Sabtu, 05 Oktober 2019

Ex-Simpsons Composer Alf Clausen Files Wrongful Termination Suit

Streaming Movies 2019 Full Online



Alf Clausen, the longtime composer for The Simpsons who was fired from the show in 2017, filed a wrongful termination lawsuit against Fox and the show, claiming he was dismissed because of his age, Variety reports.

Clausen joined The Simpsons during its second season and worked on the show for 27 years. When he was let go in 2017, he said he received a call from Simpsons producer Richard Sakai, who said the show was seeking a different kind of music.

In his new lawsuit, filed Monday, Clausen countered, saying, This reason was pretextual and false. Instead, Plaintiffs unlawful termination was due to perceived disability and age. The new suit names Fox, James L. Brooks Gracie Films and The Simpsons new corporate owner, Disney, as defendants.

'The Simpsons': Watch Trump Flee the Squad in New 'West Side Story' ParodyRussi Taylor, Voice of Minnie Mouse and 'Simpsons'' Martin Prince, Dead at 75

A representative forThe Simpsonsdeclined to comment. A representative forFox did not immediately return Rolling Stones request for comment.

After Clausen was fired, The Simpsons replaced him with the music production company Bleeding Fingers Music, which was founded by Hans Zimmer, Russell Emanuel and Steve Kofsky. The suit alleges that Clausens replacement was substantially younger in age [and] was not only paid less, but was not disabled. The suit does not identify Clausens disability.

A lawyer for Clausen did not immediately return Rolling Stones request for comment.

At the time of Clausens firing, there was some speculation that the move was part of ongoing cost-cutting measures at The Simpsons, even though the show continues to rake in massive profits. The composers overhead was particularly high because he scored every episode with a 35-piece orchestra. While that was the set-up Simpsons creator Matt Groening wanted from the start, the cost of musicians, studios, orchestrations and other expenses could run into the millions per year.

During his tenure, Clausen handled background music and cues, contributed to an array of classic Simpsons songs and earned 23 Emmy nominations, winning two. At the start of Season Three, he also re-arranged Danny Elfmans famous Simpsons theme song.

Jumat, 04 Oktober 2019

GLOW Season 3: A Little Less Conversation, A Little More Action, Please

films Movies 2019 Online to Watch for free



This post contains full spoilers for GLOW Season Three, which Netflix released on Friday.

In the closing moments of GLOWs third season, Britney Youngs Carmen announces plans to leave the show-within-the-show because, she says, I want to wrestle, and I cant do that here anymore.

Carmens in a unique position among the Netflix dramedys main characters. Almost everyone else fell into wrestling by accident, or for lack of a better option, where Carmen grew up in the wrestling world and loves it for its own sake. Even money man Bash (Chris Lowell), while a wrestling fan, has diversified his interests by this point in the series, and looks at GLOW as one small part of his larger showbiz empire. So it makes sense that Carmen, of all the regulars, would be most apt to make a meta comment about how little wrestling there is in this season of a show about wrestling.

'Sword of Trust' Review: Have Blade, Will RambleA 'GLOW' of Their Own: See Geena Davis as a Swanky Las Vegas Director in Season 3 Trailer

Over the course of a 10-episode season, only three episodes feature any significant action inside the squared circle: the premiere (Up, Up, Up), which establishes how the former cable-access show translates into a Las Vegas casino revue; the fifth episode (Freaky Tuesday), where all the women swap characters for the night; and the finale (A Very GLOW Christmas), in which Carmen convinces Ruth (Alison Brie) to perform a version of A Christmas Carol where Ruths wrestling alter ego Zoya the Destroya is Scrooge.

In several ways, it makes a lot of sense that Season Three largely back-burners the wrestling. Doing GLOW as a stage show for tourists means that it will be the same thing every night, and theres no point dramatizing that except on occasions like Freaky Tuesday, where things go differently. (And it turns out that Betty Gilpin can do a terrible Russian accent almost as amusing as Bries.) And by the end of Season Two, GLOW had arguably pushed the wrestling angle as hard as it could. Not only had all of the actresses become technically skilled in the ring, but that season devoted an entire, marvelously silly episode to showing us an installment of the Bash-produced show from beginning to end.

Perhaps most importantly, the wrestling sequences take up a lot of real estate on a show with a big ensemble an ensemble that it was clearly determined to service more thoroughly this year than in the past. By acknowledging early on that the Vegas show would be the same from night to night, Season Three gave itself more room (*) to dig deeper into nearly every character. (The two hairdressers were still mostly comic relief, but even they played a more dramatic role as Sunita Manis Arthie anxiously took a step out of the closet.)

(*) As a streaming show without commercials or time slots, GLOW can technically be any length it wants, and nearly every episode this year was 30-plus minutes, with several clocking in near or even over 40. But thats also pushing the outer limits of what tends to work in a TV comedy episode even for a series meant to be binged so something had to go. In this case, it was the wrestling.

Like Ruth and Debbie, GLOW itself has always looked on the wrestling as a means to an end. For the show, it was the chance to explore the ambitions and bonds among a group of misfits at a very tacky moment in our pop cultural history. Having long since established how the wrestling works, Season Three looked more at what made everybody tick.

Bashs green-card marriage to Rhonda (Kate Nash), for instance, allowed the creative team to more directly address Bashs own stay deep inside the closet, which had only been touched on briefly in previous seasons. This is tricky dramatic territory, but Lowell, Nash, and the writers navigated it with grace throughout culminating in an unexpected threesome between the sexually incompatible spouses and the male prostitute Rhonda had hired in the mistaken belief that she could make Bash jealous. Most of that sequence was dialogue-free, with the actors expressions and movements explaining everything about this impromptu renegotiation of the marriage.

There was also good material for Sheila the She-Wolf (Gayle Rankin) and Tamm (Kia Stevens) as they opted to make like Ruth and get serious about acting; for Debbie as she asserted herself as a producer and fell into a brief romance with older businessman Tex (Halt and Catch Fires always-charming Toby Huss); for the awkward romance between Arthie and Yolanda (Shakira Barrera), who had no interest in hiding her own identity; for GLOW director Sam (Marc Maron) to make peace with the fact that daughter Justine (Britt Baron) was a better writer than him; and for Cherry (Sydelle Noel) to debate whether to sacrifice her career to have a baby with husband Keith (Bashir Salahuddin). Nothing revolutionary, but all the stories were effectively told. The season also did a nice job with its two major new additions: Geena Davis as the former showgirl who owns the casino, and Kevin Cahoon as Bobby, a drag queen who becomes close with Sheila.

The monotonous, backgrounded nature of the wrestling fit into the seasons themes. Vegas offered both GLOW and its performers a chance to reinvent themselves. Nearly all took it, and discovered new facets of their work and/or personal lives. The only exceptions: Carmen, who just wanted to wrestle; and Ruth, who found herself plateauing while all her friends were blossoming. (Even Sam couldnt cast her in the studio movie he was making, because screenwriter Justine objected, and Sam chose his daughter over his would-be girlfriend.)

So in terms of plot, character, and theme, it made sense that we didnt spend much time watching Zoya, Liberty Belle, Machu Picchu, and the rest of the womens wrestling characters. But I have to admit that by the time Carmen voiced her objections to Ruth and Debbie, Id started to agree with her.

While the Vegas setting hemmed in the creative team regarding how much the show-within-the-show could change each time we saw it, its also not coincidental that Freaky Tuesday and A Very GLOW Christmas were among the seasons most effective episodes for both laughs and character development. GLOW just feels livelier, and truer to itself, when were spending at least a few minutes each episode on the work thats brought these misfits together. And in seasons past, the show deftly used the wrestling not only to provide narrative structure, but to help advance character arcs. There was some of that in Season Three Jackie Tohns Melrose does a racist Asian accent while swapping roles with Ellen Wongs Jenny in Freaky Tuesday, kicking off a very potent storyline for two of the shows back-benchers but not as much as there could have been. Its a big deal late in the season, for instance, when Sheila encounters a real wolf during a desert camping trip and, realizing that shes been faking it all these years, ashamedly burns her wig and other bits of lupine cosplay. But the only time afterward that we see her in the ring, its for the Christmas Carol spoof, which means we have no idea what kind of character she winds up playing the rest of the time or whether she feels enough of an actress now to separate the She-Wolf from Sheila and use the former for work purposes.

GLOW doesnt always need wrestling to move things along and hit important emotional beats. The seasons penultimate episode (The Libertines) takes place at an AIDS benefit cabaret that Bobby invites the women to, and those performances effectively take on the role the wrestling scenes so often play in underlining story and character and theme. (Its at the cabaret, for instance, that Sheila gets major validation for her acting, while Arthie is inspired to embrace her truth after homophobes vandalize the event.) But some kind of performance is helpful, and Season Three could have used some similar substitutions throughout.

The season ends with Debbie having helped Bash buy a local TV network out from under Tex, with the plan to revive GLOW as a television property (with new characters, because their old station owns the rights to Zoya, et. al), and with Ruth replacing Sam as director. But Carmen has already split for other opportunities, and Ruth doesnt want to give up her acting dream, even if, as Debbie bluntly puts it, it would have happened for her by now if it was going to.

Its a promising set-up for a potential fourth season, but fourth seasons on Netflix are becoming an increasingly rare proposition. The streaming giant has apparently embraced the idea that it can cancel shows, and that its subscribers would rather start something new after a few seasons. (Never mind that long-running shows like The Office and Friends are apparently among the most popular titles in the entire Netflix library.) It wouldnt surprise me if theres a fourth season of GLOW, but nor would it shock me to see it join the recent ranks of Tuca & Bertie and The OA, among many others, to get a shorter-than-planned run.

This was still a fine season of TV, and the best showcase yet for many members of the cast. And if GLOW manages to break the recent cancellation trend and come back for a season where Debbie and Bash are mounting a new wrestling TV show, then we can look on Season Three as an admirable and mostly successful experiment. But if the last we see of these characters is Debbie and Ruths awkward airport goodbye, then among the disappointments will be the fact that GLOWs unplanned farewell season mostly sidestepped the arena where so many of its memorable moments once took place.

