The Dahls visit to London

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Steve, Louisa, Ben and Michelle at Waxy O'Connors

Our great friends, Louisa and Steve have made their way over to sunny London after travelling through the US visiting places like Los Angeles, Las Vegas and New York.

After catching the red-eye in on Thursday we took them down by the river for a pint, then on Friday we went and saw Guys and Dolls at West End, finishing the night off by eating an Indian.

We hired a car on Saturday and took off down to Windsor castle where the Queen spends most of her weekends. In the evening we headed out to Goodge St in the center of London to a restaurant called Crazy Bear. It’s Crazy Awesome. We finished the night off with some dancing at Waxy O’Connors.

A truly fab weekend.

Lou and Steve are off at Lou’s cousins wedding as I write this and they are flying out super early tomorrow to Paris for a couple of days.

They come back for Thursday and Friday before we head off to Ireland for the August Bank Holiday weekend.

Tasty?

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My colleague says to me: “I’ll have a light lunch as I’m having an Indian tonight”. You’re thinking: “How exactly is your colleague going to consume this poor defenceless Indian person?”. What she means is “I’m going to have some Indian tonight”.

Rarely a day goes by without someone saying something along the lines of “I’m having a McDonalds for lunch”. Just one?! The whole store?! “Perhaps you could have a KFC instead”. Or, Ben’s personal favourite: “I’m having KFCs” More than one?!! Hopefully you’re getting the picture. The crazy Brits just have a quirky way of phrasing things sometimes.

Unlike us Aussies, of course. We speak much more better.

Working, Dining and Cruising

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Fresh from a holiday in NY, I started a new job this week at Canary Wharf. It takes me an hour each way door-to-door and I have to wear a suit. A bit of a change from the jeans, t-shirt and thongs I was wearing in my last job. But hey, you have to grow up sooner or later :)

The people seem really nice and the work seems like it could be interesting… so far I’m optimistic about the role.

Friday night, our good friends John and Kirstin treated us to some fine dining at their house. Kirsty must have spent days preparing for the event as it was seven delcious courses all served with a different beverage and a warm smile. It was an awesome evening with plenty of laughs.

Saturday evening it was off to the Thames to enjoy four hours cruising up and down the river to celebrate our friend Cynthia’s birthday. I had an awesome time. If only the weather hadn’t been so dreary.

You can check out this weeks action in this short 2 1/2 minute video. The soundtrack for this video was inspired by the theme song in the movie Little Fish that we saw on Wednesday evening.

Outtakes

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Here’s the bits that didn’t make it in to first movie as I ran out of time :)

Little Fish

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I’ll see just about any Australian film that makes it over here (even if it hits UK screens almost a year later like the one I’m reviewing here). I love them. But Little Fish is not just any movie. It is one of the most raw and powerful films I’ve seen for a long, long time and had me ‘in’ from the first scene.

Set in Cabramatta, it’s about Tracey (Cate Blanchett) who is trying to escape her heroin-addicted past, but is haunted by the return of an old boyfriend, her brother’s involvement in drug dealing and the devastating drug habit of Lionel (Hugo Weaving), who seems to be the closest she has to a father figure.

Don’t expect feel-good vibes or a ‘Hollywood’ ending. What you’ll get is a gripping movie with truly superb performances from pretty much the whole cast. It’s a long way from Play School for Noni Hazlehurst who gives an exceptionally convincing and heart-wrenching performance as Tracey’s tormented mother Janelle. And Hugo Weaving is a genius.

The film examines, in a really honest and moving way, how this family faces the demons of the past and of the present, entangled in the world of drugs.

A few times throughout the movie a local school choir sings a haunting rendition of Cold Chisel’s ‘Flame Trees’ and it’ll make your hairs stand on end.

michelle’s rating: 10/10

ben’s rating: 100000000/10 – it was that good!