Tuesday, 27 December 2011

There'll Be Peace When You Are Done

Supernatural has rolled into the station slightly later due to the weekend's festivities. I hope you all enjoyed your turkey, mulled wine and presents!

But to a more pressing matter.

This week, I have chosen to recall a monster.

Everybody, meet... A Wraith.

"Oh, you mean like an angel on your shoulder?"
"No no. His name’s Castiel. He wears a trench coat."

Bradley Rushforth journalist

The Wraith first appeared in Season 5 Episode 11, Sam Interrupted. Sam and Dean are contacted by a former hunter, who now resides in a mental asylum. The two brothers get themselves 'checked in' to investigate a spate of deaths, presumably suicides.

A Wraith is the monster at the heart of the trouble.

Wraiths are human-like creatures whose true form and nature - including that of their sagging and decayed flesh - can only be seen in reflections. They appear to be human in all ways, with the exception of the sheathe spike that protrudes from their wrist, enabling them to feed on their victims.

According the the former hunter, a man named Martin Creaser, the Wraith has picked up its trail in the hospital as it is easier to go undetected when surrounded by the insane, and also because, and I quote "the chemicals that flood our brains are apparently delicious".

Wraiths have the ability to alter a persons perceptions with just a touch, resulting in hallucinations and emotional imbalance. However, in terms of Supernatural ghosts and ghouls, the Wraith is quite easy to kill, provided you can identify it! Using a mirror can come in handy, as it's true image will be reflected.

Piercing a Wraith through the heart with silver will send it on its merry way.

In Season 6 Episode 19, Mommy Dearest, Dean comes across a hybrid: a Wraith twinned with a vampire. Dean dubs the creation as a Jefferson Starship.

The definition of a Wraith is thus:

"A Scottish word, first used in English in 1513. A Wraith is an apparition, vision, or double of another living person. Its appearance is commonly seen as an omen that the person being doubled is about to die."

Tune in next Sunday for another insight into the world of Supernatural!


Bradley Rushforth journalist

Sunday, 18 December 2011

Carry On My Wayward Son

 Bradley Rushforth journalist

Ghosts are real. So are angels and demons and even the bogeyman.

Maybe not to some of you, but to Sam and Dean Winchester,  it's all they know. As it nears the halfway point of the seventh series, television show Supernatural leaves me breathless and wanting more after every episode. This fact only makes it fitting that I discuss with all of you lovely people, such a colossal story.

Every week, I will post about a character, monster, episode, location or a general witty occurrence from the seasons that have gone by.

We start with one of the stars of the show; Dean Winchester.

"My name is Dean Winchester. I'm an Aquarius. I like sunsets, long walks on the beach and frisky women."


Bradley Rushforth journalist

When Season One begins, Dean is 26, while younger brother Sam is 22. An expert with fire-arms, Dean prefers to use his silver-plated Colt 1911 pistol or his home-made, sawn-off shotgun. Raised as a soldier by his father John, Dean possesses a strong nature in use of martial arts and knife fighting, often subduing assailants and attackers with ease, when they are more often than not, a lot stronger.

Dean lives his life hunting, scouring bars for women, loving his car - a 1967 Chevrolet Impala - and doing what fans love him best for: his awesomely funny quotes.

Possessing an in-depth knowledge in escapology, Dean can find a way out of a room with no doors. With a aged, wooden box stuffed with fake I.D's and police badges, drowning in old grains of rock salt, Dean has the ability and arrogance to pull a very convincing act out of the bag, often posing as an F.B.I agent or governmental official to gain information.

 Bradley Rushforth journalist

  • Dean is a talented mechanic, meaning the Impala is always in tip-top condition.
  • The pendant that Dean wears around his neck was a gift from Sam, originally meant to be a Christmas gift for John. But when John didn't return for Christmas, Sam gave it to Dean. 
  • Dean has died repeatedly throughout the first six seasons of Supernatural, and has been to both Heaven and Hell
  • The pendant is also angelic; burning hot to help locate God on Earth.
  • Dean is in love with mullet-style rock music. His favourite band is Led Zeppelin.
  • The most insatiable craving in Dean's life is that of bacon cheeseburgers.
  • Dean is noted for being one for witty remarks and quotes, with some of my favourites below:

"Dude, where's the pie"?

"Is it 'cause we're so awesome? I think it's 'cause we're so awesome."

"I'm not gonna die in a hospital where the nurses aren't even hot."

"What do you want me to do, Sam, huh? Sit around all day writing sad poems about how I’m going to die? You know what, I’ve got one. Let’s see, what rhymes with "Shut up, Sam"?

Bradley Rushforth journalist


Saturday, 3 December 2011

What do you do when you can live forever?

Bradley Rushforth journalist

 Andrew Niccol, director of The Truman Show, shows us the world where time really is money.

Justin Timberlake takes the starring role as Will Salas, a factory worker living in an alternative reality, where human beings, for some unexplained reason, cease to age beyond their 25th year.

In Time is the tale of how everyday is a struggle for the poor, whilst the rich hold the world in the hands. Or on their wrists in this case. Everybody dons a digital clock showing the remaining time alive from years, down to their very last second. By working, they can top up the internal body clock, which when reaches zero, causes them to drop dead.

