Sunday 27 January 2019

City not blown off course in win over Brighton

Manchester City won 3-0 against Brighton and Hove Albion at the Academy stadium on a bitterly cold and windy to stay top of the FA Super League by a single point.

In an odd way, it felt like a good result for Brighton. In the two meetings between the sides, this season City has scored more than their fair share. The reverse fixture in October saw City win 6-0. only a fortnight before this game it was a 7-1 home win for City in the fog.

It looked like a familiar pattern was emerging in the second minute as City won a penalty that Nikita Parris calmly converted.

City were content to pass the ball around amount the defence in the opening stages and it was with their first foray into the Brighton half that created the penalty. Lauren Hempstead was allowed too much space and breezed in the area (sic) before being bundled over by the 16-year-old Ellie Hack. 

Chances for Brighton were few and far between in the first half as City were dominant for much of the first 45 minutes.

Brighton's best chance came in the 23rd minute as Felicity Gibbons found herself behind the City defence and fired the sort of cross that strikers dream about; Ellie Brazil unchallenged on the edge of the six-yard box met it head on only to see Karen Bardsley clutch onto the shot with relief.

It was soon business as usual as City went about finding the next goal. It came in the 31st Gemma Bonner was quickest to react to a corner that was not clear with enough conviction. 

Marie Hourihan the Brighton keeper injured her ankle in the melee and was replaced by Sophie Harris. Hourihan did join the bench tracksuited and booted in the second half.

Harris was tasked with keeping the City sharpshooters for the best part of an hour. She made a string of good saves including a shot from range by second-half substitute Georgina Stanway.

The Brighton keeper did, however, picked the ball out of the net as Parris added her second goal of the game just before half-time; again, it was a corner that was Brighton’s undoing and Parris with a close-range header made the score 3-0.

Brighton regrouped at half-time and the introduction of Ini Umotong gave the Brighton defence welcome rest bite as they had someone that looked as if they could worry the City defence.

Umotong was unlucky not to have scored on the hour as lost her defender was clear through only for Bardsley to make the save.

Brighton held their own after the break and City could not find a way through; with five in midfield, the spaces that City were passing through in the first half were no longer there.

Both teams will be happy with how they performed after the international break while the 1279 supporters in the stands will be happy to eventually defrost.






Thursday 3 January 2019

Film Review: The Favourite

I would imagine like most people I know very little about the reign of Queen Anne. I know I don’t my favourite period of history; I’m constantly disappointed about the vision set in films of this time period. I couldn’t get past the trailer for the recent version of Robin Hood.

So what makes The Favourite different? I guess it helps that it is a period in history that isn’t really part of history that is talked about much. What we do know about this period comes from the words of Jonathan Swift and Daniel Defoe. There are of course the may adaptations of those authors. They tell stories that still somehow feel modern.

I still didn’t know what to think of The Favourite, All I knew was I liked the actors in the cast. Olivia Colman, Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz.

This is another film that proves just how good Emma Stone is. The only American in the film her English accent is very good. I don’t think I have ever seen a poor performance from Stone, then again, I have never seen The House Bunny. She was the best thing about La La Land and only Colman overshadows in this.

The Favourite does paint the picture of what the period would have been like. Based on the authors mentioned before there is that sense of a bawdiness about the society that comes across on screen. The swearing was not only funny but fitted the occasions. It was no Ian McEwen and that Atonement of the c-word.

The performances from the three leads were spot on. There was also a very convincing performance from Nicolas Holt (About A Boy).

There were shades of A Cock and Bull Story the film about trying to film Tristram Shandy the 2005 film about filming a film that is the impossible film.

I’m glad this film was a comedy and not a straight-laced drama, I now feel like exploring this period some more.

Set in the time of satire it was the perfect antidote for the current world outside the cinema walls. Hopefully, we get more comedies that live up to this, and also we need more comedy films in general.

An Oscar wouldn’t go amiss for Olivia Colman either.