High School Politics Hit Insane Heights in New Trailer for The Politician

Watch free Movies 2020 Online



Ben Platt plays a teenager obsessed with becoming President of the United States in the riotous first trailer for Ryan Murphys new high school comedy, The Politician, out September 27th on Netflix.

In the new eight-episode series, Platt plays the preppy and wealthy Payton, whos convinced his dreams of occupying the White House will only be realized if he first becomes Student Body President of San Sebastian High. Unfortunately for Payton, the other students (and teachers, and parents) of San Sebastian are just as ruthless and willing to play dirty as he is, even going as far as to concoct a murder plan.

And while this may just be an election for Student Body President, The Politician is also a Ryan Murphy show, and the trailer teases plenty of on-the-nose political satire. She cant vote without a student ID, one high school poll watcher deadpans. Otherwise theyd bus in a bunch of kids from other schools to vote illegally.

The Politician also stars Gwyneth Paltrow, Jessica Lange, Zoey Deutch, Lucy Boynton, Julia Schlaepfer, Laura Dreyfuss, Rahne Jones, Theo Germaine, David Corenswet, Bob Balaban and Benjamin Barrett. Ryan Murphy co-created, co-wrote, co-directed and executive produced the show with Brad Falchuk and Ian Brennan; all three previously collaborated on Glee.

Kamis, 03 Oktober 2019

A Peasant Farmer Resists Nazi Germany in Terrence Malicks A Hidden Life Trailer

Where to watch films Movies 2019 for free online



An Austrian farmer refuses to fight for the Nazis in World War II in the tense new trailer for Terrence Malicks upcoming film,A Hidden Life, which opens December 13th

A Hidden Life is based on real events and stars August Diehl as Franz Jgersttter, an Austrian peasant farmer and devout Catholic whos unnerved by the rise of the Third Reich and refuses to serve in the army. Whats happened to our country? he wonders in the trailer. Were killing innocent people, raiding other countries, preying on the weak. If our leaders, if theyre evil, what does one do?

The Nazis ultimately charge Jgersttter with treason but faced with the threat of execution, he keeps his resolve through his wife Fani (Valerie Pachner) and their children. The trailer for A Hidden Lifefeatures some of Malicks famously breathtaking cinematography, both in its jarring handheld close-ups of human conflict and in its sweeping wide shots of the Austrian countryside.

In addition to Diehl and Pachner, A Hidden Life also stars the late Michael Nyqvist and Bruno Ganz, both in their final performances. The film premiered in May at the Cannes Film Festival to positive reception.

See Dave Chappelle Roam a Desert-Like Landscape in New Trailer for Netflix Special

Where to watch films Movies 2020 for free online



Dave Chappelle roams a desert-like landscape in the new trailer for Sticks & Stones, the comedians fifth Netflix stand-up special that airs on August 26th.

Narrated by Morgan Freeman, the one-minute clip features Chappelle sauntering the salt flat, eventually coming across a white backdrop. He sits on a stool with a microphone as the camera zooms in. How did we get here, I wonder? Freeman asks. I dont mean that metaphorically; Im really asking. How did Dave get here? I mean, what the fuck is this? Ah, what do I know? Im just Morgan Freeman.

The special, detailed as a provocative perspective on the tidal wave of celebrity scandals, the opioid crisis, and more is the comedians fifth standup special in two years. He previously starred in Deep in the Heart of Texas: Dave Chappelle Live at Austin City Limits, The Age of Spin: Dave Chappelle Live at the Hollywood Palladium, Dave Chappelle: Equanimity and Dave Chappelle: The Bird Revelation.

On October 27th, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts will award Chappelle with the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor; the comedian already has two Grammys and two Emmys under his belt. Earlier this year, Chappelle joined Will Smith for an episode of Will Smiths Bucket List, where he gave the actor advice on how to do stand-up.

Everyone Is a Murder Suspect in Final 13 Reasons Why Season 3 Trailer

Streaming Movies 2020 Full Online



Netflix released the final trailer for13 Reasons Whys Season 3 on Wednesday, before the new season premieres August 23rd on the streaming platform.

The new trailer gives more insight into the Homecoming death of Bryce Walker, the driving force behind this season at Liberty High. Everyone is a suspect, as nearly everyone at the high school had a reason to kill Bryce. But which one of them is truly capable of murder?

Everyone has their reasons The secrets at Liberty High run deep, and in the aftermath of the Homecoming game all of the friends have something to hide. As the mystery of his death engulfs the town, there are numerous suspects in focus, reads the Season 3 synopsis.

Season 3 sees much of the13 Reasons Why cast reprising their roles:Dylan Minnette, Brandon Flynn, Justin Prentice, Alisha Boe, Christian Navarro, Miles Heizer, Devin Druid, Ross Butler, Timothy Granaderos, Anne Winters, Steven Weber, Brenda Strong and Amy Hargreaves. The season introduces new cast members Grace Saif (as new girl Ani), Bex Taylor Klaus and Tyler Barnhardt.

Rabu, 02 Oktober 2019

See Sylvester Stallone Blow People Up in New Rambo: Last Blood Trailer

How to watch films Movies 2020 free online



Sylvester Stallone readies himself for revenge with knives, machine guns and landmines in the new trailer for Rambo: Last Blood, the actors first Rambo movie in 11 years. Most of the action seems to take place on Rambos farm-like compound, where hes protecting his niece. All shes got is me, he says, between shots of him cocking a semiautomatic rifle and building a device that punctures tires. Throughout the clip, scenes from previous Rambo movies starting with 1982s First Blood flicker between fireballs.

Elsewhere in the trailer, there are scenes of soldiers marching through fire to Rambos barn and the Vietnam vet blasting baddies in some sort of underground tunnel system (the existence of which really ought to be explained in the movie, because its doubtful most farms need tunnels). Im gonna tear you apart, Rambo mumbles at one point, stretching an arrow out on his bow.

The film, which will hit theaters on September 20th, also features Paz Vega, Sergio Peris-Mencheta, and Adrianna Barraza, among others. Filmmaker Adrian Grunberg, whose credits include working as the assistant director on Narcos and Jack Reacher, helmed the picture. Stallone, who directed 2008s Rambo, cowrote the screenplay with Matthew Cirulnick, who, incidentally, has a writing credit on Eminems The Slim Shady Show cartoon.

The film studio, Lionsgate, is billing Last Bloodas a final mission for the character. A previous trailer for the film, which is the fifth in the Rambo series, featured Lil Nas Xs Old Town Road on the soundtrack.

The Nightingale Review: Aussie Revenge Tale Pulls No Punches

Watch free Movies 2019 Online



Its instructive to point out that The Nightingale is not for the faint of heart. Theres horrific violence abound; at one point early on, a rapist violates his victim while her baby screams in his ear. But in no way is this powerhouse another treatment of male violence filtered through an exploitaive male gaze. In her second film, after 2014s haunting The Babadook, Australian writer-director Jennifer Kent creates a womans revenge tale fueled by a righteous anger at the evil men do. Theres not a whit of audience coddling. Youve been warned.

Set in the harsh 1825 Tasmanian Outback, the film stars Aisling Franciosi the Italian-Irish actress best known as Game of Thrones Lyanna Stark as Clare, a 21-year-old Irish convict. Shes been sent to this remote penal colony of Van Diemens Land and enslaved by Lieutenant Hawkins (Sam Claflin), a British officer and boot-and-polish sadist. His slow rise in the ranks is a consistent sore point. So he takes out his frustration by brutalizing those in his charge, from underlings to prisoners. That most definitely includes Claire.

Boogeyman Nights: The Story Behind This Year's Horror Hit 'The Babadook'25 Best Modern Exploitation Movies

At first, Hawkins is content to make the young woman his personal songbird, given that Clare sings like a nightingale while she serves him food and drink. And then the screaming starts. Claflin, the blond dreamboat Finnick Odair in The Hunger Games series, plays this colonial monster without dropping his charm and good looks, which makes him doubly scary. Its a bold gamble of a performance that pays off. Hawkins wears a surface sanity in public; he desperately wants that promotion. And its Clares hope that the pressure will persuade him to set her free, along with her husband Aidan (Michael Sheasby), a fellow convict, and their infant daughter.

When her dream of liberation is brutally squashed, Clare vows revenge. Thats when Kent and the splendid cinematographer Radek Ladczuk (shooting in the square-shaped, old-school Academy ratio) build a historical story of vengeance that shakes you to your core. The Nightingale extends from the tale of one woman in pursuit of a male predator to a broad condemnation of a system that exploits women and the indigenous people of Tasmania, all the while detailing how their world becomes one.

Clare chases Hawkins into the wilderness on her husbands unsteady horse, her trauma often reducing her to a fevered dream state that tests her survival at every turn. As a guide, she hires an Aboriginal tracker, Billy (a superb Baykali Ganambarr), who is reluctant to work for this half-crazed, racist woman who is likely to get him killed. Ganambarr, a dancer in an extraordinary acting breakthrough, builds a character whose grudge against the British begins to match Clares own. Watching the mutual hostility between these two antagonists soften into a fragile bond gives the film a fierce hold on viewers, and Kent never loses sight of the psychological wounds that fester underneath Clares odyssey. Its a shame that she diffuses the force of her storytelling with too many false endings. But as a devastating deconstruction of the complex nature of one womans retribution, The Nightingale is peerless.

Selasa, 01 Oktober 2019

Best TV to See in September 2019: Country Music Doc, The Deuce, Walton Goggins in The Unicorn

Watch this free Movies 2019



Remember when September was the big month for new TV programming? (Gather round, children, and let Grandpa tell you about the days when there were only three networks!) Yes, the traditional pilot season is once upon us, which means laugh-tracked comedies, curious cop shows and Lost-like mysteries are once again upon us. Also on deck: Ken Burns delves into an august tradition of American music; a documentary looks at an icons impact on sport and culture; and an under-seen triumph returns to HBO with meticulous period recreations intact. Here are the sitcoms, procedurals, and other future Ill-binge-this-once-its-on-a-streaming-service favorites hitting the tube this month.

