#clare hope-ashitey
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haveyouseenthismovie-poll · 3 months ago
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evviejo · 2 years ago
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thirteen’s era appreciation: 233/?
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closetofcuriosities · 7 months ago
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Children of Men - Dir. Alfonso Cuarón - 2006
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cinematicmasterpiece · 2 years ago
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children of men (2006)
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theleafling · 7 months ago
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barbara parker / sophie straw and diane lewis in funny woman (2023) -> 1.02 . 2/2
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movie--posters · 19 days ago
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filmy420 · 2 years ago
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vintagewarhol · 1 year ago
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bohemian-nights · 1 year ago
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Nettles Casting Speculation(Part 2)
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Where is Nettles? Who is playing her? Is it the woman in the blurry photo from months ago? Is it Anna Jobarteh? Is it someone else? When will she come out of hiding?
I don’t know the answer to any of these questions and since HBO doesn’t want to tell us(I’m about 79% sure it’s Anna at this point, but you never know with this sh*tty show😑) I am once again compiling a list of all the actresses who could possibly be her.
1. Adelayo Adedayo
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She’s 34 and the last project she was working on is in post-production.
2. Clare-Hope Ashitey
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She’s 36 and not currently working on any projects. The side profile looks like it could kinda be a match.
3. Jasmine Jobson
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She’s 28 and doesn’t appear to be filming anything at the moment.
4. Little Simz
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She’s 29 and nearly 5’8.” I don’t think she’s filming anything at the moment.
5. Nicole-Lily Baisden
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She’s sadly currently in a play, but I wanted to include her anyway.
6. Nicholle Cherrie
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She’s 5’8” and she’s not currently working on anything at the movement.
7. Laura Lake Adebisi
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Her last project is in post production.
8. Melissa James
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She’s not currently working on anything.
9. Denise Laniya
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If I had to guess her age I’d say she’s in her mid to late 20s(based on when she graduated). She’s not currently involved in any productions.
10. Ellena Vincent
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Can’t find her exact age, but she doesn’t appear to be in any productions currently.
11. Keziah Joseph
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She’s 31 and her last two projects are in post production.
12. Aisha Toussaint
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She’s 28 and doesn’t appear to be working on any projects.
13. Roxy Sternberg
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She’s 34 and has no upcoming projects.
14. Aliyah Odoffin
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From what I can find she’s 23, but she doesn’t appear to be working on anything at the moment.
I’d just like to say personally I’d love it if she was Netty 👏🏽
15.Mali Ann Rees
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Her last project is in post production.
16. Faye Campbell
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Her playing age is between 15-23. She doesn’t appear to be working on any projects at the moment.(her play wrapped up back in June).
17. April Nerissa Hudson
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Her playing age is between 16-25. She’s has a upcoming play in October that she’s staring in.
18. Karla Crome
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She’s 35 and she doesn’t appear to be working on any projects at the moment.
19. Angela Marie Hurst
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Her playing age is between 25-40. She was in a play from late July to August.
20. Colette Dalal Tchantcho
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I cant find her exact age but she graduated with a bachelor’s back in 2011 so I say it’s safe to guess she’s in her early to mid 30s. It doesn’t look like she’s working on any projects currently.
Do not make me do a part three. I mean it Ryan🙃 It’s almost been a freaking year. Where the hell is she 😊
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gebo4482 · 10 months ago
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Constellation — Official Trailer | Apple TV+
Star: Noomi Rapace / Clare-Hope Ashitey / Jonathan Banks
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denimbex1986 · 11 months ago
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'Bad Wolf, Torchwood, Saxon... now "The One Who Waits" appears to be joining the ranks of Doctor Who story arcs teased by writer/showrunner Russell T Davies.
The Giggle – the third and last of the show's 60th anniversary specials – saw the Doctor (David Tennant) once again face off with old foe The Toymaker (now played by Neil Patrick Harris).
The events of previous episode Wild Blue Yonder saw the Doctor unwittingly allow the Toymaker – an elemental force who exists beyond the rules of the universe – entry into our universe.
In The Giggle, the cruel Toymaker was able to provoke the Doctor into challenging him to a game – as the two prepared to match wits, the villain taunted the Time Lord with tales of his accomplishments.
"I came to this universe with such delight," he said. "I played them all, Doctor – I toyed with supernovas, turned galaxies into spinning tops, I gambled with God and made him a jack-in-the-box."
We even discover that The Master – last played by Sacha Dhawan in last year's The Power of the Doctor – fell foul of the Toymaker, losing a game to the villain and ending up trapped, apparently for all eternity.
But then, the Toymaker makes a confession: "There's only one player I didn't dare face – The One Who Waits.
"I saw it, hiding, and I ran."
The Doctor attempts to question the Toymaker further, but he shrugs off his earlier comments, telling his nemesis: "That's someone else's game."
So who is The One Who Waits?
