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#but hugh dillon is killing it
auroraluftss · 6 years
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X Company is finally back on Canadian Netflix 
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adamwatchesmovies · 2 years
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Ginger Snaps Back: The Beginning (2004)
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Of the three Ginger Snaps films, Ginger Snaps Back: The Beginning is easily the weakest. That doesn’t mean it’s not enjoyable. For fans of the previous entries, it’s worth taking and look. In fact, I wish more filmmakers would take note of what it does well. This “sequel” has some great ideas.
Set in the Canadian wilderness in 1815, sisters Brigitte (Emily Perkins) and Ginger Fitzgerald (Katharine Isabelle) take refuge in a fort besieged by werewolves. Their only hope for survival is in an enigmatic warning given to them to “Kill the boy so that both may live”.
Ginger Snaps Back doesn’t have the budget for elaborate transformation sequences (none of the three films do) and makes up for this with some good additions to the mythology. By now, we know morphing into a wolf-life creature isn't tied to the full moon. It’s more of a transformation that concludes itself in a month’s time. In this story, we’re given the “cure”: if you manage to deliver the final blow to the werewolf that infected you, you’ll be ok. I love it. It adds tension. Everyone wants to kill werewolves, but you have to be the one to kill this specific one, meaning your “enemies” are now the lycanthropes and anyone hunting them or defending themselves from an attack. The film also finds a novel way for people to detect the curse. If you strive to make a good werewolf movie, check this one out. Either copy it or do something along the same lines.
Some of the picture's flaws are obvious, making them feel like oversights on the part of the writer. Several murders are committed without any repercussions at all. I’m not talking about a situation where “well, he/she MIGHT have been infected” sort of thing. I mean that someone guns another, and the dead body is never addressed. Then, there are the side characters, which Stephen Massicotte and Christina Ray should've also put some additional work into. It makes sense for there to be threats inside the fort as well as out. It’s done all the time in zombie films, but there’s no reason why J.R. Bourne’s character or the fort’s “The End is Nigh!” reverend (played by Hugh Dillon) wouldn’t have met “accidental” death just a few days into the siege. They’re more trouble than they’re worth and anyone should be able to tell.
Although the film is ok, it's nowhere near as good as the first two. Ginger Snaps: The Beginning isn't as innovative or memorable, making it a letdown. One notable aspect deserves a lot of praise, however. It's the way it fits in with the first two Ginger Snaps. Many films struggle with their sequels and that goes double for horror. The majority of the protagonists you’ve come to love have been butchered or mentally broken. Your solution is to either bring in a new batch of victims or do a bunch of retcons. In this series' case, what drew us in was the relationship between Brigitte and Ginger and seeing them figure out the werewolf situation. This film replicates this sensation by casting Katharine Isabelle and Emily Perkins in a spiritual sequel instead of an actual follow-up. I wish more films would do this.
Ginger Snaps 3: Beginning / Ginger Snaps Back: Beginning is surprisingly good for a direct-to-DVD werewolf movie, even if it’s easily the worst of the three films in the series. Despite the drop in quality, it’s still very much worth seeing, particularly if you like stories about lycanthropy or enjoyed the first two. (On DVD, May 13, 2016)
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stuff1 · 3 years
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Hugh Dillon- “The Killing”
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aion-rsa · 3 years
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Best Romantic Movies on Amazon Prime Right Now
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Some movies brave enough to tread where only pop songs and poems go, and try to capture all the drama, contradictions and happy, bubbly feelings that come along with romance and love. It’s high-time that we honor them and defend them against their unearned sappy reputations with the best romantic movies on Amazon Prime.
We’ve scoured Amazon Prime to find the best romantic movies available for your viewing pleasure. Here are the best romantic movies on Amazon Prime. Ok, some of them are perfectly sappy.
The Big Sick
Kumail Nanjiani and his wife Emily Gordon’s theatrical debut made big waves when it came out for the singularity of its vision and just how plain funny it is. Now Amazon gets to reap the benefits of producing a bonafide romantic indie hit by getting its exclusive streaming rights. The Big Sick is the real life story of comedian Kumail Nanjiani meeting and falling in love with his wife, Emily (who is played by Zoe Kazan in the film).
Kumail and Emily’s courtship process is difficult enough to begin with due to Kumail’s family pressuring him to find a nice Pakistani girl to settle down with. But soon things get even more difficult as Emily suffers a health scare and Kumail must suddenly contend with that situation and Emily’s eccentric parents who have just come to town. The Big Sick is a clear vision from talented people and tells a beautifully convincing love story while making plenty of room for laughter. Not only that but it’s a big win for our list of best romance movies on Amazon Prime.
Watch The Big Sick
What If
Canadian drama What If (originally known as The F Word before the MPAA got its greasy fingers all over it) is a fun romantic movie and a tremendous showcase for its two young stars Daniel Radcliffe (you know what he’s from) and Zoe Kazan (The Big Sick). Radcliffe stars as Wallace – a directionless young man living in Toronto who decides to become more social after his girlfriend cheats on him.
Enter Kylo Ren (Adam Driver playing a character who is unfortunately not named Kylo Ren) who takes Wallace to a party where he meets the alluring Chantry (Kazan). Wallace and Chantry immediately fall for each other. Unfortunately there’s the small matter of Chantry’s boyfriend. What If? is a sweet little Canadian flick that knows how to push its audiences romantic buttons.
Watch What If
Still Mine
Still Mine isn’t necessarily about romance. It’s about love – a deep prevailing love built up over decades. Craig Morrison (James Cromwell) is a farmer in rural New Brunswick, Canada. He intends to build a new house for his ailing wife Irene (Geneviève Bujold) but runs into trouble with the local municipality’s bureaucracy prevents him from doing so.
Still Mine is as romantic a movie about bureacratic development regulations as has ever existed. Cromwell and Bujold have wonderful chemistry and paint a portrait of profound, abiding love.
Watch Still Mine
Some Kind of Wonderful
Some Kind of Wonderful doesn’t have the same pop culture standing as other John Huges films like Sixteen Candles or Pretty in Pink. Still this remains a worthwhile entry into the Hughes canon on teenage love. 
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By Carley Tauchert
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The Bee: The $50 Million John Hughes Movie That Fell Apart
By Simon Brew
Keith Nelson (Eric Stoltz) is a high school outcast who has his eyes set on popular girl Amanda Jones (Lea Thompson). Thankfully he has his tomboyish Watts (Mary Stuart Masterson) to help court her. Based on that meager plot description, you may think you know where Some Kind of Wonderful is going to end up, and…you’re probably right. That doesn’t make the journey any less satisfying. 
