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urban.spaceman

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Everything posted by urban.spaceman

  1. Just finished my third film script. Very happy.
  2. Taking her up the Filbert's Treat.
  3. Saw Sully. It was OK. Narratively all over the place. Great performance from Hanks though, and Eckhart's moustache was beautiful. Some absolute arsehole thought it was a great idea to bring their child along - couldn't have been older than 2 years old, kept talking throughout the trailers and then didn't shut up when the film started. Then he took him out to the relief of everyone in the cinema. And then brought him back in 5 minutes later! The kid still kept talking and the guy was talking to his wife and about taking him out but the other child (about 7) wanted to stay and everyone started shouting at him to take the kid out. So he did. Loudly. After ruining the first 15 minutes of the film. And then 10 minutes later the wife and other kid left as loudly as they could manage it. What is wrong with people?!
  4. Glad to hear you're getting better. Important thing to remember is that it's a bit like Leicester City's current form table - ups and downs. One day you'll be feeling great, the next you'll be at your lowest possible ebb. If you look back over a month it's like a wave going up and down; where you should be is somewhere in the middle able to control it all - the meds should help you control that but it takes a few weeks for them to kick in and really help; just make sure you stay on top of them and definitely don't run out. For me it's about self care. If I know I'm having a bad day I can sometimes realise quite early and try and ride it out till the end of the day - treating it as a write off and try and control myself by using breathing techniques or something you know will help. Do things you enjoy - I love cinema, so I'll go and see a film 3 or 4 times so I get some hours in the dark to relax my brain. Or spend 4 hours playing FIFA on beginner mode. Whatever - anything that induces happiness or any semblance of positive emotions is important, and something to aim for. Best of luck on your journey mate.
  5. Saw Rogue One yesterday. This is what the prequels should have been. Didn't think it was as good as the Force Awakens though (will have to see it again obviously). Don't bother with 3D.
  6. yes please.
  7. Like Mark said, writing about it is good. Any sort of writing. Anywhere. There's an app called Elefriends where you can just post whatever you're thinking or feeling, completely anonymous - can sometimes be useful for just getting your feelings out and having support from people feeling the same way. You may also have heard of Big White Wall which may or may not be funded by your local NHS provider - if not it costs £24 a month which isn't worth it IMO. Otherwise - creative writing is a great way to go. I did a screenwriting course at the Phoenix a couple of years ago which coincided with a really tough terminal illness and bereavement. It really helped me to write a script which sparked an enthusiasm for the craft that persists today; all I'm saying is creative writing isn't a bad place to express yourself.
  8. What a great community we have here on FT. Cheers everyone.
  9. I moved to Cape Town in January and things really started to get serious! Then I was visiting family and friends up in Botswana at the start of April and we actually won the bloody league - I'd definitely recommend Cape Town as not only is it one of the best cities in the world but theres also the Cape Town Foxes who meet up to watch every game at the pub - having those guys to share my joy really helped so wherever you go make sure there's a group of Foxiles there to enjoy it/suffer it with! (what I will say is I didn't have anything like this when I lived in New Zealand, so just be wary!)
  10. Never, ever feel ashamed. I suffer with depression too and it's especially bad sometimes but always try and remember that things can only get better - you're getting help now which is great news. Also like others have said, being open about it you really are helping with awareness about it for others particularly with exactly how bad things can get. @The Blur mentioned it above but it's important to reiterate: mental illness is just like a physical illness. Depression affects you physically and can have a profound effect on your physical health. Trying to keep it together and get positive is ****ing exhausting. The meds will help you get bring yourself onto an even keel though so make sure you stay on them the best you can and don't run out (I ran out last month and my anxieties led to me not going back to the docs to get more for 3 weeks cos I'm an idiot. City's form in that time didn't help - although Saturday definitely did!). Your job sounds great - look at that as a brilliant new opportunity; being unemployed myself I'd love a job that offers me that (although anywhere in the would would suit me better). They got any vacancies?! We're all here for support mate. Cheers.
  11. I hope he feels like a bit of a tit now. What a squalid little article!
  12. I agree though Garfield's a very good actor who deserved much better treatment. The main issue was Sony's desperation in retaining the rights to the character; Raimi was still developing Spider-Man 4 to make up for Spider-Man 3 but their deadline for the rights reverting to Marvel was approaching and they panicked. Even worse they kept interfering in the eventual reboot which is never a good sign with a big studio. Marvel being back in control is the best thing to happen to the character for 10 years.
