Tampilkan postingan dengan label Movies 2019 imdb }. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Movies 2019 imdb }. Tampilkan semua postingan

Kamis, 12 September 2019

See Lupita Nyongo Play Zombie-Slaying Teacher in Little Monsters Trailer

Stream Movies 2020 Online free



Months after her breakout horror role in Jordan Peeles Us, Lupita Nyongo builds on that momentum with the new trailer for Little Monsters. In the grisly horror-comedy, the actress stars as Miss Caroline, a brave schoolteacher who shields her students from a zombie breakout during a field trip gone awry.

The clip opens with military personnel strategizing how to defeat the undead. Its zombies again, one character intones. Fast ones or slow ones, sir? another responds. Luckily for all involved, its the slow variety, as the outbreak unfolds in the sleepy town of Pleasant Valley.

The trailer shows Miss Caroline working with Dave (Alexander England), a washed-up musician on-hand as a chaperone, and kids show personality Teddy McGiggle (Josh Gad) to defeat the zombies. Adding a comedic spin, Caroline attempts to keep her students blissfully unaware of the apocalyptic scene distracting them with ukulele songs and telling them the bloodthirsty beings are part of a game. Gads character, meanwhile, is more defeatist about their potential doom, telling the kids, Were all gonna die.

Abe Forsythe (2016s Down Under) wrote and directed Little Monsters, which premiered in January at the Sundance Film Festival. The film hits theaters in the U.K. and Ireland on November 15th; a U.S. release date has not been announced.

Apocalypse Now: Final Cut: Coppolas Surreal Vietnam Epic Returns

Streaming Full Movies 2019 Online free



About a mile out, the man says, theyll put on the music. The kid looks confused: music? Just a classical piece the boys love it. Put on PSYWAR OP, he barks into his headset. Make it loud.

The reel-to-reel starts up. Wagners Ride of the Valkyries, from the German composersRing of the Nibelung opera, begins playing over loudspeakers. The soldiers look around, confused and bemused. The camera keeps shooting a group of helicopters, already in attack formation, from below youd think they were prehistoric birds of prey. The troops staring out from these metal beasts are in profile, stoic and larger-than-life, pure Riefenstahl 101. And from where youre sitting, the command to make it loud seems redundant. It feels deafening, overwhelming. It feels like youre on the whirlybird when that first missile launches, the bobbleheaded co-pilot bouncing in his seat, guns firing, people on the ground falling, explosions everywhere. Noise seems to be swirling around you, from static-y voices on intercoms to heavy artillery blasts. Youre in the middle of pure chaos.

The Last Word: Francis Ford Coppola on Brando, Smartphones and 'Live' MoviesThis Is the End: James Gray on 'Apocalypse Now'

Its one of the most famous extended sequences in American filmmaking. John Milius wrote it, based on experiences hed heard from folks whod come back from Nam after being in the shit. Gerald B. Greenberg edited it. The legendary Walter Murch designed the soundscapes. Akira Kurosawa allegedly loved it. Francis Ford Coppola says hes watched it many, many times over the past 40 years, in various states of dread and fear. You may have seen these moments on a plane, in a train, on a boat, with a goat. (Just, please, do not say on your phone.)

But sitting in a cavernous theater in downtown San Francisco and viewing Apocalypse Now: Final Cut, a 4K restoration-cum-remix of Coppolas 1979 Vietnam War magnum opus, it almost feels as if you are experiencing this attack for the very first time. It goes without saying that most movies are best seen on a big screen, with an audience and in the dark. When youre talking about this surreal, psychedelic vision of life during wartime, however a phantasmagoria of gung-ho surfing obsessives, gyrating Playboy bunnies, ghostly French colonialists, and Marlon Brando in greenface youre talking about a whole other mind-fuck when its madness is presented in IMAX. Which is all the more reason to catch this rejiggered masterpiece when it gets a brief run in select theaters starting August 15th. (A Blu-Ray release hits shelves, virtual or otherwise, on August 27th.) It is, in terms of storytelling and scope, a completely different trip up the river, through your acid-fried skull, and into the heart of darkness.

So about that Final Cut subtitle . . .

Back in early 2017, James Mockoski, the archivist at Coppolas production company American Zoetrope, approached the director with the idea of doing something special to commemorate the films upcoming 40th anniversary. The 79 negative was in decent though slightly beat-up shape, as was the material used for the expanded 2001 version known as Apocalypse Now Redux; according to mix engineer Colin Guthrie, the original six-track master audio given to the studio and kept by Zoetrope . . . both were lost.