Watch Some Kind of Wonderful
To Catch a Thief
You know who would make a great romance film? The guy who did Psycho. Yes To Catch a Thief is a classic romance film from none other than Alfred Hitchcock. Of course, there’s a lot more going on in this heist thriller.
Cary Grant stars as retired cat burglar John Robie. When another burglar starts copying his act, Robie has to undergo One Last Job (TM) to catch…a thief. In the process John comes across the wealthy Frances (Grace Kelly) and the two strike up an unlikely romance for the ages.
Watch To Catch a Thief
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Hello, My Name is Doris
Between TBS’ Search Party and Hello, My Name is Doris, director Michael Showalter had a stellar 2016. Hello, My Name is Doris is a wonderfully sweet, equally tragic and completely hilarious romantic comedy. Sally Field stars as the titular Doris, a lively woman in her 60s who after the death of her mother becomes infatuated with a younger man. 
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Best Romantic Movies on Netflix
By Alec Bojalad
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Best Romantic Movies on Hulu Right Now
By Alec Bojalad
With the help of cliched self-help materials she does whatever she can to get his attention. Hello, My Name is Doris is an empathetic romantic comedy that will change how you view age. 
Watch Hello, My Name is Doris
Sabrina (1995)
Let’s get one thing out of the way right now. Sabrina‘s theatrical poster is dope. When I was a kid and I would pass the VHS cover in Blockbuster, I couldn’t help but think “Wow, that is a real adult movie.” At a young age, the mere sight of a woman’s lascivious red lipstick (lascivious in my head at least) was enough to fry my brain. Poster aside, however, Sabrina is an excellent romance with some real star power. It’s a remake of the 1954 film of the same name starring Billy Wilder and Audrey Hepburn. 
This version was directed by the great Sydney Pollack and stars Harrison Ford, Greg Kinnear, and Julia Ormond. Weirdly enough Greg Kinnear plays the ultimate rich playboy while Harrison Ford plays his studious older brother. Weird casting choices but it works out alright thanks to each actor’s chemistry with Ormond.
Watch Sabrina
Ghost
Ghost is much more than just the reason you can no longer attend a pottery class without giggling. It’s a legitimately great sci-fi romance yarn. Patrick Swayze stars as Sam a banker who is killed by a mugger. Immediately post-death he discovers that he has become a ghost and can no longer directly interact with his girlfriend Molly (Demi Moore).
Sam sets out to solve his own murder and somehow reconnect with the woman he loves. Ghostcomes along with all the corniness of an early ’90s blockbuster but its central theme of love trying to achieve the impossible plays in any decade.
Watch Ghost
Brokeback Mountain
Longing is a crucial part of the formula in any romance movie and Brokeback Mountain has it in spades. Ang Lee’s 2005 film played a crucial role in bringing queer cinema to the mainstream and it did so by presenting mostly straight audiences with a universal depiction of love and passion – the kind of love that supersedes the norms and expectations of everything in your life to that point.
Heath Ledger and Jake Gylllenhaal star as 1960s Wyoming cowboys Ennis Del Mar and Jack Twist. While herding sheep on the Brokeback mountains, Jack makes a sexual pass at Ennis and the two begin a summer-long physical affair. The movie then follows the pair through the subsequent decades as they try to return to their “normal” lives, all the while unable to forget their time on Brokeback.
Watch Brokeback Mountain
Letter to Juliet
Somewhere along the way, Hollywood decided to let Amanda Seyfried become the queen of romantic comedies set in exotic locales…and that’s perfectly fine with us.
In Letters to Juliet, Seyfried stars as a New York fact checker Sophie on “pre-honeymoon” with her fiancé in Verona. There she learns of the phenomenon of “letters to Juliet” where women women bring love letters to Juliet Montague’s Verona courtyard. When Sophie answers a letter from 1957, she embarks on a decades-spanning journey of love and self-discover.y
Watch Letters to Juliet
What Men Want
Back in 2000, only one film had the distinction…nay, the courage of trying to figure out What Women Want. The answer, apparently, was Mel Gibson. We don’t talk about this movie that much.
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Which YA Romance Should Netflix Adapt Next?
By Kayti Burt
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Yesterday Is History: Meet the Latest Addition to the Time Travel Romance Genre
By Alana Joli Abbott
2019’s What Men Want is a loose remake of the earlier film. And it has something that the original never did: Taraji P. Henson! Henson stars as Ali Davis, a sports agent who gains the ability to read men’s minds after meeting a shaman. The movie puts Ali’s male-dominated profession to good use and in the process tells a nifty little romance story.
Watch What Men Want
There’s Something About Mary
More than two decades later, it’s still wild to see that above screenshot. Like, that ran in newspapers. It was on a poster! And if you don’t know why a photo of Cameron Diaz with a unique hairstyle is a big deal then you’ve likely not seen the Farrelly Brothers 1998 gross out classic There’s Something About Mary.
This is not so much a romance movie as it is an exploration of the pitfalls of attraction. Diaz stars as Mary Jensen…and there’s just something about her. Ben Stiller, Matt Dillon, Lee Evans, and Chris Elliott all play men who are helplessly in love with Mary and trying to win her affection. In the process, many injuries as sustained.
Watch There’s Something About Mary
Moulin Rouge!
If you like your romance with more than a dash of Baz Luhrmann saturated colors and big, sexy musical numbers then Moulin Rouge! is almost certainly the movie for you.
This 2001 film is set in 1900s Paris amid the Bohemian movement. When Christian (Ewan McGregor) falls in love with Moulin Rouge cabaret actress and courtesan Satine (Nicole Kidman), he must contend with her impending betrothal (or really sale) to the Duke of Montrose. As one might imagine, this is resolved with quite a bit of singing and dancing.
Watch Moulin Rouge!
Sylvie’s Love
Amazon Prime’s 2020 film Sylvie’s Love positively oozes jazz era atmosphere and tells a compelling, decades-spanning love story in the process.
Tessa Thompson stars as Sylvie Parker, a young woman who one day meets an aspiring saxophonist (played by Kerry Washington’s husband and former NFLer Nnamdi Asomugha) and in her father’s record shop in 1950s Harlem. This leads to sweeping romance that guides the pair through the era’s jazz music scene.
Watch Sylvie’s Love
The post Best Romantic Movies on Amazon Prime Right Now appeared first on Den of Geek.
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thebeastofblackmoor · 4 years
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Nancy Drew Asks- Send me a Suspect!
Since it seems everyone is cooped up at home, I figured I’d make an ask game of my own to help the Clue Crew combat boredom... Send me a suspect and rb!
