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About Mrs Brown's Boys D'Movie

There are many interesting films because something is repeated. As in the the television adventures of the potty-mouthed Dublin mammy attracted 11 million viewers, it's repeated more times than Mrs Brown says "feck" in an episode, and the show is now a worldwide brand with cartoon spin-offs, tea towels, greetings cards and books. But will D'Movie be a D'Isaster? Hit sitcoms transfer as easily to film as Agnes Brown moves from baggy cardigan to shimmering ball gown. A few have made it. The Likely Lads, On The Buses and Porridge managed to pull decent audiences at the cinema. And, more recently, The Inbetweeners actually improved on its television success. But dozens more have failed. Steptoe And Son, Rising Damp and Till Death Us Do Part never hit the mark set by their sitcom counterparts. Bless This House, Bilko and Bewitched made a case for the argument that more is usually less. More recently, Keith Lemon - The Film proved to be, well, a lemon. So why do sitco

Twelve Differences Between 'The Fault In Our Stars' Book and Movie

You can now find "The Fault in Our Stars" out in theaters while notice some pivotal differences between the novel and the screen version of the beloved story. Huff Post Entertainment said that not every moment from the 25-chapter book can make it into the 125-minute movie. 1. In the book, Augustus Waters' parents do not let him take Hazel Grace Lancaster downstairs unsupervised to watch "V for Vendetta." Instead, they let Gus show her the basement and then watch the Natalie Portman film in the living room. In the movie, Gus and Hazel go straight downstairs without any parental guidance. 2. John Green writes that Hazel goes to visit Isaac at the hospital following his eye surgery. In the movie, she doesn't. 3. In the young adult novel, Hazel has a friend named Kaitlyn, who is up to speed on her budding romance with Gus, as well as the latest fashions. In the movie, Kaitlyn doesn't exist. 4. Augustus' former girlfriend Caroline Mathers, who died

Finding Happiness in ‘The Fault in Our Stars’

Happiness of the ending likely be a matter of perspectives. But Green says ultimately comes down to from his young-adult bestseller, "Any time you end a story knowing how much you were loved, that's a happy ending."  Does 'The Fault in Our Stars' have a happy ending? Some people say yes, as every great romance has its happily-ever-after ending. It can be see from the new movie adapted from John Green's young-adult bestseller, The Fault in Our Stars. The movie tells a love story about two teens with cancer.  Considered as they lay on the worst condition that the young lovers has complicated by Cancer, of course this movie sets out to make you cry. Like the book, it is also true that the movie is like that the world is not a wish-granting factory. It's an expertly built machine for the mass production of tears. Much of the film has also shows you the looming presence of death is never far away. Hazel Grace Lancaster and Augustus &