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Trailer Watch: Which film will you watch this weekend?

As cinemas begin to reopen, here are a few options for weekend watching.

EVERY THURSDAY EVENING, we bring you three trailers for films that are due out in the cinema that weekend.

With cinemas slowly beginning to reopen, here are three trailers for films you can catch in cinema, on streaming services, or on television.

Stage Mother

Movie Coverage / YouTube

Set in the glitz and grime of San Francisco, Stage Mother stars Jacki Weaver, Lucy Liu and Adrian Grenier. It follows a church choir-mistress from Texas who inherits a drag club from her long-estranged son.

  • RottenTomatoes: 100%
  • IMDB: 7/10
  • Where can I see it? Showing in reopened Odeon and Omniplex cinemas

The Truth

IFC Films / YouTube

Juliette Binoche and Ethan Hawke play a married couple who come to Paris from New York with their daughter to see her grandmother, a star of French cinema. The actress’ new memoir raises old resentments between mother and daughter.

War Horse

WarHorseMovie / YouTube

Based on the book by Michael Morpurgo, War Horse follows a farmer’s son and the horse he must give up to the British army during World War One. RTÉ2 is showing the well-loved story on Sunday evening.

Which will you watch first?


Poll Results:

None of them (1425)
War Horse (732)
Stage Mother (309)
The Truth (177)

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    Mute Ablitive
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    Nov 22nd 2014, 3:39 PM

    Meanwhile life goes on at Fukushima.

    http://s15.postimg.org/6mayr0wnv/fukus.jpg

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    Mute navanman
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    Nov 22nd 2014, 3:31 PM

    Only a matter of time when we will rue the day of nuclear power

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    Mute Glen
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    Nov 22nd 2014, 3:38 PM

    I think the people of Pripyat already do.

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    Mute Graham Kavanagh
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    Nov 22nd 2014, 5:34 PM

    Someday they will learn to handle it properly and safely…

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    Mute Graham Ross Leonard Cowan
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    Nov 23rd 2014, 1:36 PM

    “Someday they will learn to handle it properly and safely” — but what will the consequences be,
    when they learn that?

    It’s no trick being safer than coal. But what if it becomes safer than natural gas to provide the same power? Safer than natural-gas-plus-wind-turbines? It’s already less radioactively polluting than those systems.

    When that superior safety shall be fact, a government that wants to take a billion dollars in natural gas severance taxes and/or royalties and/or import duties will have to accept the loss of some citizens to gas disasters in the bargain. If it allows nuclear energy to be used instead, those lives will be saved, but the billion will, from a civil service point of view, be lost: it will remain in private hands.

    No-one will forthrightly deplore that result. Everyone’s official position will be that however good a few million dollars in tax revenue may be, it doesn’t justify an innocent citizen’s death.

    But perhaps there will come to be a huge industry of denying that nuclear energy is a lifesaver, and of calling nuclear wrecks that harm no-one “nuclear disasters”.

    Perhaps, eh?

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    Mute Michael Mann
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    Nov 23rd 2014, 1:49 PM

    Perhaps when the media makes accuracy the priority over profits.. but the scary word “nuclear” sells very well. The headline “Radiation from Fukushima has not caused any health effect” may be true, but it won’t catch peoples attention or sell advertising. They definitely don’t want people to know that fear of Fukushima radiation caused much more harm than the radiation itself, then they might be held accountable…….

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    Mute Ross UAE
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    Nov 22nd 2014, 8:12 PM

    Not a single person was killed when the water hit the Fukushima nuclear plant, in fact I have not heard of anyone even cutting their finger there. In comparison around 18,000 people from the surrounding area were swept away never to be seen again. But here on the Journal Fukushima is remembered as a a nuclear disaster. In the press hysteria trumps fact every time.

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    Mute Uncle Mort
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    Nov 22nd 2014, 7:51 PM

    The tsunami left the enormous death toll,19000, not the incident at the nuclear power plant. The wording of this item is rubbish.

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