With a single dessert and just two glasses of wine our bill was kept in check - but the effort of doing so was not much fun
Babbo
Film
This is a film with beautiful performances and a visual style that urges you towards reflection
Bright Star
Theatre
Although the first half of Kwei-Armah’s production is pacy, funny and intelligent, the energy level then drops off
Seize The Day
I loved this film from start to finish. Take the girlfriend, tell your mum - I'd see it again tomorrow and will buy the dvd.
I saw this last night and can't remember the last time I was so moved in the theatre.
I have been to many of London's so-called best Japanese restaurants and none have been as good as the food that I've had at Aqua Kyoto
London,




Dir: Edward Zwick.
Cast: Daniel Craig, Liev Schreiber, Jamie Bell, Allan Corduner, Ido Goldberg, Mia Wasikowska, Jodhi May, Alexa Davalos, Mark Feuerstein
Description: As Hitler's army marches through Belarussia, incarcerating and exterminating Jews, three brothers escape from the onslaught and lead hundreds of survivors into the dense forests. While Tuvia Bielski and his gentle, youngest sibling Asael establish a self-sufficient community beneath the tree canopy, fiery-tempered middle child Zus refuses to stand by as his people are wiped off the face of the Earth. So he abandons the refuge with a few men in tow, determined to strike at the very heart of the Nazi machine.
Country: US. 2008. 136mins
Blood brothers: Craig and Liev Schreiber, who plays his brother
Defiant mood: Daniel Craig with members of the cast and crew in Leicester Square, including Jamie Bell, Jodhi May and Alexa Davalos
The story is extraordinary, all the more so because it is true. In 1941, three farming brothers, Jewish Poles, took refuge in the dense woods of Belarus near the Novogrudok ghetto as the Nazi occupiers massacred their compatriots by the thousand.
They not only learned how to stay alive but fought the German patrols and their collaborators and raided their old homes to mete out revenge.
By the end of the war they had established a community of survivors numbering well over 1,000.
So much for the persistent theory that the Jews did nothing to fight back.
In Edward Zwick’s film, based on Nechama Tec’s moving book of the same name, Daniel Craig — taking time off from playing James Bond — Liev Schreiber and Jamie Bell take the parts of the brothers, fierce rivals at times but determined somehow to survive.
It is an unorthodox cast — probably an attempt to increase the box office value of yet another holocaust story.
What doesn’t work is Zwick’s pedestrian telling of the tale. It is not aided by a very ordinary screenplay from Zwick and Clay Frohman and by direction which constantly puts one in mind of an old fashioned Second World War thriller that happens to star Jewish heroes rather than John Wayne or Errol Flynn.
Even so, Craig as Tuvia, the reluctant but eventually dictatorial leader of the group, who had himself lost his wife and infant daughter, demonstrates that 007 only partly shows off his talents. And both Schreiber, as the brother hooked on revenge rather than survival, and Bell, as the youngest sibling, emotionally caught between the two, seem like real people rather than actors.
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Defiance remains a fantastic story. No one could doubt the sincerity of its telling. What Defiance lacks is simply an ability to make it come fully alive.
Details are correct at the time of publication - please check with venue before booking.