Daryl Gray: What kind of car do you drive? Connie Watson: Are you a part of any clubs? Hal Tanaka: Have you ever cheated in school? Hector “Hulk” Sanchez:  Do you play any sports? If so, which one(s)? Detective Beech: Do you keep a journal? What’s in it? Mitch Dillon: Have you ever blocked your number and if yes, why?
Mattie Jensen: Describe the plot of the last TV show you watched. Rick Arlen: What’s your favorite kind of chocolate? Lillian Weiss: What’s the worst way you’ve ever broken up with somebody? Millie Strathorn: Would you consider yourself cluttered or organized? Dwayne Powers: Do you hold a grudge? Ralph Guardino: What is your job?
Rose Green: Do you talk with your hands? Abby Sideris: What is your star sign? Louis Chandler: What’s the oldest thing you own? Charlie Murphy: How many different places have you lived?
Dexter Egan: Did you get in trouble a lot as a kid? Professor Hotchkiss: Early bird or night owl (hoot hoot)? Lisa Ostrum: Do you speak another language? Jacques Brunais: Would you rather have a big or small wedding?
Brady Armstrong: What was the worst job you ever worked? Simone Mueller: Has anyone ever climbed out of your wardrobe? Nicholas Falcone: Have you ever been to a protest? Joseph Hughes: If you had to move away to live with family in another state, who would it be and where?
Joanna Riggs: What’s your favorite exhibit at the museum? Henrik van der Hune: Are you attracted to Henrik? this is a serious question I know a lot of you are or at least used to be.. what was the deal with that.. Alejandro del Rio: What country are you from? Taylor Sinclair: Do you have a nickname?
Red Knott: What’s your favorite animal? Emily Griffin: If you owned a store, what would it sell? Jeff Akers: Do you have any pets?
Harlan Bishop: Have you ever gotten into trouble with the law? Ingrid Corey: If you suddenly got a lot of money, how would you spend it? Joy Trent: Do you consider yourself an optimist or a pessimist? Elliot Chen: If any, what kind of art do you do?
Katie Firestone: What is your favorite kind of sandwich? Holt Scotto: Political alignment? Andy Jason: Sharks or whales? Jenna Deblin: Starbucks or local coffee shop?
Dave Gregory: You got a steady back home? Tex Britten: Have you ever ridden a horse? Shorty Thurmond: Are you a good cook? Mary Yazzie: Have you ever had a secret relationship?
Linda Penvellyn: Are you married? Jane Penvellyn: Favorite mythological creature? Mrs. Drake: Do you have plants? Ethel Bossiny: What period in or piece of history fascinates you the most? Nigel Mookerjee: Do you scare easily?
Emily Crandall: When was the last time you stayed in your pajamas all day? Richard Topham: Have you ever seen a psychic? Jane Willoughby: What kind of accent do you have? Jim Archer: Are you good with money?
Lori Girard: Favorite celebrity? Charleena Purcell: What was the last book you read? Tino Balducci: Do you exaggerate stories?  John Grey: What’s the cheesiest TV show you watch?
Minette: Do you have any tattoos? JJ Ling: Most outrageous lie you’ve told? Heather McKay: Do you care about fashion? Dieter von Schwesterkrank: How many people have you dated? Jean-Michel Traquenard: Where do you do your best work?
Dr. Quigley Kim: Bugs: yay or nay? Big Island Mike: What’s your favorite meme? Pua Mapu: Have you ever been surfing? Malachi Craven: Do you take compliments well?
Ollie Randall: Have you ever been hunting? Freddie Randall: Do you like winter weather? Bill Kessler: Name a place from your childhood that holds a fond place in your heart. Yanni Volkstaia: Winter or summer sports? Lou Talbot: What did you major in or what would you like to major in, if applicable? Guadalupe Comillo: Did you have a “wolf phase” growing up?
Henry Bolet: Are you more goth, jock, nerd, or prep? Renee Amande: Do you have a secret stash of food in your room? Lamont Warrick: Do you have allergies? Gilbert Buford: Describe your best friend.
Margarita Fauberg: Do you prefer to spend time inside or outside? Helena Berg: What’s your favorite city in the world? Colin Baxter: Do you give a single shit about tesserae tiles?? Enrico Tazza: Favorite card game? Antonio Fango: Do you work in an office?
Kyler Mallory: Do you know much about your family history? Matt Simmons: Do you enjoy playing practical jokes? Kit Foley: Have you ever gotten into a physical fight? Donal Delaney: Favorite drink, alcoholic or otherwise? Fiona Malloy: What was your favorite toy as a kid?
Johnny Rolle: Favorite Halloween costume you’ve ever worn?
Corine Meyers: Did you get good grades in high school? Izzy Romero: Were you popular in high school? Mel Corbalis: Do you play an instrument? Rachel & Kim Hubbard: Do you have any siblings?
Scott Varnell: What are you really passionate about? Debbie Kircum: Are you a hard worker? Frosty Harlow: Do you like photography? Chase Relerford: Have you ever stolen from a store? Pa: Do you do any theater?
Yumi Shimizu: Would you consider yourself bossy? Miwako Shimizu: Are you timid or assertive? Takae Nagai: Do you have any traditions you honor? Rentaro Aihara: Are you technical-minded? I was gonna ask if you like puzzles but, um, this is the friggin clue crew
Karl Weschler: Are you a leader or a follower? Anja Mittelmeier: Have you or would you lie on your resume?  Lukas Mittelmeier: Do you like to cause trouble? Renate Stoller: Tell us the best story you’ve got.
Deirdre Shannon: Do you get jealous easily? Brenda Carlton: Are you just the fucking worst? (HINT: No, because you’re not Brenda) Toni Scallari: Do you talk about people behind their backs? Alexei Markovic: Do you break things often?
Abdullah Bakhoum: Do you have high self-confidence? Lily Crewe: Favorite board game? Dylan Carter: Are people inclined to believe you, even when you lie? Jamila El-Dine: Do you believe there are aliens on other planets?
Victor Lossett: Are you strict? Ryan Kilpatrick: What’s your favorite kind of candy? Mason Quinto: Do you consider yourself a logical thinker? Ellie York: What “percent scientist” are you? Gray Cortright: Would you work a night shift?
Clara Thornton: Tell us a story you haven’t told almost anyone. Apparently “have you ever accidentally gotten someone killed?” isn’t an appropriate question for tumblr dot com Wade Thornton: Do you believe in ghosts? Jessalyn Thornton: Do you think spending a night on a haunted island with your best friend sounds like fun? Harper Thornton: What’s your favorite book? Colton Birchfield: How would you get the attention of someone you liked?
