Nolfi and the cinematographer, JohnToll, have produced a sombrely unified vision of New York as a place of dull skies and frequent downpours, a city whose towers stick up like hostile gray stalagmites.
The writer and director, George Nolfi, and the cinematographer, JohnToll, have produced a uniform vision of New York, a place of dark skies and frequent downpours, a city whose towers stick up like hostile gray stalagmites.
When you add the suffering and public scrutiny of the likes of Wayne Bridge and Anton Ferdinand the toll inflicted by John Terry is wide-ranging and in many cases needless.