn propelled her to the top of the best-seller lists. An unhappy period in Egypt as an army wife gave rise to Daphne du Maurier's best-known novel, Rebecca (1938). An intense study of female jealousy, Rebecca was made into a successful film in 1940, directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Frenchman's Creek (1941) and Hungry Hill (1943) followed, both of which were also made into successful films. She had another daughter, Flavia, in 1937, and a son, Christian, in 1940, and while her husband was away at war, she moved back to Cornwall with the children to live in 'Menabilly', a house which she had loved since her early 20s. During and after the war, the du Mauriers' marriage became strained. This prompted her to write a play, The Years Between (performed in 1944), which explored the effects of war on marriage. My Cousin Rachel (1951) was followed by two collections of short stories, The Apple Tree (1952) and The Breaking Point(1959); the latter was also influenced by her psychological stress. The Scapegoat (1957), a novel exploring themes of stolen identity and the self, is appreciated by critics as a more serious work, though at the time it was pigeonholed as another of her romantic thrillers. In 1963, Alfred Hitchcock's film version of her short story The Birds, was released and became a cult classic. The death of her husband, in 1965, affected Daphne du Maurier profoundly and her unease was compounded by a growing sense that her imaginative talent was waning. Unable to renew the lease on her treasured home, Menabilly, she moved to Kilmarth, in Par, where she wrote the well-received The House on the Strand in 1969, the same year that she was made a DBE. She subsequently entered into a period of creative and personal decline, culminating with a nervous breakdown in 1981. She died at home in Cornwall in 1989 at the age of 81.From https://www.bl.uk/people/daphne-du-maurier. For more information about Daphne du Maurier:Rebecca: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/rebecca-daphne-du-maurier/1100182387?ean=9780380730407“In Praise of Daphne du Maurier”: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/06/books/daphne-du-maurier-enthusiast.html“Daphne du Maurier: In Rebecca's Footsteps”: https://player.pbs.org/widget/partnerplayer/3051784528/?callsign=WLIW“Sex, jealousy, and gender: Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca 80 years on”: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/feb/23/olivia-laing-on-daphne-du-mauriers-rebecca-80-years-on
Helen Cooper author of psychological thrillers THE DOWNSTAIRS NEIGHBOUR, THE OTHER GUEST and the forthcoming THE COUPLE IN THE PHOTOHelen chats about:the long days required to study creative writing around workhow persistence and constant learning can pay off,how your agent believing in you is worth its weight in goldusing friends with police and medical backgrounds to check plot holeshow rewriting can be helpful to flesh out characters and plotGuest: Helen Cooper Twitter: @HelenCooper85 Instagram: @HelenCooperWriter Books: The Other Guest by Helen Cooper Host: Kate Sawyer Twitter: @katesawyer IG: @mskatesawyer Books:The Stranding by Kate Sawyer & This Family Helen's recommendations: A book for fans of Helen's work: The Girls by Lisa Jewel A book Helen has always loved: Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier & My Cousin Rachel by Daphne Du Maurier A book coming soon or recently released that Helen recommends: The Choice by Lucy Martin Other books that we chatted about in this episode: The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold Novel Experience with Kate Sawyer is recorded and produced by Kate Sawyer - GET IN TOUCHTo receive transcripts and news from Kate to your inbox please SIGN UP FOR MY NEWSLETTER or visit https://www.mskatesawyer.com/novelexperiencepodcast for more information.
Michelle Cox is the author of the Henrietta and Inspector Howard series, a mystery/romance saga set in the 1930s Chicago often described as “Downton Abbey Meets Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries.” To date, the series has won over sixty international awards and has received positive reviews from Library Journal (starred), Booklist (starred), Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, and various media outlets, such as Popsugar, Buzzfeed, Redbook, Elle, Brit&Co., Bustle, Culturalist, Working Mother, and many others. Cox also pens the wildly popular, “Novel Notes of Local Lore,” a weekly blog chronically the lives of Chicago's forgotten residents. She lives in the northern suburbs of Chicago with her husband and three children and is hard at work on her next novel. Follow the Best Book Ever Podcast on Instagram or on the Best Book Ever Website Host: Julie Strauss Website/Instagram Guest: Michelle Cox Website/Facebook/Twitter/Instagram/BookBub/TikTok We are hard at work on our annual Kids/YA Gift Giving Guide. Do you know a young person who'd like to talk to me about their favorite book? For more information, GO HERE! Previous Kids/YA Episodes: 2021 2020 And, just for fun, here's an episode of outtakes from my chats with kids. Discussed in this episode: My Cousin Rachel by Daphne DuMaurier Henrietta and Inspector Howard Series by Michelle Cox: A Girl Like You A Ring of Truth A Promise Given A Veil Removed A Child Lost A Spying Eye The Interview Show on PBS (filmed at The Hideout Bar Chicago) My Cousin Rachel film adaptation Get Out tea scene Life After Life by Kate Atkinson Behind the Scenes at the Museum by Kate Atkinson (Note: Some of the above links are affiliate links. If you shop using my affiliate link on Bookshop, a portion of your purchase will go to me, at no extra expense to you. Thank you for supporting indie bookstores and for helping to keep the Best Book Ever Podcast in business!)
Just in time to get your library hold in before #Halloween - it's SCARY stories! Across time, genres, and age groups, what makes a good scary story? Why are we drawn to them? Is there real intrinsic value, or is it just for fun? Can't wait to hear your feedback on this one!! Books Mentioned in this episode: Fear Street Books Goosebumps Books Are You Afraid of the Dark Books Dracula by B Stoker Alfred Hitchcock's Ghostly Gallery Frankenstein by M Shelley Rebecca and Jamaica Inn and My Cousin Rachel by D Du Maurier The Strange Case of Dr Jeckle and Mr Hyde by RL Stevenson The Night Gardener by J Auxier The Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner by ST Coleridge Edgar Allen Poe's works The Haunting of Hill House and The Lottery by Shirley Jackson The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins The Turn of the Screw by Henry James Edith Nesbit Hugh Walpole Dragon Tattoo Series by Steig Larsson The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders The 4 Aspects of Victorian Ghost Stories: Atmosphere, Dread, Revelation, Repositioning
Rael's musical background, rooted in classical training, began at the age of 6. He graduated from the Tonmeister Course with First Class Honors, winning both available prizes for composition. Rael has worked on a variety of roles in film, including: Composer, Music Producer, Orchestrator, Music Editor, Music Programmer and Session Musician. Rael's film work includes: Les Miserables, Alan Partridge, Suite Française, My Cousin Rachel, Oasis: Supersonic, and most recently, the acclaimed, Mrs. Harris Goes To Paris. Rael's television work includes: Sherlock, Ill Behavior, Harlots, The Salisbury Poisonings, The Kings, and Ten Percent.
The Duke is based on a true story about the theft of a Francisco Goya painting, The Duke of Wellington from The National Gallery in London, England. The film stars Oscar recipients Jim Broadbent and Helen Mirren. It's the last theatrical feature film directed by Roger Michell (Notting Hill, Hyde Park on Hudson, My Cousin Rachel) before his passing.