They each knew the restoration process would be laborious frame by frame, moment by moment, as Guthrie says but thanks to advances in digital technology over the past decade or so, not impossible. The two men began examining the elements they had from the various prints and home-entertainment reissues over the years. The idea would be to clean up the images and substantially improve the sonic fidelity, with the goal being a far better-looking and -sounding Apocalypse Now compared to previous rereleases, especially in regard to the audios low end. (At Zoetropes mixing barn in Napa the day after the San Francisco screening, Guthrie plays the newly restored Operation Arclight bombing sequence with massive speakers pointed at a couch in the center of the room, and the rumble of the bombing raid makes you feel like youre seconds away from encountering the mythical brown note firsthand.)

I didnt intend to make a new [Apocalypse Now]. . . . But I felt that this being longer than one and shorter than the other was the right blend.
Francis Ford Coppola

Mockoski and Guthrie figured they could not only get everything into shape but could, in the formers words, push things in a different direction . . . into becoming more of an immersive viewing experience using technology that wasnt around in 1979, especially once Dolby and IMAX came on board. (The Final Cut theatrical run will include screenings in the IMAX format, though not exclusively.) The question was whether Coppola was interested in going back into this particular jungle once more. Hed already revisited the film and radically added close to an hour of footage, giving us the second Redux version. Yet the idea of just putting a spruced-up, albeit technically superior, print of the movie out for the anniversary seemed like too much of a nostalgic indulgence. And which cut would he choose for the anniversary, anyway: original recipe or extra-crispy?

When we were releasing the film in 79, Coppola says, sitting in one of his Northern California winerys large, museum-like spaces above the tasting areas, we knew it was too long, and too weird. The film was surreal my feeling was the war was surreal, so anything trying to get to the heart of it was going to be out-there. But distributors kept telling us, Make it shorter, make it less weird. So we did. Then, when folks were making my wifes documentary [1991s Hearts of Darkness], they had access to all of the hours and hours of footage. And by that point, the mainstream has sort of absorbed what we were doing in Apocalypse, so it didnt seem quite so weird anymore. Ironically, it was the distributors who came to me and said, Well, you have all this stuff, why not put what you cut back in? Thats how Redux happened.

But I always felt, he continues, that the first version was too shortened not too short, too shortened and the other version was . . . well, maybe we shouldnt have put everything back in. A movie is in service to a theme that runs through it, and I always felt that Redux never quite supported the theme of the film as fundamentally as I wanted. So we started with the second version, because that already had the restorations and corrections, and we began to tweak from there. I didnt intend to make a new version . . . but I felt that this being longer than one and shorter than the other was the perfect blend.

Thus was born Apocalypse Now: Final Cut, or what some say Coppola has privately referred to as the Goldilocks edit of the film a just-right amalgamation of both previous iterations, something that seems equally sprawling yet tighter than either of the versions weve come to know. Some 14 minutes have been taken out. Several game-changing Redux decisions remain, notably the PBR Street Gangs water-skiing excursion coming after their Col. Kilgore misadventure rather than before, as it does in the original a move that makes the boats crew seem less gonzo from the get-go and more like guys deservedly blowing off steam. (Laurence Fishburnes rubber-limbed boogieing to the Stones Satisfaction naturally steals the scene no matter where you put it.) The second encounter with the Playboy bunnies is gone; the slapstick stolen-surfboard vignette remains. And the controversial French-plantation sequence has been streamlined, though the immortal Jung-and-the-restless line There are two of you . . . one that kills and one that loves has, for better or worse, been left intact.

More important, this Apocalypse Now retains the center-cant-hold insanity of its onscreen journey (and the offscreen legend of behind-the-scenes creative mayhem) that has always made this movie feel like a singular cinematic fever dream. If anything, seeing this New Hollywood landmark/last gasp in such a clean, crisp, larger-than-life state emphasizes the multitudes it still contains. You might notice that, say, when a CIA agent is cutting into a slice of roast beef during the initial meeting between Martin Sheens Capt. Willard and his military overlords, it mirrors the slaughter of a bull near the end. You may take note of the tenderness that Robert Duvalls Kilgore always and forever a goofy foot displays toward children and babies during his siege on a Vietnamese village. You may find yourself really noticing, for the first time, the chorus of crickets that accompanies Col. Kurtzs final breath. Or you may find yourself identifying with Chef, or Clean, or even Dennis Hoppers countercultural motormouth instead of Willard this go-round. Viewers never step in the same river twice.

