Editors' Blog / Analysis & Opinion News Live Blog Morning Memo Cafe / outside voices & analysis Muckraker / scandal & investigations Prime / Member Exclusives Podcast Features Memberships View ...
Jack (Danny Dyer) spends his weekends coked up and causing havoc outside football matches until an arrest leaves him with six weeks to clean up his act or be sent to prison. But with his disturbed ...
But Marching Powder isn’t just about anti-woke banter: it also has plenty of affection for its characters, even if it doesn’t fully flesh them out. It’s punchy but never lands a killer ...
Marching Powder, to stretch a comparison, is Danny Dyer’s The Godfather, Part III. How? Because of a much-quoted Al Pacino line: just when we thought he was out, they’ve pulled him back in.
After a hiatus of 18 years, the pair are finally reunited for Marching Powder, a comical adventure that’s about as woke as an evening with Donald Trump. Powered by its provocative title (a ...
The boys have been here before. More of a comedy than a drama, Marching Powder isn’t a sequel to 2004’s The Football Factory, but it follows a similar path. Dyer is Jack, a 40-something ...
Marching Powder marks Danny Dyer's first movie in a decade, so it feels fitting that his return to the big screen also marked a reunion with British filmmaker Nick Love. The new comedy is their ...
Although not a sequel to that earlier film, Marching Powder definitely has a few things in common – including a shared sense of humour – with their previous collaboration, and fans of the ...
At the start of each school year, the sounds of high school marching bands begin to echo through New Orleans as students weave through city blocks, offering neighbors a glimpse into their ...
(Staff Photo by David Grunfeld, The Times-Picayune) Mason, an alumnus of St. Augustine High School, also got a surprise mini-concert from the school's revered Marching 100. "We wanted to be here ...
Marching Powder marks the much-anticipated reunion of director Nick Love and his iconic leading man Danny Dyer, bringing fans back into the gritty adrenaline-fuelled world of The Football Factory.
Mothers for Justice and Equality (MJE) held a kick-off rally on Oct. 8, marching from Grove Hall to Morton Street. Pictured here, holding the banner, (from l to r) are: Angie Smith, MJE Founder ...