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The Night Manager final episode - a superb climaxWithout wishing to play the spoilsport, this was not John le Carré’s idea of an ending.
The Night Manager 2? BBC rumoured to be considering sequelSuccess of adaptation of John le Carré spy novel leads to speculation in Radio Times that corporation wants to create follow-up
Scores killed in suicide blast aimed at Christians in Lahore children's parkPakistani Taliban faction Jamaat ul-Ahrar says Christians were target of bomb killing 69 and injuring 280 in park thronged with families
Murdered Muslim shopkeeper's family fear for their lives from hardline Islamic factionsAsad Shah's wife and siblings pay tribute to him on the condition their names are not published for fear of retribution
QuoteThe Night Manager final episode - a superb climaxWithout wishing to play the spoilsport, this was not John le Carré’s idea of an ending.http://www.telegraph.co.uk/tv/2016/03/24/the-night-manager-final-episode---a-superb-climax/Thought it was pretty gripping. Quite a happy ending QuoteThe Night Manager 2? BBC rumoured to be considering sequelSuccess of adaptation of John le Carré spy novel leads to speculation in Radio Times that corporation wants to create follow-uphttp://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2016/mar/27/the-night-manager-two-bbc-reportedly-considering-making-sequel-john-le-carreHopefully we may see more of 'The Fort'.
Car-scrapping plan extended to May 20The government has decided to extend its vehicle-scrapping scheme, in which it subsidizes the new car purchases of owners who take their old vehicles off the roads, until May 20, although the subsidy will be cut by 50 percent from last year.
You didn't see the baddy get killed only taken away by other baddies. So, Shite Mangy II hitting your screens next winter when pretty pictures of hot places will appeal the most.
Migrant crisis: Chaos on Greek islands as aid workers quit refugee camps in protestThe eastern Aegean Islands are struggling to cope with a humanitarian and public order crisis after several major international organisations pulled out of refugee camps last week in protest at the scheme they say is inhumane
RSPCA acted wrongly when it seized and destroyed family's pet cat, official report concludesClaude, a 16-year-old cat, was taken away from the Byrnes family and put down against their wishes by the animal welfare charity The RSPCA has been accused of acting unlawfully after seizing a family’s pet cat - which was then put down against the owners’ wishes – in an official review which described the charity’s actions as a “travesty”.The 16-year-old Turkish Van, named Claude, was taken away from Richard and Samantha Byrnes by RSPCA inspectors after a neighbour raised concerns about the animal’s appearance. Now an official review conducted by Stephen Wooler, the former HM Chief Inspector to the Crown Prosecution Service, found the RSPCA had failed to disclose material to the Byrnes in a subsequent animal cruelty prosecution.Mr Wooler concluded Claude had been removed without lawful authority and there appeared to have been no explicit consent by the owners, nor authorisation from the police. The RSPCA last year issued a public apology to Mr and Mrs Byrnes of Tring, Hertfordshire, for what it admitted was “disproportionate and insensitive” conduct which had caused “unnecessary distress to the whole family”.Sara-Lise Howe, the couple's lawyer, said that the RSPCA had unlawfully usurped their rights and made a "disgraceful attempt to besmirch the Byrnes' reputation in the press in order to salvage their own". MPs are currently holding an inquiry into the charity's role in prosecuting 80 per cent of animal welfare cases in England and Wales.
British holidaymaker 'tried to swim to cruise liner when it left port' in PortugalA 65-year-old woman apparently jumped into the water after a row with her husband over whether to cut the holiday short
More than six million workers to be stripped of take-home pay under stealth tax raidThe new system, introduced next month, will see millions of workers face paying more tax through increased national insurance contributions Experts say that under the new scheme, which was announced three years ago, those in the middle of their working lives are likely to lose out the most.
Prominent Muslims call for unity after Glasgow shopkeeper's killingScotland’s only Muslim minister calls for sectarianism to be stamped out, including among Islamic community
Rowan Atkinson stars as the Parisian detective in the first of a new occasional run of dramas based on the novels of Georges Simenon. The summer of 1955 finds Paris in the grip of both sweltering heat and terror on the streets. Four women have been murdered in Montmartre, with no apparent connection between the victims. Chief Inspector Maigret comes under huge pressure from the public and his superiors to apprehend the killer before he can strike again.
Quote from: Aristarches on Monday, 28 March, 2016 @ 11:39:04You didn't see the baddy get killed only taken away by other baddies. So, Shite Mangy II hitting your screens next winter when pretty pictures of hot places will appeal the most.Someone told you the ending? Or......... did you watch it, Ari?All films should be made in Birmingham?
Rowan Atkinson's Maigret fails to convince critics