"McGrane’s self effacing set is esoteric, occasionally filthy and always funny."-Peter "Hotrod McCaughan", culturenorthernireland.org
“McGrane’s set goes into the kind of detail about cult comics and movies that would have even Jonathan Ross’s head spinning.” - Andrew Johnson, AU Magazine
"Straight faced comedy with a good sense of comic timing"*** Three Weeks"Free comedy is a mixed bag, and free student comedy is an even bigger risk - but in this case it's one worth taking. East Anglian comics Tom Moran, Jonathan Brittain, Johnny Kearns and Lorcan McGrane filled an enjoyable if variable hour at the Standing Order. "***Three Weeks
"Lorcan McGrane charmed the audience with sensitively told observational comedy, regarding mainly pornography and onanism"Ant Cule, Laugh Out Loud Review, Concrete, Dec 4th, 2007.
2 comments:
i can't wait for this one--all the previous batmans i thought were miscast. micheal keaton made a serviceable bruce wayne, but val kilmer and gerorge clooney should have never been batman--ugh!
yep totally agree, Clooney had the chin for it, but there was a dopey smile above it for most of the flick...like he'd just 'got over' his parents being offed. And there was the terrible R. Kelly song 'Gotham City, City of Justice', I've found the lyrics:
"A city of justice, a city of love
A city of peace, for everyone of us
We all need it, can't live without it
Gotham City, oh, yeah
How sleeping awake because of fear (ohh, yeah)
How children are drowning in their tears
How we need a place where we can go
A land where everyone will have a hero (even me)
[repeat 1, 1]"
Gotham City a city of Justice? not in anything I've read. And as for R. Kelly singing about 'children drowning in their tears'...yeah that wouldn't happen, R. Kelly, if you weren't knocking around Gotham City.
I used to sing alternative lryics...
Gotham City, city of baddies/
they killed my daddy/
Now I'm an S&M vigilante.
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