Sunday 8th June 2025
Blog Page 2218

Student savaged by hit-and-run thieves

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There are fears that an Oxford postgraduate may have suffered permanent brain damage after he was bludgeoned over the head during a brutal robbery.
Kentaro Ikeda, a student at St Edmund’s Hall, was riding along a cycle path in the early hours of the morning when he was suddenly set-upon and savagely beaten.

Shocked passers-by later found the 26-year-old victim lying unconscious on the deserted track in a pool of his own blood.

They immediately dialled 999 and frantically tried to revive the unconcious student whilst paramedics raced to the scene.

He was rushed to the John Radcliffe Hospital and put into intensive care after doctors discovered that he had suffered a severely fractured skull.

With the Japanese postgraduate recovering in hospital, detectives launched a major hunt to track down those reponsible for the mugging.

The scene of the horrific attack, between Ferry Road and the University Parks, Marston, was cordoned off by police whilst forensic investigators combed the area for clues. It was not long before officers had recovered Kentaro’s rucksack in a nearby road and the weapon believed to have been used to batter him over the head.

Days later, officers from Thames Valley Police arrested two 18-year-olds suspected of carrying out the crime.

Teenagers Craig Knowles and Thomas Mack, both from Marston, Oxford, were later charged with robbery and carrying out grievous bodily harm with intent.
They both appeared to answer the charges at Oxford Magistrates’ Court on August 4th. They were remanded in custody until another hearing they were due to attend at Oxford Crown Court next Monday.

Meanwhile Kentaro has recovered sufficiently enough to return to Japan, after spending a month in John Radcliffe Hospital.

The student’s mother arrived from Japan shortly after the incident. It is understood that she was arriving in Oxford on a planned trip, and was only told that her son was in a critical condition in hospital when she landed.
Kentaro has lived in Oxford since November last year, when he began studying for his Masters degree in Educational Studies at St Edmund ‘s Hall.
He is said to have been just weeks away from finishing his thesis when he was brutally beaten.

Fellow postgraduates at St Edmund’s Hall said that they had been astonished and horrified on hearing news of the horrendous attack.
One stunned student, Johannes Kaminski, said that he felt completely helpless, having only heard about the awful attack on his freind whilst he was away in Vienna.

He revealed that Kentaro may have been partly paralyzed following his traumatic experience.

“Rumour has it that he can only move the right side of his body,” he said.
“He can only communicate by writing at the moment, but he can distinguish Japanese from English,” he added, implying that Kentaro’s brain damage may not be as severe as previously feared.

Johannes added that the appalling assault had brought safety for students around town into sharp focus for many of his fellow students at St Edmund’s Hall.

“We try not to scare the graduate freshers but make them aware of the dangers in Oxford.”

ChernEin Oon, another friend of Kentaro’s, said that he would “need some time to really really recover” following the incident in the early hours of July 31st.
Fellow postgraduate Evan Innis added that he simply could not comprehend what had happened to his friend.

“Kentaro loved to play around and is a very very friendly person. He is a real fun-loving guy. This attack is just unfathomable.”

“This has obviously caused a lot of shock in the MCR. It was a rather unpleasant way to find out he was back in Oxford.

A spokesperson for the Thames Valley Polce said, “Kentaro is back in Japan but he has lost the power of movement in his left side, although he is now conscious.”

 

 

Failed novelist successful at last

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A member of the University’s Failed Novelist Society is to have her novella, Lizard, published. Leonore Schick of Jesus College is the first member of the society to cease adherence to the group’s raison d’etre after getting a publishing deal for her Kafkaesque story.

The plot follows the adventures of a girl who wakes up one day to find that part of her calf has become lizard-like. Schick’s story made her a winner in the Roastbooks competition earlier this year. Roastbooks Limited, established by Oxbridge graduates, is a new publishing organisation specialising in short novels and novellas.

