Death trope romances are oh-so-back thanks to Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield. Their new film We Live In Time has finally landed in Australian cinemas this week, bringing all the tears (and plenty of heart) to our screens.
In We Live in Time, Pugh and Andrew Garfield play a couple whose sense of the ridiculous sees them survive almost anything.
What I enjoyed most about this film is how realistic the story line was. Its romance is magical and yet commonplace. Sparks fly between a Weetabix Cereal salesman and a chef with a dream living in London.
We're first parachuted into the world of Almut (Florence Pugh) and Tobias (Andrew Garfield) through the pitter-patter of Almut's steps as she pounds the pavement on her morning run. Arriving back ...
Thanks to Studio Canal Australia and Think Tank Communications we have 5 double in-season passes (Admit 2) to see Andrew Garfield and Florence Pugh in We Live In Time, now screening in Australian theatres.
We Live in Time is now available to watch on Video on Demand platforms such as Prime Video, YouTube, Google Play, AppleTV+, and Fandango at Home. It is currently available to rent or buy at a discounted price. You can rent the film for $5.99 or buy it for $19.99.
On Tuesday, February 11, Irène Duval will perform an hour-long concert featuring Bach’s Chaconne for Solo Violin. Audiences can opt for a light lunch of soup and a sandwich at noon, followed by the concert at 1pm, with the lunch being served in the church hall.
As Clare Smyth prepares for ‘the Olympics of cooking’, she sits down with Charlotte Lytton to discuss gender roles in kitchens, challenges in the restaurant industry, and what’s next
In We Live in Time, a young couple find their dreams of a long and beautiful relationship threatened by serious illness.
In A Complete Unknown, Timothée Chalamet is the young Bob Dylan changing the world of music forever, Wolf Man remakes the famous horror creature for the 21st century, Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield are a young couple battling a disastrous diagnosis in We Live in Time,
When Fifty Shades of Grey was published in 2011, it led to a spike in purchases of Amazon Kindles. People were embarrassed to be seen reading a book filled with BDSM sex, even though it was one of the bestsellers of the century.
The tear-jerker, co-starring Florence Pugh, helped the Spider-Man actor process his grief over losing his mother.