Saturday, 2 September 2017

Chemical contamination on the Sussex coast and experiencing and planning new cultural experiences in Tyne and Wear




Events which appear loosely connected are usually not.

A week ago, my attention was drawn to an appeal by Sussex police for residents in the Eastbourne to Birling Gap area on the coast to keep their windows and doors closed because of the impact of a chemical haze which had come inland from the sea. The BBC also carried a report which said that the number of people affected and requiring attention had risen from 50 to 150. Kent live reported that 200 people had been decontaminated at hospital.

There was a news report in the Telegraph which stated that scientists believed the cloud had been created from shipping and not the continent. The Guardian presented the views of several experts. One suggested it could have been a discharge from a water treatment works but this was immediately dismissed by Southern Water.

One expert pointed to the similarity with chlorine gas and Sky online included a notice to the door of a McDonalds saying the store had closed because of a discharge of chlorine gas. Another reported said this was not chlorine gas.  While police investigations were reported to be continuing there appears to have been no further report explaining what had happened. Fortunately, the cloud had dispersed sufficiently in time not to affect the expected numbers coming to the coast on the Bank holiday and the stay home request was lifted.

My first reaction at the time was that this was a terrorist attack from a craft off the coast.

Yesterday, I went to the new Cineworld  Cinema at the Gate restaurant, and entertainment centre in the heart of the City of Newcastle to see the second performance of the new British film directed by Simon West called Stratton and based on the novel series by former special boat services officer Duncan Falconer who since his service with the British Security Services has become a specialist for a  British based international enterprise  and which includes outsourced work for government intelligence and defence departments. The extraordinary aspect of my attendance at on an evening opening performance at the start of the weekend is that I was the only person in the theatre.

I was not aware from what I had read beforehand that the plot involves a terrorist creating four drones to disperse clouds of a lethal gas in an attack on a major city. I am tempted to explain in more detail but given the negative review by Mark Kermode, in the podcast checked this morning will say no more. In fairness it is an old fashioned British action film divorced from the sophisticated CGI technology we have now come to expect with Derek Jacobi playing an old sea dog anchor  father figure for the hero. The Danish actress Connie Nielson plays the MI6 chief in a stilted and slow English way which I interpreted as the attempt by the director to create the illusion of a real-life documentary but which only added to the lists of negatives which make Kermode’s criticism valid. However, I looked beyond the film as a film or coherent and plausible story into the potential reality that Terrorists would attempt this kind and level of atrocity if they have not already thought of it. It is however the kind of attack which the authorities will have anticipated, monitored and planned to defend against. In the film, it is said that the only way to prevent the airborne generated number of fatalities is to incinerate the device before it can be used but I wonder if this can be so and that while it should eliminate most of the toxicity is not possible to prevent some damage using such a method.

It is noteworthy that coinciding with the Bank holiday weekend the public were reminded to be vigilant and a senior counter terrorism specialist said there appeared to have been  shift to using social media to incite existing UK based fanatics to commit atrocities in part because of the extent  to which  those returning from fighting in Syria and Afghanistan are being monitored The implication is that local fanatics were being shown how to make simple but lethal explosive devices or to use simpler weapons such as knives. I am taking the warning seriously, paying close attention to what is happening around me when I am out and about.

This was second visit to Newcastle and to the cinema in two days.  Given that Newcastle has become a party city since the first days of organised cheap holidays to Spain in 1970’s, it has continued to surprise that cinema going has not been a major activity. When I arrived in the North East there were three cinema Theatres. The multiplex was to the East side of the city centre across from the dual carriage underpass for main route from the south over the Tyne going northward and on to Scotland with one branch towards the coast and Whitely Bay. Since that time there are now two road tunnels under the Tyne between Jarrow and Wallsend and where the road then loops into the AI from Newcastle going northward. The number of road, rail and pedestrian bridge crossing over the Tyne has also increased.