As to whether Apocalypse 3.0 is the definitive version of Coppolas warped war-film vision, the answer may depend on the moviegoer. No one is even sure if final is truly applicable either. After premiering this cut at the Tribeca Film Festival in April, he made a few extra trims for its official release; Mockoski notes that the director never really locks a film, he latches it. For Coppola, however, this is the end result of decades of thinking about the story he wanted to tell a three-hour trek into mans dark side and a nations military moral free-fall that has, at long last, come to a conclusion hes happy with. Film is an illusion, he says. And this was the version where the illusion of Apocalypse Now finally snapped into place for me.

Rabu, 11 September 2019

Jeff Goldblum Feeds His Curiosity in The World According to Jeff Goldblum Trailer

Stream Movies 2019 Online free



Of all the trailers to come out of Disneys D23 Expo this past weekend, none were quite as dazzling as the one for Jeff Goldblums new travel show, The World According to Jeff Goldblum. The new series, hosted by Goldblum and produced by National Geographic, premieres on Disneys new Disney+ streaming service on November 12th, in tandem with the platforms launch.

The show will follow Goldblum as he travels the globe and explores pretty much whatever interests him in that moment: Sneakers, jewelry, ice cream, tattoos, Korean barbecue, square dancing, synchronized swimming and much more.

Im not here to be didactic or professorial in any way, Goldblum says in the trailer over a mug of coffee. I know nothing thats the premise. Im a humble student and, in fact, kind of a late bloomer a late Gold-bloomer.

In addition toThe World According to Jeff Goldblum, Disney+ will feature a plethora of content from Disney and its various franchises, including Marvel, Pixar,Star Wars and more. Other shows in development for the platform include four separate Star Wars series, as well as aShe-Hulk series anda High School Musical spin-off titled, appropriately,High School Musical: The Musical: The Series. Disney will also make their live-actionLady and the Tramp remake exclusively available on Disney+.

Watch Kate Upton Take on 80s Aerobics Dance Moves on Fallon

Streaming Full Movies 2020 Online free



The 1980s may be long past, but our love for Eighties aerobics dance moves will never die. On The Tonight Show, Jimmy Fallon challenged actress and model Kate Upton to an 80s Aerobics Dance Challenge set to actual workout videos from the era.

In the clip, Fallon and Upton dress in Eighties gear, including neon patterns and a high ponytail for Upton. They take turns mimicking the moves of the Eighties aerobics instructors, which have not aged well. Thats kind of like the Eighties version of the dab, Upton comments about one move. The duo then pairs up for some joint workout sequences, which look slightly unsafe.

That was great, Fallon says, but I think we know how to end this. That conclusion is, of course, the iconic scene from Flashdance, involving actual water.

Upton also joined Fallon for a sit-down interview, where she discussed her marriage to Justin Verlander and how it helps her relate to Fallons movie Fever Pitch, as well as her love for Mario Cart and flip cup.Upton appeared on the show to promote her new workout program, Strong4Me, which she created with her trainer Ben Bruno and recently launched. Especially as a new mom its so hard to find time to work out and stay fit, Upton said. Ben and I wanted to make it convenient for anyone, anywhere.

Selasa, 10 September 2019

Watch De Niro, Pacino, Pesci Recreate Jimmy Hoffa Saga in Trailer for Scorseses The Irishman

Stream Movies 2019 Online free



Robert De Niro, Al Pacino and Joe Pesci recreate the story of long-lost union boss Jimmy Hoffa in the gripping new trailer for Martin Scorseses long-awaited crime drama The Irishman. The film will premiere at the New York Film Festival, September 27th, before it is released on Netflix and in select theaters this fall.

De Niro anchors the film as the Frank The Irishman Sheeran, a World War II vet and hitman. In the opening scenes of the trailer Pescis Russell Bufalino boss of the Bufalino crime family puts the staid Sheeran on the phone with Hoffa (Pacino), who says, Our friend speaks very highly of you. I heard you paint houses prompting a quick cut to Sheeran throwing a mark through a glass door and putting a bullet in his head.

The rest of the trailer teases the broad scope of the historical drama, which spans several decades and delves into Hoffas story and, per a statement, the hidden corridors of organized crime: Its inner workings, rivalries and connections to mainstream politics.

The Irishman boasts an all-star supporting cast that includes Harvey Keitel, Ray Romano, Bobby Cannavale, Anna Paquin, Jesse Plemons, Jack Huston, Stephanie Kurtzuba, Kathrine Narducci and more. The film is based on the book, Heard You Paint Houses by Charles Brandt, with an adapted screenplay by Steven Zaillian. The film notably used new anti-aging digital effects to depict De Niro, Pacino and Pescis characters as up to 30 years younger.

