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Tom Hardy defends Barry Islands ‘ghost train ride'

Tom Hardy defends Barry Islands ‘ghost train ride'

In an interview today with Radio X's Dominic Byrne on The Chris Moyles Show the Hollywood A lister said:
'I had a great time on Barry Island' after presenter Dominic Byrne jokingly claimed 'the guy running the ride is actually scarier than the ride itself…'
Speaking about Barry Island in general Hardy continued to say he enjoyed the coin machines in the arcade.
He said: 'I went with my family, and there's also the two penny machines. You know, the slidey machines?
'They are incredible.' Tom Hardy defends Barry Islands 'ghost train ride' (Image: X Radio) The actor was spotted on the island back in 2021 during filming of 'Havoc', a thriller where a jaded detective tells the aftermath of a drug deal gone wrong.
The movie directed by Gareth Evans, an Aberdare-born filmmaker was released April 25 and is available to stream now on Netflix.
It has been given a 69% rating by rotten tomatoes.

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Straw (2025) Movie Review
Straw (2025) Movie Review

The Review Geek

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  • The Review Geek

Straw (2025) Movie Review

Hitting breaking point Tyler Perry is back, and this time the auteur has turned his hand to a pressure-cooker thriller in the form of Straw. This Netflix movie is simple in premise and execution, with a series of escalating incidents leading to a big misunderstanding, murder, and a stand-off at a bank. The film does include a 'twist' at the end, although unfortunately, it undermines the themes of the movie and feels designed more for shock value than as a well-thought-out surprise. The story here predominantly centers on a single mother named Janiyah. She works two jobs, is eking out a living, can barely afford to pay rent on her dingy apartment, and is close to breaking point. Unfortunately, today is going to be the worst day of her life. After dropping her daughter off at school, Janiyah finds herself in trouble with the police, fired from her job, and left on the street when she can't pay the overdue rent to her abrasive landlord. Intervening in the middle of a robbery, Janiyah shoots the robber and then turns the gun on her boss and pulls the trigger. Heading to a nearby bank with her bloodied cheque, her backpack (including her daughter's science project, which looks suspiciously like a bomb), and a handgun, a stand-off ensues as police close in on her. The story clearly takes inspiration from movies like Falling Down, while trying to channel the same uneasy tension seen in films like Phone Booth. The execution, though, is clunky, with heavy-handed messaging and one-dimensional characters that struggle to break free from Perry's archetypal shackles. The movie attempts to make us empathize with Janiyah's plight and while yes, we can obviously understand why she's snapped, she murders two people and holds hostages in a bank. It's a weird framing device, especially as law enforcement – and in particular the heavy-handed FBI – are framed as the bad guys in this situation. The story is a little overlong at times as a result of all this, which isn't helped by the frenetic opening to the film. In an attempt to bring you into Janiyah's world, the first 30 minutes are relentless. Expect quick cuts, full-on shouting, crazy antics, drama, and bloodshed. It almost borders on melodrama, but thankfully Straw never tips over the edge into farcical waters. I can't help but feel a more gradual build-up, slowly stacking these misery cards before an inciting incident (this robbery) turns everything upside down, could have helped – especially if the misunderstanding was played up a lot more. This is a particular problem because the middle act of the movie slows down considerably as we start to understand more about Janiyah's life. You see, Janiyah's daughter, Aria, suffers from seizures and has asthma. She also appears to be bullied at school (it's never outright said, but her teacher seems to hold a grudge against her) and is very much Janiyah's entire world. During this time, we also hear from some of the other hostages, who seem to understand why Janiyah is keeping them against their will and sympathize with her. It's here we're introduced to Detective Kay Raymond, who empathizes with Janiyah's plight and tries to talk her down during their negotiations. She's also a negotiations expert from her time in the army, but aside from a couple of lines of dialogue about her past, we don't see a whole lot else from her. This is a real shame, because Raymond, out of all the characters, feels like the one with the most untapped potential. The movie never seems all that interested in actually fleshing out the cast though, instead keeping the attention squarely on Janiyah and, to a lesser extent, Raymond. Beyond that, everyone else is pretty much a one-dimensional archetype. We have the loudmouth landlord who curses constantly, the rude, prejudiced white cops, and the older women who sympathize with Janiyah out of wisdom and lived experience. There's never much in the way of tension inside the bank either, which isn't helped by us already knowing that the item inside Janiyah's rucksack isn't a bomb. I can't help but feel that a rewrite to obscure this from the audience – so we're led to believe Janiyah may actually have a bomb – could have ratcheted up the tension. Production-wise, Straw is pretty good, and the camerawork is decent across the board. Taraji P. Henson puts on a really solid performance as the exasperated mum at the end of her tether, and she really carries the movie forward. However, when you compare Straw to other thrillers of its kind, there's really not a whole lot here to write home about. The movie has a decent enough message, but it's muddied by the moral implications around Janiyah's actions. While the intention is clear, the execution is sloppy – which is a shame, because there's definitely potential here. Read More: Straw Ending Explained