Schick states that the key themes of her novella are “selective memory, imaginary relationships, anti-coming of age”. She had been writing creatively since she was a child, including for Jesus’ JCR magazine Anonymous and The OxStu, but this is the first work she has submitted for publication. When asked whether following her recent success she intends to pursue the life of a novelist, she replied that, since a writer might have to cope with financial difficulty, “[I’m] not sure what the life of a novelist is, but I’ve heard it is all about being very poor. It depends how poor. I’d draw the line at having to grow my own potatoes.”

Lizard will be one of six titles coming out in Roast Books’ first series Great Little Reads. Director of Roastbooks, Faye Dayan, says the series is “ideal for our busy modern lifestyles”. Her advice to any ‘failed novelists’ trying to get their work published is “just don’t give up and don’t be afraid to share your writing… Like Sylvia Plath said, the worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt.”

She commented on Lizard, saying, “The immediate attraction to Lizard was the protagonist, Eliza, who is a vehicle for these wonderful and unique dialogues between thought and speech, reality and make-believe, the magic of childhood and the sobriety of growing up. In Lizard, the idea of loss is something I think many readers will relate to.”

The Oxford University Failed Novelist Society is far from a defeatist or gloomy group. Selena Wisnom, president of the Society, explained that the group’s name “is not pessimistic” but “a reminder not to take ourselves too seriously. All novelists are failed novelists, because no novel you write is as good as the one you want to write!” One member of the society reported that everyone had been delighted with Schick’s success which has “made us all more excited about writing”.

 

Leukaemia student remembered by widow

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A Brasenose student has died from leukaemia the day after marrying his university sweetheart.

Matt Carver, aged 22, passed away just hours after tying the knot with Nicola Godfrey, his 21-year-old fiancée from New College.

The couple had planned to get married in two years’ time, but decided to bring the ceremony forward when doctors told them that history student Matt had only weeks to live.

Matt had proposed to Nicola just two months beforehand in December last year. Their plans were shattered however when Matt was suddenly taken ill weeks into their new term at Oxford University.

Weighed down by his academic career, as well an array of extra-curricular pursuits and job applications, neither Matt nor his wife-to-be had given much thought to the severe bouts of tiredness he had been experiencing.

However, when the young fiancé suffered a small cut on his finger that wouldn’t stop bleeding that the pair decided he should visit his GP. Later that day however, following several blood tests, doctors had to break the news to Matt that he had contracted the blood cancer leukemia.

Matt was determined to fight the illness, but after three courses of debilitating chemotherapy he developed a facial paralysis – an indication the disease had reached his brain.

With signs that they might not have much longer together, the young couple rushed their wedding forward so that they would still be able to enjoy some time together as husband and wife.

After a ceremony surrounded by family and friends at Brasenose College chapel, the wedding party had dinner at Oxford’s Old Bank Hotel. Yet the following morning, Matt began complaining of a headache and he was rushed to the John Radcliffe Hospital.

Realising his condition, the registrar who had been handling his treatment ordered staff to remove all drips and other equipment from Matt and to move him into to a private room. Later that afternoon, with his wife and their immediate families by his side, he died.

Mathematics student Nicola Carver later paid tribute to the bravery that her husband had shown following the last fatal diagnosis.

“They told us that it was going to be weeks, possibly months,” said Nicola. “It was a massive shock but we could plan things and do things which we had put on hold when he was initially diagnosed.”

“I will never, ever forget how brave he was.

“Matt was the kind of person who put his heart and soul into everything he did.
“He was a fantastic man and I will miss him very much. Even when he was ill he still managed to make everybody laugh.”

Mrs Carver added that she took some comfort from the two of them being able to make the commitment to each other before he died.

“It was a true celebration of our love and was everything that we had dreamed of since we decided to get married,” she said.

“Matt was desperate to get married and it was such a relief to get through the day and become his wife but obviously we would have wanted more time together.

“He looked fantastic, dressed up to the nines in his top hat and tails.
“I’m told by his dad that when he was waiting for me to come in he kept on asking: ‘What time is it? What time is it now?’
“He was just like any other groom.”

Showing her own determination and courage, Nicola said that she intends to return to Oxford to complete her degree this Michaelmas term.
She said: “I have lots of friends who are still there and who are going to take care of me.