  13. Ruthless Ranieri is no Mr. Nice Guy – and Leicester’s manager has proved it again The Italian was adored last season for his affable personality with media and players alike – but, writes FFT’s Joe Brewin from the Estadio do Dragao, his intolerant streak is emerging again in a tough campaign for Leicester Don’t be fooled by the persona – Claudio Ranieri is a brutal old chap when he wants to be. Leicester might have made it through to the Champions League last 16 as group winners before they’d even kicked a ball against Porto at the Estadio do Dragao, but Foxes fans weren’t expecting to see this game as a declaration of war from their manager. Six first-team players had been left at home for the trip to Portugal with an eye on improving domestic form; Kasper Schmeichel, Robert Huth, Andy King, Riyad Mahrez, Islam Slimani and Jamie Vardy had their feet up for the dreadful 5-0 defeat to Porto on Wednesday night. Leicester might have made it through to the Champions League last 16, but Foxes fans weren’t expecting to see this game as a declaration of war from their manager Do one, Ron But that wasn’t really the story – resting with the league in mind was unsurprising. Yet after a dismal start to their Premier League title defence – just three wins from their first 14 matches of the campaign – Leicester were surely hoping to see this game as a potential catalyst for improved Premier League form. At the very least it was a chance for their fringe men to offer up solutions, or even just get fit – central midfielder Nampalys Mendy, for example, made his first appearance since August 20 after injury. Ranieri, however, elected to deselect Ron-Robert Zieler in goal and instead pick Ben Hamer for his first Leicester appearance since January 2015. (Zieler, for what it’s worth, hadn’t even missed a Bundesliga minute for over five years at Hannover before signing for the East Midlands side this summer.) The Italian suggested post-match that it was nothing more than giving his squad members valuable game time, but Ranieri was visibly dismayed by those he'd entrusted to impress him on the night. Zieler has hardly inspired for Leicester, but his snub was brutal Danny Simpson, meanwhile – who’d performed Leicester’s pre-match press conference duties – was left out of the starting line-up for the fourth time in six Champions League games. The former Manchester United youth graduate is far from the Foxes’ best player, but he was a virtual ever-present in Ranieri’s team that won the title last season and has surely warranted more than his limited European minutes to date. That a natural centre-back was again taking his place, and again struggled, must have grated. Form for it This isn’t the first time that Ranieri has played tough guy as Leicester manager, though – it’s just that, amid the success, his ruthlessness has largely gone unnoticed. Gökhan Inler was expected to be a fulcrum of Leicester’s suspect-looking central midfield after joining from the latter last summer, but could barely get a kick Take Gökhan Inler from last season as a case in point: the Swiss enforcer of former Udinese and Napoli fame was expected to be a fulcrum of Leicester’s suspect-looking central midfield after joining from the latter last summer, but could barely get a kick by the season’s end after N’Golo Kanté and Danny Drinkwater had proved immovable. Inler had wanted to move on in January, but Ranieri refused to budge in case of injury. In the end the midfielder made only 12 appearances in all competitions and missed out on Switzerland’s Euro 2016 squad. “I had several enquiries in January, but didn't leave as the manager said he was counting on me,” Inler huffed in March. “But there have been no more games for me since then. It makes me sick, and the stupid thing for me is that I have the Euro 2016 finals with Switzerland this summer. “I’m in a critical situation. I usually speak diplomatically, but I have to face up to why things are the way they are. There is no point in me trying to sugarcoat the situation.” Hamer's return to first-team action was unhappy Inler, to his credit, had generally remained patient as Leicester’s biggest loser from 2015/16 – he was at Jamie Vardy’s house celebrating the title with his team-mates, and certainly wasn’t a disruptive influence at Belvoir Drive – but it was no surprise when he left for Besiktas in the summer. He wasn’t the only loser, per se: Ranieri was steadfast in his refusal to play record signing Andrej Kramaric despite a relatively promising debut campaign, made Shinji Okazaki play second fiddle for the good of his team, and only brought Jeff Schlupp, Demarai Gray and Leo Ulloa off the bench to shore up games. There was nothing wrong with that – after all, that strong management helped his team win the league – but despite Leicester’s struggles this season it’s largely been the same: Gray, for all his impressive efforts as a substitute, still can’t nail down a first-team place, while Schlupp is allegedly eyeing a move to West Brom in January. New signing Bartosz Kapustka, an admittedly-young but £7.5m summer capture who was part of Poland’s Euro 2016 squad, hasn’t yet kicked a ball for Leicester’s first team (“I don't know when he will be ready to play in the Premier League,” said the Italian recently, and very much unconvincingly, amid Telegraph reports that Foxes scouts had never actually watched the player live before signing him.) Portugal hotshot Andre Silva grabbed two goals against the Foxes Calm it, Claudio Worryingly for Leicester, these are cracks that last season can’t repair. The reasons for this season’s collapse are manifold – FFT touched on them a couple of weeks ago – and Ranieri has a sizeable task on his hands convincing his squad that, yes, last season really did happen. Kanté aside, these are the same players at his disposal. The 5-0 defeat to Porto was hardly unexpected given the second-string line-up, but most frustratingly for the Italian it didn’t prove that his deeper squad members are ready to step in and help the Foxes escape their current predicament. Ranieri now faces his biggest challenge yet as Leicester manager: getting them out of a rut. First he must find a starting XI that resembles something like last season’s crop, then establish a harmony among those who feel they can do better. With the current fragmentation, there will surely be many in the latter category. Ranieri made his statements in Porto by leaving key men at home and benching those he felt let down by, but now it’s time for the Italian to campaign for the major thing he didn’t need to last season: togetherness. A five-goal humping in Portugal won’t define Leicester’s season, but their manager’s next moves just might. http://www.fourfourtwo.com/features/ruthless-ranieri-no-mr-nice-guy-and-leicesters-manager-has-proved-it-again?utm_m_medium=t&utm_source=Facebook
  14. Just been given a free car. Today is a good day!
  15. Spoiler alert: She doesn't die in Episode 10.
  16. Yep - 60 hours overall apparently. I also read that they're going to re-cast the main parts to keep up with ageing. Not sure how that would work as Claire Foy and Matt Smith have been pretty good. Alex Jennings who plays Edward VIII has been excellent IMO. (and Jared Harris as George VI). Apparently they spent £100m on it - money well spent!
  17. BABY GROOOOOOOOOOOT!!!
  18. Westworld - brilliant finale!!
  19. BBC One showed an episode of Fawlty Towers last night in tribute to Andrew Sachs. (Mrs Richards) I laughed as much I did when I first watched it 20 years ago. It is still peerless. As a screenwriter I aspire to even a fraction of Cleese's greatness.
  20. Anyone here sell their pics on Shutterstock or another stock website?
  21. http://playingfor90.com/2016/12/01/discover-tottenham-players-think-funny-riyad-mahrez-leicester-city/ Spurs fan getting all mardy (and forgets that they're out of the Champions League)
  22. I ****ing love this football club.
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