The multiplex on the East side has been demolished along with the restaurants to enable the expansion of Northumbria University which now has more undergraduates and other students than Newcastle University although combined there are now over 50000 attending the two universities plus academic staff together with art and dance schools and a college of further education. The serious film student is more likely to visit the Tyneside Cinema, an independent arthouse which was recently developed with four theatres showing a balance of current films, those from other countries and from yester year together with an upmarket event cinema experience.  A more traditional cinema a few doors on the opposite side of the main road leading from the Tyne Bridge closed and recently fell during demolition causing havoc but no injuries. Like Sunderland City centre, for a time there was no multiplex cinema in the city centre and cinema goers had to rely on Cineworld at Bolden in South Tyneside and Odeon’s located at the Silverlink shopping centre at one end of the Tyne Tunnel and the other within the Metro centre shopping extravaganza at one edge of Gateshead on the Banks of the Tyne on the way to Hexham.

The past two decades has witnessed a major transformation.  To remain the largest out of town shopping complex in Europe the number of indoor malls at the Gateshead Metro centre has increased from three to four and a new link between the red and yellow malls became a restaurant quartet leading to a state of the art Odeon with Imax theatres, a VIP experience and a trendy bar. Earlier this year a multimillion refit of the main part of the restaurant quarter was completed and I was impressed on a visit to see the film Dunkirk in Imax just how busy the restaurant quarter had become. This was surprising because the indoor shopping centre in central Newcastle, Eldon Square, has also had a major refit at Monument end on three floors bringing the number of restaurants and bars there and in the immediate vicinity to over thirty.   

This quarter now completes with the Gate Entertainment centre which near Newcastle football stadium, China town and the former huge Cooperative Department store between Monument and Haymarket Metro stations. The Cooperative store is now the second Premier Inn hotel in the city with many restaurants on the ground floor.  The Gate is huge complex on three floor which opened in 2002 and at the top of which is a large multiplex with 12 individual theatres plus three studios theatres all accommodated on one floor (with access by two lifts and escalators).  The entrance to the cinema also the biggest space I have seen at any multiplex and unusually there are two areas of tables, chairs and benches. The escalator from first to the ground floors involves a walk passing several restaurants towards the Casino and it was at this point I noted the closure of the Handmade Burger restaurant which on my way to the Monument Metro home through Eldon Square I also noticed was closed, suggesting the financial collapses of the chain and which on checking is in administration with immediate closure of nine of its twenty-nine establishments, including that at the Metro centre.

The Casino does not require membership and is open 24/7. It features a sports bar with 25 individual screens and one cinema style screen, a restaurant and full range of gaming opportunities where there are also 25 individual sport screens. The centre offers a free discount card for those who work in the city. For everyone else the online site reveals a wide range of special offers. There is a 266-space underground car park free Sunday-Thursday if one goes to the cinema and eats at one of the named restaurants. On the ground, there is the ubiquitous Wetherspoons and the coloured large one price eat as much you want for £9.99 food from the world Za Za’s Bazaar featuring Sushi, Tex Mex, Italian Pizza and Pasta, Indian, Chinese and American Grill, Vietnamese and GB classic twenty separate food bars in total cooked with fresh ingredients by up to 30 chefs. There are two sports bars with banks of TV screens plus a cinema size screen. One bars provide topless female dancers when I once visited to watch a relay of a Newcastle game. It is possible to watch Newcastle (and Sunderland home as well as away games at bars in the respective cities for the price of a round or two of drinks).

The Cineworld at the Gate is only three months of age replacing the previous cinema chain(Empire) which managed the cinema when the centre was first opened as it continues to do in the City of Sunderland which is across a pedestrian area from the Casino built to one side of the multi storey carpark. I now have a a Cineworld subscription which after its first year provides 25% off in-house snacks and concessions off the full price of meals at many adjacent restaurants. Learning that Cineworld had taken over the Newcastle multiplex I was interested in visiting the Newcastle development because of its intention to have a 4D screen. Until recently the only Imax cinema in the North East was at the Metro Centre and apart from the senior discount, it was necessary to pay the full price plus the petrol on an hour’s travel each way.

