Jackets for the lads

It’s that time of year again to get yourself a new jacket. One of the great things about wearing a jacket, apart from how good it looks is that you can get away with wearing something less than perfect underneath. So if you’ve not managed to get that top ironed or are just wearing a scruffy T-shirt or whatever then the jacket will hide it well, especially if you just happen to be wearing your new Stone Island one. Today’s selection is from Mainline Menswear.

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Black Friday Sale at Stuarts London

What is Black Friday?

Black Friday is one of the most exciting days for shoppers and retailers and is arguably the biggest shopping event of the year. It occurs the day after Thanksgiving in the United States and marks the start of the holiday season. Many shoppers will start their Christmas shopping in Black Friday sales due to the heavy discounts that retailers apply – we’re no exception! Keep reading to find out exactly where you can get the best deals and how to become the first to know about Stuart’s Black Friday deals. 

How much can I save during Black Friday?

At Stuarts London, you will find a wide range of discounted brands during our Black Friday sale. Some brands you will find have discounts include Emporio Armani, Jeffery West, Harrys London, NOTA, Yogi, Mizuno and more. The Black Friday designer sale from Stuarts London includes some of the finest designer brands with discounts up to 80% off. 

Interviews for the Lads – Frank Harper

He has been in classics such as The Football Factory, Lock Stock & Two Smoking Barrels, Rise of the Foot Soldier, to name a few over a career spanning over 35 years. Frank Harper talks about how he first got into acting, his first acting jobs, films that influenced his career, the fights in The Football Factory, how he took Denzel Washington to The Old Den at Millwall to watch them play Leeds, what it was like to play convicted murderer Jack Whomes, his directing career and more.

The Business

Frankie is sent from London to Spain to make a delivery to Charlie, who likes the kid and shows him the ropes including the use of guns and drugs. Frankie likes the sun, pools and the cute, bikini clad girls and stays in Spain.

The Business is a 2005 crime film written and directed by Nick Love. The film stars Danny DyerTamer Hassan and Roland Manookian, all of whom were in Love’s previous film The Football FactoryGeoff Bell and Georgina Chapman also appear. The plot of The Business follows the Greek tragedy-like rise and fall of a young cockney‘s career within a drug importing business run by a group of British expatriate fugitive criminals living on the Costa del Sol in Spain.

The film is narrated by Frankie, a young everyman living in South East London during the Thatcher era of the 1980s specifically 1984, with little hope of ever making anything of himself, yet he dreams of “being somebody” and escaping his lonely, dreary lifestyle. After severely beating his mother’s abusive boyfriend, he becomes a fugitive, and through family connections escapes to the Costa del Sol. His job there is to deliver a bag containing money to “Playboy Charlie”, a suave expat and fugitive who runs his own nightclub. Impressed by Frankie’s honesty in not opening the bag, Charlie takes a liking to Frankie, introduces him to his business associates, including the psychopathic Sammy, and invites him to remain in Spain and work as his driver. Frankie discovers that Charlie and his associates are in fact the “Peckham Four”, wanted for armed robbery back in Britain. However, Frankie decides he prefers the excitement, wealth, status, and luxury that Charlie’s gang offers, as opposed to his previous unremarkable life in London. Frankie therefore joins Charlie in the business of smuggling hashish across the Strait of Gibraltar from Morocco.

Plot

The film then follows the rise-and-fall pattern common to many gangster films, showing first the criminals living the high life as their cannabis trade is booming, and then their downfall as greed and paranoia introduce conflict between them, and eventually split them up. Tensions amid the group are exacerbated by the mutual attraction between Frankie and Sammy’s wife Carly. Charlie and Frankie decide to go into business alone, importing cocaine instead of cannabis through drop-offs from Colombian aeroplanes, but this fails to resolve their problems. Not only do both men become increasingly addicted to the drug itself, but their new smuggling attracts the ire of the local mayor, who had previously been happy to ignore the cannabis trade but warned them not to import cocaine. After discovering that Frankie and Charlie have entered the cocaine trade, the mayor cracks down on their gang and shuts down their businesses. A subsequent assassination attempt on the mayor’s life proves unsuccessful, and leads to the beheading of one of the gang’s affiliates.

Six months later, Frankie and Charlie are homeless thugs, reduced to stealing in order to survive. While organising a disappointing reunion party at Charlie’s old bar, now run by Frankie’s friend Sonny, Frankie meets Carly again and decides to make one last deal. He invites Sammy in on a pick-up, but while both intend to betray the other, Carly had given Sammy a pistol. Sammy tries to shoot Frankie, but this proves unsuccessful as his pistol was handed to him with an empty magazine, unbeknownst to Sammy. Frankie in turn attacks Sammy with a rock; the fight then ends abruptly as Sammy is fatally shot by Spanish Navy patrolmen while Frankie escapes through a sewage pipe and emerges to meet Carly, who was responsible for handing Sammy his unloaded gun. Preparing to leave town with Carly, Frankie discovers that she is plotting against him as well when he finds another pistol in her handbag amongst their money; Frankie knocks her unconscious and drives off triumphantly into the sunset on his own.

The ending reveals that Sonny cleaned up his act and continued to run Charlie’s old bar, which he did successfully, whilst Charlie was reduced to working as a bouncer. The theatrical ending also reveals that “Carly went back to her parents’ house in Penge“, “Sammy went to Hell” and “Frankie went to Hollywood“.

Courtesy of Wikipedia – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Business_(film)

Facts for the Lads

The DVD features an alternate ending where Frankie meets Carly at the border. There she promptly tells the border guard where to find drugs in Frankie’s car.

Quotes for the Lads

My old man wrote me a letter from prison once. It said if you don’t want to end up in here, stay away from crime, women and drugs. Trouble is, that don’t leave you much else to do, does it?

Teddy Atlas telling it like it is, as always

‘People are full of s***. They want to see something dark. People want to feel close to it and in on it, but, of course, only from the distance of their suburban homes. They want to have the benefit of comfort, security, safety, respect, and at the same time the privilege of watching something out of control – even promote it being out of control – as long as we can be secure that we’re not accountable for it.

With Tyson, the dark thing was always the anticipation that somebody was going to get knocked out. The whole Kid Dynamite thing. But we wanted to believe that the monster was also a nice kid. We wanted to believe that Mike Tyson was an American story: the kid who grows up in the horrible ghetto and then converts that dark power into a good cause, into boxing.

But then the story takes a turn. The dark side overwhelms him. He’s cynical, he’s out of control. And now the story is even better. It’s like a double feature now, like you’re getting Heidi and Godzilla at the same time.’

– Teddy Atlas

Source:The Loneliest Sport 

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