“I have to at least try. If I don’t go back now, then I’ll never go back.”

She and Matt – both passionate musicians – had first met on a University wind orchestra trip to St Tropez in 2006.

Brasenose College, where Matt had been studying medieval history, lowered its flag to half mast in recognition of its loss, following his death earlier this summer. More than 500 mourners packed his hometown funeral 11 days after his death to say their last goodbyes.

The student, from Newport, South Wales, had been an active member of the college, representing the them in rowing, cricket and football before he was struck down by illness.

Chaplain the Reverend Graeme Richardson particularly paid tribute to him, saying: “He was an outstanding all-round student, who was involved in many aspects of the college.”

Matt and Nicola’s families have since launched campaigns to raise money for two specialist cancer charities – the Anthony Nolan Trust and Leukaemia Research. They are urging people between 18 and 40 to join the bone marrow register. For more details or to make a donation please contact the trust on 0901 882 2234 or visit www.anthonynolan.org.uk.

The Informed Opinion: Mike Valli

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It felt like the first day of school. At the Iffley Rd sports complex 25 candidates arrived, seeking 16 positions in Blue Boat and Isis for the 2009 Boat Race. After speeches by President Colin Smith and coach Sean Bowden, we met the assembled media who interviewed us on important biographical info: our academic history, rowing credentials, favourite movie and flavour of ice cream.

Since that dramatic first day we’ve settled into our training routine of rowing, weights and ergs. The squad football match is the most exciting training we have done so far. Twenty-six guys, who are all around six foot five, with no football skills and – in the case of the American guys – no understanding of the rules are divided into two teams. A semi-inflated ball appears from somewhere and for an hour we proceed to hack shins, shout friendly abuse and trip over ourselves. Luckily this carnage happens early on a Sunday morning when no one can witness this pathetic display of hand-eye coordination.

The Turf and The Bear are two favourite pubs, despite a couple of our guys touching the ceilings with their shoulders. Our Social Secretary continues to work tirelessly and has already organised some excellent events. For our professional development we attend networking nights with other sports clubs including the lightweight women rowers, the women hockey squad and the Brookes cheerleading club.

After the Boat Race we’ll be getting involved with college rowing in Trinity Term and already we’re taking mental notes of which colleges have the most OUBC members. At this stage Teddy Hall is shaping up as the favourite to dominate Summer Eights.

Nearly half the squad is American. Luckily the ‘Rest of the World’ guys outnumber them and can squash their crazy ideas like introducing American Football to England, that we should always listen to Bruce Springsteen in the minibus, that we should drive on the right or that The Sun is not really a newspaper.

We have one German, Polish, Italian and Ukrainian, who are useful for laughing at and teaching us rude words in different languages. I’m forced to endure bad Australian impersonations about kangaroos, wallabies and the crocodile hunter.

Alex is the only woman in the squad, a half-Polish half-French coxswain. She rolls her eyes and tries to tolerate our banter as best she can.

As for the rowing, the squad is working hard. We have a down-to-earth group who are quietly putting in the effort to produce something special in March. Three weeks gone and the early mornings and late afternoons at the Wallingford training centre are preparing us for our first races: October Boston Trials and The Fours Head.

Just Spraying Around

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As the train moves out of Zone 2 the scenery begins to change. The houses get smaller and darker, the roads narrower, the fences rustier. And almost everywhere you look there are marks – spray-painted and scratched, single unbroken lines and large bulky designs, some are messy and some – works of art. We can dismiss it as vandalism or put it up in the museum, but what we cannot do is deny that graffiti is one of the most fascinating (and often beautiful) social phenomena of the last 50-odd years.

Graffiti started out in the 1960s in urban New York as a means for rival gangs to mark their territory, yet very soon it developed into a form of competition in its own right.

Different boroughs began trying to outdo each other, coming up with fancier styles, more dangerous and prominent places to put it and new techniques to produce it. Because of the number of different strands that have grown out of it, the umbrella term ‘street art’ is now more applicable. It encompasses stencil art, for which Banksy is renowned, sticker bombing ( placing stickers in public places), subvertising (either mimicking or altering a corporate or political advert to create a new, often opposing, statement), and many others.