Andy and Alyssa return to the Fear Street series with R.L. Stine's controversial tome The Best Friend (1997). Along the way, they discuss My Cousin Rachel; man hands; Brian de Palma; memory lapses; mirroring; gendered exercise; Love is Blind; Guns n' Roses; hysteria; queer villains; Single White Female; Nella Larsen's Passing; All About Eve; hair twins; Basic Instinct; Dead Ringer; the penultimate season of The L Word; Mulholland Drive; Gothika; Dollhouse; figures from your sordid past; The Gift; bullies; Teju Cole's Open City; Street Fighter; The Yellow Wallpaper; Baby Teeth; Rosemary's Baby; The Stepford Wives; non-naturalistic dialogue; being hung up on your ex; My Best Friend's Wedding; Scott Pilgrim; Forgetting Sarah Marshall; parental disapproval; Romeo and Juliet; Pet Sematary; Twilight; Gilmore Girls; protagonists with two less hot friends; Nancy Drew; unclear motives; Leatherface; Ils; House of 1000 Corpses; nominal destiny; and Christmas stories. // Music by Haunted Corpse // Follow @saypodanddie on Twitter and Instagram, and get in touch at saypodanddie@gmail.com
In the first of this three-part series covering Special Edition #2 - More Tales to Give You Goosebumps, Andy and Alyssa read "The Werewolf's First Night" "P.S., Don't Write Back," and "Something Fishy." Along the way, they discuss marshmallows on hamburgers; Rocky Horror Picture Show; The Matrix: Resurrections; Through the Looking Glass; secretive parents; The Wasp Factory; nonsensical endings; becoming animal; “The Guests” from Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark; The Lake House; Kate and Leopold; “Feasibility Study” from The Outer Limits; My Cousin Rachel; family abandonment; A.I.; divorce plots; personality traits; psychedelic horror; The Prisoner; Pink Floyd's The Wall; goldfish horror; Shibuya Goldfish; The Sword in the Stone; the Twilight Zone episode “Midnight Sun”; Hell; extreme environments; Oedipus Rex; universal theories of werewolves; mischief elves; July 1964; and betta fish. // Music by Haunted Corpse // Follow @saypodanddie on Twitter and Instagram, and get in touch at saypodanddie@gmail.com
Subscribe to Quotomania on Simplecast or search for Quotomania on your favorite podcast app!Daphne du Maurier (1907–1989) is one of the best-loved authors of popular fiction of her generation. Her novels established her as a master storyteller, but she also wrote plays, short stories and biographies. Haunting and atmospheric, her work occupies a unique place in 20th century literature, appealing to a broad audience yet worthy of literary merit. Daphne du Maurier's first novel, The Loving Spirit, was published in 1931 to critical acclaim. She married Major Frederick Arthur Montague ('Boy') Browning in 1932 and had her first daughter, Tessa, in 1933. Her frank biography of her father, Gerald: A Portrait (1934) shocked some of her father's admirers but also gained her recognition as a talented writer. In 1936, publication of Jamaica Inn propelled her to the top of the best-seller lists. An unhappy period in Egypt as an army wife gave rise to Daphne du Maurier's best-known novel, Rebecca (1938). An intense study of female jealousy, Rebecca was made into a successful film in 1940, directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Frenchman's Creek (1941) and Hungry Hill (1943) followed, both of which were also made into successful films. She had another daughter, Flavia, in 1937, and a son, Christian, in 1940, and while her husband was away at war, she moved back to Cornwall with the children to live in 'Menabilly', a house which she had loved since her early 20s. During and after the war, the du Mauriers' marriage became strained. This prompted her to write a play, The Years Between (performed in 1944), which explored the effects of war on marriage. My Cousin Rachel (1951) was followed by two collections of short stories, The Apple Tree (1952) and The Breaking Point(1959); the latter was also influenced by her psychological stress. The Scapegoat (1957), a novel exploring themes of stolen identity and the self, is appreciated by critics as a more serious work, though at the time it was pigeonholed as another of her romantic thrillers. In 1963, Alfred Hitchcock's film version of her short story The Birds, was released and became a cult classic. The death of her husband, in 1965, affected Daphne du Maurier profoundly and her unease was compounded by a growing sense that her imaginative talent was waning. Unable to renew the lease on her treasured home, Menabilly, she moved to Kilmarth, in Par, where she wrote the well-received The House on the Strand in 1969, the same year that she was made a DBE. She subsequently entered into a period of creative and personal decline, culminating with a nervous breakdown in 1981. She died at home in Cornwall in 1989 at the age of 81.From https://www.bl.uk/people/daphne-du-maurier. For more information about Daphne du Maurier:“In Praise of Daphne du Maurier”: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/06/books/daphne-du-maurier-enthusiast.html“Daphne du Maurier: In Rebecca's Footsteps”: https://player.pbs.org/widget/partnerplayer/3051784528/?callsign=WLIW
Bait depicted Cornish second-home owners in a tense relationship with local fishermen. The 2019 film's director Mark Jenkin is one of Laurence Scott's guests along with author Wyl Menmuir, and Joan Passey, from the University of Bristol, where she is researching ideas about the sea as a monstrous space. Their conversation ranges from The Jewel of the Seven Stars by Bram Stoker via Wyl's novel The Many, centred on a derelict home in a coastal village and ideas about outsiders, to Celtic Cornish Breton connections. In our archives and available to download, you can find a Free Thinking discussion about ideas of Revenge and Daphne du Maurier's My Cousin Rachel - about a young man brought up in Cornwall and the widow of his cousin who comes to the county. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b08slx9w Our Green Thinking playlist includes programmes exploring oceans, rising UK sea levels and the insights gained from new research. The Green Thinking podcast is 26 episodes 26 minutes long for COP 26 hearing from a range of academics looking at challenges facing the planet. Producer: Luke Mulhall
Philippa interviews Linwood Barclay about his new book "Find You First" and then takes a different approach to her book reviews by using the “Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed and Something Blue” tag! Books covered include: “My Cousin Rachel” by Daphne Du Maurier, “Ready Player Two” by Ernest Cline, “Death Undercover” Martin Walker and "Hamnet" by Maggie O’Farrell.
Andy and Alyssa read Goosebumps #22: Ghost Beach. They discsus Puritans, the best #FoodWatch to date, plants,The X-Files, Yankee Candles, mad humanists and adled Lovecraftian scholars, vengeful ghosts, The Grudge, Gravestone Girls (@gravestonegirls), The VVitch (2015), landscape horror, H.P. Lovecraft's "The Terrible Old Man" (1921), Daphne DuMaurier's "My Cousin Rachel" (1951), A Thousand and One Nights, scary beaches, Sweetheart (2019), Plato's Allegory of the Cave, theories of ghosts in the Stineverse, and the historical context of the 1640s. // Music by Haunted Corpse // Follow @saypodanddie on Twitter and Instagram, and get in touch at saypodanddie@gmail.com
Look out, everyone! 2021 is just around the corner and when it hits, mnemonic couriers are going to be traveling around with a lot of data in their heads! That's right, folks, it's 1995's Johnny Mnemonic, starring Keanu Reeves! Grab your dial-up modem and connect as Adam and Andy discuss this mid-90s summer release!Show Notes:What We've Been WatchingAdam: 47 Ronin, Terminator, Terminator 2, Terminator 3, Terminator Salvation, Terminator Genisys, Terminator: Dark Fate Andy: Shin Godzilla, Someone's Watching Me!, My Cousin Rachel, The Appaloosa, The Swarm, The BeesChapters:(~0:09) Introduction (~0:37) What We've Been Watching (~10:14) Featured Review (~23:46) Up Next (~24:14) Closing Subscribe if you'd want to see more episodes.Feel free to send us a question we can answer on the air to ReelShame@gmail.com or follow us on Instagram @ReelShame.
