In Claire’s Camera, a philandering film director is again a major plot point and Kim Minhee, again the star. But this time the mood is light and airy as a summer breeze, thanks in large part to a lively performance from Isabelle Huppert (The Piano Teacher, Elle). Huppert plays Claire, a school teacher with a camera that might be magical on her first visit to Cannes. She happens upon a film sales assistant, Manhee (Kim), recently fired from her job and also meets So Wansoo (Jung Jinyoung), a film director whose one-night stand with Manhee was the reason for her firing. Beneath the humor and charm on the surface of Claire’s Camera, Hong explores the power of images to transform us. “The only way to change things,” says Claire, “is to look at them again very slowly.”
A modern day train hopper fighting to become a successful musician, and a single mom battling to maintain custody of her daughter, defy their circumstances by coming together in a relationship that may change each others lives forever.
Tracklist on next page
A thief operating along the highways of rural Australia gets caught in the crossfires of an ongoing police investigation after he mugs a serial killer.
Possibly the greatest television series the BBC has EVER made! Historically accurate, interesting, entertaining, just plain great! Best prisoner of war drama ever made!
Three 10x55min series. The first series set in 1941, a group of English and Australian women from Singapore are shipwrecked while they try to escape the Japanese invasion. The survivors are captured and put in a prison camp. They and their Dutch companions must all make drastic adjustments to and discoveries about their lives. In the second series, the group is moved to a new camp with a completely new pecking order and a particularly vicious camp leader. At the beginning of the third series, the prisoners are liberated and must re-adjust themselves to live in Singapore, in the aftermath of the war.
While released on furlough from prison, a lowly criminal evades his guards and returns to his old haunts to take revenge on the people that made him a cold-hearted killer. It’s an epic, bloody battle to search for the soul he lost years ago on the streets of an unforgiving city.
Woman’s Weekly magazine inspires you to get creative with irresistible cookery, fantastic home, gardening and craft ideas. With fiction you can’t put down and heart-warming real life, a subscription to Woman’s Weekly magazine guarantees hours of great reading every week.
Wildflower is an original Country Lifestyle magazine, which incorporates a host of feel-good topics – lovely interiors, flowers and gardens, beauty and wellness, food, wine and travel, as well as a comprehensive round up of what’s on across the country each season. Created for those who live in the country, or dream of moving there, the name Wildflower represents a shared sensibility and love of all things beautiful and natural, a theme which runs through all that we do. With gorgeous, seasonal photography, Wildflower transports you to an inspiring and thoughtful place to be, so take time out of your busy day, and relax via the pages of our beautiful magazine! The Christmas issue of Wildflower is packed full of Christmas inspiration, gifts and decorating ideas, seasonal recipes, and wellbeing tips to get you through the festive season!
Established in 1966, the Ulster Tatler has a readership of 279,000 and is a must buy for anyone interested in Ulster’s buzzing social scene. Now in its fortieth year the Ulster Tatler has extensive coverage of all the key events in the Northern Ireland social calendar as well all the latest local fashions.
The idea for the Oldie was cooked up 25 years ago by its founding editor, Richard Ingrams, and his much-lamented successor, the late Alexander Chancellor. Their aim was to create a free-thinking, funny magazine, a light-hearted alternative to a press obsessed with youth and celebrity. The Oldie is ageless and timeless, free of retirement advice, crammed with rejuvenating wit, intelligence and delight. With over 100 pages in every issue, The Oldie is packed with funny cartoons and free-thinking and intelligent articles covering a wide range of topics – from gardening and books to travel, arts, entertainment, and so much more.
Tracklist on next page