Alec Fell: Are you especially witty? Moira Chisholm: Again, since “have you ever accidentally gotten someone killed?” isn’t gonna cut it, I’ll go with: What are your hobbies? Ewan Macleod: What piece of spy gadgetry would you pick if you got to take one home? Zoe Wolf: Do you like to break the rules?
Sonny Joon: Do you doodle? Patrick Dowsett: Are you a good swimmer? Leena Patel: How did you meet your best friend? Kiri Nind: Why did you dedicate your life to being on trashy TV? Do you watch reality TV?
Xenia Doukas: Which fictional character do you relate to on a personal level? Niobe Papadaki: Are you a good public speaker? Grigor Karakinos: If you had to make up a fake identity for yourself, what first and last name would you pick and why? Thanos Ganas:  Do you think you’re intimidating?
Elisabet Grimursdottir: Are you a cat or a dog person? Dagny Silva: What’s your sexuality? Soren Bergursson: If you were a villain, what would be your weapon of choice? Gunnar Tonnisson: What stands out about your physical appearance?
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delakoks · 4 years
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Dooo do do doOoOoo you have some headcanons for IDK ellis and nick but for others also??
Oh oh oh. Yes, I do, Anonzo. I’ve been playing this game for years sooo~~~ Of course, it’s mostly about Ellis and Nick, but, I think, I could remember few things about Coach and Ro too.
Let’s talk about Ellis first (cause he’s my favourite since the first game session yes). 
Freckles. I don’t know why I say about it first but anyways. This sunny boy definitely has some freckles on his nose and cheeks and his shoulders. They’re not so dark so they’re almost invisible. But they’re there. You can’t change my mind.
He’s pretty clumsy. Not the best thing in zombie-apocalypse hehe
Magnet for trouble
Ellis. Can. Sing. He’s not just a basist but also a back-vocalist. Sometimes in the zombie-apocalypse he murmurs some tunes to calm himself down.
Panromantic or pansexual. Easily falls in love (oh, wait, it’s canon lol). Virgin. I don’t think he ever had something more serious than a date or two.
All HUGS and soft touches. 
His childhood wasn’t easy. I believe he was raised by his mom, his dad either died or left family, so Ellis had to work since pretty young age to help his mom. Also maybe some problems with other children? Ellis’s so kind and naive, some kids definitely were assholes towards him. But look at this sunshine, you need something more than even a zombie-apocalypse to break him.
Ellis has a younger sister, they always make fun of each other, but love each other sooo much.
And Ellis can’t imagine the world without his family. He’ll give his life for them.
This boyo believes that he could help people, so many people.. And it’s killing him to learn that it’s not true. He doesn’t understand how (and don’t want to believe that) people could be so cruel and evil and violent. 
Nick.
He was married (canon again). She was a bitch, but he loved her. Simple story. When they finally got divorced she tried to take everything from Nick. And this was another lesson not to trust people. He had so many of those lessons so he became this hostile to other people.
Nick’s parents were really busy making careers and money but they never forgot about their son. So Nick recieved quality education and tried so many things in an attempt to find something he would like to do in his life. But it never worked out. He always was too adventurous and daredevil-ish.
Talking about education. Upper-intermediate italian, under-intermediate deutch, french and spanish.
Secretly loves hugs. Gives the best hugs you can imagine. Touch-starved.
Bisexual. And there is no way you can change my mind c;
And this man SINGS. FREAKING. AMAZING. Just listen to his voice. He definitely was a part of some rock band. (Thanks Hugh Dillon and Headstones)
Knows how to comfort people easily. Really good psychologist. But won’t do that for everybody, only for close people.
Baker. Uh huh. This man knows how to bake an amazing cake or pie from almost nothing.
Smoker. Bad habit to make your life in the zombie-apocalypse a looot harder. (and here we go with a relative headcanon about Nellis. That one time Nick finally found a pack of cigarettes and smoked.. and scared poor sleepy Ellis so much with nicotine smell. So he decided to quit smoking not to trigger kiddo, who had too much from Smokers)
Has a tattoo.
Is afraid of falling for someone but when he does (oh, wait, is it Nellis again?), oh my, he’ll fight the whole world to keep his loved one safe. He gives all of himself into relationship.
Rochelle.
Strong beautiful girl (canon!) who was so freaking tired of her work that the first thought about apocalypse that came to her mind was: ‘Oh, god, finally’. (believe me, I’m a professional journalist, it’s always that way XD)
She was raised in a big loving family with a few older siblings. Her brothers taught her self-defense. And sarcasm.
She always spent more time with boys than girls - school, university, work... She always can find words to defend herself. And if words won’t work - she has her knuckles C;
Ro tried to date different guys so many times but it never worked out. Either they were some boring assholes or.. idk. Maybe just assholes.
Eventhough she was the youngest in the family, she was the voice of reason. Ro always looked after her older brothers. That’s why she cares about Ellis so much - he reminds Rochelle of her brothers.
Ro always was an excellent student. Eventhough her behavior wasn’t so excellent :D
Coach.
He was/is married. Coach loves his wife very very much. They never had kids eventhough really wanted to.
Coach’s team was his family. He loved every one of those kiddos and was so proud of them. 
None of those kiddos were immune.
Coach was a professional sportsman but he was getting older so he decided to quit on the peak. Anyways he couldn’t just give up the passion of his life so he started train kiddos.
ok i guess i don’t have much for Coach oops
Welp. I’m one hundred percent sure I forgot about so many things. But here we are.
Thanks for the question!
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dlasta · 7 years
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Finished The Killing, all four seasons. Callum Keith Rennie and Hugh Dillon both had small roles in it, sadly on different seasons. I wish my heart could take Hard Core Logo now.
..maybe just relevant clips on youtube?
ps. Watch the Killing. Mireille Enos and Joel Kinnaman are amazing. All your favorite canadian actors. Not Ian Tracey though for some weird reason.:)
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Fly Me To the Moon
New review is live
Fly Me To The Moon is a 2021 science fiction novel by Kerry Hugh Dillon. It was published by Dolphin Books and released in April of 2021. I discovered the novel when browsing Kindle Unlimited one day. Two years after twenty-year-old Finn Collins was abducted and almost killed by an over-zealous scientist, he survives a knife attack which proves fatal for his assailant. Fearful of being blamed…
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WIND RIVER (2017)
Starring Jeremy Renner, Elizabeth Olsen, Gil Birmingham, Jon Bernthal, Julia Jones, Kelsey Asbille, James Jordan, Graham Greene, Martin Sensmeier, Ian Bohen, Matthew Del Negro, Eric Lange, Hugh Dillon, Teo Briones, Tara Karsian, Tokala Clifford, Althea Sam, Apesanahkwat and Blake Robbins.