"This wasn’t the life Mr and Mrs Olanrewaju conjured up in their dreams. When they thought of Stratford, they pictured the Olympic Park, not a cramped flat in a rat-ridden tower block"Rotimi is born to loving, if poor, parents. When they see an opportunity to provide him with all the things they never had, they take it - at which point things take a very dark turn indeed. Part horror, part satire, Dipo Baruwa-Etti's Then I Heard a Black Man Cry is a terrifying new fairy tale for a disturbed age. Written by Dipo Baruwa-EttiRead by Paapa EssieduDirected by Jennifer BakstSound, Music and Editing by Max PappenheimCONTENT WARNING - This audio drama contains strong, offensive language including use of the n-word as well as violent imagery, gun violence, and references to multiple forms of trauma and abuse, including self abuse, racism and exploitationDipo Baruwa-Etti is a playwright, poet, and filmmaker. Currently Channel 4 playwright on attachment at Almeida Theatre, his forthcoming play AN UNFINISHED MAN will premiere at The Yard Theatre, published by Faber & Faber. For screen, he is developing several TV projects and a short film as writer-director with BBC Drama and BFI.Paapa Essiedu’s theatre credits include Pass Over (Kiln Theatre), The Convert (Young Vic), Pinter One (Harold Pinter Theatre), Hamlet, King Lear (RSC, Kennedy Center and Brooklyn Academy of Music, New York - Ian Charleson and UK Theatre Award winner for Best Actor), Racing Demon (Theatre Royal Bath), The Merry Wives of Windsor, The Mouse and his Child (RSC), You For Me For You (Royal Court Theatre), Romeo and Juliet (Tobacco Factory), King Lear (National Theatre), Black Jesus (Finborough Theatre), Outside on the Street (Pleasance Theatre), and Dutchman (Orange Tree Theatre). For television, his work includes I May Destroy You, Gangs of London, Press, The Miniaturist, Black Earth Rising, Revolting, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Kiri, Not Safe for Work and Utopia; and for film, Murder on the Orient Express and Women at the Well (Screen International Star of Tomorrow 2017).Creative Associate at English Touring Theatre Jennifer Bakst is a director and dramaturg. She was previously New Work Associate at Kiln Theatre. Her theatre credits as a director include Dear Future Generation (Kiln Theatre Young Company), Armstrong’s War (Finborough Theatre) and theatre work with young prisoners for the Synergy Theatre Project. Her credits as an associate director include Handbagged (Kiln Theatre/59E59 New York) and The Great Wave (National Theatre)Max Pappenheim's theatre includes The Night of the Iguana (West End); The Way of the World (Donmar); The Children (Royal Court/Broadway); Waiting for Godot (Sheffield Crucible); Macbeth (Chichester Festival Theatre); Dry Powder, Sex with Strangers, Labyrinth (Hampstead); Ophelias Zimmer (Schaubühne, Berlin/Royal Court); Crooked Dances (Royal Shakespeare Company); One Night in Miami (Nottingham Playhouse); Hogarth’s Progress (Rose Theatre Kingston); The Ridiculous Darkness (Gate Theatre); The Gaul (Hull Truck); A Kettle of Fish(Yard Theatre); CommonWealth (Almeida); Creve Coeur (Print Room); Switzerland, Spamalot, The Glass Menagerie (English Theatre of Frankfurt); Mrs Lowry and Son(Trafalgar Studios); My Cousin Rachel, The Habit of Art, Monogamy, Teddy, Toast, Fabric, Invincible (National Tours). Opera includes Miranda (Opéra Comique, Paris); Scraww (Trebah Gardens); Vixen (Vaults/International Tour); Carmen: Remastered (ROH/Barbican). Radio includes Home Front (BBC Radio 4). Associate Artist of The Faction and Silent Opera.ETT tour theatre across the UK and internationally, collaborating with visionary artists to create engaging and imaginative work which interrogates and celebrates contemporary England and reflects the diversity of our nation. ETT won the UK Theatre Awards Best Touring Production in 2014, 2015, 2016 and Best Play Revival in 2019. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Movies Referenced In This Episode The Love Witch (2016) Baby Face (1933) Stromboli (1950) Europa ’51 (1951) Fear (1951) Duel In The Sun (1946) The Scarlet Empress (1934) Blonde Venus (1932) Nora Prentiss (1947) Woman On The Run (1950) Wait Until Dark (1967) Rosemary’s Baby (1968) Imitation of Life (1969) Little Women (2019) Emma (2020) My Cousin Rachel (2017) Sex and the City (2008) Mamma Mia! (2008) Mildred Pierce (1945) The Reckless Moment (1949) Sudden Fear (1952) Torch Song (1953) Captain Marvel (2019) Other Notable Items The Captain Trips virus in Stephen King’s novel The Stand (1978) Marlene Dietrich Mae West Jennifer Jones Joan Crawford Joan Bennett Gene Tierney Barbara Stanwyck The Hays Code Cary Grant Marilyn Monroe Ingrid Bergman Roberto Rossellini The Academy Awards Bette Davis Jennifer Jones Gregory Peck Joseph Cotten Travis Banton Josef von Sternberg Catherine the Great The Criterion Collection Kent Smith Dan Duryea Douglas Sirk Jane Austen Mildred Pierce TV miniseries (2011) Eleanor Parker Joan Bennett James Mason Max Ophüls The Blank Wall novel by Elisabeth Sanxay Holding (1947) Ruth Chatterton Ida Lupino Warner Brothers Neil Simon Jack Palance Gloria Grahame Michael Wilding Goldie Hawn Paramount Pictures Clint Eastwood This list is also available on Letterboxd.
Please welcome to the podcast the lead vocalist and co founder of the Italian rock band "Belladonna" Luana Caraffa. Together with Dani Macchi has produced 6 full albums, their first release in 2006 with Metaphysical Attraction. The Noir Album has become popular with Iron Maiden's Bruce Dickinson playing the track "Till Death Do Us Part" on his BBC radio program (Also the first track on the podcast). Belladonna has shared the stage with some of the biggest names in rock music - Duff McKagen of Guns N Roses, Korn, Nine Inch Nail and Muse. In 2016 they released "The Orchestral Album" and in 2017 Sound Scape Collection which Hollywood producers are using on their TV and movies. Belladonna music has been featured in "My Cousin Rachel", "Split", "The Equaliser 2" and Micheal Moore documentary. Belladonna has recorded 2 cover songs Kiss "I Was Made For Loving You" and Guns and Roses "Sweet Child Of Mine" which Desmond Child has recently really liked. @luanacaraffa @belladonna_band Here we talked about growing up in Italy, where she developed her vocal talent, supporting Duff McKagen's band, why people think Belladonna is heavy metal?, working with the Orchestra, creating a mix tape for Belladonna fans? and some amazing road stories. https://tellcraigyourstory.podbean.com https://linktr.ee/tellcraigyourstory tellcraigyourstory@hotmail.com @tellcraigyourstory Youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcCr6P3Ja395SkapnECvOFw?view_as=subscriber #luanacaraffa #tellcraigyourstory #belladonna #leadvocalist #tilldeathdouspart #Italy #duffmckagen #gnr #korn #muse #thenoiralbum #NIN #theorchestraalbum #mixtape #danimacchi #metalhammer #kiss #brucedickinson #ironmaiden michealmoore #split #equaliser2
NOTE: In trying to accommodate necessary social distancing, this week's podcast was recorded with Vicky calling in via Zoom. We apologize in advance for the sound quality and hope to get better at remote recording! Enjoy and stay safe everyone. The work of Daphne du Maurier has been adapted many times for the screen, most notably by Alfred Hitchcock in 1940's Rebecca and 1964's The Birds. Lesser known among her stories is My Cousin Rachel, which nonetheless has gotten two films adaptations and several TV productions. Dan and Vicky discuss the 2017 version directed by Roger Michell (Enduring Love, Notting Hill) and starring Rachel Weisz, Sam Claflin, and Iain Glen. Social distancing has kept our hosts inside so there's lots of recently seen to talk about too including The Hunt, Spenser Confidential, The Invisible Man, Murder By Decree, Images and the timely Marc Maron: End Times Fun. Stay inside and listen to Hot Date 103: My Cousin Rachel. Leave us some feedback and have fun on our website www.hotdatepod.com.