What in theory makes street art different to all other forms of art is its stance as subversive, rebellious and free. By choosing exactly what they depict and where they depict it the artists do not have to comply with the wishes of the curator or the critic. As far as creativity goes it might well be considered the purest form of artistic expression.

Mass production

In the 90s advertisers caught on to the fact that this free-spirit attitude appeals to a lot market groups. Fashion and sports industries, constantly looking for something fresh and edgy, were quick to jump onto the bandwagon, and graffiti-style work is now splattered all over the media, advertising posters and designer clothes.

As the public’s eyes got accustomed to these new types of images, so their attitude towards them changed from a hostile to accepting. The Bristol authorities for example have now given up trying to buff out all the Banksys, since every attempt to do so was followed by a public outcry.

It has even come to a point where the government and large corporations, the very establishments that street art initially set out to attack in their free-for-all fashion, will now provide the means for the artists to do their work. A demonstrative example was the Cans Festival. Six months ago Eurostar opened up their old Waterloo tunnel to 29 graffiti artists from all over the world, who, in a three-day event, transformed the grotty place into the most surreal, effervescent environment.

What was initially shocking has come to be respecte; the skill that goes into producing this work has been recognised. Graffiti can now even be bought. Angelina Jolie and Christina Aguilera are known collectors of Banksy’s work, though the images are stencilled onto a canvas. It has not entered the mainstream art world, but since museums are often last to catch onto street trends, it’s probably on its way.

With so many different forms of street art, not to mention different individuals within each one, it is impossible to pin- point why people make it. For some it is only a cool style that they perfect in their art school to then reject. For others it becomes a form of activism, the victim of the attack ranging from consumerist society to a specific individual. Others yet, use it as a form of self-assertion.

Yet the common denominator is in the name. Graffiti is art produced on and for the streets. Its power resides in it being part of the environment we inhabit, of appearing on a building that people walk past every day, of being moved around the city on the side of a train; every graff is integrated into a particular area and a particular community. This is why I personally distinguish between the work produced in a sanctioned situation, where the placement is not chosen freely – such as the Cans Festival – and real street art. I was determined to get hold of a real artist.

The word on the street

Upon my arrival to meet Nova – a South East London graffiti artist – at this rather exotic (for me) location, I was instantly informed that ‘there’s not much to do round here, just drugs.’ And graffiti.

These guys don’t do it as a form of activism or in an attempt to become distinguished artists, it is what they do and something of which to be proud. I was initially embarrassed about ‘interviewing’ him, yet each time I asked a question his mate and he would interrupt each other to give me a twenty minute long answer, complete with extravagant praise. The number of thousands of pounds of public damage they’d caused in the last year was cited in the same animated manner. They really put their souls into it.

As Nova’s mate was rolling another spliff, I was trying very hard to get over the embarrassment of my public school accent and ensure that I do not, in an attempt to fit in, suddenly blurt out one their favourite expressions like ‘innit’ or ‘brova’. Hats off to them, since at no point did I actually feel uncomfortable, even considering the striking differences in our appearance, with my having ‘Oxford’ written all over me and their complying with every stereotype of a middle class mother’s worst nightmare.

Like other artists that work illegally they are adrenalin junkies. Here, the greater the challenge, the greater the satisfaction. Nova admitted that when his friend agreed to have his whole house painted over by their crew, it was not as fun as doing it on railway tracks at night, constantly looking over his shoulder. This adrenalin rush is addictive, and once one railway track has been ‘conquered’, the next place chosen will often be a more dangerous one.
Moreover, being hunted down by cops is almost a right of passage, and, once the air is clear, the story of this chase spreads by word of mouth across the whole community, gaining the escapee that little bit more respect.
In this part of town one’s ‘graff’ name is the method of choice, which can be a nickname, a surname or just a pseudonym they come up with themselves; once someone has been recognised for what he does this name will often stick. Nova has not been called by his first name for several years now. There is just something about painting your name as a large, beautiful, distorted picture on the wall of the train station. Something exciting, comforting, powerful.