Screenplay by Taylor Sheridan.
Directed by Taylor Sheridan.
Distributed by The Weinstein Company. 111 minutes. Rated R.
From the evidence of three films – Sicario, Hell or High Water, and now Wind River – writer (and now director) Taylor Sheridan is not a light-hearted man.
Which is not to say he doesn’t make enjoyable films, but they are awfully dark. And despite the fact Wind River is completely blanketed by white snow, it is a very, very dark movie.
It takes place on a Montana Indian reservation, one which gives the film its title. At the start, we watch an athletic teenaged girl running through a snow-covered plain with a light coat and no shoes. We don’t know who she is or what she is running from, but whatever it is must be pretty terrible to get her to run this distance on the freezing tundra barefoot.
Because this mountain range is beyond simply cold. Getting lost out there for a matter of minutes could cause you to freeze to death if not properly attired for the elements. Between the constant snow, the gale force winds and the frigid temperatures, the fact that she is able to run at all is something of a miracle.
Fast forward a few days and we meet the real central character of the film. Cory Lambert (Jeremy Renner) is a tracker on the reservation, one of the few non-native-Americans to work there (his soon-to-be ex is a member of the tribe). Cory spends his days scaring wolves away from livestock. He is in the middle of a somewhat tense breakup, and they have a middle-school aged son, as well as a teen daughter who died mysteriously the year before.
One afternoon, while searching for a mountain lion and her two cubs, which have been killing local livestock, Lambert stumbles upon the frozen body of the girl we saw in the prologue. He recognizes her as Natalie (Kelly Asbille), the daughter of a friend and the best friend of his late daughter.
The tribal police have no idea why or how she would have been so far in the wilderness, with no shoes and light clothing. They reach out to the FBI for help on the case, and the Feds send Jane Banner (Elizabeth Olsen), a smart-but-green agent who has no real understanding of life on the tundra and tribal life.
She asks Lambert to be her guide and together they slowly pursue the truth, interviewing locals, hoods, government contractors and others trying to get to the bottom of things. In the end, the story turns out to be much more violent and horrible than they imagined.
As stated before, Wind River is an extremely dark film. There are very few light moments in the film, much less jokes, to ease off on the oppressive atmosphere. Most of the ones that do come are compliments of the great Graham Greene as the stoic, but pithy, tribal sheriff.
However, the dialogue is crisp, the acting is haunting (check out Gil Birmingham as the father of the victim) and the scenery is stunning.
You don’t go to a movie like Wind River in search of a good time, and you don’t get one here. However, if you can handle the film’s extremely bleak world view, Wind River has much to recommend it for.
Jay S. Jacobs
Copyright ©2017 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: August 11, 2017.
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tulipblack · 5 years
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31 May 2019 | COCK BLOCK & TIT BIT #105
/  / LISTEN LIVE ON 8K.NZ  Friday 12:00 NZT repeats Saturday 15:00, Monday 06:00, Wednesday 00:00 /  / MIXCLOUD  /  / TULIP's snakes on the radio mix Trouble - Snake eyes The Kills - Black rooster Princess Nokia - Dragons Acid Washed - Snake Nicki Minaj - Anaconda Portishead - Western Eyes Sharon van Etten - Serpents Nicole Dollanganger -Snake Arca - Snakes Pumarosa - Snake Throwing Muses - Snakeface PJ Harvey - Snake Let's Eat Grandma - Snakes & Ladders Mitra Mitra - Snakes St Vincent - Rattlesnake Madonna - Like it or not
KEBABETTE'S Boys in the band mix Silver Sphere - boys in bands Bells Atlas - Belly The Melancholies - Rising [NZ] Otoboke Beaver - I'm tired of your repeating story Clairo - Bags Dillon Francis featuring T-Pain and That Girl Lay Lay - Catchy Song Megan Thee Stallion - Realer Laurence Nerbonne - Money CA$H Bunny Michael - Wanna be your wifey Aldous Harding - Pilot [NZ] pronoun - stay Claudia Jardine - Hide [NZ] Juniore - Ah bah d'accord Mind Bath - Scorpio Yumi Zouma - Bruise [NZ] Hugh featuring Yomi Sode and James Massiah - True love will find you in the end
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ann-arde · 7 years
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Not the best week for Hugh Dillon’s characters apparently.
I was about to make a post with his military characters (these two and the sniper from Flashpoint), but then they killed him off in The Expanse, and now this. Kinda sad.
I mean, it was expected for Sinclair in X Company (poor Sinclair, but still), but the other one...
It felt like they’re just starting to develop this Martians’ subplot (Hugh Dillon’s character and his Marines) and all of a sudden they kill them off without any reason so far. Of course we’ll see in the next episodes, but, uhh, those were very promising characters and now they’re gone.
Ah, yes, spoilers. But nobody reads this, so doesn’t matter.
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phillhall · 7 years
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Review: Stranger Things
(TV mini-series/Netflix)
Slick, nostalgic, pitched almost perfectly and so full of holes it could have been made in 1983...
There has been a buzz recently about a new 8-part Netflix series called Stranger Things, starring Wynona Ryder and some other people. Set in a backwater US town in the mid-1980s, it has a group of pre-teen ‘misfits’, a bunch of pre-college Jocks, an outsider/loner, a confused teenage girl, rogue cop, distraught mother - all the things that made 1980s ‘blockbusters’ from Steven Spielberg to the teen angst of John Hughes. Throw in a decidedly odd mix of Stephen King and Clive Barker and then don’t bother to think things through too much or you’ll end up picking it to pieces.
If you do start picking it pieces you begin to notice that it’s all style over substance and while it either allows or expects the viewer to fill in the necessary missing pieces, it also constitutes very lazy writing when some of the characters are literally just there to facilitate a plot thread.
There have been comparisons - justifiably - to Spielberg’s 80s movies such as ET, CE3K and his co-scripted The Goonies film and the homage flies thick and fast and any film buff worth their salt will be reeling off references faster than a teenager can have a wank and around the third episode I realised this was a production trick - a way of diverting the viewer’s attention away from the glaring lack of credibility and almost total lack of reason.