New Twin Peaks Box Set Collects Entire Story, Adds New Interviews

Free Movie Streaming Sites



A new, exhaustive box set, Twin Peaks: From Z to A, will collect all of the puzzle pieces of David Lynchs quintessential northwestern mystery. The set, available only on Blu-ray, includes all three television seasons and the prequel movie Fire Walk With Me, as well as the films deleted scenes (dubbed here as The Missing Pieces). It also includes new interviews, behind-the-scenes footage, and other bonus material. The box is limited to 25,000 copies and will come out on December 10th.

Its yrev very good to see you again old friends, David Lynch said in a statement.

The previously unreleased content includes behind-the-scenes footage of Lynch filming Twin Peaks third season (which was subtitled on Showtime as A Limited Series Event) with 20 to 30-minute featurettes for each of its 18 parts. Theres a new joint interview with Kyle MacLachlan, who played Agent Dale Cooper, among other characters, and Sheryl Lee, who played Laura Palmer, and a separate featurette with Harry Goaz (Deputy Andy) and Kimmy Robertson (Lucy Moran) called On the Couch. Additionally, the collection includes unedited performances from the Roadhouse Bar featured in A Limited Series Event.

Katy Perry, Norah Jones Booked for David Lynch Foundation Benefit GigDavid Lynch to Receive Honorary Oscar

The collection also includes 4K Ultra High Definition versions of the original Twin Peaks pilot and the Limited Series eighth episode. Lynch oversaw both transfers. And it will feature all of the existing bonus material from previous home-video releases of Twin Peaks. It features 20 hours of new and existing bonus content.

Outside of the video content, the box set includes acrylic figurines depicting Laura Palmer kissing Agent Dale Cooper. Its housed in the series Red Room, though people will be able to take them and put them in their own red rooms in their houses. There are also prints of scenes from the Red Room.

In addition to the From Z to A release, there will also be a less-deluxe compendium, Twin Peaks: The Television Collection, available on DVD and Blu-ray on October 15th that focuses on the TV series. It also includes all of the previously available bonus content.

In a 2017 interview with Rolling Stone, Lynch discussed what he liked about filming the series in the woods of Washington state. Oh, the woods are full of mystery, he said. Its really great. Daytime woods are really beautiful, but at night, the mystery quotient goes way up and its a real beautiful experience. The woods in the Northwest, theyre friendly woods. I guess you could come across a bear, though by and large theyre very friendly. But they still hold a mystery. Theyre kind of overwhelming when youre in them and its night.

Kamis, 05 September 2019

Watch Robert Pattinson, Willem Dafoe Go Stir Crazy By the Sea in New Trailer for The Lighthouse

Where to watch films Movies 2019 for free online



After making a big splash at the Cannes Film Festival back in May, Robert Eggers new film The Lighthouse finally has its first official trailer. The nautical psychodrama arrives in theaters October 18th.

The film, shot on 35mm black-and-white film and presented in Academy (square) ratio, stars Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson as a lighthouse keeper and his apprentice, who are stationed on a remote and mysterious New England island in the 1890s. Naturally, the two men start to experience hallucinations, lunacy and psychological turmoil during their prolonged isolation. And yes, there are plenty of sea shanties, dancing jigs and pirate accents from both Dafoe and Pattinson, if thats what floats your boat.

The Lighthouse is the second feature to be written and directed byEggers, who previously made the 2015 period horror film The Witch (set in 1630s New England). Eggers co-wrote the script forThe Lighthouse with his brother, Max Eggers.

At Cannes, the film was met with wide acclaim and was named the best movie at the festivals Critics Week and Directors Fortnight by the International Federation of Film Critics.

The 2019 Emmys Will Not Have a Host

How to watch films Movies 2019 free online



Following in the footsteps of the Oscars, the 2019 Emmy Awards will not have a host, Fox CEO Charlie Collier announced at a Television Critics Association event Wednesday.

Collier said the network and the production team overseeing the show decided to go host-less while weighing what they thought the big themes of the 71st Emmy Awards would be, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Its our job to assess how to elevate the program, he said, and whats interesting about this year is how many amazing shows were saying goodbye to: Game of Thrones, Empire, Veep, Big Bang Theory You have to look at tradeoffs, if you have host and opening number thats 15 minutes you dont have to celebrate the shows. Our production team has had to balance those tradeoffs. I think it will give us more time to honor those shows.

Sepinwall on Emmys 2019: 'Thrones' Rules, But First-Timers Rise to the OccasionAlan Sepinwall Picks Who Should Be Nominated for 2019 Emmy Awards

This will be the first time since 2003 that the Emmys has not had a host (coincidentally, the show also aired on Fox that year). It previously went without an emcee in 1998 and 1975 when it aired on NBC and CBS, respectively.

