Thanks I'll try that
Printable View
Oooooh.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWEASasO-tI
Wish I had HBO, but I'll track this down some kinda way.
Oh damn, Peele is producing?
Good trailer. Hope this is better than his "Twilight Zone."
Jonathan Majors, I love him!
Dude's got an...interesting face for being thirty.
Looks neat to me.
Freakin' finally:D
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S33uf3E4UT4
Directv subscribers with HBO are getting HBO Max complimentary.
I believe HBO Max has several [Adult Swim] shows
Well, I'm not sure if [Adult Swim] has a streaming service or anything (plus, since I'm not American, it would probably wouldn't work here either) so I cannot comment on that. However, since a show like Primal is so good and has been flying under the radar since it began (at least, relatively speaking), I could see why getting a chance to reach a wider audience could be exciting.
Only one way to find out.
https://www.adultswim.com/videos/primal/spear-and-fang
Can't watch it here.
In a weird move... all the DC movies apparently are leaving the service on July 1st? I dont understand this....
Batman
Batman Forever
Batman Returns
Batman & Robin
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice
Catwoman
Jonah Hex
Justice League
The Lego Batman Movie
The Losers
Steel
Suicide Squad
Teen Titans Go! to the Movies
Wonder Woman (Animated Movie)
Wonder Woman
HBO go is finally going away.
So now people don't have to be confused with three HBO apps.
Gone with the Wind isn't a film I love--it's more interesting as an historical artifact than it is as a movie--but the conversation around the film in 2020 is boringly simplistic. It's less a film about the American civil war than it is a film about 1930s and the ideological contradictions in US society at the time of the film's release (not only between black and white, but also between North and South and male and female). In order for the film to recoup its costs, it had to be acceptable in all parts of the US, and so the film has to somehow negotiate those ideological contradictions. For the film, what the pre-war South represents is primarily a society with clear, stable social norms and hierarchies which is literally blown up about forty minutes into the movie, and the rest of the film is about the characters trying to figure out how to live in this new, uncertain world they find themselves in. That racial issues largely take a backseat to the depiction of the war as a psychic trauma inflicted on the South and Scarlett O'Hara as a challenge to conventional gender roles reveals a lot about the racial consciousness of the film's makers and the fact that Hollywood wasn't much concerned with black audiences in the 1930s.
Incidentally, Charles Burnett's Nightjohn (a much better film than Gone with the Wind, or 12 Years a Slave for that matter) isn't available on any streaming service in Canada (although you can see it on Amazon Prime in the US). What's the deal with that?
Gone with the Wind is a pretentious bore. It's like 4 hours of a women whining where scenes are separated by lazy text crawls and bloated dialog. It could quite possibly be more overrated than Tree of Life.