Brian Cox: The 'Succession' Star on the Art of Playing BastardsNathan Fielder to Write, Direct New HBO Comedy Pilot

American Horror Story: 1984 (FX, Sep. 18th)
Jocks in crop-tops, hair several stories high, New Wave synth music on the soundtrack it must be the Eighties on Ryan Murphys unstoppable horror anthology. He pays homage to cabin-in-the-woods slasher movies with the latest season, with the summer camp setting specifying the pool of references to Sleepaway Camp and its ilk. A cast of unsuspecting, nubile teens, including Murphy regulars Emma Roberts and Billie Lourd (along with Ryan TV newcomers DeRon Horton and Olympic skier-turned-actor Gus Kenworthy), will get hacked to bits by a masked assailant, but this being American Horror Story, there has to be more to it than that. Though taut midriffs and intermittent stabbings is, to be fair, plenty.

Country Music (PBS, Sep. 15th)
Americas preeminent longform-doc historian covered jazz in 2001; now Kens Burns is turning his sights on the other purely American genre of music. Country gets the full Burns approach with a top-to-bottom account of its formation, its social import, and its legacy in the present day. With an avalanche of rare preserved footage, exhaustive research, and color commentary from such luminaries as Garth Brooks, Loretta Lynn, and Willie Nelson, Burns has accomplished another herculean feat of posterity-building. He establishes a public record of all that his chosen topic means to the people at its center joy, heartbreak, hope, and everything in between.

The Deuce, Season 3 (HBO, Sep. 9th)
David Simon and George Pelecanos porn epic jumps ahead into the Eighties for its final season, when videotape revolutionized the industry by slicing production costs. Rising director Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) continues to gain in legitimacy, while sleazeball brothers Vincent and Frankie Martino (James Franco and James Franco, respectively) do the opposite as their business enterprises grow shadier and shadier. Porn starlet Lori (Emily Meade) goes mainstream as a video vixen on the hair metal scene, and the cops launch a new plan to clean up Times Square once and for all at the behest of Mayor Ed Koch. Times change, buildings rise and fall, but the one constant throughout everything: Sex sells.

Diego Maradona (HBO, Sep. 24th)
Diego Maradona has a solid claim to the title of historys greatest soccer player. (Fine, fine, football player.) This documentary goes one step further to posit him as one of the most fascinating figures in all of sport, exposing the agony and ecstasy of an unparalleled talent. From his childhood in the slums of Argentina, to his rise to stardom and the frenzied media spectacle surrounding it, to later-in-life scandals involving cocaine and La Cosa Nostra, its another comprehensive portrait from director Asif Kapadia, i.e. the man behind Senna, the jaw-dropping Formula-One-champ profile, and Amy, the Oscar-winning chronicle of Amy Winehouses life and times. In other words, audiences are expecting a gooooooooooal.

Emergence (ABC, Sep. 24th)
An airplane falls out of the sky and crashes on the Peconic Bay in Long Island. Out from the smithereens crawls a girl (Alexa Skye Swinton) with no memory of who she is or where shes come from. Theres a mystery afoot, probably related to the unexplainable electrical flares and odd lights in the nighttime sky, and local police chief Jo Evans (Fargo breakout Allison Tolman) wants to be the one to unravel it. Trouble is, shes taken a shine to the young survivor and offered her a home, tying some emotional knots into her deductive efforts. Uh-oh.

Prodigal Son (Fox, Sep. 23rd)
What if Hannibal Lecter was your dad? Thats the jumping-off point for this new crime procedural, in which ex-FBI profiler Malcolm Bright (Walking Dead alum Tom Payne) returns to the job when a new serial killer appears to be copycatting the murders Malcolms father (Michael Sheen) committed years earlier. Hell have to confront his mental demons and go face-to-face with his long-estranged, homicidal pop-pop if he wants to solve the case before the killer strikes again. But Malcolm cant shake the sneaking suspicion that his father may somehow be orchestrating all this from behind bars, and more troubling still, that he may be one of the pawns.

Room 104, Season 3 (HBO, Sep. 13th)
Sam Richardson, Luke Wilson, Arturo Castro, Paul F. Tompkins, and June Squibb number among the guests checking in at HBOs anything-goes anthology series this year. The show sticks to its one guiding principle all action takes place within a single suite at a singularly strange hotel but that parameter leaves a lot of space for flights of fantasy. This seasons trailer teases a growhouse FDA bust, multiple openings of the third eye, and at least one encounter with a well-renowned monster. Oh, and lots of bloodshed. The drama appears to be drifting towards the realm of horror, a fittingly unlikely pivot for a show thats thrived on its own unpredictability.

Stumptown (ABC, Sep. 25th)
The title refers to the nickname of Portland, Oregon, the city that down-on-her-luck veteran Dex Parios (Cobie Smulders) calls home. Unemployed and deep in debt, she gets the bright idea to scrape together some scratch as a private eye, using her skills learned from the military to pay the bills and support her brother (Cole Sibus) with Down Syndrome. One lowlife at a time, she cleans up the streets and dispenses sardonic one-liners; the project hasnt strayed far from its graphic novel origins. Shes a far cry from HIMYMs Robin Sparkles, in other words.

Sunnyside (NBC, Sep. 26th)
Kal Penn draws on his background as an entertainer, a political operator, and an Indian-American man for this sitcom about the red tape wrapped around the American dream. The shows creator also leads as Garrett Modi, a former New York City councilman booted from office due to drug charges. (To think: Kumar himself, getting high!) He finds his second act in a group of immigrants preparing to take their citizenship exams; they need help getting a leg up on the test, and he needs to do something meaningful. Do you think theyll end up teaching him as much as he teaches them? Have you ever watched a half-hour television comedy before?

The Unicorn (CBS, Sep. 26th)
For the record: Series lead Walton Goggins does not portray the snow-white one-horned horse of legend in this new comedy series. Rather, his character Wade is a comparably rare phenomenon in the adult dating world: handsome, a good father, gainfully employed and, after the tragic death of his wife, single. And this sitcom picks up at the point where the widower decides to get back in the game. Yes, he may have caught the eye of every single mom within a ten-mile radius. No, hes not done processing his own grief or figured out how to introduce a new woman to his youngsters. Who doesnt pine for a weekly dose of Walty G. once more?

The Radical Kindness of Steven Universe

How to watch films Movies 2019 free online



The title character of Steven Universe is an adolescent boy who, over the course of the Cartoon Network series first five seasons, developed the ability to fly, to conjure an impenetrable pink shield out of thin air, to use his saliva to heal injuries short of death (and sometimes beyond), to merge his body with a friends (in an act called fusion) so they can become even stronger as one than they are side-by-side, and more. But his greatest power and the reason the show became so adored that a follow-up film, Steven Universe: The Movie, will air on Labor Day, potentially leading into future seasons is both much simpler and much more remarkable:

Watch Alec Benjamin's Poignant Video for 'Must Have Been the Wind'Hear Skrillex, Boys Noize and Ty Dolla $ign Team Up for 'Midnight Hour'

Steven is kind.

The animated series, created by Adventure Time alum Rebecca Sugar, has a complicated mythology involving the Gems, an alien race of women whose leaders, the four Diamonds, want to reshape the universe into something following their very rigid and orderly caste system. Thousands of years ago, we gradually(*) find out, a Gem known as Rose Quartz (Susan Egan) formed a rebellious group called the Crystal Gems to protect life on Earth from being conquered and eradicated by the Diamonds. By the time the series begins in the present day, Rose has sacrificed herself to give birth to half-human son Steven (Zach Callison), who is raised in part by failed rock-star dad Greg (Tom Scharpling) and in part by the three surviving Crystal Gems: the enigmatically cool Garnet (Estelle), uptight Pearl (Deedee Magno Hall), and immature Amethyst (Michaela Dietz). Steven inherited Roses gem, and her powers, but his age and the human half of his DNA make them slow to emerge. So in the shows earliest adventures, Steven is a glorified mascot to the Crystal Gems, along mainly for moral support and the occasional bit of improvised pubescent boy strategy.

(*) Most episodes are 11 minutes long, and Sugar slow-plays a lot of the backstory and major arcs by focusing the start of the series (and each ensuing season) on relatively light-hearted standalone adventures. Its a seasonal structure that classic genre shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Veronica Mars, and The X-Files used so well back in the day, but thats unfortunately gone out of vogue in favor of pure serialization. (When Veronica came back this summer, it told a single, eight-episode story.) As a kids show with extremely nuanced themes, Steven Universe benefits greatly from how much time it lets you marinate in Stevens world before getting to the big topics. But a newcomer wouldnt be blamed for sampling the first few episodes and dismissing it as something much sillier and more superficial than what follows.

But even after he begins mastering his inherited powers, its clear that Stevens greatest asset to the team and the most appealing part of the whole series is his fundamental decency. Its not just that he prefers nonviolent solutions when Garnet or Amethyst would be content to smash the latest monster in their path. Its that his impulse is almost always to empathize and try to help, and to see the best in everyone he meets whether seemingly villainous Gems like the smug Peridot (Shelby Rabara) or humans like shiftless doughnut-shop worker Lars (Matthew Moy). Steven wants to be friends with everyone, and wants everyone to be friends, and more often than not, he succeeds. (Think Leslie Knope, but huskier and less intense.)

Heroes who are intrinsically good can prove intimidating to storytellers who need to generate conflict. Its why most of the attempts to make a post-Christopher Reeve movie about Superman involved making him angstier, or why, before Chris Evans came along, no one believed audiences would want to watch a hero as cornily forthright as Captain America. But when it works and hoo-boy, does it work on Steven Universe, whether youre a wide-eyed kid or a cynical adult the force of their virtue shines so brightly that it can be hard to imagine wanting anything even slightly less sincere.

Stevens empathy and his knack for accepting people on their own terms proves essential for a show that presents complex ideas in a manner its young audience will appreciate. Just like Buffy once used monsters as metaphors for adolescence, Steven Universe uses the Gems to talk about a variety of LGBTQ issues (among other things). Pearls unrequited love for Rose and her resentment of both Greg and Steven for taking Rose from her is subtly but clearly established, and is something she and the guys have to work through together. Gems are only meant to fuse with others like them (Ruby with Ruby, Pearl with Pearl), which makes the Crystal Gems habit of fusing with one another an abomination to the more traditional, repressed Gems. Yet Steven is thrilled when he sees Pearl and Amethyst fuse into the giant archer Opal. And when he accidentally fuses with best friend (and mutual crush) Connie (Grace Rolek) into the glamorous, intersex Stevonnie, it becomes a story about the importance of consent, with each of them frequently checking in with the other to be sure they want to stay this way a while longer.

