This time around, Neeson plays Matt Scudder, an ex-NYPD cop and recovering alcoholic with a tortured past. (This is slightly different from Bill Marks, the air marshal Neeson played in Non-Stop; Marks also had a tortured past, but was in the full-throes of his addiction.) Scudders now working as an
credits his wife and his daughters, Sarah and Laura, for their unwavering support as he came to terms with the illness. Eventually, he began seeing Dr. Bill Marks at UCSF - "on a 1-to-10, he's a 12," Owens said - and has been on a daily regimen of the drugs Stalevo and Sinemet to manage the symptoms.Now that he's gone public, will he be doing any shows on Parkinson's? Owens isn't sure. He's always tried to avoid what he calls "me-centric" shows, but if he had a guest like his doctor, Bill Marks, it could offer listeners the opportunity to call in with questions about Parkinson's.
Date: Aug 25, 2014
Category: Health
Source: Google
Family Filmgoer reviews 'Mr. Peabody & Sherman' and '300: Rise of an Empire'
ncluding racial profiling, and then debunks a few of them. Non-Stop is a tad violent for middle-schoolers. Bill Marks (Liam Neeson) may be an air marshal, but he still grips the arm rest during takeoff on his London flight. Soon after, threatening text messages start popping up on his phone. The a
, the tale is able to pick up the pace, even moving a bit too fast for itself, to the point where an already outrageous plot ends in an even more exorbitant fashion. Along the journey, Neeson portrays his character, Bill Marks, as a beaten, broken down man, almost unfit to be a Federal Air Marshal. And
Liam Neeson borrowing heavily from his performance in Taken, which isnt a bad thing is a U.S. Air Marshall by the name of Bill Marks. Marks is on an international flight from New York to London. Soon after the plane takes off, he receives a mysterious text stating that someone on the flight w
was wrong. He's gone there again. He's not Bryan Mills from "Taken", but Bill Marks, a washed up, slightly alcoholic air marshal with a bit of a mysterious past. He, according to the talk radio show he listens to before boarding the flight in the movie, has the easiest job in the federal government.
Yet its every bit as stone-faced as Neeson, who stars as Bill Marks, an alcoholic former cop whos become a federal air marshal. Still trying to cope with his lifes tragedies, Marks is forced to sober up literally during a transatlantic flight (from London to New York). As it turns out, a myst
airplane. Like any fictional detective, in"Non-Stop" Bill Marks sorts through a number of possible culprits, deals withfalse clues, follows red herrings, and ultimately solves a couple of murdersthrough the same cerebral methods as the investigators of those novels, a HerculePoirot or Henry Merrivale.