Inspired by John Ibrahim's best-selling autobiography, Last King of The Cross is an operatic story of two brothers, John and Sam Ibrahim who organize the street but lose each other in their ... Read allInspired by John Ibrahim's best-selling autobiography, Last King of The Cross is an operatic story of two brothers, John and Sam Ibrahim who organize the street but lose each other in their ascent to power.Inspired by John Ibrahim's best-selling autobiography, Last King of The Cross is an operatic story of two brothers, John and Sam Ibrahim who organize the street but lose each other in their ascent to power.
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Last King of the Cross is Australian tv at its finest. Highly engaging from the first episode. Lincoln Younes and Claude Jabbour put on a spectacular performance. The original underbelly portrayal; the last mile, was in my opinion quite average and underwhelming. I had some hesitations in the lead up to this new and improved series, but it definitely lives up to the hype. The old Kings Cross is brought to life on screen, with the coca-cola signage invoking nostalgia. The first couple of episodes set the scene quite well and the 3rd episode captured my attention making me want more. Can't wait for the next episode and the rest of the series.
Am halfway through the show now and enjoying myself! The Cross feels like a seedy place where anything can happen and because the show is a fictionalised version of that era they can add in plenty of violence to keep it entertaining. The leads are both great, John played by Lincoln Younes as the successful businessman and Sam played by Claude Jabbour who you think is a stiff older brother but turns into a dangerous loose livewire adding genuine electricity to every one of his scenes. And of course always nice to see someone like Tim Roth onboard adding that extra touch of Hollywood to the whole thing.
Looking forward to more episodes.
Looking forward to more episodes.
Decent cast each playing a personality of a real person in most cases. They look and sound just like the real people.
Cleary some of the details are fabricated or dramatised.
For an Australian based TV series this is world class.
Don't listen to the haters. Watch a couple of episodes, don't treat it like a documentary and you will enjoy it too.
Decent cast each playing a personality of a real person in most cases. They look and sound just like the real people.
Cleary some of the details are fabricated or dramatised.
For an Australian based TV series this is world class.
Don't listen to the haters. Watch a couple of episodes, don't treat it like a documentary and you will enjoy it too.
Cleary some of the details are fabricated or dramatised.
For an Australian based TV series this is world class.
Don't listen to the haters. Watch a couple of episodes, don't treat it like a documentary and you will enjoy it too.
Decent cast each playing a personality of a real person in most cases. They look and sound just like the real people.
Cleary some of the details are fabricated or dramatised.
For an Australian based TV series this is world class.
Don't listen to the haters. Watch a couple of episodes, don't treat it like a documentary and you will enjoy it too.
The first two episodes have dropped . This a very good violent and somewhat graphic recreation of Sydney's Kings Cross of the 70' and 80's
An epic gangster show based on true story . The Cross comes up a treat re dressed for the era and its retro colours really pop . They have clearly spent money on this show the special effects are high levers Tim Roth adds real international cred . To the gangster world of Kings Cross at that time -
The lead playing main character John Ibrahim the King of the Cross is excellent, he has real talent . Early days yet in his story but the first two eps have build a character arch that makes him both menacing yet likeable . Certainly far more likeable than most of the other characters, which bodes well
looking forward to next espisodes .
An epic gangster show based on true story . The Cross comes up a treat re dressed for the era and its retro colours really pop . They have clearly spent money on this show the special effects are high levers Tim Roth adds real international cred . To the gangster world of Kings Cross at that time -
The lead playing main character John Ibrahim the King of the Cross is excellent, he has real talent . Early days yet in his story but the first two eps have build a character arch that makes him both menacing yet likeable . Certainly far more likeable than most of the other characters, which bodes well
looking forward to next espisodes .
A downgrade remake of Underbelly made for the US market. Bland, very bland. Australian strip clubs made to look like boring US ones, with people throwing notes on the stage (lol) and strippers dancing in their underwear (lol again). And casinos in the Cross? (Lol even more). Even the cops in this show look half respectable. Aside from John Ibrahim trying to make some money out of his reputation, this series looks like it's made by people who were all born in the 21st century. And who never visited the Cross in its heyday. A very sad indictment on the state of Australian media today. (Lol)
Underbelly did it so much better.
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- TriviaOne of the most expensive TV dramas ever produced in Australia with a rumoured budget of $50 million.
- How many seasons does Last King of the Cross have?Powered by Alexa
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- L'ultimo boss di Kings Cross
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