Its a wonderful show for many reasons, but the curiosity and warm-heartedness of Steven is the crucial one.

Steven Universe: The Movie plays less as a sequel to the series so far than a Greatest Hits collection almost a primer for newcomers, even if it wont have the same impact on them that 160 bite-sized episodes of TV had on the veterans.

The movie takes place a few years after the Season Five finale, and early on features a long expository musical number about who everyone is and how they all got happy endings when last they appeared. Then along comes a mysterious new Gem who at times resembles Bugs Bunny at his most anarchic, at others the elastically cheerful Steamboat Willie-era Mickey Mouse. Her attacks give the Crystal Gems a kind of factory reboot that erases all the emotional progress they made during the series, forcing Steven to recreate important moments from their lives to bring them back to normal.

The structure of the movie can make it feel like a rehash of things the fans all know so well. (At one point, Steven even loudly complains that he is once again having to deal with the consequences of something his mother did.) Fortunately, its a rehash accompanied by a soundtrack of terrific original songs (co-written by, among others, Chance the Rapper, Aimee Mann, and Ted Leo) performed by Steven and friends. And if Im following in Stevens footsteps and looking for the best in this follow-up to those five wonderful seasons, Id look at the movie as the start of whatever Sugar wants to do with this world next. If its meant as a conclusion, its fun but inessential. But if its the start of a new phase of an older Stevens universe, then it makes sense to travel down memory lane with frequent musical interludes before pushing onto whatever comes after the happy ending.

The first four Steven Universe seasons are streaming on Hulu, while Season Five is available On Demand. Steven Universe: The Movie premieres September 2nd at 6 p.m. on Cartoon Network.

Martin Scorseses The Irishman to Premiere at New York Film Festival

How to watch films Movies 2019 free online



Martin Scorseses highly anticipated new film, The Irishman, will have its world premiere at the 2019 New York Film Festival Friday, September 27th, festival organizers announced on Monday.

The Irishman is so many things: rich, funny, troubling, entertaining and, like all great movies, absolutely singular, said NYFF festival director Kent Jones, who previously worked for Scorseses World Cinema Foundation, in a statement. Its the work of masters, made with a command of the art of cinema that Ive seen very rarely in my lifetime, and it plays out at a level of subtlety and human intimacy that truly stunned me. All I can say is that the minute it was over my immediate reaction was that I wanted to watch it all over again.

Robert De Niro's Company Sues Ex-Employee For Embezzlement, Binge-Watching 'Friends' at WorkBob Dylan: Best Gifts and Collectibles to Buy Right Now

Scorsese said of the announcement, Its an incredible honor that The Irishman has been selected as the Opening Night of the New York Film Festival. I greatly admire the bold and visionary selections that the festival presents to audiences year after year. The festival is critical to bringing awareness to cinema from around the world. I am grateful to have the opportunity to premiere my new picture in New York alongside my wonderful cast and crew.

The mob drama stars Robert De Niro, Al Pacino and Joe Pesci, and is due to be released on Netflix and in select theaters later this year. Based on the nonfiction book I Heard You Paint Houses by Charles Brandt, with an adapted screenplay penned by Steven Zaillian (Schindlers List,Gangs of New York,Moneyball), the film uses state-of-the-art anti-aging digital effects to depict De Niro, Pacino and Pescis characters as up to 30 years younger.

The last time a Scorsese film was screened at the New York Film Festival was in 2011, when a work-in-progress version ofHugo premiered as a special surprise for guests.

Festival, VIP and special event passes for this years NYFF, including the screening ofThe Irishman, are on sale now; other individual screening tickets go on sale to the general public on September 8th. The festival runs September 27th through October 13th.

Senin, 30 September 2019

Brittany Runs a Marathon Review: Star Jillian Bell Goes the Extra Mile

Streaming Full Movies 2019 Online free



A fun ride, spiked with touching gravity, is not a shabby way to end the movie summer. Thanks to Jillian Bell, a comic force of nature with real dramatic chops, thats what you get in Brittany Runs a Marathon. The glorious Bell, who stole every scene she graced in 22 Jump Street, plays the title role, an aggressively upbeat twentysomething who gets a medical wake-up call about weight, high blood pressure, and Adderall addiction her body mass index is in the obese zone. Brittany barely gets by working as an usher at an Off-Broadway theater, and her lack of ambition and direction is eating away at her self-esteem. Theres a downside to being what she calls the fat sidekick to her skinny, narcissistic roommate Gretchen (Alice Lee), and its not pretty.

Watch Alec Benjamin's Poignant Video for 'Must Have Been the Wind'Hear Skrillex, Boys Noize and Ty Dolla $ign Team Up for 'Midnight Hour'

Its running the 26-mile New York City Marathon that represents Brittanys impossible dream, especially since her attempt to merely jog around the block leaves her out of breath and on the verge of collapse. Still, she has a nearly year to prep and a newfound determination. Luckily, debuting director Paul Downs Colaizzo, an acclaimed playwright (Really Really) who based the film on the experiences of his own best friend (also named Brittany), doesnt build his sharply witty script for easy sitcom miracles that tie everything up in a neat Hollywood bow. Its true that Brittany creates a support team in another inexperienced runner, Seth (Micah Stock), and acid-tongued expert Catherine (Michaela Watkins), who puts them both to shame. And she does find love, of sorts, with snarky Jern (Utkarsh Ambudkar, terrific), who shares the house- and dog-sitting job she takes to pay for gym class. You just know their sniping byplay has to lead somewhere; that it doesnt follow the clich handbook is a bonus.

For Brittany and anyone who lives in the real world self-improvement is all baby steps, and the same goes for the movie, which refuses to leave Brittanys demons unexplored. Its the backsliding that gets to the roots of her self-loathing. In one stunner of a scene, Brittany boozes it up on a visit to the home of her supportive sister (Kate Arrington) and brother-in-law (Lil Rey Howery), and insults their overweight guest, a woman who is bearing the brunt of all the hate Brittany actually feels for herself. Bell and Colaizzo do it the hard way, creating a character to root for without glib shortcuts. When you cheer at the end and you will the laughs and the tears feel honest and richly earned. Yes, Brittany Runs a Marathon gets a little earnest at times, stopping just short of self-righteousness. But Bell is always there to pull us back. She is pure gold.

The Kitchen Review: Melissa McCarthys Mob Drama Is Undercooked

Where to watch films Movies 2019 for free online



Oh, what a movie The Kitchen could have been. It seems impossible to screw up a crime thriller starring Melissa McCarthy, Tiffany Haddish and Elisabeth Moss as mob wives who turn the tables on the men who done them wrong. On paper, its a great idea to have Andrea Berloff, the Oscar-nominated co-writer of Straight Outta Compton,make her feature directing debut with this adaptation of DC Vertigo comic book series by writer Ollie Masters and artist Ming Doyle.

Though the time is 1978 and the place is New Yorks Hells Kitchen then a garbage-strewn wasteland the cast of McCarthy and Haddish leads us to expect comic mayhem. But except for a stray smile or two, the laughs never come. The Kitchen is deadly serious and worse, deadly dull, even when it tries to act tough by laying on the violence and a heaping side of gore.

'Ready or Not' Review: Here Kills the Bride'Fiddler: Miracle of Miracles' Review -- An Untraditional Documentary on a Beloved Musical

Kathy Brennan (McCarthy), Ruby OCarroll (Haddish) and Claire Walsh (Moss) are left at mercy of the Irish mob when their husbands are sentenced to three years in the pen. Claire doesnt miss Rob (Jeremy Bobb) who beats and rapes her. Ruby hated the fact that her husband, Kevin (James Badge Dale), let his racist mother (the ever-superb Margo Martindale) goad her with insults about going back to Harlem. But Kathy still has a soft spot for Jimmy (Brian dArcy James), the father of their two children.

When local mob boss Little Jackie (Myk Watford) refuses to support the wives as promised, the women spring into action. Though the premise recallsSteve McQueens 2018 Widows, in which newly-solo mob wives also decide to do it for themselves, any resemblance vanishes when it dawns that Widows was a solid film and The Kitchen is built on quicksand. As staged, the scenes in which Kathy, Ruby and Claire presumably convince hardened street types to quake in their boots when they bark orders and fire guns have the impact of children playacting. Could these three dynamos have pulled off the trick with better writing and guidance? Well never know. Haddish seems uncomfortable with her humor valve shut off, and McCarthy fails to build the emotional resonance she displayed in her Oscar-nominated role in Can You Ever Forgive Me. Moss fares best, as Claire comes into her own and finds love with Gabriel (Domhnall Gleeson), a protective hitman who teaches her how to dispose of bodies by cutting them up in a bathtub and dumping the pieces in the Hudson. You may not buy Moss as the butcher of Broadway, but she commits totally to the role.

In the final section of the film, Berloff and the actors aim for tragedy, but the film self-destructs from its own mixed messages. The women want to murder bad buysand also improve the neighborhood. Huh? Things get worse when the husbands are released from jail and come home to take back their power, each looking thoroughly ridiculous in the process. There should be a catharsis in watching predatory men get theirs. But since theyre never developed as real characters, the pathos falls flat. The Kitchenstrains credulity past the breaking point and goes disastrously off the rails, leaving its trio of femme powerhouseses looking as adrift and confused as the audience. Very little in The Kitchen is funny, but the movie itself is definitely a joke on anyone who buys a ticket.

Minggu, 29 September 2019

Aquarela Review: The Shape of Water, Indeed

Streaming Movies 2019 Full Online



Shot in high definition at 96 frames per second though most theaters will only be able to show it at 48 fps this eyepopper from Russian director-writer-cinematographer-editor Victor Kossakovsky (Vivan Las Antpodas!) is like nothing youve ever seen. His free-form documentary on water opens by scaring us to death. The scene is on frozen Lake Baikal in Siberia, in which cars are shown cracking through the ice, while a rescue team labors to save a driver and passenger. Its a showstopping sequence that reminds you how, when it comes to raging H2O, human beings are unfit opponents.