Cristiano Ronaldo's girlfriend has her Netflix show cancelled after three series
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Cristiano Ronaldo's girlfriend has her Netflix show cancelled after three series

Georgina Rodriguez said she will be stepping away from the reality series, which made her a public figure in her own right but 'requires so much effort' to make. Georgina Rodriguez has confirmed that her hit Netflix reality show I Am Georgina has been cancelled after three successful seasons, despite raking in a staggering £22 million from the series. The model and long-time partner of football icon Cristiano Ronaldo, 31, revealed the news in an interview with Vogue Arabia. She confirmed that there will be no fourth season of the show, which documented her glamorous lifestyle and personal journey from shop assistant to international celebrity. "The reality show has been one of the most important professional experiences and the one that has made me the most excited," Rodriguez said. ‌ ‌ "It has been a lot of work and requires so much effort. I think that it has given me the opportunity to show the real 'me' to the world. It has been the most important and large-scale project that I have done so far. However, at the moment, I do not plan to continue with the reality show." Rodriguez not only starred in the series but also served as executive producer. I Am Georgina became a global success, reaching the top 10 most-watched shows in 46 countries. The popularity of its debut season quickly led to two renewals. The cancellation comes as Rodriguez and Ronaldo continue to attract public attention amid ongoing speculation about whether they have secretly tied the knot. The pair met in 2016 when Georgina was working at a Gucci store in Madrid. By Ronaldo's own admission, it was love at first sight. In 2019, he told Piers Morgan: "Yes, it is [true love]. Yes, it was [like magic meeting for the first time]... She's the mum of my kids. I'm so passionate for her. Why not [get married]... We'll one day, for sure. It's my mum's dream." ‌ In I Am Georgina she opened up a bit about how overwhelming it was to experience Ronaldo's wealth for the first time when they started dating, saying: "The first time I went to Cristiano's house, I'd get lost every time I went to the kitchen. It would take me half an hour to get back because I didn't know the way. "Sometimes it would take me half an hour to get back from the living room because I didn't know the way. It was so big. Since I was a kid, I'd been used to living in small apartments." While the pair have never made a public wedding announcement, Ronaldo has frequently referred to Rodriguez as his wife in recent years. In a speech at a Dubai awards ceremony earlier this year, he said: "My oldest son is here, and my wife [Georgina] is here." He has also used the term in social media posts, which continues to fuel rumours that they secretly got married. Rodriguez shares two children with Ronaldo and helps raise his three other children. During her time on I am Georgina, she became an influential figure in her own right.

