Stone’s Original Green Ginger Wine Review

I love ginger wine. I specifically asked to review Stone’s Ginger Wine Special Reserve last year, and this is just as good. Stone’s Original Green Ginger Wine has been a favourite in England since 1740. It is made with grated ginger and middle-eastern raisins. In the 19th century they used it as an aphrodisiac and treatment for cholera.

This wine is on the right side of sweet. Depending on your tastes the ginger can be hot. Which makes this the prefect drink for cocktails. This is also quite strong for a wine. It tastes great with coke too.

If you do drink it on it’s own it doesn’t have a horrible aftertaste. All in all, this is a very pleasurable wine that is perfect for a summers day and barbecues. It tastes divine and is a good alternative to other summer drinks.

Stone’s Original Green Ginger Wine (widely available, £4.99 for 70cl)

Drink within three weeks of opening

God Save My Shoes | Film Review

Women love shoes. Not all women, but enough to make the shoe industry in the US worth 40 billion dollars. 60% of which is solely from women. Vogue did a survey of it’s readers and found that they spent $9,000 a year on shoes. $9,000!! Even during the recession women never stopped buying shoes. They still bought expensive designer shoes; just less of them. At around $400 a pop.

This American documentary is incredibly good. Even for those who are not obsessed with shoes . The history is fascinating. Did you know that stiletto means “slender dagger” in Latin? This documentary was three years in the works and it is an impressive achievement.

It has an all-star cast, Kelly Rowland, Dita Von Teese, Manolo Blahnik, Stacey Ferguson, Christian Louboutin to name just a few. The relationship between sex and shoes is explored, as is feminism and the pain of wearing heels. One (obviously male) designer states that women like a little bit of pain when they wear high heels. He is wrong, he should just make more of an effort to make them more comfortable.

This is a good documentary. Worth a watch for men and women alike. A massive accomplishment. Also, with every purchase of this DVD, Caid Productions will donate a pair of shoes to someone in need. Thumbs up all round.

www.godsavemyshoes.com

Pre-Cannes Networking Event | Social Diary

Frost Magazine proudly sponsored Sheepish PR’s Pre-Cannes Networking Event. Director Howard J Ford, Valeria Bandino, actress, Normski (TV host, DJ), Marc Zammit (actor), Louise Glover (Model of the year and cover model at Playboy), Emma Cony (from Take Me Out), Johny Pach (Sky TV presenter), Robbie Moffat from Palm Tree Entertainment, and Mac Chakaveh, president of the Marbella Film Festival all attended, as did the wonderful Paola Berta.

© S. Dean Photography. Thanks to Paola Berta, Sheepish PR, Beverly Hills UK – Film Society & Events –

5 Tips to cope with the Euro Meltdown

5 Tips to cope with the Euro Meltdown by Karen Perkins.

1 Take control. Review, and keep reviewing all your savings/bank accounts etc and decide if you have anything to worry about. If yes, make a plan and act now. if not .. relax & praise yourself, at least you have acted.
2 Choose to listen less to the News .. let go of things you cannot control.. concentrate on the things you can .. you can choose to take on less stress, especially if its not your own !
3 Get over it… think of people who are much worse off than you, imagine having to walk 4 miles a day for clean water !
4 Protect ,and futureproof your current job/ business by keeping your eye on the ball , and being indispensible.
5 Help others, do at least 1 Random Act of Kindness a day , volunteer to help a charity , we are very lucky here in Sheffield ..

Good luck !

Karen Perkins is a life coach. For more information go to her site.

Moonrise Kingdom | Film Review

It’s 1965, and we’re on New Penzance Island off the cost of New England. The turbulence of the nation is far away, there’s a storm on the horizon and young love is in the air which has the adults in a fit. This island is the latest whimsical destination of Wes Anderson, the pin up director of commercially successful American independent cinema who has built a loyal fan base since the late 1990s with one of the most unique and recognisable styles in mainstream cinema today.

On said island Anderson introduces us to young Khaki scout Sam and intelligent yet isolated Suzy (newcomers Jared Gilman and Kara Haywood), two twelve year olds who meet by chance and instantly fall for one another. Hated by his fellow scouts, Sam has no hesitation in stealing several camping supplies, quitting the troop and absconding with Suzy who insists on bringing a record player, a Francoise Hardy LP and her collection of science fiction novels. Suzy’s unhappily married parents (Bill Murray and Frances McDormand) are furious and join in the search party led by sad sack Police Captain Sharp (Bruce Willis) and Scout leader Randy Ward (Edward Norton). Time may not be on their side however as the ominous shadows of a hurricane and ‘Social Services’ () bare down upon New Penzance…

From the very opening we clearly are in ‘Wes World’. A gorgeous tracking shot through the elaborate set of Suzy and her family’s home highlights many if not all of Anderson’s directorial flourishes. The very particular framing of the camera and its movement, the positioning of actors and their props, the autumnal colour scheme and frequent overhead shots of hands and key items have defined his style over seven films. I also really admired the incredibly retro titles which even have the traditional serial number beneath the title. His understanding of mise-en-scene (‘what’s in the frame’ for the film buffs) is immediately recognisable and marks him out as one of the few directors working today whom you could instantly recognise from a single frame and Moonrise Kingdom is no exception. His critics accuse him of being to forced in his style and becoming an obstruction to the narrative yet I personally applaud a director who is able to make a film that is clearly their own and can be recognised as a true auteur in the industry.