Tabby has special guest Kate on to discuss "My Cousin Rachel" by Daphne du Maurier; mistress of suspense. We'll be taking a few glances back at the original adaptation, but mainly focus on the 2017 production. We are so here for the drama, the costumes, the power dynamics, and the gorgeous location shoots. Find Kate on InstagramFind Kate's blog hereFor questions and feedback, please email modernlifepod@gmail.com. You can also find us on Twitter and Instagramwww.modernlifepodcast.comPlease subscribe to our podcast!AppleGoogleStitcherYoutubeInstagramSupport Modern Life by donating to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/modern-life-pod
Creaky Floorboards & Locked Doors - Learning Tension and Suspense from Gothic Fiction Whether you write the grittiest crime, the goriest horror or the sweetest romance, if you want to keep a reader hooked until the end of the book,your story must include tension and suspense. This is not just for mystery novels and ghost stories! So how do you create suspense? How is it different to tension? What methods are employed to keep a reader engrossed? While you can learn these things from any genre, since it is the season of All Hallowtide, Jules and Madeleine decided that it would be fun to take a selection of Gothic novels and demonstrate how the authors use these techniques. You can then apply them to any genre you like. On the slab this week Rebecca and My Cousin Rachel by Daphne du Maurier, Dracula by Bram Stoker, Frankenstein by Mary Shelley and man more. Title music: Ecstasy by Smiling Cynic
Tyler and David discuss what they've been watching, including Angel of Mine, It Chapter Two, Into the Ashes, Brightburn, Nightmare Cinema, Overcomer, Abominable, My Cousin Rachel, Frankie, Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood, The Tiger of Eschnapur and The Indian Tomb.
Sommaren har övergått till augusti och kvällarna blir mörkare men TT Filmpodcast fortsätter outtröttligt med att behålla sommarkänslan.I kvällens avsnitt så har vi kollat in Rachel Weisz som spelar kusinen Rachel som till en början är en vän och snäll kvinna på 1800-talet. Men när hon skall hälsa på sin kusin efter mystiska omständigheter så kan man fråga sig ifall hon är så supersnäll trots allt. MY COUSIN RACHEL var en film som jag tvingade på Tomas Törnros. Och vad var tacken för det? Det blir ett riktigt liv i podcaststudion...Liam Neeson spelar Stellan Skarsgård i nyinspelningen av den norska filmen "Kraftidioten". Nils blir Nels och handlingen flyttas till USA. Liam Neeson kör plogbil och efter att hans son blir mördad så kavlar Liam Neeson upp ärmarna och ger sig ut på en hämdturné. Vanlig standard Liam Neeson? Nähä då. Ack vad vi bedrog oss. Förvirringen är total i COLD PERSUIT.Tomas Törnros filmuppdrag denna gång var Peter Jacksons skräckkomedi FRIGHTNERS från 1996. Michael J Fox frontar filmen som mannen som kan se döda människor och gör sig en hacka sin förmåga. Frågan är Tomas är mottaglig för sån här sorts film. Kommer han gilla det eller tar han som vanligt fram motorsågen och gör slarvsylta av sin filmrecension?Dessutom så återvänder vi till Ari Asters MIDSOMMAR då vi förra gången helt omtumlade direkt efter biobesöket försökte säga något vettigt förutom att jubla över sommarens stora filmupplevelse. Består betyget nu när den fått sjunka in?Välkommen till ett överfullt och överenergiskt avsnitt där vi båda är på ett ovanligt elakt humör. Och hur det yttrar sig? Det hör ni i kvällens avsnitt.Nu kör vi!
Journey's End is a new version of R C Sheriff's classic play about World War I, following a small group of men on the eve of the 1918 Spring Offensive. Stars Sam Claflin (Their Finest, My Cousin Rachel), Paul Bettany and Asa Butterfield.
www.boneditch.wordpress.com While I finish writing the next story, here are some words that came out of the panic attack I experienced reading Daphne du Maurier's wonderful novel My Cousin Rachel, and how they both reminded me of the amazing Alice Bradley Sheldon, who wrote one of the scariest short stories ever... For more excitable words about stuff I love to read please visit my other website at www.mrcarapace.wordpress.com - I'll have the next Boneditch story finished soon... Thanks for listening... www.boneditch.wordpress.com
Back to the Blu-rays we go as Erik and Sergio talk the 50th Anniversary of Night of the Living Dead along with a number of wonderful new gems from Criterion. Sergio gets to talk about being in the minority of a film he loved in 2017 and then joins along with Erik in their love of the holiday’s surprise hit, Wonder. They get into the weeds a little talking about the first post-scandal Woody Allen film but get right out by talking about Sergio’s experience as an assistant director on Jamaa Fanaka’s Penitentiary as well as his first Blu-ray commentary track. Criterion (Night of the Living Dead, Young Mr. Lincoln, I Daniel Blake, The Complete Monterey Pop Festival, Tom Jones) Universal (Marshall, Happy Death Day, American Made) Warner Bros. (The Long Long Trailer, The Belle of New York, The Hanging Tree) Lionsgate (Wonder) Kino (The Executioner’s Song, Blame It On Rio, The Way West, Intermezzo) Twilight Time (Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, Dragonwyck, My Cousin Rachel, Husbands & Wives) Vinegar Syndrome (Penitentiary)
英格蘭有一名孤兒從小過繼到有錢人家,家中長子視之為親弟弟而且陪伴他成長,年紀又大上一輪,小男孩很受感動,論輩分該稱人家大表哥,但內心敬愛彷彿長兄如父。小男孩日漸高大,大表哥則越來越衰弱,天生體虛不耐北方寒冬,經醫師建議遷往南方,遂獨自搬去義大利養病,留下田產、家僕由表弟全權使用。兩人倚靠通信連繫情感,信中捎來近況,表哥身體好轉而且娶妻,愛妻美若天仙,總算覓得今生真愛過著幸福美滿的日子,表弟既感動也寬心,但是,新婚不出數月即傳來噩耗…(My Cousin Rachel (2017) 浮生夢) 朗讀散文、觀後感,歡迎上網搜尋'雨木觀後感'。 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/yumu-review/message
Amanda and Jenn discuss international reads, Star Trek readalikes, bisexual characters, and more in this week's episode of Get Booked. This episode is sponsored by As You Wish by Chelsea Sedoti and OwlCrate. Enter our Best of 2017 books giveaway! bookriot.com/bookriottop20 Questions 1. Hi girls! I love reading about people from different countries or people currently living in different countries and would love a recommendation! I'm trying to find something that isn’t about war or racism. Maybe something a little more lighthearted- if that exists. I love both fiction and nonfiction and am very open to translated works, poetry, plays, short story collections, etc. None of my book friends have been able to help, but I'm hoping you can :) Thank you! --Bianca 2. Hi Amanda & Jenn, I'm looking for a recommendation for my book club. We're all women ranging in age from mid-twenties to mid-sixties and, as individuals, read everything from literary fiction to romance to science fiction and fantasy. We've only been meeting for the past 6 months so we're still figuring out what types of books work best. Right now, we've read Where'd You Go Bernadette (which everyone really enjoyed), Small Great Things (most people liked), Elsie and Mairi Go to War (awful, didn't even finish), Exit West (another strong pick), When Dimple Met Rishi (good, but not substantial enough), and God: A Human History (haven't discussed yet, but from our group emails, I'm thinking it's a bit too academic). Contemporary fiction with interesting, strong female protagonists seems to be our sweet spot. We have The Mothers on our to-read list as well as A Gentleman in Moscow, My Cousin Rachel and The Summer Before the War. We read diversely, don't shy away from difficult/sensitive subjects, nonfiction is ok but we've read a decent amount lately, and prefer adult to YA. Thanks so much! --Megan 3. Hi there - I'll be moving to the Bay Area soon for a software engineering program, and I'm a little nervous about feeling lonely/missing home. I'd love some recommendations for: escapist/comforting reads and/or fiction with an awesome female lead and/or books set in San Francisco. I've been