Kossakovsky and his fellow camera virtuoso Ben Bernhard capture sights that blur the line between reality and fantasy. The filmmakers show water in all its raw beauty, but also as a malevolent force. If you want to know what its like to ride Hurricane Irma as it pummels Miami, youll find out here. And Eicca Toppinens immersive, intrusive heavy-metal score wont calm your nerves nor, for that matter, will natures own crashing, thrashing sound design. Sure, the doc eventually treats us to the serene majesty of a rainbow over Angel Falls in Venezuela. But as the cameras travel through places as far-flung as Scotland, Mexico, Portugal and Greenland, theres no losing the awareness of a larger, far more imposing climate-based threat.

'Honeyland' Review: To Bee or Not to Bee10 Best Documentaries of 2018

Aquarela has no use for charts, grafs, voiceover narration or other contexual shortcuts. What you see is what you get, and that includes glaciers breaking apart leaving chunks of ice ready to rip. Theres no doubt who is starring in this movie when we watch a raging storm overtake a single woman piloting a sailboat. Whether the subject is taking the form of surging waves or making us believe its about to swallow up the cameras themselves, the documentary is a warning that insists attention must be paid. Itd be a calamitous mistake not to listen.

Hear Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Aniston, Steve Carell Conjure Newsroom Drama in The Morning Show Teaser

Streaming Movies 2020 Full Online



Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Aniston and Steve Carell tease tense backstage drama in the first teaser for their new series,The Morning Show. The show will debut onApples new streaming service Apple TV+ this fall.

The Morning Show will be a high stakes drama that pulls back the curtain on early morning TV, according to a press release. Though the teaser gives away few plot details, it takes us around the empty backstage area of a morning show studio, where a poster shows that Carell and Anistons characters are the hosts.

The three main cast members are heard in voiceover, reciting snippets from disparate conversations I am a journalist!, Dont you ever question my integrity in my house ever again, We dont know the details of the allegations before the screen fades to black.

Jay Carson (House of Cards,The Front Runner) initially helmed production onThe Morning Show before exiting over creative differences. Kerry Ehrin currently serves as the showrunner. The series also stars Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Billy Crudup, Nstor Carbonell, and Mark Duplass.

Watch Elites Stalk Strangers for Sport in Wild New Trailer for The Hunt

Free Movie Streaming Sites



Hilary Swank orchestrates an annual competition where elites try to track and kill everyday citizens in the new trailer forThe Hunt. The movie hits theaters September 27th, and marks the latest offering from Blumhouse, the production company behind horror films like Get Out andThe Purge.

The Hunt centers around twelve strangers many of them working-class and/or from the South who have been chosen by a shadowy group of elites for a sadistic purpose: Theyre brought to a remote manor to be hunted for sport. One of the hunted, Crystal (Betty Gilpin from the Netflix series GLOW) wises up to the elites plan and turns the tables on them, hatching a plot to go after the killers with the help of the other kidnapped strangers. Oscar-winning actress Hilary Swank stars as the leader of the elites and the films primary antagonist.

The film shares several credits with the post-apocalyptic television showThe Leftovers, with Craig Zobel credited as director andThe Leftovers creator Damon Lindelof (who also createdLost) penning the script with Nick Cuse. The film also stars Emma Roberts, Ike Barinholtz, Glenn Howerton and country musician Sturgill Simpson.

Sabtu, 28 September 2019

Shia LaBeouf Examines Turbulent Child Star Days in Honey Boy Trailer

Streaming Movies 2020 Full Online



Shia LaBeouf wrestles with past demons, in the script and on the screen, in the new trailer for Honey Boy, the upcoming film based on his own experiences as a young actor.

The clip follows the fictionalized version of LaBeouf, Otis Lort, as he deals with family turmoil and the pressures of fame as both a child (Noah Jupe) and young adult (Lucas Hedges). LaBeouf himself appears as father James Lort, a former rodeo clown and felon who brings his son both inspiration and angst. Youre a fucking star, and I know it, the elder Lort tells Jupes character. Thats why Im here. Im your cheerleader, honey boy.

The preview traces the loose arc of the actors career from his ascent to stardom to eventual stint in rehab. It opens with Hedges on the set of a Hollywood action movie, filming a scene capped with a massive explosion; then in a montage, he swigs some alcohol, gets in a car crash and winds up yelling at the police from the back of a cop car: What am I being arrested for? You think youre hot shit? Cause you dont know how good I am at what I do!

Honey Boy, which premiered at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival and hits theaters November 8th, was directed by Alma Harel (Bombay Beach) from LaBeoufs screenplay. The cast also features singer FKA Twigs in her feature debut.

Eddie Murphy, Taylor Swift, Phoebe Waller-Bridge Announced in Saturday Night Live Season 45 Lineup

Free Movie Streaming Sites



UPDATE: Leslie Jones will not return to Saturday Night Live after five seasons on the show. Jones joined the cast in 2014 and quickly became a fan favorite, especially for her appearances on Weekend Update. Its unclear exactly why Jones decided to leave the cast ahead of its 45th season, though a source told The New York Post, Leslie has chosen to depart as she has several upcoming projects in the works and she thought its as the right time to go. Jones is reportedly prepping a new stand-up special, which is expected to hit Netflix next year.

**

Saturday Night Livehas announced its Season 45 lineup, kicking off on September 28th with Woody Harrelson in his fourth appearance as host and Billie Eilish in her first musical guest slot.

The host lineup also includes Fleabag andKilling Eve creator Phoebe Waller-Bridge, slotted in for October 5th, as well asStranger Things actor David Harbour (October 12th) and Kristen Stewart in her second time as host (November 2nd).

But perhaps the most notable announcement for SNL fans is Eddie Murphy, who will be hosting the show on December 21st for the first time since 1984. The former SNL cast member has repeatedly distanced himself from the sketch series where he made his name, appearing very briefly duringSNLs 40th anniversary special but otherwise not participating. (It was later revealed by Norm Macdonald, in 100-tweet-long Twitter monologue, that Murphy was originally slated to give a Bill Cosby impression but turned it down.)

Other musical guests this season include Taylor Swift, joining Waller-Bridge on October 5th, and Camila Cabello on October 12th. The musical guests for the November 2nd and December 21st shows have yet to be announced.

Jumat, 27 September 2019

Them That Follow Examines the Poison of Fanatacism and Poverty in Appalachia

Stream Movies 2019 Online free



Fresh from her Oscar win for The Favourite, the indisputably great Olivia Colman shows up in Them That Follow as a snake-handling Pentecostal congregationalist in the Appalachian mountains who finds her faith sorely tested. You might want to read that sentence twice since this movie does not follow any traditional paths. But the faith it examines, in practice for more than 100 years, is considered a religious freedom by those even in areas that seek to outlaw it. Writer-directors Britt Poulton and Dan Madison Savage do not come from a Pentecostal church background, so in making their feature debut, they were determined to show respect to what exists off-the-grid and outside conventional morality. A wise choice, especially when youre entering a world that could easily be misunderstood.

The World and 'Hollywood' According to Quentin Tarantino'The Mountain' Review: Mental Health Will Drive You Mad

Them That Follow takes its good, sweet time getting to the point, which may try the patience of viewers. Its the actors who put flesh on the bare bones of the story. Colman plays Hope Sister Slaughter to the community who claims she has only one vice: smoking. Having experienced the big, bad world outside before settling down with her husband, Zeke (comedian Jim Gaffigan, scoring solid dramatic points), Hope is ready to show Zeke the required slavish devotion. Its their son, Augie (Thomas Mann), who questions the precepts of their faith. Their pastor, Lemuel (Walton Goggins, doing that popping thing he does with his eyes), preaches the gospel according to Mark 16:18 that requires each parishioner at service to test Gods love with a venomous viper. If the rattlesnake bites and kills you (it can take up to 48 tortuous hours for the venom to finish the job), it is Gods will. If you survive the ordeal, the Lord has shown mercy.

Augie resists this dogma and risks expulsion from the community by carrying on secretly with Mara (a heartfelt and touching Alice Englert), the pastors daughter. Mara has already been promised in marriage by her father to local boy Garret (Lewis Pullman), who seems more attracted to her virgin purity than anything else about her. If Mara veers from the sects strict patriarchal rules, she will have to show her submission through such tasks as washing Garrets feet.

Credit Poulton and Savage for detailing life in this Pentecostal hamlet without condescension or ridicule. Nonetheless, its hard to watch Mara and her friend, Dilly (Booksmarts stellar Kaitlyn Dever), being forced to detour from a path that would allow them to think for themselves. The need for each individual to carve out a space for independent contemplation is the storys core dynamic. And when the script gives the actors a chance to play these home truths, the film comes meaningfully if fitfully to life. Sadly, Poulton and Savage have a tendency to dawdle without using the time to build meaningful characterization. And the swerve into bizarre melodrama in the final third knocks the film permanently off course, reducing a potentially rich examination of religious extremism into a missed opportunity.

Watch Two Complementary Teasers for Noah Baumbachs Marriage Story

films Movies 2020 Online to Watch for free



Netflix released two teaser trailers for Noam Baumbachs Marriage Story starring Scarlett Johansson and Adam Driver. The film will be released on Netflix and in select theaters this fall.

The marriage of actress Nicole (Johansson) and stage director Charlie (Driver) are told from both their perspectives. Johansson narrates What I Love About Charlie, set to Cat Powers cover of Otis Reddings Ive Been Loving You Too Long. She discusses her admiration for how easily he cries in movies, his inability to get defeated and fashion sense. In What I Love About Nicole, Drivers character celebrates his wifes competitive nature, dance abilities and gift-giving skills, set to Reddings original version of Ive Been Loving You Too Long. Both trailers feature scenes of them parenting their son before cutting abruptly to a courtroom where the pair sit on opposite sides.

Laura Dern, Ray Liotta and Alan Alda also star in the film. Randy Newman composed and conducted the music.

Watch John Oliver Examine the Disturbing Realities of Prison Labor

films Movies 2019 Online to Watch for free



On Sundays Last Week Tonight, John Oliver offered a disturbing portrait of the sad realities of prison labor, examining the low wages, institutional corruption, inhumane practices and exorbitant fees that stand between inmates and their attempts to rebuild behind bars.

