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#jonathan keeble
enchantzz · 1 month
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The Easter Bunny aka LJ Ross dropped a new DCI Ryan book. I'm a very happy (Easter) Bunny and already half way through the book. I love it so far. Happy to read about new adventures of the criminal investigation department and Ryan's team in famous Northumberland settings. Also, reading this, I hear it in my head in Jonathan Keeble's voice, who narrates the audiobooks. I'll have to wait for the audiobook a while longer, but its great to have a new story already 😊
And of course imagining Ryan looking like this (my manip)
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milliondollarbaby87 · 2 years
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Living (2022) Review
When a man who had just been going through the motions within his life finds out that he is dying, he will eventually try and feel alive again! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ *LFF 2022 Preview Screening* (more…)
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moviesandmania · 9 months
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OLDER GODS (2023) Reviews of Lovecraftian horror
Older Gods is a 2023 British horror film about a young man investigating an apocalyptic cult after the disappearance of his troubled friend. Written, directed and co-produced by David A. Roberts. Produced by Scott Bishop, Shaun Bishop and Keith Lupton. The Wagyu Films production stars Lindsay Bennett-Thompson, Ieuan Coombs, Jonathan Keeble, Holly Kehoe, Andrew Sexton, Tim Wells and Rory…
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corneliushickey · 2 months
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"devotional reading," he said, "my dear...."
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drunkcodicier · 1 year
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It’s a Jonathan Keeble narrated book lads you know what that means
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vincentpriceofficial · 4 months
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laclos’s little snide laugh here cracks me tf up
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transmutationisms · 9 months
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Long time listener first time caller (well not really I'm pretty sure we've talked about Succession before). I wanna read up more on anti psychiatry but I'm fucking shithouse at reading, are there any like videos or podcasts or audiobooks you'd recommend, because that would make my life ten times easier
yes great question honestly. i haven't heard all of these podcast episodes, but i curated the list based on knowing the speakers' work (not necessarily the podcast hosts/shows!), and i think these are good places to start.
"Debunking the Myth of the Chemical Imbalance with Dr. Joanna Moncrieff" interviewed by Dr. Caroline Leaf
Revolution Health Radio: "Reviewing the Evidence on the Serotonin Theory of Depression, with Dr. Joanna Moncrieff"
Mad in America Radio: Lucy Johnstone on the Power Threat Meaning Framework
NPR Fresh Air: Anne Harrington on psychiatry's "troubled search" for a biological understanding of mental illness
New Books Network: Mical Raz on her book "What's Wrong With the Poor: Psychiatry, Race, and the War on Poverty"
The Mental Breakdown Morning Show: "Bruce Cohen and Psychiatric Hegemony" (Cohen, unlike most on this list, explicitly aims for a marxist explanation and understanding of mental illness)
Madness Radio: "Bipolar Medication Myths" (Joanna Moncrieff interviewed by Will Hall)
What Your GP Doesn't Tell You: "David Healy Discusses SSRI Drugs, Suicide and Sexual Dysfunction"
Coming From Left Field: "The Political Economy of Mental Health Systems with Joanna Moncrieff"
States of Mind: "Mental Illness in America" (includes segments with Katherine Bankole-Medina, Jonathan Metzl, Allan Horwitz, Jamie Cohen-Cole, and Elyn Saks)
Jesse Meadows's podcast on ADHD, "Sluggish" (haven't listened to this one, but have read a lot of their writing; they're challenging the psychiatric view of ADHD as a person who struggles with the symptoms and behaviours the diagnostic label describes)
audio books: i'm honestly not sure where's the best and cheapest place to actually download these from, but i know there are audio books of 'mind fixers' by anne harrington (narrated by joyce bean) and 'desperate remedies' by andrew scull (narrated by jonathan keeble). uh, if anyone has a good list of audiobooks on this lmk :-)
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sister-calliope · 5 months
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May I ask you…Is Ruinstorm a fun novel? …I read Angels of Caliban, better said I tried to read Angels of Caliban and….I need some recommendations…please
Ruinstorm is dramatic - it could make a good film with the right visual effects. And we first start to see the Sanguinor become a part of the lore, and Sanguinius really starts to suffer from visions, more so than before. And of course Konrad being the delightful agent of chaos he is. But fun? More angsty if I recall. The main legions/Primarchs confront temptations, more daemons, and outsized Warp insanity. It’s an important part of the storyline for the legions and Primarchs involved but I wouldn’t use the word “fun”.
Have you read the books about Imperium Secundus that come before it & Angels of Caliban?
Because The Unremembered Empire and Pharos are two of my favorite books in the whole series. Those are necessary to understand what’s going on in Angels of Caliban & Ruinstorm. They feature Guilliman/Lion/Sanguinius versus Konrad Curze being Konrad Curze. And two lovely Astartes characters, Alexis Pollux and Barabas Dantioch, their bromance (or more, according to many fans) is really worth reading.
And they’re both fun as hell because the Primarch banter is 🔥🔥
Also, as someone who is a fan of Azkaellon, you will definitely want to read Pharos.
One other thing - I’ve mostly listened to the series on audio books because for years I had a job that required me to commute 4+ hours a day. And the way narrator Jonathan Keeble voices Sanguinius is just absolute perfection.
@dese-o thank you for the ask!! Hope this is helpful in some way!
