Music / Performing Arts, Comedy - Director: Trevor Nunn, Geoffrey Posner - Original Language: English - Classification: 15 years and over, Parental Guidance - Starring: Duncan Preston, Celia Imrie, Julie Walters, Victoria Wood, Jim Broadbent
Bell), the star of the cop show they both work on, together for five years until she dumps him for British rock star lothario Aldous Snow (Russell Brand). To get over the break-up he takes advice from his brother Brian (Bill Hader), who, with the help of Brian's scatty wife Liz (Liz Cackowski), tell Pete to go to Hawaii and have a holiday, but you guessed it, Sarah is there with Snow, slobbering all over her and likewise. Not only that but they are in the same hotel complex and so will be seeing a lot of each other.
Pete, although jealous, sets about trying to win her back, whilst Snow sets about lining up the next shag, this not a meaningful relationship in anyway, Snow a pinball machine of love looking for rebounds, his tongue going like the flippers for the ladies.
Pete is a doormat and takes what life throws at him and is not ...
Advantages: good kids fun Disadvantages: A bit dated
The Tomorrow People 6.
I remembered the earlier shows, probably from 1973 when it first aired through to 1979 when it initially ended. Watching it again on DVD was very very enjoyable
and to be honest quite refreshing. It was at the time an imaginative program and held a 70's quaintness.
Remembered nothing of the second incarnation of the show, 1992 - 1995 and again nothing of the third reinvented show from 2001 - 2007.
You follow some rare talented humans as they 'Break out' and change from normal humans to the next stage in human evolution. They have abilities such as telepathy, telekinesis, and teleportation.
They have adventures inventing new technologies and fighting evil villains on this planet and from other galaxies.
There are a few surprises along the way.
1973 - 1979 Series
Series 6 ...
Advantages: interesting plot and characters, funny and entertaining Disadvantages: slow towards the end
If you hated your life, everything about it, and everyone in it, how far would you go to escape the monotony? As far as to fake amnesia?
This is what Jordan, the heroine of the novel "ForgetAbout It", decides to do. She is sick of feeling like a stranger in her own family and having her far-less talented boss at the ad agency she works at stealing her ideas and passing them off as her own. The final straw comes when she sees her playboy boyfriend on a date with another girl - being ran over seems like a blessing in disguise as she comes to a split second decision to pretend she can't remember anyone. Only Todd, her best friend since she "married" him as a child, is in the know that Jordan is just faking her memory loss.
In a lot of ways, Jordan's "amnesia" is freeing - suddenly she can act however she likes and attribute it to ...