reading through the October Daye series by Seanan McGuire and have enjoyed them. I'm also planning to take Sourdough by Robin Sloan with me. I enjoy most sci-fi/fantasy and read a lot of literary fiction as well. Some of my favorite authors are Miriam Toews, Mary Doria Russell, Peter Heller and Connie Willis. Thanks for your help and for the show - this podcast has helped me find so many great books! --Rachel 4. What sci-fi books would you recommend to someone who loves Star Trek? I've of course read some of the novelizations, but I'd like to read some novels that are unconnected but have a similar enough feel to Star Trek. I love the space exploration, philosophy, and different alien races working together, but most of all I loved the idealized future. It seems every futuristic novel I read, we all live in a terrible future that is terrible, and OH LOOK AT HOW EVIL TECHNOLOGY IS. There are no words to describe how tired I am of that. Thanks in advanced guys. I can't wait to hear your recs. --Eliza 5. Hi, I recently listened to your podcast about biography recommendations and can't wait to check out Cleopatra. I would love some other great biographies/memoirs about women. I would prefer people of color or/not already widely famous people. For example, I loved Stolen Lives; Twenty Years in a Desert Jail by Malika Oufkir, Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi, Unbowed by Wangari Maathai, and Mennonite in a Little Black Dress by Rhoda Janzen. Thanks! --Carrie 6. I'm on a search for bisexual characters in literature (who actually call themselves bi- too often authors try to skirt around the word). I'm bisexual myself and I'm craving representation. I find so many gay and lesbian characters, but rarely bi. I don't mind if the character is in a same sex or opposite sex relationship, I would just really like to read about a bi character. Also, while I would love to see some bi women, I encounter bi women much more than I encounter bi men, so I would appreciate it if your suggestions had both genders (if that is at all possible). Thank you so much, and I absolutely adore the show. --Virginia 7. Hi Amanda and Jenn! I love listening to your podcast! Im wondering if you can recommend some books set in the Middle East. I recently read When the Moon is Low by Nadia Hashimi and loved it. I'd particularly like books told from the perspective of a female character(s). Thanks! --Becky Books Discussed Sunshine by Robin McKinley A Darker Shade of Magic by VE Schwab The Rabbit Back Literature Society by Pasi Ilmari Jääskeläinen, translated by Lola Rogers The Woman Next Door by Yewande Omotoso (rec’d by Rebecca) White Oleander by Janet Fitch Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi Wallbanger by Alice Clayton A Dirty Job by Christopher Moore Shards of Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold Provenance by Ann Leckie Wild Swans by Jung Chang Mighty Be Our Powers by Leymah Gbowee A Gentleman’s Guide to Vice and Virtue by Mackenzi Lee 100 Must Read Bisexual Books post Swordspoint by Ellen Kushner Escape from Aleppo by N.H. Senzai An Unnecessary Woman by Rabih Alameddine
This week, with the summer holidays upon us it's the perfect time to relax with a book. Frances Keyland is on the program to chat about her Summer Reading Guide which focuses on books that became films in 2017. Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express, Daphne du Maurier's My Cousin Rachel, R.J. Palacio's Wonder and many more, these books are available at Vision Australia's Library Service. Also on the program, Vision Australia's Lead Policy Advisor Bruce Maguire brings an update on the Audio Description Working Group.
Follow Jason on Twitter @jjgoad; visit his website jjgoad.com Jack Reacher books by Lee Child; Robert B. Parker’s Spenser books; Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe books; Ross Macdonald’s Lew Archer books; Silver Screen Fiend by Patton Oswald; Sick in the Head by Judd Apatow; Letterman: The Last Giant of Late Night by Jason Zinoman; Hope: Entertainer of the Century by Richard Zoglin; Gilbert Gottfried’s Amazing Colossal Podcast; Raised Eyebrows: My Years Inside Groucho’s House by Steve Stoliar; Krazy: George Herriman, a Life in Black and White by Michael Tisserand; So Deadly, So Perverse: 50 Years of Italian Gialo Films by Troy Howarth; Dario Argento, director; Hollywood Babylon by Kenneth Anger; The Complete Peanuts by Charles Schultz, published by Fantagraphics; Popeye by E.C. Segar; The Chocolate War & I Am the Cheese by Robert Cormier; A Day No Pigs Would Die by Robert Newton Peck; The Outsiders, Rumblefish, & Tex by S.E. Hinton; Rumblefish movie directed by Francis Ford Coppola; Bosch, Amazon tv series, based on Michael Connelly’s Harry Bosch books; The Talented Mr. Ripley & The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith; Harper’s Interview w/ Ottessa Moshfegh (http://www.harpersbazaar.com/culture/art-books-music/a17696/ottessa-moshfegh-eileen-interview/); Rebecca, My Cousin Rachel, & The Birds by Daphne Du Maurier; Rebecca, The Birds, Psycho, North by Northwest, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Rear Window: movies directed by Alfred Hitchcock; Frank Ocean; Tai Pai by Tao Lin Theme song from Schnupp & the pups (schnuppthepups.bandcamp.com/album/demo Follow Brent @blentfryberg; brentflyberg.com Follow Kelly @kerlyhan; kellyhannahcomedy.com
Welcome to the second episode of the Directors UK Podcast! Today we’re bringing you the audio from our Goodbye Christopher Robin Q&A, where director Simon Curtis (My Week With Marilyn, Woman In Gold) spoke with Roger Michell (Notting Hill, My Cousin Rachel) about making the film. Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a review! Music: Loyalty Freak
Liam Neeson isn't, is and now isn't sick of making geri-action movies, Scorsese will team up with DiCaprio again for Roosevelt and Tom and Dave argue over Battle of the Sexes, the true story of that time when the superior sex was decided by playing tennis. Also: My Cousin Rachel, The Little Hours, Certain Women.
MAIL SACK: (00:09:50) From Dianae @Dianae173 FLICK: (00:14:25) "My Cousin Rachel" (2017) SLS Cast rating: 3.25 Matt's rating: 3.25 Tim's rating: 3.25 Copycat Throwdown: (00:30:00) "My Cousin Rachel" (1952) vs "My Cousin Rachel" (2017) NEXT WEEK! Errors of Continuity Episode Three: THE 'HALLOWEEN' MOVIE FRANCHISE Until Next Time Cinephiles... Audio Links: "My Cousin Rachel" (2017) Trailer (HERE) "My Cousin Rachel" (2017) Clip (HERE) (HERE) "My Cousin Rachel" (1952) Trailer (HERE) RSS Feed (All music within the podcast is copyrighted 2010 - 2017 by Cries of Solace and is used with permission. Additional copyrighted material used under Fair Use for the purposes of [including, but not limited to]: criticism, comment, and news reporting. Any opinions expressed are strictly those of the hosts, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Sony or any of its affiliates and subsidiaries.)
MAIL SACK: (00:05:00) From Dianae @Dianae173 FLICKS: (00:09:30) "Wind River" (2017) SLS Cast rating: 4.25 Matt's rating: 4 Tim's rating: 4.25 (00:26:00) "Mother!" SLS Cast rating: 2.75 Matt's rating: 1.75 Tim's rating: 3.75 NEXT WEEK! Copycat Throwdown "My Cousin Rachel" (2017) vs "My Cousin Rachel" (1952) Until Next Time Cinephiles... Audio Links: "Wind River" (2017) Trailer (HERE) "Wind River" (2017) Clip (HERE) (HERE) "Mother!" Clip (HERE) RSS Feed (All music within the podcast is copyrighted 2010 - 2017 by Cries of Solace and is used with permission. Additional copyrighted material used under Fair Use for the purposes of [including, but not limited to]: criticism, comment, and news reporting. Any opinions expressed are strictly those of the hosts, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Sony or any of its affiliates and subsidiaries.)