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little-exhausted · 9 months
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Try with @re-dracula
I might have to switch! I've been really enjoying Jonathan Keeble's narration but once we got to Dr Seward I just got so lost haha
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LIVING (2022)
Starring Bill Nighy, Aimee Lou Wood, Alex Sharp, Tom Burke, Adrian Rawlins, Hubert Burton, Oliver Chris, Michael Cochrane, Anant Varman, Zoe Boyle, Lia Williams, Jessica Flood, Patsy Ferran, Barney Fishwick, Nichola McAuliffe, Jamie Wilkes, Richard Cunningham, John MacKay, Ffion Jolly, Celeste Dodwell, Jonathan Keeble, Eunice Roberts and Mark James.
Screenplay by  Kazuo Ishiguro.
Directed by Oliver Hermanus.
Distributed by Sony Pictures Classics. 102 minutes. Rated PG-13.
“Life is what happens to us while we are making other plans.” Allen Saunders
Other plans are all that Mr. Williams (no first name necessary), a London bureaucrat in the 1950s, has in this beautiful, sweet British film, surely one of the best movies to be released this year.
An adaptation of the 1952 movie Ikiru by Akira Kurosawa, Living takes a subtle and nuanced look at life and shows that even quiet, modest lives have special meaning, and sometimes the scale of the accomplishments is less important than just making a little bit of difference.
The role of Mr. Williams is perhaps a career-best performance by the always reliably terrific British actor Bill Nighy, who stuns in this performance as a completely repressed government worker – a slave to routines and rules, who has essentially been doing the same exact things every day for decades – who comes to learn that he is dying.
Suddenly realizing that his life has greatly been wasted, he tries to see what he has been missing out on for all of these years.
However, unlike less thoughtful films, this does not lead to a wholesale overhaul of the man’s entire personality. Sure, he toys with some of those things – going on an alcoholic bender, playing hooky from work, spending a lot of time with a much younger female former coworker.
Still, Living recognizes that he is still the same man, and it makes his little triumphs and changes much subtler. He shows his changes much more delicately; a sly whimsical smile, the obvious curiosity of a man who has denied himself for years, the ability to just relax and try to enjoy life as it goes on around him.
And wonderfully, his epiphany – just like the man himself – comes in a much humbler pursuit. Mr. Williams knows he can’t change the world, but he can use his knowledge and skills to do little things to make things better and help those around him. Therefore he throws himself into a modest pursuit that he knows that he can play a part in achieving – creating a playground for the kids in a downtrodden nearby neighborhood.
Living is a quiet, insightful film in which not a whole lot happens – but what does happen speaks volumes. Life isn’t always about grand gestures, sometimes it is more important to luxuriate in simple pleasures. It’s a nice thing to be reminded in a cinematic world where blockbusters try to make everything faster, brighter and shinier.
I can tell you this: Living has stuck with me a lot more strongly than many of the holiday blockbusters that have been trying to capture a sensation-starved audience’s attention.
Mr. Williams is more like a character from the Beatles song “Eleanor Rigby” – “All the lonely people, where do they all come from? All the lonely people, where do they all belong?”
Not every story has to be grand. Some stories are far more interesting simply because they are not.
There is a lot more of Mr. Williams in most people than there is in – say, the characters from things like Babylon or Avatar II or Violent Night or Wakanda Forever – just to mention a few films that are released at the same time and will likely swamp this little film’s box office take. Which is not even to say that those films aren’t worthy of your attention (some are, and some aren’t…).
However, Living is absolutely worthy of your attention, so even though it may be a little more difficult to track down than those films, treat yourself and go and find it.
And don’t be surprised if Nighy gets a deserved Oscar nomination for his performance. He may not win – in fact, he probably won’t just because it is much more low-key than other choices – but that’s okay, at least he has done his best. Mr. Williams would appreciate the effort.
Jay S. Jacobs
Copyright ©2022 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: December 21, 2022.
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mournivaldisco · 5 months
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If you ever want to get a little baked and watch a horror movie which is so bad you will cry with laughter, but has Jonathan Keeble doing his Grimaldus voice as the bad guy, watch Older Gods
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enchantzz · 1 year
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Me listening to audiobooks and imagining the protagonists 🔥🔥🔥
And people wonder why I get so immersed in audiobooks... 😈
DCI Ryan (Maxwell Finley-Ryan) - LJ Ross - Voice by Jonathan Keeble, an amazing narrator - image Jay Byars (altered and photoshopped by me)
Dr. Alexander Gregory - LJ Ross - Voice by Hugh Dancy, Richard Armitage and Jonathan Keeble (Book 5, Chapter 22 where Ryan meets Alex) - image Tomas Skoloudik
DI Rowan Jackman - Joy Ellis - Voice by Richard Armitage - image Richard Armitage
@lathalea
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dead-philosophy · 5 months
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I started listening to Hollow by B. Catling and I'm already obsessed. New brainrot acquired.
It's also narrated by Jonathan Keeble which I appreciate as a fan of 40k.
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Gotrek and Felix
I really liked this series years ago, even though I didn't make it much past Dragonslayer. I got sick of waiting for them to release and I'm sort of at that same point again. Would be nice if they just released all the books as one big omnibus.
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xenobladehistorian · 5 years
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Xord’s English VA is Jonathan Keeble. He also voiced the Nopon scientist Muimui from Xenoblade 2...and a documentary narrator!
Here’s a link to a cutscene with Muimui, a walking Nopon Xord [spoilers]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=byXKtom4spc
And here’s the link to a scene from the documentary, Churchill’s Spy School: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=12AoTWLkIbY
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drunkcodicier · 2 years
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Me listening to any black library book narrated by Jonathan Keeble or Toby Longworth
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