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Thats_Racist
i have finally faced it
the well is dry
and we're not gonna make it
out of the war alive
he brings me close and says to me
lets make this a happy ending
and try to stay friends
but you see
if this love affair was happy
then it would not end and i don't wanna be
one of your friends
if we must break up
then that's where it ends so please don't come around
bringing me down
listening for your love
i don't hear a sound
please don't come around
bringing me down
tossin' and turnin'
my smile's upside down don't invite me out to dinner
don't call me on the phone
you wanted to leave me baby
so won't you leave me alone so please don't come around
bringing me down
listening for your love
i don't hear a sound
please don't come around
bringing me down
tossin' and turnin'
my smile's upside down it's all or nothing
we'll be one or none
right now you need to know
that I cannot begin again
after what just happened
this ain't no tv show
my heart's completely broke
so... so please don't come around
bringing me down
listening for your love
i don't hear a sound
please don't come around
bringing me down
tossin' and turnin'
my smile's upside down and i miss your love baby
and i miss your lovin'
so stay away from me
Reviews
The X Files: I Want to Believe (2008)
Good movie - but a missed opportunity?
Had 'I Want To Believe' featured as a regular two-part episode during the original run of the series, it would have been a perfectly competent episode.
Therein lies the problem. Fans of The X Files had waited ten years for the continuation of Mulder and Scully's story and ten years of patient waiting requires a huge pay-off. I Want To Believe is the exact opposite of that - it's a slow, measured sci-fi drama. Minimal FX, minimal action and, until the climax at least, minimal sci-fi. It just isn't enough.
Loose ends from the series are tied up with the bare minimum of thought for long-term fans of the show and the Mulder-Scully relationship never feels real. Separately, both David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson give impressive performances, and whilst they still have chemistry together, they are given little to do as a couple and spend much of the movie apart.
Gillian Anderson deserves to be singled out for her performance - although Billy Connoly is quietly chilling as the possibly psychic priest with a disturbing past.
The Frankenstein-style plot is adequate, although when I saw it in a theatre the final reveal resulted in a fair few giggles from the audience.
Overall, I Want To Believe is a good film - but it had the potential to be a great film. Fingers crossed for The X Files 3.
The Life and Times of Vivienne Vyle (2007)
Dark, Biting Satire.....fabulous!
When the first episode of Vivienne Vyle premiered in the UK in October 2007, the critics knives were out for Jennifer Saunders latest venture into sitcom territory. A sharp shock for anyone expecting Absolutely Fabulous or Jam and Jerusalem, Vivienne Vyle is a disturbing, all too real insight into the world of TV talk shows and celebrity culture.
Jennifer Saunders relishes her role as the ambitious, uncompromising Vivienne Vyle - host of a trashy morning talk show. Miranda Richardson excels as the heavy drinking, manic editor of the show who, after a fight breaks out on the show, decides to take the programme in a new direction.
Over six thirty-minute episodes, The Life And Times Of Vivienne Vyle perfectly balances comedy, tragedy and a disturbingly authentic view of the celebrity culture in which we live.
Ignore the critics and give it a chance - this is Jennifer Saunders at her very best.