This week on BEHIND THE LENS writer/director BRIAN CAVALLARO is on hand talking about the making of AGAINST THE NIGHT. Night shoots and lensing inside the decaying and decrepit (and haunted - shhh!) Holmesburg Prison in Philadelphia using flashlights as the filming light source are just some of the challenges Brian talks about embracing and overcoming in order to bring this story to life. And for a bonus, Brian gives some tips and recommendations on working with the local film commission. Plus, hear what writer/director ROGER MICHELL had to say in his exclusive interview with film critic debbie elias on his adaptation of Daphne du Maurier's MY COUSIN RACHEL. http://behindthelensonline.net http://eliasentertainmentnetwork.com
0:00 - Hello, an iTunes review, the virtues of New Orleans, the paradox of wives listening to this show, mention of another show with a similar name 7:00 - "Patti Cake$" review 15:15 - "I Do... Until I Don't" review (Bayer only) 18:30 - Snider saw "Wind River" and "Birth of the Dragon"; Hollywood has forsaken us again this week 23:10 - A few loose ends to tie up regarding the Summer Box Office Challenge 27:25 - DVDs are "Baywatch" and "My Cousin Rachel," and an Agent can win a copy of "Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2" 31:00 - Our Movie of the Month: "The Best Years of Our Lives" (1946) 45:30 - Our MOTM for September is "In the Heat of the Night" (1967); recap and good day REVIEWS: Patti Cake$: B- 7/10 I Do... Until I Don't: n/a 4/10 Birth of the Dragon: C- n/a
Yes, we know - you've been dying to know what the SSS guys think about upcoming films Power Rangers, Beauty & the Beast, Life, My Cousin Rachel. Never fear, Episode 12 has what you need - along with some thoughts on conventions, Jennifer Lawrence, and a special announcement at the end.The guys also watched 2015's Southbound, a movie with no shortage of love online.Did they see something scary?Download to find out!
欢迎大家收听最新一集的404电影,本集是多部电影的分享。首先是由香港同名舞台剧改编的电影《29+1》。然后是天凌和腐哥分别介绍各自看过的几部电影:由张扬导演执导的《冈仁波齐》开始,此外,张扬导演另一部作品《皮绳上的魂》已经定档8月4日。然后是《美好的意外》以及《荡寇风云》。接着谈谈《缉枪》、《原谅他77次》和《52赫兹,我爱你》。再到女性题材的《浮生梦(My Cousin Rachel)》、《梅根•利维(Megan Leavey)》和恐怖悬疑片《黑夜造访(It Comes at Night)》。以及《重返•狼群》、《内心引力》、《我心雀跃》和《忠爱无言》,最后三部是《亨利之书(The Book of Henry)》、《仓皇一夜(Rough Night)》以及《生化危机:复仇(バイオハザード:ヴェンデッタ)》。这期节目全部更新完毕,谢谢大家的收听,不要忘了加404的微博,上面已经更新完由热心听众GAS提供的异形年鉴。我们有缘再见!
欢迎大家收听最新一集的404电影,本集是多部电影的分享。首先是由香港同名舞台剧改编的电影《29+1》。然后是天凌和腐哥分别介绍各自看过的几部电影:由张扬导演执导的《冈仁波齐》开始,此外,张扬导演另一部作品《皮绳上的魂》已经定档8月4日。然后是《美好的意外》以及《荡寇风云》。接着谈谈《缉枪》、《原谅他77次》和《52赫兹,我爱你》。再到女性题材的《浮生梦(My Cousin Rachel)》、《梅根•利维(Megan Leavey)》和恐怖悬疑片《黑夜造访(It Comes at Night)》。以及《重返•狼群》、《内心引力》、《我心雀跃》和《忠爱无言》,最后三部是《亨利之书(The Book of Henry)》、《仓皇一夜(Rough Night)》以及《生化危机:复仇(バイオハザード:ヴェンデッタ)》。这期节目全部更新完毕,谢谢大家的收听,不要忘了加404的微博,上面已经更新完由热心听众GAS提供的异形年鉴。我们有缘再见!
Our regular Film Ireland Podcast returns with resplendent hosts Sarah Cullen and Richard Drumm bringing you fun and frolics from the film world. Yes there's Star wars news, Yes there's movie reviews. Want to hear about Baby Driver - take that. After the Storm - bleakly optimistic. Miss Sloane - make guns seem cool with the ladies. Wonder Woman - we all liked it. It Comes at Night - thinking man's apocalypse. My Cousin Rachel. Of course. Alien Covenent - celebrating James Franco's face on fire. http://filmireland.net/
June wasn't the best month of movies ever, but Jordan and Phil are here to provide you with spoiler-free reviews, ratings, and recommendations for ten theatrical releases and two Netflix originals! 2:55: A glowing iTunes review from a lovely person 4:45: Baby Driver Review 14:55: It Comes At Night Review 26:50: The Mummy Review 36:00: Shimmer Lake Review 41:30: Quickfire Reviews/Recommendations (Rough Night; Megan Leavey; My Cousin Rachel; 47 Meters Down; All Eyez on Me; The Book of Henry; The House; Nobody Speak: Trials of the Free Press) 55:00 July theatrical releases preview 56:30 July Netflix Originals preview How to contact/listen: Twitter: @mildmanneredpod; @4M_Phil Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mildmanneredpod Podbean: www.mildmanneredmoviemen.podbean.com iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/mild-mannered-movie-men/id1236455805 E-Mail: mildmanneredmoviemen@gmail.com
For our series Queer Icons, Christine and the Queens chooses Jenet Genet's novel Our Lady of the Flowers, set in the Parisian underworld of thieves and drag queens, as her favourite LGBTQ artwork. Christine and the Queens is the stage name of Héloïse Letissier, the French singer-songwriter of the best-selling album Chaleur Humaine.As the Spider-Man gets its third reboot in 15 years Jason Solomon reviews what Spider-Man: Homecoming brings to the franchise.On Front Row Rachel Weisz remarked that in order to play the title role in My Cousin Rachel she had to decide whether or not she was guilty, but she told no one, not even the director. Michael Simkins has played a murderer, and a suspect who turned out not to be guilty. He also played Sion Jenkins, who was tried for the murder - and eventually found not guilty - of his foster-daughter Billy-jo Jenkins, in a docu-drama. Michael talks to Samira Ahmed about acting guilty - and not.In our final look at the shortlisted institutions vying for the Art Fund Museum of the Year 2017 prize, Front Row visited the Lapworth Museum of Geology in Birmingham which re-opened in June 2016 after a £2.7 million redevelopment and expansion. Since re-opening, the museum, which used to receive 20,000 visitors a year, has recently welcomed its 50,000th visitor.Presenter: Samira Ahmed Producer: Julian May.
My Cousin Rachel is an old-fashioned gothic melodrama, written by Daphne Du Maurier, and starring Rachel Weisz and Sam Claflin.
Simon Morris looks at three films competing with "blockbuster season" – My Cousin Rachel, The Beautiful Fantastic and The House.
Velkommen til en ny podcast fra Filmpolitiet. I dag anmeldes disse filmene: "It Comes At Night" er en skremmende thriller som engasjerer. "Grusomme meg 3" byr på småslem humor i en familievennlig innpakning. "My Cousin Rachel" reddes av Rachel Weisz i tittelrollen. "The House" er en feilslått komedie, bare full av tull og tøys. Netflix-filmen "Okja" er et stort og bredt eventyr med litt ujevn satire Og "Fra balkongen" er et filosofisk essay om livet, som er både morsom og lekende. Den anmeldes, og regissør Ole Giæver forteller om ideen bak filmen. I tillegg anmeldes spillet "Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy", som gamle fans vil sette stor pris på. Programleder er Birger Vestmo.