Collier added that Fox was comfortable going ahead without a host after seeing the success of the host-less Oscars earlier this year. Originally, Kevin Hart was slated to host, but stepped down after years-old homophobic tweets of his resurfaced online. Hart subsequently apologized but insisted he had no plans to re-accept the gig, and the Academy never replaced him.

The Oscars did very well, Collier said. That was something we paid attention to. This is a unique year for some of Americas favorite shows and producers came to conclusion that spending more time on those was the right thing to do.

The 71st Emmy Awards will air September 22nd. Game of Thrones led this years nominees, notching 32 nods for its eighth and final season. The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and Barry, meanwhile, led the comedy categories, with 20 and 17 nominations, respectively.

Selasa, 03 September 2019

Helter Skelter Star Steve Railsback: The First Manson Actor Looks Back

Watch this free Movies 2020



Fifty years ago this month, Steve Railsback was a 23-year-old actor in New York when he caught a newspaper headline that Sharon Tate and four others had been brutally massacred in a house in L.A. I remember thinking, God, whats happening in this fucking world? Railsback recalls.

Seven years later, in 1976, Railsback would be part of one of the first attempts to depict what transpired that horrific night. In the two-part TV movie Helter Skelter, based on the Vincent Bugliosi and Curt Gentry best-seller about Charles Manson, his Family, and the murders, Railsback made casting history as the first actor to portray Manson. This sounds crazy, but I had a ball, Railsback, 73, recalls. People have asked me if I had to go to a psychiatrist afterward, but there I was, 29 years old, doing what I loved doing acting. It was amazing.

Ted Bundy and Charles Manson Fans Are Deep in a Twitter FeudWhat Do We Really Know About the Manson Murders?

Many have donned Manson wigs and beards since, including Damon Herriman in Quentin Tarantinos Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (and again in Season Two of Mindhunter). But thanks to the success of Helter Skelter which drew a staggering 55 million viewers back in those three-network days Railsback remains the actor most associated with the role. He was also the first to deal with the repercussions of portraying a murder-ordering cult leader, which has been a blessing and occasionally a curse over the last 43 years.

Originally from Texas, Railsback moved to Manhattan at 21 and worked his way into its theater community; his first cinematic role was in Elia Kazans 1972 drama The Visitors. Railsback was invited to L.A. to attend the premiere of that film and, strangely, wound up staying at the very same Cielo Drive home where the Tate murders had taken place. His manager, Rudi Altobelli (whose clients also included Henry Fonda and Katherine Hepburn), owned the home and had rented it to Tate and Roman Polanski that fateful summer. Three years later, Altobelli offered the house as a crash-pad to Railsback while he was in L.A. I knew that was the house, but I didnt think about it, Railsback says. It was so peaceful. Rudi never talked about it when I was there. Coincidence is coincidence.

A few years later, Railsback found himself back in L.A., auditioning for Helter Skelter. For his try-out, he acted out Mansons courtroom testimony, a chilling scene that would later be in the movie as well. In prepping for it, Railsback says he wasnt thinking of Manson but rather his own life. There were two people in New York who were trying to take my confidence away, he says. So when I went up to do that speech, I was talking to those two people. I was talking about actors who had never arrived. It was about my feelings about acting and how you have noright to take my confidence away. My whole thought was that they had meon trial.

I put a lot of passion into that speech, he says. When it was over, I felt a thousand pounds had been lifted off my shoulders.

Offered the role of Manson, Railsback initially turned it down. I didnt want to be [typecast], he says. At the urging of Kazan, who knew Helter Skelterdirector Tom Gries, Railsback relented. If Im playing a killer, thats a negative, he says, but you turn a negative into a positive.

At that point, Railsback read Helter Skelterand watched a documentary to study Mansons way of walking and talking. Since Manson had said he felt most secure in jail, Railsback locked himself in a room in his home a few times. I wanted to get that feeling of solitude, he says, so I would close the door and talk to myself.The one thing he chose not to do was meet Manson: I didnt want him to manipulate me into thinking he was something he wasnt. To this day, Railsback never had any face time with Manson (who died two years ago) or his followers.

The making of Helter Skelterwasnt without its own drama. At least one bomb threat, attributed to a Family member, was called in, and, as Railsback watched, Gries threw Bugliosi off the set after the district attorney-turned-author told George DiCenzo, the actor playing him, that he wasnt getting the portrait completely right. Yet Railsback has little but fond memories of the experience: Veteran actors David Niven and Peter Falk visited the set, and Truman Capote hung out with Railsback in his trailer to talk about Manson and his crew.

