Liam Madden’s Film Review: Sleepwalking

If you fancy a night in watching a DVD, then take a look at the selection available at Island Libraries. At just £1 per night, they’re a great bargain. Ed

Liam Madden's Film Review: SleepwalkingVentnor Library: where the immortal passing transience of the molecular dew gathers gracefully and eternal. Where the wonders consistently in fruition work nocturnal.

For those who are seeking, searching or found already, advice and recommendations for journeys onward are always welcome.

Perhaps for your consideration, to extinguish momentarily the back burn stale in your mind, could be the investment of comparison to your own onward struggles. To comprehend that life is part learning, part experience, but forever changing and perhaps not so difficult after all.

‘Sleepwalking’ – an easily missed DVD release, originating to advice that should anyone ever consider leaving their own country for that of America, as an option for improvement, perhaps they should reconsider.

Heartbreaking from the immediate start and also managing to initially be practical in sadness, ‘Sleepwalking’ attends to harsh realistic facts, to show just how hard living in America can be for some.

However, William Maher concentrates his direction on not only regret manifested by abandonment, but also follows the path of decline downward to the worsening affect imaginable, which could so easily have been avoided.

Unquestionably thoughtful for its poignancy, ‘Sleepwalking’ does deliver a considerable weight towards the manifestation of destiny and also how necessary and over considerable lengths of a person’s life, a change can replay back on them so magnificently fast with horrendous consequences.

See Liam’s other film reviews