Plus - bleeding eyes? Really? Hasn’t this been done to death? Plus, why do film makers insist that people would bleed out of their lacrimol caruncle? Do you know what happens if you get a bleed in that part of the eye? Blood - a liquid and the surface of the eye, also a liquid/lubricant - mix and you get red, streaky eyeballs, especially when you blink. In a series that largely used 21st century special effects, this was one of several 1980s special effects they could have done without (but it was used as a plot device...).
The main story begins with the disappearance of an 11-year-old boy, mysteriously in some local woods. This in itself was handled like a baby with a hand grenade. I know this is the 1980s, but I’m fairly sure even the most red-necked and ignorant of US town sheriff’s would a) treated a missing child case with a degree of seriousness and b) done his searching during the day when flashlights were not required. Kid goes missing and townsfolk all do a day’s work before going into the woods with halogen lamps... This wasn’t the first thing in the show that puzzled me (unless it was an X-Files reference and therefore a decade too early) to the point of annoyance.
I’m going to stop being linear here because I’m not just going to spell out the eight-episodes for you. We are also introduced to 11 (played by Millie Bobby Brown) a young girl with closely cropped hair and a hospital-styled smock who is wandering around the countryside; she is met and befriended by the three friends of the boy who has gone missing. She has mysterious powers and doesn’t talk much.  We are then introduced to what I feel is arguably the weakest and the part of the story that prevents the series from actually working...
Matthew Modine plays the head of some weird scientific project based in a building completely cordoned off not too far from the place where the boy went missing. No one, not even the sheriff seems remotely bothered or even knowledgeable about an apparently top secret facility, with armed guards, is situated so close to their town. It would appear this place and its employees might as well be in a completely different country - or dimension - because in a town that is portrayed as being small enough to know everyone else’s business, the top secret facility obviously was doing it’s job well.
Modine appears to be working for the US government and using a telekinetic child to locate and spy on Russian/Soviet officials - all very cloak and dagger and all very superficial. The problem for the girl doing these experiments - 11 - is that to be able to link with whoever her keeper’s want her to, she has to go through a place where monsters live - which she later describes as ‘the upside down’. Using your own powers of deduction, it appears that by using this incredibly powerful girl to spy on people it starts to break down the barriers between dimensions.
We’re then treated to more film and novel homage with nods to Poltergeist, Stephen King novels about dimensional barriers and at times Labyrinth. There is also a tree and this tree is obviously the portal that the creature (or creatures) on the other side of it uses to come to our world and abduct its food. This allows one of the supporting cast to do something totally totally out of character and then allows the series makers to do something almost ridiculously 1920s in its cliffhanger execution. 
It’s the fact that the characters when the series is set up in the first episode don’t really express much after that first episode. We’re introduced to a group of young friends, but we have no real back story for two of them; the general conversation is that Mike the ‘leader’ of this gang of misfits and Will - the missing child - are best of friends and telephone conversations between their mothers’ (Ryder and Cara Buono) suggest the two women are also best of friends, but that never materialised. The thing is - no one talked to each other. It was like the 1980s was this period of time when everyone was just doing their own thing and no one else was remotely aware - maybe it was, but I can’t help thinking if Stephen King has written this - because it fits in with so many of his town-themed novels - it would have been more realistic in its characterisation.
It is so wonderfully crafted, it looks and sounds like it was made in 1986, even down to crowd scenes - the hair and clothes are all spot on. The dialogue, at times, veered into the wrong era - the expression ‘sick’ for something good was a few years away and began in a different part of the USA. Even the government as secret above-the-law agency was handled well, except... it wasn’t at all. The slightly bogus secondary antagonists - Modine’s security detail - were unconvincing and inconsistent - Spielberg did ‘sinister government’ spot on and believable; this lot just looked like a cross between crooks and psychopaths.
However many plot holes and things that were just badly written, it did have some really clever things going for it, there were some really unexpected performances and it fairly rattled along once it got going. Millie Bobby Brown stole the show for me and her tone and way she drifted through the series was possibly the best thing about it. Imagine a girl that has been kept as an experiment all her life, her lack of love and parenting, no nurturing, just used as a weapon and then being released into an unsuspecting world. The mixture of rage and confusion was set very well as was her ability to kill if she felt it was necessary. 
Wynona Ryder was a revelation in the kind of role that Dee Wallace or Melinda Dillon excelled at in the 1980s, but with little or no real back story about her life, looking at her house, compared to her peers, and judging by her general hippy-ish attitude in flashback scenes, you get the impression that histrionics, drama and crisis has never been too far from her door; had this been emphasised a little more clearly, you might have understood why no one seemed that overtly concerned about her son Will’s disappearance. The fact that another town youth also disappears soon after generates about as much interest as an apple-bobbing party at the local church. Ryder plays the in-denial grieving mom very well up to the moment she starts playing with lights, carrying an axe round and smashing walls open because Will was trying to communicate with her. How he was managing to manipulate the electricity in a mobile home in the middle of nowhere from ‘the upside down’ was never explained, not even looked at, it was just thrown in there to emphasise to the viewer that Ryder wasn’t just bonkers.
There are some excellent scary bits, but once the suspense is done with and you’re given the idea that 11 and the monster are more than just linked, it might just be the creature of her id (created by the thing she was using to do the government’s bidding) it becomes a bit of a slaughter-fest with 11 and the monster dispatching large numbers of faceless agents. The’upside down’ is a mixture of creepy and Silent Hill and at times it had tremendous atmosphere, but none of the main characters are particularly likeable; even the kids are an odd mix, with the black kid being the most overtly bigoted and the fat toothless idiot as the level-headed one, despite being a (low-grade) buffoon. Spielberg gave you emotional attachment to specific kids inside 2½ hours; this series never manages to really make you care about any of the kids, because they’re all dislikeable in certain ways. Only 11 (or El as the boys called her) seemed exempt from this and not enough time was spent on her ‘re-education’ to life and too much time spent on Modine glowering over her and showering her in fake love.
So much, like a 1980s film, is left to the imagination and that, now, is a problem. Setting it in the 1980s circumvents such irritants as mobile phones, the Internet and transparency, but that doesn’t necessarily add any authenticity to it. Maybe viewed weekly this might have worked better, allowing the viewer to not remember clearly certain bits, thus allowing the imagination to fill in the blanks; but as a box set it just falls down in places.
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Quick review Expanse Season 2, episode 1-2
Like most others, I think Dresden was horribly cast, his character is supposed to be slimy yet persuasive. I mean, he talked an entire company board (and Mao himself) into funding his research and the Eros plot.  Yet he didn’t sound very persuasive at all in this episode. I like that they showed Miller watching him, the gears clicking in his head. Fred shouldn’t have accepted so readily though. 
