![]() Men - even those related to her - develop dangerous sexual obsessions with her. Anna is engaged to Jay because Jay looks like her brother … who she was also f**king, at least until he killed himself because of his obsession with his sister. That is not the only ick thing going on here, however. ![]() She agrees to marry William’s son because William commands it. When William is not having sex with Anna, he’s stalking her, following her around the city, even if that also means tracking her while she’s with his son. It’s uncomfortable because I was in constant fear that either William’s son, Jay (Rish Shah), or his wife, Ingrid (Indira Varma, seriously slumming it) would catch them in the act. He sees her across a room at a party, and they wordlessly stare at each other, and soon thereafter, they are having animalistic sex on floors, up against walls, and out in alleys. That’s because Armitage’s character, surgeon William Farrow, spends a lot of time f**king his son’s fiance, Anna (Charlie Murphy). There is a lot of steamy sex in Obsession, but unless you have a specific kink, it’s probably not going to do much for you. He is the epitome of serviceable, a perfect mid-tier Netflix actor, and he has excelled in Harlen Coben series like Stay Close and The Stranger, modest mysteries that are watched and quickly forgotten. I like Armitage: Chiseled good looks, the ability to glower on cue, and a lack of personality. ![]() After a few seconds of that, Armitage turns back over, stuffs the pillow beneath him, and f**ks it to fruition, trembling and then crying. After wildly sniffing the pillow for a few seconds, Armitage turns over in the bed and - while the pillow is stuffed over his face - yanks down his jeans and starts to jerk it. When he finally finds the scent lingering on a throw pillow, he stuffs his face into it as though the scent is the only thing keeping him alive. I cannot tell you how bizarre and unsettling it is to see Richard Armitage - Thorin from The Hobbit movies - pounce on a hotel bed like a Basset Hound sniffing out a treat in search of the scent of his lover, the previous occupant of the hotel room. Blurring the fine lines between love and hate truth and fiction and right and wrong The Little Drummer Girl weaves a suspenseful and explosive story of espionage and high-stakes international intrigue.Those familiar with the work of Richard Armitage probably expect to see him a certain kind of way: Grim, composed, down-to-business. Charlie takes on the role of a lifetime as a double agent in the ‘Theatre of the Real’, but despite her natural mastery of the task at hand, she increasingly finds herself inexorably drawn into a dangerous world of duplicity and compromised humanity. ![]() It quickly becomes apparent that his intentions are not what they seem, and her encounter with him entangles her in a complex plot devised by the spy mastermind Kurtz (Shannon). Set in the late 1970s, the pulsating thriller follows Charlie (Pugh), a young, fiery but unfulfilled British actress and idealist whose resolve is tested after she meets the mysterious Becker (Skarsgård) while on holiday in Greece. The six-part miniseries stars Emmy® and Golden Globe® Award winner Alexander Skarsgård (Big Little Lies) as Becker, twice Academy Award-nominated Michael Shannon (The Shape of Water) as Kurtz and BAFTA-nominated Florence Pugh (Lady Macbeth) as Charlie. ![]() As audacious now as when the book was first published, it portrays a world in which the lines between hero and villain, and between love and hate, are dangerously in flux. Synopsis: Based on John le Carré’s best-selling literary masterpiece of the same name, The Little Drummer Girl is a passionate love story and a deeply immersive thriller. ![]()
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