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Horrid Henry Awesome Collection £17.99 Free Delivery

Summer Holidays and the Children already Driving you To Distraction ? Then why not pick up this little beauty. 14 Discs of Dastardly Horrid Behaviour by the one and only Horrid Henry. 14 Discs and literally hours and hours of adventure to keep the Kids quiet. Limited Stock so do not miss out. Order Today!!

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PIGGY DVD £2.99 While Stocks Last!

Joe is one of those kids that doesn't really have that many friends. He is mild mannered, avoids confrontation and is in many ways withdrawn; he lives alone and likes it that way and works at a couriers where he simply wont even try to get along with the other workers. So he is the complete opposite to his gregarious and outgoing brother John (Neil Maskell `Kill List'). Then a misunderstanding in a pub gets taken too far and John is severely beaten in an ambush attack. Joe has lost his only friend and is beside himself with grief. Then Piggy turns up with a full on air of menace and says he was an old school friend of his brothers. He more or less convinces Joe that he wants revenge on those that attacked his brother. That is when he sets Joe on the path to avenger vigilante. This is a gritty North London revenge tale. It is narrated by Joe (Martin Compston best known for `Sweet Sixteen') and it has a pace and rhythm that buoys it along. Whilst viscerally violent it is not over the top and comes across as very real. The emotions of revenge are ones that most will be able to empathise with and the initial reactions of Joe seem to be very well observed. The downward spiral is something else. Paul Anderson as Piggy gives a remarkable performance, you may remember him from the last Sherlock Holmes movie or indeed `The Firm' 2009 version. He is genuinely engaging, repulsive and scary often in the same scene. He is the one who wants to have `stupid disguises' as that will be the only thing the victim will remember. There is violence, torture obviously some gore. This was a small production with a big ambition and it more or less works, a few teeny plot holes but nothing worth faxing home about. The use of sound is excellent at telling the bits of the story that you would find too disturbing to watch, the cinematography is to the high end of the value scale and the direction from Kieron Hawkes is spot on. So a gritty Death Wish esque tale of a loner in Camden with a mad tutor tale that is actually very good indeed.

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