Bradley Rushforth journalist

Salas spends his life living day to day with just hours, sometimes minutes remaining on his clock. But his life is turned upside down when he bequethes a century from a suicidal tycoon.

On the run from the police force, aptly named the 'time keepers', Salas decides it's time to bring down the system after being put on the most wanted list for the murder of the initial owner of his new inheriatnce.

Befriending a powerful banker, Phillipe Weis, Salas seizes an opportunity by running off with the bankers rebellious daughter, Sylvia.

The pair embark on a Bonnie and Clyde/Robin Hood-style crime spree, in which they steal time and deliver it to the poorer inhabitants of 'The Ghetto'.

A production which really gives hope to those who 'negotiate for immortality', Im Time is a film that portrays a great idea (although thought of before), and really delivers.

Bradley Rushforth journalist

Wednesday, 11 May 2011

The Day that the Wind showed us who was Boss...

Weather.

Our entire lives seem to depend on it. "We can't go to the beach because it's going to rain..." The weather has it's own form of innate intelligence too.
Bradley rushforth
It flashes rays of sunshine through our windows, leaving streams of light (or in our case, a small, solitary square on the kitchen floor), lulling you into a false sense of security. It is our own fault. We see this sunlight and immediately fall into a falsely created sense of jubilancy, prompting us to trade our jeans and cardigans for shorts and flip-flops.

Big Mistake. This is what happened to Stacie and I when we decided to take a day trip to Ashbourne in Derbyshire. A town fabled for its quaint, Victorian style buildings, most of which are dealers of some quite impressive antiques, and also home to Carsington Water, a lake boasting an eight mile circumference.
bradley rushforth, website, journalist
However, the weather used all of its astuteness, and blew a force ten gale as we strolled the pathway alongside the sailing and boating docks on the edge of the lake, resulting in a few wayward frisbee throws and watery eyes.

After we had both just been through one of those awful working weeks, an enchanting afternoon was topped off with a meal at a farmhouse, a farmhouse whose cows were very interested in our arrival.

My Curious Damsel wanted to finish of the day with her first outfit post, Blushing at Dusk, which can be viewed via these links.
Bradley rushforth, website, journalist, cheshire, australia
Oh, and I bought a fancy hat.

Monday, 25 April 2011

Ground breaking or ditchable?

A film with one actor and one location. A film made with 14 planks of wood and seven camera angles.

Buried, a film I have wanted to see since September last year, and I was left feeling slightly let down. Ryan Reynolds plays the part of Paul Conroy, a contract truck driver working in Iraq. After being ambushed by locals, Paul wakes to find himself inside a wooden box, buried in the Iraqi desert.

As he searches his uncomfortable new surroundings, Paul discovers he has a lighter, a torch, a mobile phone and a flask of spirit in his possession. As the story goes on, you begin to get to know the people Paul talks with on the phone, including the Iraqi rebels who are demanding a huge ransom for his release, an American Terrorist worker with Simon Cowell's accent and the manager of Paul's company, who inevitably turns out to be the biggest fool in existance.




The most fascinating aspect of this film is that it never, I repeat NEVER leaves the coffin. A lot happens and there are other actors, however, they are limited to voice acting. This gives the viewer the opportunity to get stuck in the box along with Paul, and gives a great edge to the film.

On top of that, the fear, rage and pure annoyance you feel due to the lack of helpfulness and generally ignorant personalities of those who Paul contacts using the phone is brilliantly crafted.

Upon the conclusion, which I won't give away for those who haven't  seen the film, I was left with a familiar feeling of not really knowing whether I enjoyed the film or not. There will be many critics who slate this film, but it should be noted that films like this are trying to take their place amongst Hollywood's elite.

I would say that Buried is defiently worth the watch, but I am unsure if I would watch it again. All round, good film, but it may be the twists and suprises that make it.

Thumbs up: 6.5/10

Wednesday, 20 April 2011

Believe the Legend. Beware the Wolf.

"Oh Grandma, what big eyes you have!"



The tale of Little Red Riding Hood; a story that has had many different interpretations in years gone by. The wolf has eaten the grandmother, the woodsman has saved both Red and her grandparent. The list of endings and versions goes on.

But the latest version, a film directed by Catherine Hardwick, the woman behind Twilight, is a slightly darker and more intense version than anyone has seen before. For those of you who like suspense, then this is well worth the watch!

The storyline remains somewhat similar to what we have all grown up to listening to, but with a twist. The village of Daggerhorn is plagued by the visits from a wolf who is feeding on the residents. No one has seen it. No one has heard it. No one can stop it.

Valerie displaying her red cloak, is in love with a woodsman, Peter. But their ambitions to leave Daggerhorn are interrupted by the wolf's intentions of tearing the village apart.

Hope arrives when a reputable werewolf hunter arrives to let the villagers know that the wolf is a human. An inhabitant of the village. But as they suggest and suspect everyone, it leaves the audience unsure about who the wolf could be.


The art direction takes a Twilight-esque turn with distant shots of the snow-covered mountains, abstract viewpoints of Valerie in the red cloack on a white backdrop and a slow, yet vigorous soundtrack.

Suprises are in store, and a few gasps and shrieks are sure to be heard. Red Riding Hood is an exciting and intense fairytale adjusted for the 21st Century.

Top Drawer: 7/10