Anybody with a spray-can, a name and some confidence can produce a ‘bomb’ – a squiggly unbroken line which usually stands for one’s ‘graff’ name. But it not everyone is good at ‘throw-ups’ – quick two-dimensional bubble characters – and very few can do ‘dubs’ – fancy, three-dimensional writing, complete with interior designs, background effects. And that’s where the line between vandalism and art disappears completely. Nova is the best artist in his area, having started ‘bombing’ in early teens and perfected his technique over the years. It now takes him an hour to take a name, stylize it until the characters are unrecognizable unless pointed out, expand it to a few of metres in length and place it onto a wall as a nuclear explosion on the background of the grey industrial warehouse.

 

Crucially, urban graffiti is linked with community. When working as a group, these guys will write the names of their friends, all part of asserting your group’s presence in the area. And hand-in-hand with this group loyalty goes gang rivalry.

Gangs have differing names and status; they’ve got rules and weapons. Nova’s neighbourhood is pretty colourful on this front. A few years of disagreements between the two most powerful gangs in the area recently led to some unsightly stabbings. Covering the whole enemy street with his and his best friend’s bombs a few weeks before the event probably didn’t help the matter.
Due to safety considerations the guys insisted on walking me to the train station, but before we reached it they had to leg it. A police car had appeared and Nova’s friend was ‘wanted’. On the return I collected my thoughts. Firstly, the whole time I had felt completely safe. Secondly, I had really liked them. And here we have the essence of graffiti – a completely different world, one in which a dub can make or brake you. Sure, the stuff that covers the walls of the Eurostar tunnel is cool and beautiful. But for me graffiti is a culture, not a style.

Get Involved: Table football

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Along with nailing that triple twenty on the darts board and emptying the quiz machine, rifling in a twenty yard screamer on the Foosball table can make anyone a college bar hero, at least for one night.

We’ve all been there on a quiet evening, enjoying the thrills and spills of a quick game between essays, wasting loose change and lording it over your mates, but last year I took the chance to dabble in the inter-college table football league. Run by the OUTFC, this is one of the top leagues in the country, featuring a large number of sterling national players.

I must add that at the time of joining I was in no way gifted at the sport; horrific own goals rather than the aforementioned screamers had become my speciality and my scoring droughts left me looking less Alan Shearer and more Ade Akinbiyi.

Still, I wouldn’t trade the laughs and jokes for anything. The league setup gives students an excuse to visit a new college every other week for an evening, meet new people and chill out in a different bar or common room. The atmosphere is always relaxed and never taken too seriously, especially outside of the top tier, in a sport where alcohol merely acts as a lubricant for epic games.

Commitment levels are relatively low – the odd game here or there easily counts as ‘training’ and overall I personally found it a very rewarding experience.

Of course if Table Football is already your niche then I cannot recommend the University league highly enough. A number of students we came up against on our travels were nationally or even internationally ranked and the mesmerising skills they could pull off were a joy to behold, although less so when we were on the receiving end.

Whether an experienced player or simply a legend in your own lunchtime, Table Football is definitely something to get involved in as a fresher, even if just for the chance to meet new people or check out other colleges. In fact if you’re anything from a fresher to a seasoned grad a quick game of competetive foosball comes highly recommended (get in touch with the OUTFC for more information on setting up a college team).

So one evening, don’t let Noel steal all of your student pennies on the IT Box, why not put some change in the Foosball table and let the banter flow.

Nights in Rodanthe

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The film tells the story of Paul and Adrienne who, having both reached crossroads in their respective lives, find themselves thrown together in the idyllic beauty of Rodanthe as each attempts to face their own demons. Closed off from the rest of the world by a hurricane, in scenes that epitomise man’s struggle against the elements and himself, they finally stop fighting and come together; but the morning comes all too soon with consequences to face as life goes on with or without them.

The film has a certain classic feel about it; one almost feels it could have been shot in black and white. With its “tell it how it is” dialogue, epic turning points, unashamedly mature, life worn characters, and an integral soundtrack ranging from classic jazz to blockbuster surges, it could have been made anytime in the last fifty years. Add to these the quite exquisite use of colour, light and the natural scenery, and you have yourself a great romance in the making.

