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James Cosmo
Reviews Featuring James Cosmo
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
This is an elegant and beautiful film that demonstrates some of the traditions of Chinese film-making but is clearly aimed at Western audiences.
This is a decent but not outstanding low-budget British supernatural thriller that makes a good start but fails to really capitalise on it.
Gritty and raw but appealing and even entertaining examination of wasted lives and drug addiction. Not to be missed.
It might be a load of nonsense from an historical point of view, but Braveheart still produces the goods entertainment-wise. But does it really have to be so long??
A poorly-written waste of time that even the finest cast in the world would struggle to make interesting.
Do not, under any circumstances, go to watch this with anyone called Little Mo.
A hidden gem in more ways than one.
Visually stunning, but totally hollow in every other department.
Sit back, think of Britain, and try to ignore the fact that its not half as good as it should be.
Medieval monotony.
This entry was written by Movie Gazette, posted on May 24, 2003 at 12:00 am, filed under People. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.
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