Guess I'mma have to re-up my NF streaming...
This just popped up.
From the writer/director of Nightcrawler.
Guess I'mma have to re-up my NF streaming...
This just popped up.
From the writer/director of Nightcrawler.
I’ve been streaming Monty Python; I thought I’d seen them all, but wow was I mistaken. So much stuff that never made it to the PBS stuff I watched as a kid, due to nudity, racism, sexism, etc. It doesn’t all hold up after all these years, but damn, it’s funny. So many gay jokes with Graham; was he out then?
GoreTex, Scotchguard, Teflon...we are all fucked. The Devil We Know on Netflix or via the Youtube link below for those w/o a subscription.
Preview
Full Film
Gonna have to check out velvet buzzsaw. Sounds like something I'll like and my wife will sleep through.
We're a few episodes in to Russian Doll. I was a bit skeptical after the first episode, but it's growing on me. The basic premise is obviously not new. So far it's not all that similar to groundhog day, but tbd where they go with it. It seems like they're trying to be original though, so I'd guess there's gotta be a conscious effort to avoid coming across as blatantly derivative.
Not much new, but here are the last 4 or 5 shows that I have seen on Netflix that I would recommend, and haven't been mentioned for awhile here:
The Ranch
Sex Education
The Magicians
The Last Kingdom
Bodyguard.
My all*time favorite is Peaky Blinders, which I just rematched.
“How does it feel to be the greatest guitarist in the world? I don’t know, go ask Rory Gallagher”. — Jimi Hendrix
Finished sex education and liked it. Pretty straightforward highschool comedy, but it's well done.
Seems like they're setting up for season 2 with the way they left it off, but it kinda feels like they just needed 2-3 more episodes in season 1 to wrap everything up. Wondering if that means that future seasons will feel a bit drawn out.
Hopefully this will reach netflix soon?
Although I think SKY productions often end up being shown by AMC in the states.
The original was superb.
Big-budget TV drama Das Boot expands the scope of the 80s film classic but is equally compelling
Edit... it appears it will be released by Hulu.and the multilingual, multi-character series has been renewed for a second run before the first has even aired on Sky Atlantic
Back in 1981, an unlikely German-language movie surfaced to break all the rules. Das Boot, following the day-to-day routines of a Second World War U-boat, was then the most expensive feature film to come out of postwar Germany. And it’s now been adapted into one of the country’s most expensive television shows.
A multiple Oscar nominee, the film took us from the bravado of the U-96’s pre-sail celebrations to the stress of cat-and-mouse engagements with Allied vessels in the Atlantic – and the outright terror of depth-charge attacks.
The grimy procedures of the sailors’ jobs and between-battles tedium were recorded in unsparing and claustrophobic close-up. But above all it presented its Kriegsmarine as flesh-and-blood individuals, not the cartoonish tropes that cinema audiences had been used to seeing in American blockbusters, while its anti-war agenda was shockingly conveyed.
It introduced us to a number of Teutonic talents who then hit the big time, from director Wolfgang Petersen (In the Line of Fire, Air Force One) to star Jürgen Prochnow (Dune, Beverley Hills Cop II) and even composer Klaus Doldinger (The NeverEnding Story), whose theme tune is subtly echoed in the new series.
Like the film, the story of the new €26.5 million eight-part series is derived from the books of U-boat veteran Lothar-Günther Buchheim. But the re-Boot is set in the autumn of 1942, months after the film ended, and the drama has been opened out to include the story of the Resistance in France, as well as the journey of the U-612.
Just discovered all the Monty Python lfg
Watched Polar because I was in the mood for a shitty action movie. And that's exactly what it is. Fairly bad, in all of the expected ways.
Has anyone seen HOLD THE DARK?
Directed by Jeremy Saulnier (Green Room; Blue Ruin)...
Velvet Buzzsaw - meh, thought it was pretty average, not worth the time. Reminded me of an old episode of Friday the 13th:The Series?
Just finished all of Mad Men as I never really watched it all the way through before missing at least the last couple seasons when it was on TV. Definitely worth watching and more interesting catching all the details when watched together in order.
Huh, I didn't get that at all. Kinda liked the style and it reminded of the other title Dookey mentioned, "nightcrawler". Never thought I'd like a Jake gyenhall movie but I thought it worked.
Also I pulled up "hold the dark" to check it out...turns out I've watched it. Might've been high. Watching it again but i feel i really enjoyed it.
“Velvet Buzzsaw” seemed kinda pointless. Interesting premise, solid cast, ok story, but ultimately it went nowhere. Like a shitty art project that thinks it’s profound.
Has anybody mentioned Medici in this thread? Just finished the first two seasons. I've done a little reading about the family, and the series pretty much represents the actual history. It's a soap opera, for sure, and everyone can be impossibly handsome and beautiful, but, it's fun to watch, and can be used as a study aid of sorts. I got sucked in when I saw that Dustin Hoffman was the grand patriarch of the family, starting the bank. You just have to love a world when daughters were traded like cattle for alliances, and the Pope had a family and loved money and power like the next guy, and Cardinals were wealthier than CEOs.
Season two ended in a really good finale with a ton of blood and guts, and season three, which is in production, will feature Savanarola, who is one of my favorite characters from that history. If I was a actor, I'd die for that role. Can't wait for that finale.
Last edited by Benny Profane; 02-09-2019 at 11:39 PM.
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