Given how omnipresent Manson has been in the culture, its easy to forget how much Helter Skelterfreaked out America in 1976. The CBS movie lost money once not enough sponsors signed up; in some cities it aired late at night or not at all. Yet even with that pushback, it became the biggest made-for-TV movie of its time, and Railsback, wearing various wigs and fully inhabiting Mansons combination of mad-dog menace and intensity, seemed to become Manson onscreen.

The real struggle came after the movie aired and Railsback realized that Hollywood might not see him any other way. I was offered every killer in theatrical or television: Get Railsback! he recalls. I didnt work for a year because I knew Id be typecast.

Then he had two breaks: 1980sThe Stunt Manwith Peter OToole (he remembers OToole hiding his joints in the wardrobe trailer, so he wouldnt be caught red-handed) and a TV remake of From Here to Eternity. But Railsback admits he also made a few mistakes, like turning down the villain role in the first Lethal Weaponthat eventually went to his friend Gary Busey. It was a wonderful role, but I still had Manson on my mind, and I said no, he says. It was stupid. How did I know it was going to make $80 million? People said, If Railsback turns it down, its gonna be a hit! We all make stupid choices sometimes. Ive made a few.

Railsback landed parts in smaller or low-budget movies, like the Pamela Anderson bomb Barbed Wire, and has continued to work; last year, he starred opposite Tom Berenger in a western, Gone Are the Days. But today, he largely considers himself retired. I get calls and theyre usually not for a good movie, he says. Everything these days is a sequel to a sequel to a sequel. Its just boring after a while.

Railsback admits he has never seen any of the other onscreen Mansons in subsequent movies and TV shows, although when heard Jeremy Davies was playing Manson in the 2004 remake of Helter Skelter, he sent a note saying, Dive off a cliff and have a great time. (I dont know if he got it, he says. I never met him.)

As of last week, he still hadnt seen Tarantinos movie, although its on his list; hes an unabashed admirer of the directors work, and the two had a long talk at the premiere of The Hateful Eight. He was walking toward me and said The Stunt Man! about five times and hugged me, Railsback recalls. They never talked about Manson but instead about Railsbacks work in Lifeforce, Tobe Hoopers 1985 space-vampire movie.

For all his career speed bumps, Railsback has few regrets about playing Manson and found the character intriguing. He could be charming and violent, he says. Its not mind-boggling to see how he got those girls to follow him. They were looking for a father figure or whatever. They would do anything he said. They would hang on his every word.

Clearly, were still fascinated with Manson and what happened over two nights in 1969. But for his part, Railsback doesnt know why movies and books on the subject keep rolling out. Ive asked myself that question, he says. Why do they keep doing these? What else are you going to learn? What the fuck? Youre just giving him all this attention. People would call me up and say, Mansons going to be on Tom Snyder or whatever. I didnt care. I said, I dont want to watch it. Youre just making him more infamous.

Watch Rami Malek Hack Through the Holidays in New Mr. Robot Trailer

Free Movie Streaming Sites



Rami Maleks Elliot Alderson prepares for a holiday season hack-a-thon in the tense new trailer for the fourth and final season of Mr. Robot, set to premiere October 6th on USA.

The new, minute-long teaser is light on plot points, but heavy on mood. Set to a gloomy piano rendition of Silent Night, the clip finds Elliot declaring, in a voice over, that its time to get back to work, before his imaginary compatriot, Mr. Robot (Christian Slater), begins laying out the dangers ahead. Over a compelling montage of clips that tease murder, drugs and tech run amok, Mr. Robot tells Elliot, This is an endless war. What youre about to do is crossing a line. To which Elliot replies, Its a little late for that, dont you think?

Watch Queen Perform 'I Want to Break Free' on Their Last Tour'Bohemian Rhapsody' Approved to Screen in China Despite Frequent Censorship of Gay Content

Mr. Robot creator and show runner Sam Esmail announced that the show would conclude after its fourth season last August, noting the final season would comprise 12 episodes rather than the typical eight. When I first created the world of Mr. Robot, I thought it would be a niche television series with a small, cult following, Esmail said at the time. Over the past three years, it has become so much more, and I am continually humbled by the shows recognition and by the amazing cast and crew that work tirelessly to help bring my vision to life. Since day one, Ive been building toward one conclusion and in breaking the next season of Mr. Robot, I have decided that conclusion is finally here.

Mr. Robot has earned heaps critical praise, and several awards, since it premiered in 2015. In 2016, the show picked up two Golden Globes, Best TV Drama and Best Supporting Actor in a Limited Series for Christian Slater, while the same year Malek won Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama at the Emmys and the show took home Outstanding Music Composition for a Series. The show also proved to be a launching pad of sorts for Malek, who won the Best Actor Oscar in February for his turn as Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody.