There are clichés, as there always are in film adaptations of Nicholas Sparks’ novels (for example The Notebook), yet I’ve always felt that he carries off cliché rather well, and the several members of the audience who were blubbing like babies obviously agree with me. The flashbacks can be irritating, and there is a horrible moment a little too reminiscent of Message in a Bottle which very nearly ruins the film. However, this is a story primarily about hope, and the possibility of life after death (of a loved one), and life after love, which are often one and the same. It just about manages to hang on to that message by the skin of its teeth, and remains a poignant, not to mention visually stunning, life affirming film.

3 Stars

The House Bunny Review

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If there’s one thing that The House Bunny isn’t, it’s clever. But then again, it’s very good at being stupid. This film has Adam Sandler’s seal of idiocy stamped all over it (he’s credited as producer) and it’s not difficult to imagine where it could have gone if not for one single factor: its lead.

Anna Faris, Scary Movie stalwart and expert of comic timing, oozes charm and warmth throughout a film that, without her, verges on the vacuous and predictable.

Shelley Darlingson (Faris) is one of the oldest bunnies in the playboy mansion. So old, in fact, that at twenty seven
she is deemed too old for centrefold, and is kicked to the kerb by Hugh Heffner himself.

Penniless then, alone, and lacking any transferable skills, she is forced to take solace as the live-in mother to a sorority house of social misfits. You can see the makeover montage a mile off, but the group of girls are a pleasant, if clichéd, bunch. They include the likeable pair of Emma Stone and Rumer Willis; Willis is blessed with the face of her mother Demi Moore but cursed with her father Bruce’s chin.

These testaments to She’s All That proceed to return the favour by teaching their mentor how to be smart, and therefore manage to find love with a man who cares more for IQ points than bra-size.

It’s a dodgy premise at best, and certainly not one that’s likely to win any Oscars, but it’s harmless enough. Shelley’s back-story, though comical (she was left in a basket as a baby with a note asking that only the basket need be returned) brings nothing to the narrative, and there is of course the difficult issue of the film’s message. After all, Shelley is ultimately applauded for her success in making women more attractive with peroxide and short skirts. Hardly the best moral, but Faris’ portrayal ensures that it’s all treated innocently enough, and with an attempt at her own intellectual transformation there is at least some recognition of just how shallow the film is. It just misses the ‘female empowerment’ vibe of soemthing like Legally Blonde, but not by much. The end is perhaps a little too farcical, an error made worse by the tongue-in-cheek majority of the film, and as always, the best bits are in the trailer, but if you’re after a good laugh this week, The House Bunny is definitely your best bet.

3 Stars

Chasing pack eye Worcester’s crown

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The sight of a shattered group of second-years huffing and puffing away their summer of lethargy in endless shuttles can mean only one thing; the football season is back with a bang.

This year the question remains exactly the same as last year – can anyone topple Worcester from their throne? Last year they seemed unstoppable as a side packed with Blues talent played some excellent football on their march to a JCR Premier Division and Cuppers double.

However they were certainly given some scares along the way and this can only give encouragement to last year’s chasing pack of St Anne’s, Wadham and Teddy Hall, each of which gave Worcester’s star studded line-up a scare along the way. So much so indeed that Worcester’s title win was only on goal difference ahead of St Anne’s.

As ever which side emerges as the closest challenger depends largely on the quality of the fresher intake, and sides such as Wadham shorn of a degree of their attacking flair will be hoping for some pace and trickery to add to their evident steel. Equally, New will require a shot of fresh blood to arrest their slide from predicted title challengers last season, to the plodding mid table side they turned out to be.

Much is expected of the three promoted sides, St Catz, Christ Church, and Magdalen, all of whom finished neck and neck at the top of an extremely competitive First Division last season. The top two especially ought to have sufficient attacking flair to be aiming for mid-table and beyond.