I’m also disappointed that they didn’t show the direct aftermath of that scene. That one event might be THE difference between Holden and Miller. At this stage in the show at least, Holden still thinks everyone is inherently good, and won’t kill in cold blood. Miller sees the threat for what it is and acts (making him judge jury and executioner). WHY they didn’t show the argument afterwards is beyond me. It’s one of the cornerstones of the morality discussion of The Expanse, and they didn’t even show it. Sad. Maybe they will in the next episode.
Moving on, I LOVED that they had Miller actually say his ‘doors and corners’ phrase (which is my blog name, hey!), considering that he doesn’t actually say it while he’s alive (in the books), and only his protomolecule-ghost version of himself says it. (Spoilers, sorry. Dunno how to tag things yet)
Avasarala is finally turning into the badass Machiavellian politician we know she is, and is more closely resembling her ‘book’ self. I’m glad they’ve taken the time to build up her character in Season 1 already instead of just introducing her now.
Bobbie was excellent, though I noticed they’ve moved some of her iconic phrases around as far as timing. Her ‘I dont use sex as a weapon, I use weapons as weapons’ phrase didn’t actually happen until well into the 2nd book if I recall.. Guess they are moving things around a little. Also loved the cameo from Hugh Dillon in there!
Overall, the episode(s) were great, but I feel like they packed far too much into two episodes. The first season takes you about halfway through the first book, and they basically got us to about the 3/4 marker of the book in less than 2 episodes. Everything felt too rushed. They need to slow it down a little, even the whole ‘Nolden’ thing is feeling rushed IMO.
Might make this a regular thing (episode reviews), not sure yet. See everyone next week!
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tuseriesdetv · 4 years
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Noticias de series de la semana: No más 'Mindhunter', no más 'Watchmen'
Renovaciones
Netflix ha renovado You por una tercera temporada
Showtime ha renovado Shameless por una undécima y última temporada
AMC ha renovado Better Call Saul por una sexta y última temporada
Showtime ha renovado Work in Progress por una segunda temporada
Showtime ha renovado The L Word: Generation Q por una segunda temporada
Sky Atlantic ha renovado Britannia por una tercera temporada
ITV ha renovado Vera por una undécima temporada
Freeform ha renovado Grown-ish por una cuarta temporada
Freeform ha renovado Good Trouble por una tercera temporada
Hulu ha renovado Dollface por una segunda temporada
Hulu ha renovado Wu Tang: An American Saga por una segunda temporada
Netflix ha renovado Bonding por una segunda temporada
TBS ha renovado American Dad por una decimoctava y decimonovena temporada
Cancelaciones
Los actores de Mindhunter han sido liberados de sus contratos debido a la apretada agenda de David Fincher, que podría revisitar la serie en un futuro. No está cancelada.
No habrá segunda temporada de Watchmen. Damon Lindelof no tiene planes de continuar la historia ni de transformarla en antología.
Facebook ha cancelado Limetown tras su primera temporada
Facebook ha cancelado Sorry For your Loss tras su segunda temporada
Cinemax ha cancelado Jett tras su primera temporada. La cadena deja de producir series.
La segunda temporada de The Walking Dead: World Beyond (AMC) será la última.
Noticias cortas
Showtime ha cancelado Intelligence antes de grabar el piloto por decisiones creativas.
Michelle Keegan (Georgie) abandonará Our Girl tras su cuarta temporada.
Amazon ha descartado el piloto de The Dark Tower.
Matthew Del Negro (Chris Caysen) será regular en la segunda temporada de City on a Hill.
Fichajes
Priyanka Chopra (Quantico) y Richard Madden (Game of Thrones, Bodyguard) protagonizarán Citadel para Amazon. Será la serie madre de una franquicia producida por los hermanos Russo (Avengers: Endgame) con ediciones ya anunciadas en India, Italia y México en los idiomas locales.
Hugh Dancy (Hannibal, The Path) será recurrente en la cuarta temporada de The Good Fight como Caleb, un antiguo militar que trabaja como socio en la firma que ha adquirido Reddick, Boseman & Lockhart. Además, Michael J. Fox (Louis Canning) retomará su papel de The Good Wife.
Courtney B. Vance (American Crime Story, FlashForward) protagonizará 61st Street. Será Franklin Roberts, un abogado de Chicago que defenderá a un joven atleta al que detienen tras confundirlo con el miembro de una banda.
Gael García Bernal (Mozart in the Jungle, Diarios de motocicleta) será recurrente en Station Eleven como Arthur, un famoso actor de una pequeña isla de México.
Dean Norris (Hank Schrader) y Steven Michael Quezada (Steven Gomez) retomarán sus papeles de Breaking Bad en dos episodios de la quinta temporada de Better Call Saul.
Dave Bautista (Guardians of the Galaxy) se une a la segunda temporada de See. Se desconocen detalles.
Gina Gershon (Riverdale, Showgirls) será recurrente en la segunda temporada de New Amsterdam como la madre de Lauren (Janet Montgomery).
Nazanin Boniadi (How I Met Your Mother, Homeland), Owain Arthur (A Confession, Casualty), Tom Budge (Bloom), Ismael Cruz Córdova (The Good Wife, Ray Donovan), Tyroe Muhafidin, Sophia Nomvete, Megan Richards (Wanderlust), Dylan Smith (I Am the Night, Into the Badlands), Charlie Vickers (Medici: Masters of Florence) y Daniel Weyman (Foyle's War, Gentleman Jack) se unen a The Lord of the Rings.
Meagan Good (Minority Report, Californication), Grace Byers (Empire, The Gifted), Shoniqua Shandai (I Am the Night, Nobodies) y Jerrie Johnson protagonizarán la comedia aún sin título de Tracy Oliver para Amazon.
Corey Hawkins (The Walking Dead, Straight Outta Compton) será Blaine, el novio del presente de Ifemelu (Lupita Nyong'o), en Americanah.
Marque Richardson (Dear White People, True Blood), Pauletta Washington (She's Gotta Have It), Steven Norfleet (Watchmen, Good Girls) y Omar J. Dorsey (Queen Sugar, When They See Us) se unen como recurrentes a Genius: Aretha. Shaian Jordan sustituye a Sanai Victoria, que participó en el piloto, en el papel regular de Little Re.
