Lou Reed: Rock and Roll Heart was an incredible movie! Both Lou Reed and Suzanne Vega were amazing! The great cast includes Lou Reed, Suzanne Vega, Holly Woodlawn, Nico, Patti Smith. If you love watching Lou Reed or Suzanne Vega, you are deffinetly going to want to watch Lou Reed: Rock and Roll Heart.
An incredible retracing of the evolution of Reed's remarkable career over three decades. Filled with interviews with Reed, his friends and some of the major artists influenced by Reed including David Bowie, David Byrne, Patti Smith, Suzanne Vega, Dave Stewart, Philip Glass and more. Production Notes, Biographies, Discography, Scene Access, Screen Test, Rare Velvet Footage
I really loved the movie Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere. I really enjoyed watching Gary Bakewell in this movie. I also think Laura Fraser (II) was great!
I think Gary Bakewell and Laura Fraser (II) worked wonderful in Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere. The great supporting cast includes Gary Bakewell, Laura Fraser (II), Hywel Bennett, Clive Russell, Paterson Joseph.
I left some information, immages, and video previews of Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere below.
Summary of Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere: Whether you view it as an alternate reality or the illusions of demented mind, Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere is an intriguing place to visit. The Sandman creator's first TV miniseries suffers from the same traditional shortcomings that plague all British "telefantasy"--namely, micro-budget production values and slapdash direction that betrays a conspicuous shortage of rehearsal time. And yet, within those limitations, Gaiman and director Dewi Humphreys have crafted an ambitious exploration of "London Below," a vast, subterranean capital, far below "London Above," where office drone Richard Mayhew (Gary Bakewell) unwittingly finds himself after rescuing Door (Laura Fraser), an underworld dweller determined to learn why her parents have been killed. Gaiman teases the viewer with hints that Richard may be insane, but Neverwhere maintains its imaginative ambiguity, and presents a dark, dangerous domain of baronies and fiefdoms, bearing familiar British nomenclature but decidedly unfamiliar landmarks. Once you've visited, you might prefer to stay. --Jeff Shannon
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