We can look forward to another twisted take on a tortured soul as TRAINSPOTTING author Irvine Welsh has his controversial
novel FILTH brought to...
Not exact matches
From the same crusty mind who brought the world the
novel Trainspotting, Irvine Welsh, comes
Filth, adapted for the screen and directed by Jon Baird.
Adapted (and softened) from the 1998 Irvine Welsh
novel of the same name,
Filth combines the sleaze of Bad Lieutenant with...
The players, as pulled from the Nick Hornby
novel of the same name by screenwriter Jack Thorne, are Martin Sharp (Pierce Brosnan, «The World's End»), Maureen Thompson (Toni Collette, «The Way Way Back»), Jess Crichton (Imogen Poots, «
Filth») and J.J. Maguire (Aaron Paul, «Need for Speed»).
So goes
Filth, the film's title taken from the Irvine Welsh
novel that forms its basis, and indicative of the seediness and unseemliness that lurks within its midst.
Adapted from the
novel by Irvine Welsh, «
Filth» has been directed and written by Jon S. Baird («Cass») and sees an intense star - studded cast convert to screen an compelling story of insanity, romance and deceit.
These virtual experiences would contextualize periods of history for students far better than any lecture or video could, and it would be a far different experience reading a Charles Dickens
novel after experiencing the
filth and grandeur of 19th - century London through your own eyes.
Sir Edward Feathers — a judge known as «Old
Filth,» thanks to the well - known midcentury acronym for «Failed in London, try Hong Kong» — looks back on a privileged and eventful life in Gardam's award - winning 12th
novel.
He's written about criminals, of course (usually junkies and petty offenders), and policemen, too (in the challenging
Filth, 1998, which was partly narrated by an intestinal parasite), but Crime is as close to an Ian Rankin
novel as Welsh seems likely to write.