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The Last of Us Season 2: Abby's Revenge and Joel's Tragic Fate
2025-05-20 13:45:05| Spiritual Career Counseling
Another week, another heartbreak as the second episode of The Last of Us season 2 killed off a major character.Warning: This post contains spoilers forThe Last of Usseason 2, episode 2, which aired on HBO Sunday, April 20.The shows latest installment opened with Abby (Kaitlyn Dever) dreaming about the aftermath of Joels (Pedro Pascal) hospital massacre from the season 1 finale.After waking up from her dream, its revealed that Abby and her crew have officially reached the outskirts of Jackson, Wyoming, as their hunt for Joel continues. However, Owen (Spencer Lord) states that they have no idea where Joel actually is, before requesting time to formulate a plan that helps them seek revenge.The plan? Owen wants to convince Abby to turn back because the only people getting killed out here are us. Related: Every Unanswered Question After The Last of Us Season 2 PremiereMeanwhile, in Jackson, Ellie (Bella Ramsey) is dealing with the aftermath of what went down on New Years Eve not...
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In The Northern Ireland Period Thriller '71,' No One Dies Well
2025-05-20 11:45:04| Spiritual Career Counseling
The film is about an English private who is cut off from his unit in the middle of a riot in Belfast in 1971. It's a conventional and smashingly good chase melodrama, but it's also a tragedy. DAVE DAVIES, HOST: This is FRESH AIR. The streets of Northern Ireland in 1971 are the setting for the new film "'71," in which Jack O'Connell, best known for his starring role in "Unbroken," plays an English soldier cut off from his unit in the middle of a riot. Film critic David Edelstein has this review.DAVID EDELSTEIN, BYLINE: The most powerful thing about the Belfast, Northern Ireland, period thriller "'71" is that no one dies well. In outline, this is a conventional and a smashingly good chase melodrama. But it's also a tragedy, from the first face-off between the British army and a mob of Catholic men, women and children who get in the soldiers' faces and draw first blood, to the heart-stopping climax in a ruined pub. By then, the protagonist Gary Hook, wounded British private, trapped behin...
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Employment
'71 review: a visceral reminder of dark days
2025-05-20 11:45:04| Spiritual Career Counseling
'71 Director: Yann DemangeCert: 15AGenre: DramaStarring: Jack O'Connell, Sean Harris, Sam Reid, Charlie Murphy, Paul Anderson, Killian Scott, David WilmotRunning Time: 1 hr 39 minsThere exists a photograph of your reviewer all purple flares and pudding-bowl hair standing merrily beneath a huge wooden 71 positioned near the Botanic Gardens in south Belfast. For reasons that should be apparent, the optimistic Ulster 71 Expo, conceived to celebrate 50 years of the Northern Irish statelet, failed miserably to define the era.There is certainly no mention of it in Yann Demanges breakneck thriller set two miles west of the giant digits. This is a heightened version of the bloodied-parka Belfast we soaked up throughout decades of miserable news reports.Film-makers have rarely dared to use the Troubles as a backdrop to any sort of mainstream entertainment. You cannot, after all, move through those waters without picking up inconvenient political residue in every exposed crevice...
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Employment