Sixty-one percent of people in prison have jobs, including common positions in janitorial or kitchen work. But theyre paid a national average of 63 cents per-hour, and some states Texas, Georgia, Arkansas and Alabama dont pay inmates at all. I know that, to many, inmates are not a naturally sympathetic group of people, Oliver said. In fact, when there was a push to get a higher wage for those working behind bars a few years ago, [some Fox News commentators] found it hilarious.

John Oliver Blasts British Prime Minister Boris Johnson: 'He Is a Liar'John Oliver on Amazon, E-Commerce and the Dark Side of the Warehousing Industry

Crime doesnt pay does sound like common sense, the host continued, after showing a clip of talking heads using that exact phrase. But its much, much more complicated than that. The truth is: When you combine the low to non-existent wages the prisoners get paid with the surprisingly high costs that they and their families can incur while they are inside, the current system can wind up costing all of us.

Some inmate jobs can be incredibly fulfilling, but also dangerous. Around 12 percent of firefighters responding to Californias wildfires in 2018 were prison inmates. But they earned a base pay of between $3 and $5 per day and even though theyre learning new skills that could be useful to them upon release, it wont matter. According to the Brennan Center for Justice, California law bars those with a criminal record from being licensed emergency responders.

Being a firefighter in prison is not unlike being an art history in college, Oliver cracked. It may be fun while youre in there, but youre not going to be doing it once you get out. Do you here that, Thessalie? Youre going to work in human resources. Youre going to have a favorite coffee mug and a throw pillow that says, Its wine oclock somewhere, and youre going to stare out the window, yearning for the sweet release of death, just like everybody else.

In addition to low pay and occasional workplace hazards, inmates also face a lot of expenses, from legal fees to basic necessities like personal hygiene products. Until 2018, female prisoners in Arizona were allotted just 12 pads per month; buying one additional pack of pads took about 21 hours of work. In the state, they have to pay a co-pay to see a doctor in order to request a medical dispensation.

While family members can send money to prisoners, the costs can be daunting and unrealistic for some, especially because for-profit companies like JPay charge fees as high as 45 percent to transfer funds. Look out, Ticketmaster, Oliver joked. When it comes to dickish transaction fees, theres a new asshole in town.

JPays parent company, Securus, is one of the biggest names in charging for prisoner phone calls and video visits, a staggering $1.2 billion-a-year industry. Phone calls within states can go over a dollar-per-minute, and other facilities served by Securus have had fees over $3 for the first minute and 16 cents for each additional one.

For families on tight budgets, those fees are difficult to navigate around. And the obvious workaround in-person visits is even becoming difficult. Prisons, and especially jails, have been phasing out in-person visits in favor of video visitations, meaning that you can turn up to see a loved-one and still have to sit in a different room and talk to them on a screen, Oliver said. Incredibly, this is something Securus has contractually mandated. Up until 2015, some of their contracts with facilities had them promise to eliminate all face-to-face visitation, and that is just evil. Machine that makes money by stopping people from visiting their families sounds like an item at the top of Satans Amazon wish list, right before super bedbugs, cauliflower rice and just the actual existence of Amazon.

The people running such facilities have cited safety issues as the main motivator behind the switch, insisting that video visits eliminate contraband. However, Oliver noted that jails and prisons often get a cut of the profits, which are supposedly funneled into inmate welfare funds, but often fund staff salaries or even items like tasers.

The current system of low wages and high cost is clearly no good for anyone but the companies, who are somehow managing to massively profit from this, Oliver summarized. There are things that we can do here, small and large. New York City recently made phone calls from jails free, and Connecticut will consider similar legislation next year. And if we want to make bigger changers like paying prisoners more, we could do that, although it would undeniably be incredibly expensive and very unpopular.

You saw people argue, Crime doesnt pay thats just common sense,' he continued. But part of the way mass incarceration persists in this country is by keeping the true costs of it off the books. And were currently doing that through a combination of underpaid labor from prisoners themselves, financially draining families whove done absolutely nothing wrong and occasionally managing to monetize prisoners being launched into the fucking air with livestock. And at that point, I would argue weve come a long, long way from common sense.

D.A. Pennebaker Looks Back on Monterey Pop: The Lost Interview

Watch free Movies 2020 Online



Its sort of strange, D.A. Pennebaker said in 2017, about restoring Monterey Pop, his document of the Summer of Loves most famous music festival. Seeing my films in later years is like seeing your children and they have beards. You werent ready for that.

Related: Greatest Rock Documentaries

In 1967, Pennebaker, or Penny as people called him, was in his early forties and had established himself as a leading documentary filmmaker. That year, he released Dont Look Back, a picture hed made a couple of years earlier about Bob Dylan, establishing him as a rare middle-aged man who not only understood rock & roll but could present it on film in a way that didnt condescend to it. So to the organizers of the Monterey International Pop Festival the Mamas and the Papas mastermind John Phillips, record producer Lou Adler, and publicist Derek Taylor Penny seemed like the perfect person to capture what would become the first major music festival.

40 Greatest Rock DocumentariesRob Sheffield: Pennebaker, 'Monterey Pop' and the 'Wow' That Changed the World

Over the course of three days that June, the Monterey County Fairgrounds hosted career-making performances by Ravi Shankar, the Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, and many others. Jimi Hendrix set his guitar on fire, the Whos Pete Townshend smashed his instrument, Otis Redding taught rock-loving hippies that its OK to have soul, and Janis Joplin delivered a jaw-dropping performance with Big Brother and the Holding Company that made the Mamas and the Papas Mama Cass simply say wow. I often think, how amazing it was that we were there, and we didnt fuck up and we ended up with not just a fantastic film but an incredible collection of performances, Penny said.

The filmmaker spoke in 2017 with Rolling Stone about the 50th anniversary of the Monterey Pop Festival, which was set to be commemorated with a tribute concert that summer. The question at hand for the interview was, Can the Monterey Pop Revival Capture the Spirit of 67?, but the conversation turned into a lengthy, wide-ranging discussion about a cultural turning point that Penny had just seemed to stumble on. Because of the nature of the article, much of the interview didnt make the cut. So in honor of the filmmaker, who died at the age of 94 on Thursday in his Sag Harbor, New York home, Rolling Stone is presenting here an extended cut of the interview.

During the talk, he was humble (Have a nice lifetime, he said at the end of the call, Im in the middle of writing myself, so I know what youre going through) and he acknowledged the long road it took for the film to be recognized as a masterpiece of cinema verit. At the time of its release, it got a showing at the Venice Film Festival and was selected for inclusion in the National Film Registry in 2018. In between those achievements, Penny made films about Little Richard, David Bowie, John Lennon, Depeche Mode, Bill Clinton, and many others. But it was on Monterey Pop that he radicalized the way music films would be shot in the decades that followed, with tight close-ups and quick cuts.

I wanted [Monterey Pop] to have that feeling of freedom that you get when you get a lot of really good musicians or good anybodys and let them do what they do well, he said. You get a wonderful feeling of freedom that anything could happen and will be good. Thats what I wanted, that feeling. So I just let it happen.

When he looked back on the era of psychedelia and free love half a century later, it was still with an awe that he got to be a witness to it. Its a world that I really didnt know that well, he said. To know that world and the people in it, you have to go out in the gigs. You have to be there, riding shotgun to the concert. And I didnt do that. But I did just film the people.

Related: Rob Sheffield on Monterey Popand the Wow That Changed the World

Did you know any of the artists who played Monterey before the festival?
I knew some of them but not very well. I had met Otis at the [Whiskey] Go-Go in L.A., and that was the first time Id actually seen him with that incredible band. I was really impressed. I hoped he was going to be at the festival. And then he told his management that he was gonna do it, and they didnt want him to do it. It was kind of brave on his part, cause he was the only black person [playing that kind of music] there.

You can see in the film how he just won over the place immediately.
His performance, for me, was the act of the whole performance. There were other ones that were good, too. I never knew Ravi Shankar, but I got to meet him. He came to watch the rushes when we were showing them in New York. He brought a whole little band there, and they sat on the floor and we just ran it and he played right along with it. They loved it.

What strikes when you watch Monterey Pop now?
There were people in it that I really got to like later, like Janis, Hendrix, and even Otis, who I got to know later. Its kind of like seeing people I really liked and wanted to see more of, and then theyre gone and thats what I have. So I look at it and try to squeeze something out of it beyond just the music.

You want the connection.
Yeah, sort of. I mean, Hendrix, he was such a gentle person and even helped me take sound on a couple of things I was shooting, so I got to know him pretty well. And Janis, if she was still around she was really smart I think shed be writing now or doing something beyond just singing. Once she did that performance, that was something. It really got people.

Were you familiar with Janis Joplin before the film?
No. The first time I saw her was when she came out for the first time and sang the song. We had been told we couldnt film it because her agent wanted money or something. I did sneak a few shots, but then I went to [camera operator] Albert [Maysles], and I said, Albert, we gotta have her in the film. So he went out and broke somebodys arm or something, and then she came running up to me and said, Im gonna do this set again and you can film it. And I knew we were ahead of the game. From then on, it was gonna work.

Were you a rock & roll fan?
I got to be one when I started to hear really good music. But originally, I wasnt. My music was recorded in the Twenties and Thirties. It was the old jazz, as I discovered it in Chicago. It was people like Bud Freeman and Eddie Condon, those people. Those were my music heroes. And they still are.

There really wasnt a template for a film like Monterey Pop, or music festivals for that matter. How did you approach the film?
Before Monterey, there was no portable sync camera that you could carry around. I think the ones at Newport were a 35-millimeter and you had to be a football field away from the performer, so you got everything through a long lens.

[At Monterey] the music was terrific, but the idea of everybody coming to hear each other play music was what the festival was. It wasnt like performances where afterwards the performers go home or go out and get drunk. They were all sitting and listening to each other because they want to know whats going on. And in order to capture that, you have to have a camera that can go behind the scenes or get onstage and I often did. Nobody noticed me. they were all looking at the performers. I was, like, a person handling the curtain or something in a show. So you could get close up to people, and thats what you wanted to see. Suddenly, you could see everything, and that was a big change.