KJ and The Bas retire to the bar to discuss Rachel Weisz's latest drama, My Cousin Rachel
Paul and Erin review two movies inspired by the music of The Beatles: Julie Taymor's sprawling 2007 romance ACROSS THE UNIVERSE, and Michael Schultz's 1978 disco debacle SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND. Plus: our quick takes on THE BAD BATCH, MY COUSIN RACHEL, OH HELLO! ON BROADWAY, HARD TIMES and ALOHA BOBBY AND ROSE.
Lee and Josh chat about Han Solo-gate, movies being filmed more like tv series, long gaps in franchise sequels, that Japanese and Bollywood actors work really hard, more treasures in digital preservation and distribution, Dave Filoni, and Edgar Wright! Plus, they discuss the movies screening from June 23rd - 30th: Tanna, My Cousin Rachel, Maudie, The Circle, Stalker, Alien: Covenant, Saturday Night Cinema, and Saturday Morning Cartoons!
This week the boys dig into some art and culture with the British mystery-romance My Cousin Rachel. Thomas tells us about his recent trip to the barber shop, Sean review’s Neruda, and Harvey has yet another B-Horror film he wanted to talk about. The weekly topic for this episode is- Movies we avoided for so long and why. Please subscribe to us on iTunes, and as well follow on Twitter and Instagram. Enjoy! 12:00 Sleep Tight review 18:12 All Eyez on Me review 32:22 Neruda review 41:58 My Cousin Rachel review 1:12:04 Movies we avoided for so long and why
Logan and Bob saw different movies this week. Bob reviews My Cousin Rachel. Rachel Weisz in a period piece? Sign him up. But what about that ending? Logan reviews Land of Mine. Can German soldiers in World War II actually be made sympathetic? Should they be? In weekend picks, Logan talks about GLOW and Preacher Bob mentions Transformers: The Last Knight, Beguiled, and The Big Sick. Watch Twitter for the final pick. Let's rock! Follow us on Twitter: @LoganBeaux and @BobCaswell
In this week’s podcast we read the Griffith Review issue 56, which is themed “Millennials Strike Back”. Then we deconstruct the trope of the gothic femme fatale in Roger Michell’s film My Cousin Rachel. And finally we watch Australia’s favourite radio lads re-enact ordinary people’s yarns in the TV series True Story with Hamish & Andy.
This week on the InSession Film Podcast: Extra Film segment, in preparation for THE BOOK OF HENRY hitting theaters this weekend, we look back at Colin Trevorrow's debut film in SAFETY NOT GUARANTEED. We also review the Roger Michell indie MY COUSIN RACHEL starring Rachel Weisz. - Review: Safety Not Guaranteed (8:02) - Review: My Cousin Rachel (33:43) Thanks for listening and be sure to subscribe on iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, Soundcloud or TuneIn Radio! iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/insession-film-podcast/id605634337 Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/listen?authuser&u=0#/ps/It5foal422yoktioaclalk3ykyi Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/insession-film Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/insession-film TuneIn Radio: http://tunein.com/radio/The-InSession-Film-Podcast-p522717/ Listen Now: http://insessionfilm.com/insession-film-podcasts-listen-now/
Susan and Russ review a new adaptation of Daphne Du Maurier’s classic gothic mystery, “My Cousin Rachel.” Oscar-winning actress Rachel Weisz (“The Constant Gardener”) takes on the title role of […] The post Take Two: “My Cousin Rachel” appeared first on KKFI.
With reviews of Universal's first in the Dark Universe series with The Mummy, and british drama My Cousin Rachel. Oh home release Keanu Reeves is back as the title character in John Wick: Chapter 2, Matt Damon stars in The Great Wall, horror action in Resident Evil: The Final Chapter, oscar nominated drama Loving, more drama in Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk and Michael Keaton is The Founder.
Backseat Directors Episode 16! My sister, Samantha, and I get our first experience of seeing an advanced movie screening, as we were treated to the dark and mysterious romance film, My Cousin Rachel. This movie had many twists and turns, as we tried to keep up with the storyline, and the dark romance between Philip Ashley and his cousin, Rachel. Take a listen! You can follow Samantha on Instagram @pajama_sammm and on Twitter @Caterpillar_sam If you want to co-host the show, follow Backseat Directors on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ TheBDPodcast for all news and updates. This podcast is intended for entertainment and informational purposes only. All original content is copyright 2017 Backseat Directors.
This week, the Cinemaholics review The Mummy, starring Tom Cruise, as well as It Comes At Night, Orange is the New Black Season 5, and more. 00:02:56 – It Comes At Night Review 00:31:26 – The Mummy Review 01:01:25 – Mini Reviews: Orange is the New Black Season 5, Orphan Black Season 5, Batman & Bill, My Cousin Rachel Check out our Patreon to support Cinemaholics! Don't forget to review and rate the show on Apple Podcasts and you can always hang out with us on Facebook and Twitter. Or email your feedback to cinemaholicspodcast [at] gmail.com. You might just hear your email read on next week’s episode! Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/cinemaholics
My Cousin Rachel is an atmospheric adaptation for the big screen of Daphne Du Maurier's novel starring Rachel Weisz and Sam Claflin and directed by Notting Hill director Roger Michell. Like her most famous novel "Rebecca" the narrative revolves around a large private estate in Cornwall and a powerful woman whose life is an enigma. Arundhati Roy was the first Indian woman writer to win the Booker Prize, which she won in 1997 for her novel The God of Small Things, and which sold over 8 million copies world wide. A political activist and writer, it has taken her 20 years to publish her ambitious second novel, The Ministry of Untold Happiness. Raphael: The Drawings at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford includes 120 drawings by the celebrated Renaissance artist, including 50 from the Ashmolean's own collection which is the largest and most important in the world. The drawings are taken from across Raphael's brief but brilliant career, taking visitors from his early career in Umbria through his radically creative years in Florence to the period where he was at the height of his powers in Rome, working on major projects such as the Vatican frescoes. Common, a world premiere by DC Moore, and directed by Headlong's Artistic Director Jeremy Herrin opens at the National's Olivier Theatre. An epic new history play co-produced by the National Theatre and Headlong, it is set in the early days of the Industrial Revolution when the common land of England is under threat. Common stars Anne-Marie Duff. Set against an awe-inspiring backdrop of the Riviera in the South of France, Riviera is a new ten part television series from Sky, and stars Julia Stiles as Georgina Clios, the smart and resourceful second wife of a billionaire banker who dies in a yacht explosion. This catastrophe sets in motion a dramatic chain of events that exposes the darker side of the Riviera's glitz and glamour and the global art market. Conceived by Neil Jordan, who co-wrote the first episode with John Banville, the series also stars Adrian Lester.