The Toymaker is established as having power almost without limit, able to manipulate the atoms of the universe and conjure up his own magical domain – in The Giggle, we saw a shaken Doctor uncertain if he'll be able to best his enemy once again.
The fact then that, whoever or whatever they are, The One Who Waits is capable of striking fear into the heart of the Toymaker is pretty terrifying. Could an even more powerful being exist in the Whoniverse?
Interestingly, in a social media post made in October, the official Doctor Who account appeared to refer to the Toymaker himself as "the one who waits" – but it's made clear in The Giggle that he's referring not to himself but to some other figure.
Of course, the Toymaker isn't the only all-powerful, ever-living being to exist in the worlds of Doctor Who...
Making their debut in the 1983 story Enlightenment, the Eternals are a race of elemental beings of immense power, capable of manipulating matter and creating objects out of thin air.
These amoral creatures act purely for their own amusement, manipulating "Ephemerals" (read: mortal beings) for fun.
Then there are the Guardians, who first appeared in Doctor Who's 16th season in 1978, a series of interlinked stories which saw the Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker) on a quest to find the legendary Key to Time.
Transcendental beings who embodied aspects of the universe, immortal and indestructible, we met the White Guardian (Cyril Luckham) – who represented light, order and structure – and his eternal opponent the Black Guardian (Valentine Dyall) – the personification of darkness, entropy and chaos.
Most recently, 2020 episode Can You Hear Me? saw the Doctor (Jodie Whittaker) and friends lured into a trap by Zellin (Ian Gelder), an immortal "god" who was haunting the dreams of humans, all to feed his beloved Rakaya (Clare-Hope Ashitey).
Could one of these creatures, or something like them, be "The One Who Waits"?
It's also possible, of course, that Russell T Davies has invented an entirely new menace. In the episode The Star Beast, The Meep (voiced by Miriam Margolyes) revealed itself to be in the employ of a figure it referred to as "the boss".
David Tennant later admitted that he remains oblivious to the identity of "the boss", which suggested that this reveal would be held back until Ncuti Gatwa's time in the TARDIS.
The Meep's admission and the Toymaker's confession in The Giggle could be the start of something much larger and entirely unexpected...'
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duinlam · 1 year ago
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“I can't really remember when I last had any hope, and I certainly can't remember when anyone else did either.”
Children of Men (2006).
Directed by Alfonso Cuarón.
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Clive Owen - Clare-Hope Ashitey
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byneddiedingo · 2 years ago
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Clive Owen in Children of Men (Alfonso Cuarón, 2006) Cast: Clive Owen, Julianne Moore, Michael Caine, Claire-Hope Ashitey, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Charlie Hunnam, Pam Ferris, Peter Mullan, Danny Huston, Oana Pellea, Phaldut Sharma, Jacek Koman. Screenplay: Alfonso Cuarón, Timothy J. Sexton, David Arata, Mark Fergus, Hawk Ostby, based on a novel by P.D. James. Cinematography: Emmanuel Lubezki. Production design: Jim Clay, Geoffrey Kirkland. Film editing: Alfonso Cuarón, Alex Rodríguez. Music: John Taverner. Since Malthus, overpopulation has always been one of the roads to dystopia, the breakdown of society and the imposition of authoritarian government. But lately, speculative fiction has focused on the opposite: infertility. It gives rise to the theocracy of Gideon in Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale. And it results in a police state in Alfonso Cuarón's remarkable film Children of Men, set in a dank dystopian London in the year 2027, a world in which human beings stopped bearing children 18 years earlier: i.e., in the year 2009 -- only three years after the film was made. The specificity of the date is reminiscent of the way George Orwell's 1984 serves as a commentary on the year in which it was published, 1948. In its treatment of the plight of immigrants and the racism that underlies it Children of Men has something like the prophetic core of the books by Orwell and Atwood, but it sidesteps a central question: How does the failure of humankind to reproduce precipitate the worldwide cataclysm that the movie presents us? Why are immigrants, in a world with a declining population and therefore less pressure on natural resources, a problem? Cuarón is indifferent to such questions, but he runs the risk of suggesting that the film promotes the extreme "pro-life" view, not only anti-abortion but also anti-contraception. Or is it simply that, as one character puts it, "a world without children's voices" is inevitably a terrible place? The lack of backstory seems to me a weakness in an otherwise extraordinary film, full of violent action and suspense, with some wizardly work by Oscar nominees cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki and editors Cuarón and Alex Rodríguez. The way they handle the film's much-praised long-take sequences, aided by special effects to give the sense of complex action taking place in a single traveling shot, is exceptional. There are also fine performances by Clive Owen, Julianne Moore, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Clare-Hope Ashitey, and the inevitably wonderful Michael Caine. 
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deadlinecom · 5 months ago
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spoilertv · 5 months ago
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theleafling · 7 months ago
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barbara parker / sophie straw and diane lewis in funny woman (2023) -> 1.02 . 1/2
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