Those close-ups really made the film. How did you direct the cameramen?
Most of the crew, except for [Richard] Leacock who was an established cameraman, were people who were working with me. None of them were technically cameramen but they knew the music. They fell into the mood of the place and they got the shot they wanted to see, which was usually a close-up of a face. You watch the Ravi Shankar stuff, and Jim [Desmond] and Nick [Proferes], who were shooting that, they were right on top of them. nobody had ever filmed anybody like that. Ravi couldnt believe it that we could that close with cameras. And we could get incredible details that make the music so much more interesting because it wasnt distorted.

Did you take anything from your process of filming Bob Dylan for Dont Look Back into how you approached Monterey?
Only using the same camera, but I was doing that before myself. Now I was still working by myself, but I had five other people all working by themselves, so by the end of the day, theyd bring me their film and we would send it off to the lab. I had no idea really what the other people had done until we started looking at rushes in New York. We ran rushes for three days, day and night.

What inspired the way you made Dont LookBack with Bob Dylan?
I had been reading this book by Peter Quennell, an English writer. He had collected all the letters to and from Lord Byron. When you read Byrons letters to different people, to women and his agents and people who were bothering him about something, he becomes such an interesting person. Its not just because he could write poetry but because he could think things through in a way that most people didnt. When he and Shelley got kicked out of England, all of the English intellectuals came down there to hang out. It was like San Francisco. Thats where the action was. I thought, if there was a guy with a movie camera there and made a film of it, wed still be looking at that film. I thought, Thats the kind of film I really want to make with Dylan. I cant command it to be around in 50, a hundred years, I just thought, Thats the kind of film I would want to see if Dylan were like Byron, 50 years before me. So I decided not to make a music film out of it, though I thought thats what [producer] Albert [Grossman] wanted. But he didnt care. He liked the film we made. In fact, everybody kind of let me do what I wanted. So that was OK.

I take it that wasnt the case with Monterey. I assume you just wanted to capture and document it.
At the beginning, the fact is I dont think anybody assessed my abilities to direct six cameramen. Had they done that, I wouldnt have gotten the job. But they thought I had made one film and it worked, maybe I could make this one work. I just didnt count on the fantastic things that would be handed to us, which was an extraordinary group of performers and four or five people who knew how to use those cameras. I like doing that. I like taking chances.

Why do you like filming musicians?
Anybody cant be a musician. When a person decides to become a musician for whatever reason, he has some ability thats in his DNA. When he turns it on, he becomes its like a saint. He has this thing he believes in, and hes willing to die for it. And most musicians are kind of like that. And I love that feeling. So when theyre on the stage singing, and it doesnt have to be a huge concert crowd, they like it. Theyre really taking it in. thats such an amazing display of almost religious belief. I love filming that because theres nothing else you can film with them that would be as telling. You could film them eating breakfast or giving out money to children in the street, and who cares? But when you can do that with music, you care. You really care.

Do you remember if Lou Adler or John Phillips asked for anything specific for the Monterey Pop film?
No. The fact is, they didnt know much about making a film. Why would they? They knew if the liked what they saw. But the fact was that I had made a film that they had heard about [Dont Look Back]. It didnt have a huge following then. It was still hard to get into theaters. But they knew about it from reviews. So they were a little shy about telling me what to do, thinking I knew what to do. But of course, I didnt [laughs]. I was a little anxious when we went out because there was a lot of musicians doing it for free for Lou, other than Ravi Shankar I think they had to pay him. I thought, If we fuck up here, if we dont make a good film about of it, a lot of musicians would be really upset. I thought, we better be lucky here.

So what were you anxious about?
I had terrible anxiety about the cameras, because they were all homemade cameras. We made them ourselves. I was thinking, One of thems gonna break down. They had half-hour magazines and wed never run cameras with anything like that, so I had no idea whether they would work or not. We tried it and it seemed OK, but you never know. But all the cameras worked, to my great surprise.

Did you feel like you were witnessing a cultural turning point as the fest was going on?
No. You never do. Youre too busy either getting more film or arguing about not letting other people in with cameras. Theres so many things youve got to worry about.

But I remember I liked when I heard Hendrix. That was the first time I ever heard Hendrix. John had said, Theres this guy coming. Hes a great blues player and he sets himself on fire. I remember thinking, Jesus, that doesnt sound like blues playing as I understand it, but well see what happens. When he first started playing, I thought, Jesus, its just noise. This isnt music. Then by the end of the set, I became a fan because what he had did was so amazing. He turned noise into music. I thought, Shit, heres a guy who can do that and thats impossible, but he could do that. And I never got over that.

Well, at least you managed to capture Jimi Hendrixs iconic burning of his guitar.
I didnt know he was gonna do that. I was as surprised as anybody else. But I got to know him and like him a lot. He was a very gentle and wonderful soul. We became friends.

It sounds like you got lucky a lot.
We were only supposed to shoot one song [with Jimi]. We had this red lightbulb on a stand, and when the lightbulb was turned on, that told the cameramen wherever they were that this we would be shooting. We were saving film; we would just get one take of the band. But some bands, like the Who or Jimi Hendrix or Otis, somebody shot everything. After a while, it was kind of a free for all, and that was good because what we got was more than just 10 songs in a row to put in a movie theater; we got a fantastic kind of remembrance of what people could do. And a lot of them didnt survive it. A year later, they were gone.

Do you have favorite shots in the film? I always think of the way Micky Dolenz watches Ravi Shankar or the way Mama Cass mouths wow after watching Janis Joplin.
I shot [Ravi] at the very end. I could feel it, it was so exciting. I was kind of lifted off the ground myself a little bit. So thats one. But Janis was the most interesting to shoot because I had not been prepared for her at all. She was [from] San Francisco, and I had been hanging out with the L.A.s. There was this thing between them. They had to sniff each other out a little bit. There was a feeling that they werent really good friends. It was wonderful to watch them sit and watch each other play. When she first stood there and belted that thing out, I thought, Jesus, this is incredible. This is the music I was used to hearing from the big blues bands of the Twenties and Thirties. It gave me a feeling that this is an important thing to do. Thats why when I was told we couldnt shoot her, I went to Albert and said, Whoevers in charge, youve gotta change their mind. Cause we gotta have her in the film. And she said, Im gonna do the set again, and you can film it.

Do you remember the reaction from when you first showed Monterey Pop?
Yeah, it was at the Venice Film Festival, and theyre [usually] not too hospitable to Americans. They werent gonna show it in the theater, but the kids all wanted to see it because they all knew about Jimi Hendrix and the people in it. So they showed it outdoors, and it was a fantastic showing, and the kids went crazy. It was like they had never been allowed to see a film like this before. That is the feeling I got. They all just went nuts. But the elders, the parents, were just sitting inside drinking cocktails. It was a funny feeling that I was at the wrong festival. But they never forgot it. Whenever I went back, still remembered the Venice showing of Monterey. And that always makes me feel good. It was kind of wonderous.

What is the legacy of the film Monterey Pop?
I dont know. I sort of wonder that to myself, because we had such a hard time getting people to see it. It wasnt like we had television to expose us to a hundred million people. We got about three theaters that would play any of [my] films, and then, reluctantly so. So we didnt have a huge audience. But its a different kind of audience.

Its hard to explain, but I understood when I was making those films both Dont LookBack and Monterey that this was music for some kind of future, I dont know, historical recognition. I dont really fully understand it. Its like listening to Billie Holiday. We will be listening to Billie Holiday for the next 50 years. And theres 10 other singers who were pretty good singers that theyre not gonna be listening to. So you have a kind of historical ladder you have to climb, and thats interesting. I cant control it. I cant make these films and say, OK, in 50 years, play them again. Nobodys gonna listen to me.

Kamis, 26 September 2019

Travers: Peter Fonda, The Easiest Rider of Them All

films Movies 2019 Online to Watch for free



The Easy Rider himself, Peter Fonda, was pushing 80 when he passed away early Friday morning it was respiratory failure due to lung cancer that took him out. But that gamechanging 1969 movie made him immortal, freezing him in time as Wyatt, the stoned biker chasing an elusive freedom. Wearing a leather jacket (a large U.S. flag sewn across the back) on a Harley and going by the handle Captain America, Fonda rode into screen history by roaring through the American south in celebration of hippies, communes, drugs, free love, and anything that raised a finger to the Establishment. Easy Rider was a western played as an acid-fueled road trip. Along with his costar and co-writer Dennis Hopper, who played Billy (as in Billy the Kid) to Fondas Wyatt (as in Earp), Fonda blasted a hole in Hollywoods lazy mainstream culture. It made $60 million on a $400,000 investment. It turned indie filmmaking into the coolest game in town.

Peter Fonda, 'Easy Rider' Actor and Counterculture Hero, Dead at 79Maui Boogie: Starring Peter Fonda and the Seven Sacred Pools

Related: 1971 Peter Fonda Cover Story

Fonda and Hopper, who died in 2010, fought like badgers for the rest of their lives about who deserved credit for the film the former produced and the latter directed (they both were Oscar-nominated for the screenplay they wrote with Terry Southern). For Fonda, one of the unintended consequences of the wildfire success of Easy Rider, also noted for a bright, shiny breakthrough performance from Jack Nicholson as a boozing ACLU lawyer befriended by the bikers, was to reduce this member of a showbiz dynasty to a one-trick pony. In fact, he created quality work before and well after he went searching for America and couldnt find it anywhere. And he did it against daunting odds.

In person, the smooth-faced, handsome Fonda radiated the no-sweat confidence of a man who had it easy. It was an illusion. As the son of Henry Fonda and younger brother of Jane Fonda, Peter was Hollywood royalty. But the good life it wasnt. Dad could be frosty and remote. And when his mother, who had mental issues, slit her throat at mental institution, Henry lied to Peter, 10, and Jane, 12, and told them she had a heart attack. Understandable, perhaps, but not to Peter, who wrote in his 1998 memoir, Dont Tell Dad: After that, no one ever talked about Mom. No one seemed to miss her. It was almost as if she had never lived. Jane and I never went to a funeral or service for her; I didnt know where she was buried.

Talking to Fonda in the late 1990s, he refused to wallow in self pity about his early years. I was an asshole, Fonda said bluntly, rebelling, acting out. Though he reconciled with his father before Henrys death in 1982, they were never close (I dig my father. I wish he could open his eyes and dig me). Peter partied, drugged, wrangled with cops and hung with the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, even the Beatles; John Lennon quoted his words I know what its like to be dead in the song She Said, She Said, referring to Peters story about accidentally shooting himself in the stomach when he was a kid.