Anderson is also highly regarded for his skill at marshalling ensemble casts and here he has amassed yet another fine one. Bruce Willis and Edward Norton have a lot of fun subverting their typical ‘dark’ image with fine take on desperate, straight man against the world vibe and it is the former who has the most fun in the role. It could be seen that Willis is deliberately referencing to his back catalogue since he is playing a police officer yet he seems to be playing more to his skills as a comedic actor in the days before Die Hard. The sight of him roaming around the landscape in a beat up station wagon with a bad toupee and Hank Williams crooning away on the soundtrack makes it hard to suppress a chuckle. Previous Anderson stalwarts Bill Murray and Jason Schwartzman tackle their material well and prove further to be the perfect foil for the dry, witty humour. I wish the same could be said for the female performers of the story. Frances McDormand is a brilliant actress and always a joy to watch yet here the role of Suzy’s mother she is not given enough material to form a satisfactory character arc; a sub plot involving an extramarital affair is wrapped up with a mere shrug. Also the magnificent Tilda Swinton is introduced a bit too late into the story to create a fully convincing antagonistic force though I couldn’t help but giggle every time she referred to herself in the third person as ‘Social Services’.

Thankfully it is in its key casting that Moonrise Kingdom truly scores. As the young couple, Gilman and Haywood are simply fantastic and carry the entire film effortlessly. At first their actions appear hopelessly naive yet this is undercut with genuine pathos of young love. There is a deliberate attempt on behalf of the writers to juxtapose the simplicity of their courtship against the dour complexity of the adults of the island. The films setting at a time when this part of America had not yet experienced the turbulent times that would reverberate through the nation’s history is offset with quaint and quiet charm that is genuinely beguiling and in the case of the young love story, quite moving. There is a yearning for a way of American life that simply does not exist today and there is a constant air of slight melancholy running throughout. As the social outcasts discover surprising truths about one another, Anderson focuses on the minuet details of their romance that steadily grow on you and pay off very well indeed.

His critics may complain, but Wes Anderson fans will be on cloud nine with this one and with good reason. With his typically assured style and charm and wit to spare, this easily stands amongst his best work. I personally cannot wait to see what he does next and will always be first in line to enter ‘Wes World’…

Beacons Festival announce final 30 | Music News

 

Yorkshire’s Beacon Festival have announced the final 30 acts to play this year’s festival. They are in no particular order:

Admiral Fallow / B>E>A>K> / Disclosure / Double Muscle / Filthy Dukes – Djs / Fun Adults / Goodnight Lenin / Hawk Eyes / Hey Sholay / Holograms / Imp / Japandroids / Juffage / Lanterns On The Lake / Luvjam / Magnetic North / Marcus Worgull / Nope / Pale Seas / Pins / Plank / Post War Glamour Girls / Runners / Soul Jazz Soundsystem / Stalking Horse / Sunless ’97 / That Fucking Tank / This Aint Vegas /Veronica Falls / Visions Of Trees / Wot Gorilla 

The bands will be joined by the following artists who have already been announced: 
Wild Beasts / Toots And The Maytals / Roots Manuva / Patrick Wolf / The Felice Brothers / Maya Jane Coles / Junior Boys / Ghostpoet / Factory Floor / Julio Bashmore / Jessie Ware / Pearson Sound / Andrew Weatherall Presents A Love From Outer Space / Cass Mccombs / Willy Mason / Errors / Cloud Nothings / Oneman / D/R/U/G/S / Peaking Lights / Xxxy / Kwes / Willis Earl Beal / Frankie & The Heartstrings / Outfit / Star Slinger / Jacuzzi Boys / Clock Opera / Lunice / Submotion Orchestra / Koreless / Bok Bok / 2:54 / Jam City / King Krule / Weird Dreams / Mazes / Still Corners / Stay+ / Stopmakingme / Gross Magic / Bos Angeles / Grass House / Arthur Beatrice / Hookworms / The Wave Pictures / Au Palais / Bleeding Knees Club / Souljazz Soundsystem / Tall Ships / Blacklisters

 

Early bird and second tier tickets are now sold out. Full price tickets are available from the festival website for £84.50.

External Links:

Beacons Festival official website

 

 


ILLLS unveil new EP | Music News

 

Oxford, Mississippi duo ILLLS have unveiled ‘Teeth’, a stadium-sized slice of playfully infectious, scuzzily refined garage-pop, serving as the first taster off their ‘Dark Paradise’ EP, released June 17th on The Sounds Of Sweet Nothing records.

Taking their cues from Jay Reatard and Jeremy Jay to The Cure and My Bloody Valentine, like any young band with a welcomed sense of naivety,ILLLS dived in headfirst to make the making of their debut EP. Part of the ever-growing creative hotbed that is the North Mississippi Cats Purring scene, counting diverse and forward-thinking musicians such as Dent May, Bass Drum Of Death and Dead Gaze among their ranks, ‘Dark Paradise’ is a confident debut brimming with vitality of a talented band in the making.

Have a listen below:

 

Ned Collette signs to Fire Records | Music News

 

Berlin-based, Australian songwriter Ned Collette has signed to Fire Records with his new album “2”, recorded with his band Wirewalker, due for release in August. Below you can watch the video for  “Long You Lie”, featuring guest vocals by Sascha Gersak and directed by Berlin-based filmmakers Lucy Dyson and Joseph Jensen.

Ned Collette moved to Berlin from his native Melbourne two years ago and is a well known and respected for his folk sound in his own country and in underground circles worldwide, having toured Europe previously with the likes of Joanna Newsom, Akron/Family, Bill Callahan and Nina Nastasia.

 

 

External Links:

Fire Records website

Ned Collette website