Senin, 02 September 2019

Tracy Morgan, Sarah Silverman, Nick Kroll Lead Crank Yankers Season Five

films Movies 2019 Online to Watch for free



Tracy Morgan, Sarah Silverman, Nick Kroll, Aubrey Plaza, Tiffany Haddish and Kathy Griffin lead the cast for the long-awaited fifth season of Comedy Centrals Crank Yankers. The first episode of the revived series in which comedians voice puppets reenacting absurd and outrageous prank calls premieres September 25th.

Adam Carolla, Kevin Nealon, Chelsea Peretti, Will Forte, Nikki Glaser, David Alan Grier, Demetri Martin, Bobby Moynihan, Arturo Castro, Jeff Ross and Adam Pally will also contribute to Season 5. Returning puppet characters include Elmer Higgins, Niles Standish, Spoonie Luv and Bobby Fletcher.

Comedy Central previewed the new installment with a trailer featuring a montage of wacky one-liners and awkward interactions, including the following questions: What if I get pregnant by a ghost?, Why are you burping on the phone? and How are we able to handle a wet and sticky load? The clip ends with a character rejoicing, Im so happy because Im making a brown, beautiful doody in my pants.

Jimmy Kimmel, showrunner for the upcoming season, will executive produce alongside Carolla and Daniel Kellison. The trio created the show in 2002, and it ran for four total seasons (until 2007) during its initial run on the network.

Kamis, 29 Agustus 2019

Disney Plots Home Alone Reboot for New Streaming Service

Watch this free Movies 2020



Disney plans to reimagine the 1990 family classic Home Alone for its forthcoming streaming service, Disney+. Home Alone is one of several well-known franchises that Disney now owns after it acquired 21st Century Fox for $71.3 billion in March.

During an earnings call Tuesday, Disney CEO Bob Iger said the company had big plans for properties like Home Alone, Night at the Museum, Diary of a Wimpy Kid and Cheaper by the Dozen, all of which could be rebooted for Disney+, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Were also focused on leveraging Foxs vast library of great titles to further enrich the content mix on our [direct to consumer] platforms, Iger said. Iger didnt offer any additional details about any of the reboots, such as whether any of the original cast memberswould be involved, or if the properties would be reimagined as films or as television series.

Disneys desire to reimagine classic Fox properties for a new generations isnt that surprising, considering the company has spent the past several years producing live-action remakes of some of its most famous animated films. This year alone, Disney has released new versions of Dumbo, Aladdin and The Lion King, while later this year the studio will unveil a new version of Lady and the Tramp. Forthcoming live action remakes include Mulan and The Little Mermaid.

As for Disney+, the streaming service is set to launch in North America November 12th. Priced at about $7 a month, the service will boast a vast catalogue of film and TV shows, including all the Star Wars and Marvel movies, Disney animated films and Pixar movies, plus new original content.

Peter Fonda Preps 50th Anniversary Easy Rider Screening and Concert

films Movies 2019 Online to Watch for free



Easy Rider will celebrate its 50th anniversary with a screening and concert at Manhattans Radio City Music Hall September 20th. The groundbreaking counterculture biker film, which stars Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper and Jack Nicholson, will be shown in sync with a live performance of the legendary soundtrack.

The score will be performed by Steppenwolfs John Kay and the Byrds Roger McGuinn, who both had songs featured in the film, including Born to Be Wild, Wasnt Born to Follow, and Ballad of Easy Rider. Other musicians will also appear with musical direction by T-Bone Burnett. The film, which has been newly remastered, turned 50 on July 14th.

The event will be produced by Live Nation, Dayglo Presents and Fonda himself, who co-wrote and produced the film. What a ride its been! the actor recently said at the Cannes Film Festival. From a funky motel room in Toronto in 67 to a roar on the shore at Cannes in May 1969. A wild ride up the stairs at the Palais into the history books of cinema. Looking for America. Would we find it today? I think not. Did we really blow it? You bet. 50 years later, are we blowing it now? You bet. Enjoy the new print. Sing along with the songs. Laugh with the humor! Remember the spirit! Find the love.

General tickets go on sale Friday, August 2nd at noon ET.

Rabu, 28 Agustus 2019

Vanessa Kirby, Your New Summer-Movie Action Hero

Streaming Full Movies 2019 Online free



Ask Vanessa Kirby if, as a little girl living in Londons middle-class neighborhood of Wimbledon, she dreamed of punching people in the face. You might hear a giggle on the other end of the phone line. Inquire about the endless hours she must have spent during her formative years wishing she could throw a toaster at someone in the middle of a fight or choke someone out with her thighs that inspires a heartier baritone chuckle from her. Suggest that Kirby must have grown up filled with a burning desire to drive a 360-degree rotating jeep out of a warehouse window. Now the 31-year-old actress makes a sort of pffft sound before laughing uproariously.