Straw review – Taraji P Henson rises above Tyler Perry's tortured Netflix thriller
Straw review – Taraji P Henson rises above Tyler Perry's tortured Netflix thriller

The Guardian

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Straw review – Taraji P Henson rises above Tyler Perry's tortured Netflix thriller

Tyler Perry is not beating the allegations. For decades, the content-creating studio chief has been roundly criticized for making the traumatization of Black women a persistent theme in his work. In Straw, his latest exercise in misogynoir for Netflix, he pulls out all the stops to break the camel's back. The guinea pig for this cultural stress test is Janiyah (Taraji P Henson), an apex Perry caricature who is past the point of exhaustion. Her loud, hot and dumpy apartment isn't all that keeps her in perennial discomfort. There's also a precocious young daughter (Gabrielle E Jackson) with nagging medical issues, and that eviction notice on the dining table. She can't make ends meet despite working three jobs, and her cashier's position at the local food desert grocery store is especially thankless. When an angry customer spikes a bottle of fizzy drink at Janiyah's feet, her boss orders her to stand down from her busy checkout lane to clean up the mess. When Janiyah unwittingly cuts off an undercover cop in traffic after begging off the register to run a quick errand, he throws his ice coffee drink at her car and threatens to 'find a legal way to blow your brains out'. In the end, Janiyah is ticketed for driving on an expired license, her car is impounded and she's forced to find her way back to work on foot in the kind of surprise monsoon that Perry keeps in the forecast to further break down his female protagonists – and, verily, things do indeed get worse: Her irascible boss (Glynn Turman) fires her for deserting her post, her landlord empties the meager contents of her dumpy apartment onto the curb, and her kid is confiscated from school after the principal squeals to child protective services. At her wit's end, she treks back to the grocery store to urge her boss to release her last paycheck only for the both of them to wind up held up at gunpoint when a band of robbers charge into the back office to empty the store vault. There's a glimmer of hope when one of the robbers attacks Janiyah, and she fights him off and kills him with his own gun – but her boss is convinced she's in on the heist because the attacker 'knew her'. Turns out the guy only read her name tag, but the boss is already running with his story while on the phone with 911. When he threatens to take her down and twists the knife, Janiyah finally snaps and shoots him dead, too. It isn't much long after that we find Janiyah in the middle of a hostage situation at the bank when her attempt to cash that bloody last paycheck raises alarm bells. The balance of the film plays like the Tyler Perry version of John Q, down to the Luigi Mangione-coded public rallying cry – trading injury for Spike Lee's insult, perhaps. The third act is freighted with pointed digressions on the intractable racism in banking and healthcare systems, and the inescapable Perry twist at the film's core is its own commentary on the Black mental health crisis. As ever, Perry – who takes top billing once more as this film's writer, director and executive producer – engages with many ideas, but none that he seems to fully understand. That includes Black women, whom he does a tremendous disservice to once again. But the hatchet job may be lost on most viewers because Straw is one of the better films on Perry's grade curve. The pacing could be better for what is ostensibly a 105-minute thriller. The day-night transitions in particular are wild, and again the rain comes out of nowhere. But Straw doesn't meander as much as Perry's other productions. (Looking at you, Duplicity.) It's not soapy or camp either. There's melodrama, sure, but Straw makes you take it seriously – and a lot of it is a credit to the actors playing it straight and, possibly, getting a few extra takes to refine their performances (weird flex, I know). Sherri Shepherd, who's typically at her best going for laughs, shines as the sober bank manager who remains empathetic in crisis. Teyana Taylor was equally impressive as the detective hostage negotiator who advocates for Janiyah. (The only letdown in her performance was her wig, which is very much on-brand for Perry.) But yet again it's Henson who delivers the powerhouse performance while edging from distress to anger to winsome compassion. It's just a shame that after hiring her for four films now, Perry is still treating her like a speed bag. In one of the scenes outside the bank, as the standoff at the bank deepens, a protest movement foments and one Janiyah supporter holds up a sign that reads, 'Nevertheless she persisted', a much-memed feminist slogan. Sadly, the irony is probably lost on Perry – ultimately, a billionaire servant of the evangelical Christian patriarchy who is steadfastly committed to proving that the women of the world who make 'bad' choices deserve all the pain and punishment they can get and then some. This certainly won't be the last Straw. Straw is out now on Netflix

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