A kestrel for a knave by Barry hines is fifty years old, the book is about a working class lad in Barnsley called Billy casper who whilst out walking discovers a Kestrels nest, rightly or wrongly he removes the bird and takes it home where he sets about training it to hand feed. The book was made into a film just one year later called Kes which stays true to the novel almost scene for scene. If you enjoy reading this is one i can recommend
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A kestrel for a knave
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Re: A kestrel for a knave
Shortened to Kes of course - the film version had Lynne "Poison Ivy" Perrie as the mother of one of the characters, probably Casper.
The book version has so much bad language inside it - my English teacher read it in our English Literature lessons, and it was astonishing to hear him swearing as he was reading it to the class.I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
I'm having so much fun
My lucky number's one
Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!
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Re: A kestrel for a knave
I saw the film on one of those movie channels that Carlton owned in around 2001-ish - wouldn't mind seeing it again.I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
I'm having so much fun
My lucky number's one
Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!
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Re: A kestrel for a knave
Not many people have hear of the single "Ball In, Kick Off" by Cornelius (it features Damon Albarn so some may have!) but it includes sample dialogue from the film :happy:Time flies like the wind, fruit flies like bananas - go figure!
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