Joanna Lumley (Absolutely Fabulous, Gangster Granny), Nigel Havers (Benidorm, Coronation Street), Jason Merrells (Agatha Raisin, Safe House), Gemma Jones (Gentleman Jack, Unforgotten), Kenneth Cranham (Hatton Garden, Bancroft), Isabella Pappas (Paranoid) y Sharon Rooney (My Mad Fat Diary, No Offence) protagonizarán Finding Alice junto a Keeley Hawes. Serán Sarah y Roger, los padres de Alice (Hawes); Harry, el marido de Alice; Minnie y Gerry, los padres de Harry; Charlotte, la hija de Alice y Harry; y Nicol, la hermana de Harry.
Joanna Vanderham (Warrior, The Paradise) será recurrente en la quinta temporada de Legends of Tomorrow. Se desconocen detalles del personaje.
Pósters
         Nuevas series
Amazon encarga Jack Reacher, adaptación de las novelas de Lee Child. La primera temporada recogerá la historia de 'The Killing Floor'. Escrita por Nick Santora (Scorpion, Prison Break).
The CW encarga Superman and Lois protagonizada por Tyler Hoechlin y Elizabeth Tullock.
The CW encarga el reboot de Walker, Texas Ranger protagonizado por Jared Padalecki.
Steve Coogan (Philomena, This Time with Alan Partridge) y Sarah Solemani (Him & Her, The Wrong Mans) escribirán y protagonizarán la dramedia Chivalry, sobre las políticas sexuales en tiempos del #MeToo, en Channel 4. Coogan interpretará a Cameron, exitoso productor conocido por sus citas con chicas jóvenes. Solemani será Bobby, escritora y directora que ha conocido el éxito con una película feminista de bajo presupuesto.
Suranne Jones (Gentleman Jack, Doctor Foster) protagonizará y producirá la historia de la cinco veces campeona de boxeo Jane Couch, basada en 'The Final Round', sus memorias.
CBS encarga Clarice, secuela de The Silence of the Lambs centrada en la detective Starling en 1993 mientras persigue a asesinos en serie y depredadores sexuales en Washington D.C. Escrita y producida por Alex Kurtzman (Fringe, Alias) y Jenny Lumet (Star Trek: Discovery).
Paramount Network ha encargado Mayor of Kingstown, drama de Taylor Sheridan (Yellowstone) y Hugh Dillon ambientado en un pequeño pueblo de Michigan que depende de las prisiones federales, estatales y privadas que hay en él y centrado en la familia McClusky, influyentes intermediarios entre la policía, los criminales y los políticos.
Freeform ha encargado Last Summer, thriller que transcurre en tres veranos de los años 90 en un pequeño pueblo de Texas y explora el cambio de dinámicas de popularidad. Protagonizada por Chiara Aurelia (Tell Me Your Secrets), Mika Abdalla (Project MC2), Michael Landes (Silent Witness), Froy Gutierrez (Light as a Feather, Teen Wolf), Harley Quinn Smith (Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood), Allius Barnes (Unbelievable, PEN15), Blake Lee (Parks and Recreation, Mixology), Nathaniel Ashton y Brooklyn Sudano (Taken, 11.22.63) y producida por Jessica Biel (The Sinner, Limetown).
Peacock ha encargado diez episodios del revival de Punky Brewster.
Peacock ha encargado Girls5Eva, comedia sobre un grupo musical femenino de los 90 con un solo éxito que se reúne para intentarlo de nuevo. Producida por Tina Fey (30 Rock, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt) y escrita por Meredith Scardino (Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Saturday Night Live).
AMC ha encargado Soulmates, antología romántica y de ciencia ficción ambientada quince años en el futuro, cuando un test científico puede determinar inequívocamente quién es tu alma gemela. Cada episodio contará una historia diferente. Con Malin Akerman (Billions, The Comeback), Betsy Brandt (Breaking Bad, Life in Pieces), Charlie Heaton (Stranger Things, El secreto de Marrowbone), JJ Feild (Turn, New Amsterdam), Sarah Snook (Succession), David Costabile (Billions, Breaking Bad), Sonya Cassidy (Lodge 49, Humans), Joe Anderson (The Divide, Hannibal), Steven Mackintosh (Luther, Lucky Man) y Tom Goodman-Hill (Humans, Mr. Selfridge). Creada y producida por Will Bridges (Black Mirror, Stranger Things) y Brett Goldstein y basada en su cortometraje For Life.
Hulu ha encargado una comedia sobre tres extraños que comparten una obsesión por los true crime y de pronto se ven envueltos en uno. Protagonizada por Steve Martin (Father of the Bride, Parenthood) y Martin Short (Damages, ¡Three Amigos!). Creada por Martin y John Hoffman (Grace and Frankie, Looking). Producida por Dan Fogelman (This Is Us, Galavant), Jess Rosenthal (This Is Us), Martin, Short y Hoffman.
Fechas
The Stranger llega a Netflix el 30 de enero
Cherish the Day se estrena en OWN el 11 de febrero
La segunda temporada de Flack se estrena en Pop el 13 de marzo
La tercera temporada de Westworld se estrena en HBO el 15 de marzo
La segunda temporada de Black Monday se estrena en Showtime el 15 de marzo
The Plot Against America se estrena en HBO el 16 de marzo
La cuarta y última temporada de Brockmire se estrena en IFC el 18 de marzo
Motherland: Fort Salem se estrena en Freeform el 18 de marzo
La cuarta temporada de One Day at a Time se estrena en Pop el 24 de marzo
La segunda temporada de Tacoma FD se estrena en truTV el 26 de marzo
La tercera temporada de Siren se estrena en Freeform el 2 de abril
La cuarta temporada de Insecure llega a HBO el 12 de abril
The Walking Dead: World Beyond se estrena en AMC el 12 de abril
Penny Dreadful: City of Angels se estrena en Showtime el 26 de abril
La quinta temporada de Billions se estrena en Showtime el 3 de mayo
Solar Oposites llega a Hulu el 8 de mayo
The Great llega a Hulu el 15 de mayo
La segunda temporada de Ramy llega a Hulu el 29 de mayo
Snowpiercer se estrena en TNT el 31 de mayo
La tercera temporada de The Chi se estrena en Showtime el 5 de julio
Tráilers y promos
BoJack Horseman - Últimos episodios
youtube
Little Fires Everywhere
youtube
The Stranger
youtube
Normal People
youtube
Black Monday - Temporada 2
youtube
The Chi - Temporada 3
youtube
Penny Dreadful: City of Angels
youtube
Shrill - Temporada 2
youtube
High Town
youtube
Insecure - Temporada 4
youtube
The Great
youtube
Dispatches from Elsewhere
youtube
Diary of a Future President
youtube
Chilling Adventures of Sabrina - Temporada 3
youtube
Inside No. 9 - Temporada 5
youtube
Motherland: Fort Salem
youtube
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