Yet which side can really challenge the champions is likely to come down to consistency; last season’s Wadham side matched two hard fought victories over rivals St Anne’s with defeats to rock bottom Lincoln and relegated Brasenose. If they and the rest of the chasing pack can find the elusive ingredient of consistency they will be confident of taking Worcester all the way to the wire.

Much can be read into the results of the opening gambits, with the first day clash between St Anne’s and Teddy Hall providing the most mouth-watering prospects along with the battle for supremacy between promoted Magdalen and Christchurch.

In the second tier much will depend on whether relegated Lincoln can let their attacking talent override the crippling lack of confidence that saw them finish with just seven points last season, especially against the verve and goal threat of LMH, unlucky in not being promoted last season by just two points.

Similarly the rest of the division ought to offer serious threat to both Lincoln and their fellow relegated sides Jesus and Brasenose. Last year even Exeter, who finished just one place above relegation, were safe by all of fifteen points and will be determined to see their good results rewarded with a rather higher finish than last time out.

The promoted trio of Pembroke, Merton/Mansfield and Corpus/Linacre will all be hoping that they can add their names to a long list of sides to become rejuvenated by a quality season in the lowest tier to challenge immediately for promotion to the Premier Division.

Much like last season, the First Division should prove the most competitive of all the college football leagues with the array of closely matched talent, especially given the tightness of last year’s contest, giving a whole host of sides equal chance of pushing for promotion.
A stunning season awaits with both the top two divisions promising to be more competitive than ever before.

Whether this will be enough for one of the pack to depose the sport-rich Worcester however, is another story entirely.

Brideshead Revisited Review

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First things first, I am perhaps the worst person in the world to be reviewing Julian Jarrold’s adaptation of classic novel ‘Brideshead Revisited’. Not only have I, to my shame, never quite got round to reading Waugh’s most famous book, but I have also never seen the BBC’s apparently magnificent series. Nonetheless, it was clear from the beginning that Jarrold et al had a hard act to follow. For the most part, however, the result of their efforts is a sumptuous tour de force of high-calibre performances and superb visuals.

The film begins with a revisit to Brideshead, an English stately home of epic proportions. The visitor in question is a rather weathered Charles Ryder, recently stationed there at a time of war. It is here that he ponders the events which brought him to the house previously when, as an undergraduate at Oxford, he met and became entangled in the tempestuous Sebastian Flyte.

Cue class divides, a brother/sister love triangle, and a stern family matriarch played by Emma Thompson, and there you have it; a film which pulls you in closer and closer before finally casting you adrift in an unwanted though inevitable misery.

While Castle Howard, standing in for Brideshead, is perhaps the true star of the film, and the many Oxford locations make it worth a look for any student here, it is the two Flyte siblings who shine. Matthew Goode is likeable, if wooden, as Charles, but Ben Whishaw’s Sebastian and Hayley Atwell’s Julia are a compelling double-act who flawlessly express how duty, guilt and parental domination can lead to two very different outcomes linked so inextricably by the idea of rejection. Thompson’s Lady Marchmain is the perfect fusion of repressive and vulnerable, and comic relief is provided by the always excellent Ed Stoppard and Felicity Jones as Sebastian’s other siblings.

Such performances, though, are occasionally let down by a clunky script seemingly ordered straight from the Andrew Davies catalogue (and, surprise surprise, he has had a hand in this film). There are moments of understated humour, of tender exchanges, but they are often marred by the melodramatic presentation of the Catholic Church as the world’s great evil. Subtle it ain’t. And while I haven’t read the book, the whispered murmurs of those around me made it clear that some rather huge changes had been made to a beloved story.

Above all else, this film tells the story of a love triangle, and if this focus is not up your street then you are best sticking to the novel. That said, the costumes and cinematography cannot be faulted; every still is composed meticulously, lavishly bathed in crisp flannel suits or sleek satin gowns. Like last year’s ‘Atonement’, there are moments when ‘Brideshead’ has the look and feel of an advertisement for Chanel. It may just fall short of greatness, but it is a thing of beauty and a homage to an era of stifling duty and all-consuming love.

4 Stars