James Richardson is joined this week by Little White Lies' Adam Woodward and David Jenkins to dissect Tom Cruise's new blockbuster, The Mummy, a remake of the original Mummy franchise which began in 1932, and the first of the new Dark Universe series. They also pick over another re-make, this time My Cousin Rachel, adapted from a Daphne DuMaurier novel and first released on celluloid in 1952 and which starred Olivia de Havilland and Richard Burton. And for the Film Club this week they choose the 2003 Scarlet Johannson, Thora Birch, Steve Buscemi cult classic, Ghost World. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
John Coulson joins Van to look at Dark Universe-launcher The Mummy, Daphne du Maurier adaptation My Cousin Rachel, indie dramedy Wilson, Jewish drama Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer, Fritz Lang's Der Müde Tod, religious drama The Shack, and twisted thriller Berlin Syndrome. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Rachel Weisz tackles Daphne du Maurier’s enigmatic heroine in My Cousin Rachel, while BLAME! sees Netflix release a feature-length adaptation of a long-running Japanese manga series. Laurie saw both of these and also covers Children of Men and Gladiator for WWBW, with Phil taking a crack at How to Train Your Dragon and Sense & Sensibility. He also … Continue reading My Cousin Rachel, BLAME!, Children of Men, Sense & Sensibility, Gladiator, How to Train Your Dragon and Movie Fan Frustration →
On this packed edition of the Cinema Clash: THE MUMMY sheds light on what a bust the Dark Universe may be; IT COMES AT NIGHT attempts to scare the ‘it’ out of you; MEGAN LEAVEY gets a dog. Hoorah.; MY COUSIN RACHEL is sadly not a sequel to My Cousin Vinny; LETTERS FROM BAGHDAD is a weak doc about a strong woman; MANIFESTO taxes the brain with Cate Blanchett playing 13 roles; and a quirky little indie called BAND AID saves the day with humor, heart and a few catchy tunes.
Hollywood star Rachel Weisz talks about the unusual ambiguity in her latest role as the beguiling widow Rachel in a big screen adaptation of Daphne Du Maurier's psychological drama My Cousin Rachel. Two years ago Bamber Gascoigne inherited West Horsley Place, a crumbling 15th century stately home and 380 acres in Surrey, along with a restoration bill of £7.3m. So he built the first opera house in the UK this century in the woods behind the house, which opens tonight. He gives us the guided tour along with the woman behind the project, Grange Park Opera impresario Wasfi Kani.It's rare for a novel to hit the news headlines but that's happened this week for Arundhati Roy's The Ministry of Utmost Happiness as it's twenty years since her first - and only other - novel, The God of Small Things, became a much loved and huge bestseller, winning the Booker Prize and selling over 8 million copies around the world. In the meantime, she's become known as an activist in her home country, India. This novel takes readers on a tumultuous journey to Delhi and Kashmir, blending the personal and the political. She joins Samira to talk about why the time felt right to tell this story now.Nigella Lawson remembers her close friend and literary agent Ed Victor.
On the latest episode of the BIG show, we sit down with filmmaker Gabriela Cowperthewaite, who talks about her upcoming film, Meagan Leavey. Cowperthewaite discusses working on another film with an animal and which filmmakers inspire her. Plus, we'll review several new films, including The Mummy, My Cousin Rachel, Band Aid, and Meagan Leavey. We'll have all of that and more on Episode 300 of Keeping It Reel with FilmGordon.
On the latest episode of the BIG show, we sit down with filmmaker Gabriela Cowperthewaite, who talks about her upcoming film, Meagan Leavey. Cowperthewaite discusses working on another film with an animal and which filmmakers inspire her. Plus, we'll review several new films, including The Mummy, My Cousin Rachel, Band Aid, and Meagan Leavey. We'll have all of that and more on Episode 300 of Keeping It Reel with FilmGordon.
Rachel Weisz talks about her new film My Cousin Rachel. Plus the Box Office Top 10 and reviews including The Mummy and The Shack. Download the Kermode and Mayo podcast at bbc.co.uk/podcasts/5live. Email: mayo@bbc.co.uk Text: 85058 (charged at your standard network rate) Twitter: @wittertainment.
0:00 - Hello, moms and technology, our T-shirts exist IRL 6:00 - "The Mummy" review 16:30 - "It Comes at Night" review 24:00 - "I, Daniel Blake" review (Bayer only) 25:55 - "My Cousin Rachel" review (Snider only) 29:30 - Summer Box Office Challenge update: Bayer joins the game! 33:35 - This week's DVDs 35:35 - We dip our grubby hands into the ol' mailbag and tell our origin story 40:00 - Recap and good day REVIEWS: The Mummy: C 6/10 It Comes at Night: B+ 7/10 I, Daniel Blake: n/a 8/10 My Cousin Rachel: B n/a
With Francine Stock Roger Michell, the writer/director of My Cousin Rachel, discusses the work of Daphne Du Maurier on film, from Rebecca to The Birds to Don't Look Now.
Matthew Sweet sees a film version of Daphne Du Maurier's novel directed by Roger Michell and looks at revenge in Shakespeare and Greek drama with 2017 New Generation Thinker Islam Issa and classicist and author Natalie Haynes. Andrew O'Hagan discusses his new book of essays exploring his relationship with Wikileaks founder Julian Assange and the Australian web developer who may or not be the inventor of the Bitcoin.Natalie Haynes new novel is called The Children of Jocasta. Andrew O'Hagan's new book is called The Secret Life. My Cousin Rachel starring Rachel Weisz is in cinemas around the UK. Islam Issa is a 2017 New Generation Thinker who teaches at Birmingham City University. He is the author of Milton in the Arab-Muslim World and you can hear him in the Free Thinking Landmark exploring Paradise Lost. New Generation Thinkers is a scheme run by the BBC with the Arts and Humanities Research Council to find academics who can turn their research into radio and television. You can find more on the Free Thinking website. Producer: Fiona McLean
In this episode, we bring in a female voice (other than Britt) to talk about WONDER WOMAN. Jessi Lauren joins us to talk about feminism, representation, and the importance of female superheroes. Britt joins continues her film education to talk about MANHUNTER! We also talk about the new releases coming this week, MY COUSIN RACHEL, MEGAN LEAVEY, and THE MUMMY! Spoilers: 0:19:35 Manhunter: 0:28:12 Coming Soon: 0:39:28 Follow Jessi on Twitter! Check out our Network! Subscribe on iTunes! ----Make sure to rate and review! Subscribe on Stitcher! Subscribe on Google Play! Donate on Patreon! This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
Here's what's going viral now on Facebook. "MY COUSIN RACHEL | Official Trailer | FOX Searchlight." Based on the Daphne Du Maurier book, this dark glimpse for the upcoming film reveals a man seeking revenge following the death of his guardian... believing his cousin is to blame. But, after encountering her... things get a bit messy. Another trending trailer... "Coco Official US Teaser Trailer." This sneak peek into the upcoming animated film shows Miguel, a boy passionate about music... and his dog, Dante, who are both magically transported to the Land of the Dead. The movie is in theaters November 22nd. And, speaking of adventures... "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul | Official Trailer | 20th Century FOX." Based on the book series, this fuller look into the upcoming movie shows the character Greg embarking on a family road trip... and the antics that ensue. The movie is in theaters May 19th. For these videos and more, go to FOXNewsRadio.com. I'm Lauren Faulkner, FOX News. Follow Lauren on Twitter: @FaulknerFOXNews Click HERE for more Viral Videos from "Status Updates"
In this episode, we check in with some old friends in T2 Trainspotting, watch two women continuously switch lives (and punch each other) in Catfight, support the apple picking union in In Dubious Battle, and watch so many seductive glances in My Cousin Rachel.
Episode 31 finds us discussing two movie trailers with "My Cousin Rachel" & "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri." We also discuss some of the latest Oscar news, answer fan questions and more. Check out more on NextBestPicture.com Please subscribe on... SoundCloud - @negsbestfilmpodcast iTunes Podcasts - itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/negs-…d1087678387?mt=2
It's the 62nd minute of ONE HEAT MINUTE, the podcast examining Michael Mann's 1995 crime opus HEAT minute by minute (1:01:00-1:02:00). Host Blake Howard is joined by AFCA Award-winning critic, a writer for the Star Observer, film critic on ABC Radio Sydney and Graffiti with Punctuation alumni Laurence Barber. Blake and Laurence discuss the potential of a podcast about "My Cousin Rachel" through the lens of Laurence and Mat Whitehead's "diseased brains," the surprisingly moving and convention-challenging minute, and the yearning to be "that" cop who addresses the grief of those people affected by the crimes he investigates.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/one-heat-minute-productions/donations