Peter hated his early movies, playing pretty-boy nothings in Tammy and the Bachelor (1963) and The Young Lovers (1964). It was his friendship with B-movie king Roger Corman, however, that changed the course of Peters career. Henry wasnt exactly beaming when his son took the leading role in 1966 The Wild Angels, a Corman quickie that riffed on the bike culture of the Hells Angels with Fonda as a biker called Heavenly Blues. Critics did not do cartwheels, but the film was a hit. Seen today, you can still feel its raw, primitive energy and feel the sensitivity and nuance that Peter brought to a role that hardly demanded it. His eulogy at a funeral service particularly stands out. The next year, Fonda starred in Cormans The Trip, with a script by Nicholson, about the hallucinatory LSD subculture that also found its way into Easy Rider. Fonda was forming friendships and a daring style that hinted at a new energy surging under old Hollywood tropes.

After the success of Easy Rider, Peter no longer feeling alienated by his fathers disapproval directed and starred in The Hired Hand (1971), a western that he always talked about with a justified pride. Playing a man who returns to the wife and the ranch he abandoned, only to be forced to work as a hired hand, Fonda brings a disturbing resonance to the film as actor and director. Today, the film, a commercial flop once dismissed as a hippie western, seems excitingly ahead of its time. Vindication for Fonda came when the film was restored and shown at festivals in 2001 and hailed as a minor classic. Damn, that felt good, he said.

Fonda scored a hit with the 1974 outlaws-on-the-run romp Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry and in 1979 stirred controversy by directing Wanda Nevada, in which his character romanced a 13-year-old Brooke Shields its also the only film in which Peter and Henry ever appeared together. Through the next decades, Peter danced through various genres: action (The Cannonball Run), horror (Spasms), drama (Bodies, Rest & Motion, alongside his daughter Bridget Fonda) and a role in the TV series In the Heat of the Night. But he was losing career momentum, stifled by films that went straight to video or oblivion.

That all changed in 1997, when Fonda scored a major career comeback with Ulees Gold, a low-budget indie from director Victor Nuez in which he plays Florida beekeeper Ulysses Ulee Jackson, a widower and Vietnam vet raising two troubled granddaughters. What Jackson cant do is open up emotionally (shades of Henry). At the Sundance Film Festival where Ulees Gold debuted, Fonda admitted he felt his father inhabiting the stoic everyman hero. In this internalized, character-driven gem, the then58-year-old gave the best and most moving performance of his career. Fonda remembers the glow he felt when he received an Oscar nomination as Best Actor. Its a wry irony that he lost the gold to his Easy Rider pal Jack Nicholson for As Good As It Gets, bringing his career around to the film that made them both stars.

Fonda never held a grudge against Easy Rider for cementing his image in the public mind. His love of bikes (riding them gives me focus) got him inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame. Working in films as varied as 3:10 to Yuma to the upcoming The Last Full Measure, Fonda remained the man his sister Jane eulogizes as my sweet-hearted baby brother, the talker in the family. The talk sometimes got him in trouble, most recently for tweeting against Trump for separating children from their parents at the Mexican border, writing that we should rip Barron Trump from the arms of his parents and put him in a cage with pedophiles. A regretful Fonda quickly deleted the tweet and apologized. But he stayed passionate until the end, about family, friends, politics, movies, and most tellingly people he didnt know. How can I help? was a phrase you often heard pass his lips.

When I Iast saw him, about a year ago, he was planning new projects and fresh mischief. Im working at it, he said with that infectious smile. Remembering Peter Fonda means recalling his kindness, a generosity of spirit rare in ego-drenched Hollywood. At the end of Easy Rider, its Fondas Wyatt who rides back for help when those gun-crazy rednecks blast Billy off his bike. The final image of the film is Wyatt and Captain America going up in flames. Fonda never saw the ending as hopeless. Its a bonfire, he said. Still burning. Thats the attitude that makes the memory of the personal and public Peter Fonda an everlasting flame.

Watch Hailee Steinfelds Writerly Rebellion in New Dickinson Trailer

Free Movie Streaming Sites



Hailee Steinfeld captures Emily Dickinsons rebellious spirit in the new trailer for Dickinson, debuting this fall on Apple TV+. The series stars Steinfeld as the 19th century poet, who famously pursued writing against the wishes of her family, who wanted her to be a proper lady.

Set in the 19th century, Dickinson is a coming-of-age story that finds Emily Dickinson to be an unexpected hero for our millennial era, reads the show synopsis, and the trailer captures just as much. In it, Dickinson and her friends are shown dancing and skipping about to a fitting yet anachronistic hip-hop beat. The clip also features an excerpt from one of Dickinsons most notable poems, Wild Nights: Wild nights/Were I with thee/Wild nights should be/Our luxury.

Rabu, 25 September 2019

David Makes Man Review: Portrait of A Boy, Interrupted

Where to watch films Movies 2019 for free online



The title of the wonderful new OWN drama David Makes Man is slightly misleading. Yes, its about a 14-year-old boy named David (Akili McDowell) struggling to become a man faster than he should have to, due to the complicated circumstances of his life. But David is just one of several names and identities our anxious and deeply sympathetic hero goes by.

To adults like his recovering addict mother Gloria (Alana Arenas) and his teacher Dr. Woods-Trap (Phylicia Rashad), he is David, a very smart but reserved boy doing his best at a magnet school for gifted kids where hes one of the few black students and comes from by far the most impoverished background. To friends at school like Seren (Nathaniel McIntyre), he is DJ, a class cut-up who cant always stop himself from taking a joke too far. And to everyone back at the projects where he lives with Gloria and little brother JG (Cayden Williams), he is Dai, reserved and odd but also considered a very promising prospect by the local drug crew.

Watch Alec Benjamin's Poignant Video for 'Must Have Been the Wind'Hear Skrillex, Boys Noize and Ty Dolla $ign Team Up for 'Midnight Hour'

We see David shift between these personae instinctively, never comfortable in any of these worlds, but understanding how hes expected to present himself to each. While his story is mostly told in a raw fashion, creator Tarell Alvin McCraney sprinkles in bits of magic realism throughout. This includes interludes where David imagines himself code-switching in an awkward moment to tell people what he really thinks. In one episode, we even see his three main identities in a room together as school counselor Dr. Bree (Ruben Santiago-Hudson) tries to figure out what makes this kid tick. For much of that story, David, DJ, and Dai are all at odds with one another; occasionally, though, they speak in perfect harmony, because there are some truths universal to this young man no matter where he is and who hes trying to be.

That would be hard, having to split yourself like that, Dr. Bree suggests as he ponders the realities David has to straddle. Hard would be an understatement. Its exhausting, and among the things David Makes Man does so well is to portray just how much this wears on David, and how quickly his anxiety can turn to desperation when a piece of his very delicately-arranged life seems on the verge of falling out of place.

There are similarities to Moonlight, which McCraney co-wrote. David is not just a quiet kid unsure of where he belongs; hes allowed a local dope dealer, Sky (Isaiah Johnson), to assume the role of father figure in place of the useless man who wanted nothing to do with him and Gloria. Theres a lyrical, dreamlike quality to the storytelling, even in some of the most nerve-wracking moments. Yet the periodic glimpses of Davids fantasy life dont undercut the gravity of his situation; rather, they underline how badly hed like to escape, and how hard that will be to do. He dreams of being admitted to an elite high school with the well-to-do Seren, but Sky warns him about trying to help anyone but himself. (Recalling the schools glossy pamphlet, Sky asks, You see two black faces or one?)

This isnt always an easy show to watch, because David and Seren and so many of the other kids are so clearly vulnerable. Even Raynan (Ade Chike Torbert), the scowling underage dealer who wants a reluctant David to work for him, isnt nearly as powerful as he likes to make others think. But McCraney and his collaborators(*) do a superb job of etching in these different communities and the people in them, and of getting us to want to protect David in a way hed be afraid to ask anyone in his own life to do. Theres nuance and understanding to each group, so that Woods-Trap and another African-American teacher can have a casual argument about colorism, or so we see the space that gender-queer Mx. Elijah (Travis Coles) has carved for herself in the projects. (The only time the neighbors are thrown by her anymore is on the rare occasion that she has to wear mens clothes to conduct business outside her home.)

(*) Dee Harris-Lawrence (Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and Biggie Smalls) is the hands-on showrunner. But the producers include Oprah Winfrey and Michael B. Jordan, whose first TV role of note was on The Wire as Wallace, a corner kid who would recognize a fair piece of himself in David.

The debut episode, written by McCraney and directed by Michael Francis Williams, runs an hour without commercials and can occasionally feel sluggish, particularly regarding a twist thats telegraphed long in advance. But the way it simply lingers in Davids worlds, and in his head, pays enormous emotional dividends in later episodes. Those installments arent quite as stylish as the premiere, but they allow for a touch more humor and whimsy, which proves a welcome trade-off.

The camera spends much of its time in close on Davids face, not allowing him to hide from us in the same way that he feels under constant interrogation from teachers, friends, and neighbors. That also asks a lot of a young and relatively untested actor like Akili McDowell. He has to convincingly be David, DJ, and Dai, conveying the weight that the character feels under any and all of those names. And he has to make you want to keep watching a story that is so much about his hard life, which requires him to communicate more through expression than the limited, halting dialogue hes often given. Fortunately, McDowell is more than up to the challenge, and makes David someone whos easy to root for even when he makes the kind of dumb mistakes any 14-year-old would.

In one episode, David does a presentation for Woods-Traps class about his background, the first time hes exposed so much of himself to his classmates. As part of the assignment, he recruits Seren and another friend to accompany him on an arrangement of Mary J. Bliges Your Child. He explains the choice by talking about how all of them are so often judged and made to feel like theyre nobody, but something as simple as a song on the radio can tell you that youre not a nobody. Something as simple as a TV show can do the same thing, particularly when a character like David is still such a rarity in a universe with 500-plus scripted TV shows and when the show is as good as David Makes Man.

David Makes Man debuts August 14th on OWN. Ive seen five of 10 episodes.