More recently a super screen opened at the new Vue cinema in Gateshead built as part of the shopping complex on the site of famous car park which featured in the cult crime film centred on Newcastle and the North East, Get Carter, (although there is also an American remake. As a Lloyds Bank club customer, I am issued 6 Vue tickets a year and where it is possible to pay an additional fee to see Imax films and/or use a VIP seat. It has and remain possible park in the car park below the Tesco store when using the cinema and although not ‘policed’ until later this month it had been possible to use the car park as a customer of the supermarket without any requirement on the amount to be spent. Parking for any purpose is restricted to four hours until 6pm when there has been no limit. This has mean that I have been able to visit the car part to shop, have a meal or visit the theatre in Newcastle always purchasing something from the supermarket, sometimes do some shopping, especially from the indoor Granger Market or Marks and spencer food store, returning to the car and then going to the theatre or a lecture at the University.

On Thursday afternoon, I drove the car first to the Bridges shopping centre car park in Sunderland (parking £1.40) to get a substantial discount for Operas on successive nights in January by the Ellen Kent company which if purchased online would cost £47.25 for an aisle seat in the middle stalls close enough to see the faces of singers on stage but without the having constantly look upwards for the translation into English. By booking at the theatre before 1st September I obtained a discount with the price per ticket reduced to £34.42, a total saving of £25.46. I hurried back to Morrisons Seaborn for petrol and a comfort break before going to Gateshead via the Boldens, passing close to Cineworld by the Asda supermarket when I was given a voucher for 3000 points when spending £30 in store. At Gateshead, I purchased a box of Croissants and a meal deal of a cheese and tomato roll, a bottle of Diet Pepsi and a packet of salted popcorn. It was at this point I discovered a voucher for £2 had been left on the desk at home.

After the roll and a swig or two of the Pepsi I made my way over to Metro station replacing the walking stick with a full-size umbrella because of the threat of thunderstorm taking the train to the Monument stop and quickly to the Theatre Royal to seek a refund for the cancellation of a concert back in June, One Night at the Opera when because the principal singer Lesley garret had pulled out.  I booked three new shows which did involve some payment over the £45 reimbursed. One show was at the Theatre Royal on the Sunday evening of Remembrance Day November 12th when a company of service military men the Bravo 22 company perform Unspoken. The month before I going to Northern Stage, the former University theatre to see a performance of Ian Hislop’s production, The Wipers Times, the magazine produced at the front by serving men   during World War 1. The second show purchased was at the Civic Hall theatre for an evening with Agers, Jonathan Agnew and Bumble David Lloyds now internationally recognized cricket commentators and former Test players although their appearance was few. David Lords comes into his own each year on the 20 20 finals day competition held for five years at Warwickshire’s County Cricket ground in Birmingham (Edgbaston) close to the university which I attend for one year   to obtain qualification as a child care officer. During the interval between the two semi-final games Bumble holds a race for the mascots of all the first-class counties. This year he was also the centre of attention with Freddy Flintoff when he performed a Karaoke during the interval between the semi-finals and the Finale as the Country singer Johnny Cash while Freddie dressed up Elvis Presley and they both led a crowd rendering of Sweet Caroline. The three games today occupied a great deal of my time although I missed the last part of the finals as the latest Montalbano took priority. Of the four teams contesting the trophy this year I could only support Nottinghamshire with enthusiasm as I had when they won the 1-day trophy at Lords earlier in the season. They are also likely to gain promotion at the first attempt back to first division leaving Durham even more isolated in the second Nottingham did win and even more pleasing was the award of Sammi Patel as man of the match.  Over a decade ago on a visit to the Nottinghamshire cricket ground when Durham was visiting team I had told my companion that Patel was an excellent player who I expected would play for England because of his ability to bat as well as bowl

The third purchase was for June 2018 for an Adele tribute show where there was a wife choice of seats so I selected a centre aisle seat at the front of the second block from stage.

I then made my first visit to the new Cineworld cinema to see a Theatre relay of a contemporary adaption of the 1930’s Lorca play Yerma part of his trilogy challenging the social conventions and moral attitudes of a Catholic dominated Spain as the Republicans faced the growing threat from fascism. In the update of this joint National Theatre production at the Young Vic the focus is the marital relationship between two central characters. The play is about the decision of Yerma, played by Billie Piper, to have a son and her descent into a frustration driven madness as all her efforts fail including a succession of IVF treatments which plunge the couple into £60000 of debt, losing home and business. The experience was harrowing and not enjoyable. The audience was small and into a state of shock at the explicitness of the language.  What struck me was the cinema appeared generally deserted when I left as were the streets of Newcastle.