In Postcards From London, a lovely piece of whimsy about gay life in a bygone London, Harris Dickinson plays Jim, an innocent who leaves the wilds of Essex (translation: London suburb often associated ...
Steve McLean’s first film, “Postcards From America,” was also his last, made way back in 1994. But with his follow-up, “Postcards From London,” it seems no time has passed at all: the film is so ...
In this LGBTQ-themed eccentricity, handsome, clean-cut Dickinson plays a suburban kid named Jim who escapes from a predictable dead-end life in the suburbs and travels to the bright lights of London ...
Jim is a young man from Essex who moves to Soho with dreams of fame and fortune. When he joins a group of luxury male escorts, he finds himself embarking on a psychedelic journey of decadence.
A young man from Essex joins a selective group of London escorts who are well versed in the arts.Despite his youth and beauty, he does not succeed as an escort. However, his acute sensitivity to art ...
“Postcards From London,” which follows the adventures of a fetching 18-year-old named Jim (Harris Dickinson) who becomes Soho’s favorite gay rent-boy, may sound like an enticing coming-of-age film but ...
A Caravaggio moment: Harris Dickinson, centre, riffs on 'The Musicians' But Jim’s artistic affinities run still deeper: he’s so sensitive to a good painting that he falls into a swoon when he sees one ...