The World and 'Hollywood' According to Quentin TarantinoHow I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the 'Fast and Furious' Movies

Im so not an action-movie type, she says. Im a theater nerd from London! But you want a lot of different experiences as an actor. As many as possible. A pause. Which is how you find yourself hanging on the edge of a cliff and a helicopter is spinning around you and youre thinking, What the hell is going on?!

The helicopter scene comes near the end of Hobbs & Shaw, the Fast & Furious spin-off that Kirby stars in alongside Dwayne The Rock Johnson and Jason Statham. By the time we get to that visceral, climactic stunt, however, weve already watched her character Hattie Shaw a rogue MI6 agent and the sister to Stathams bad-guy-turned-good-guy Deckard Shaw do every one of those aforementioned activities. Weve also seen her hop and sprint across the tops of storage containers, slide across a concrete floor to take out two thugs at once, drive a truck sideways through a wall, display an affinity for heavy artillery, ride shotgun in roughly a half dozen high-speed car chases, and kick a chair into a guys midsection before slamming his head into a table. Kirby more than holds her own against her rough-and-tumble costars. Dwayne and Jason have been doing stuff like this for years, director David Leitch says. Vanessa is new to all of this, and she immediately gave as good as she got. Plus, like Ginger Rogers, she occasionally has to do what they do backwards and in heels.

For an actor whose breakthrough role was playing Princess Margaret in Netflixs award-winning series The Crown a part whose biggest physical requirement, she points out, was stubbing a cigarette into a sandwich Kirbys coronation as a bona fide running, jumping, ass-kicking action hero may be the best surprise of the summer movie season. Her brief but memorable turn in Mission: Impossible Fallout proved that she could handle herself in a melee and was handy with a knife. But what shes doing in this F&F franchise standout is some next-level, close-contact, roll-up-your-sleeves kind of work. It suggests that, in addition to playing rebellious royalty and femme fatales, Kirby may very well be the female Bond we deserve.

Yeah, I dont quite know how this happened, yet here we are, she says. When they came to me with this, I suddenly felt like: Ok, well, heres this opportunity to introduce another strong, female character into this series. I mean, you have Michelle Rodriguez and these other wonderful actresses whove been a part of these films in the past. But this is a story where you have these two men, and a woman whos an equal part of their team. Shes not being objectified. Shes not the weak link. She doesnt need them to fight on her behalf. She doesnt need to be saved.

I knew itd be hard, and I knew itd be fun to do, she continues. But what drove me was the idea that somewhere out there, some 13-year-old girl would go to the movies, and while her brothers are freaking out over the Rock, she gets someone to relate to. That girl gets to see herself up there. She gets to have the same experience her brothers or her male friends have when they go to an action movie. It suddenly seemed like this was an important thing to do as well.

Growing up in London, Kirby was more likely to be buried in a book than catching a blockbuster, claiming she preferred Chekhov to action movies, really, before groaning, That sounds so pretentious. God, so sorry. What a wanker! She was not what youd call sporty and caught the theater bug early on, as an outlet and an escape; Kirby has talked about being severely bullied at school and suffering from giardiasis as a teen. After years of doing plays in the U.K., she nabbed the Crown role. One of the shows fans, Tom Cruise, recruited her for M:I duty, and Kirby claims she wanted to make her character kind of weird, a little strangeI liked the idea of subverting the usual stereotype of the femme fatale. (The stare her mystery woman fixes on Cruise before planting a violent kiss on him is as intense as any of the action sequences not involving extreme skydiving.)

But it wasnt until she found herself watching the star on set that she gleaned the appeal of a D.I.Y approach to action filmmaking. Honestly, I didnt understand the whole notion of doing stunts until I saw Tom do what he did. You have to be part athlete, part dancer. A fight sequence is like learning a ballet. And Leitch, a former stuntman and fight co-ordinator who co-directed the first John Wick movie and Atomic Blonde, had a reputation for staging sequences which relied on his performers to be in the middle of things as much as possible. If you can train the actor to stay in 90-percent of the action, its just that much more compelling for the audience, he notes, citing Charlize Therons one-shot shootout in Blonde as a prime example. So to observe Vanessa get to the point where judo-throwing guys on the ground looks like its no big thingit was a blast to see her take to it.

Getting to that point, however, required a lot of training: three days a week, three hours a day, for six weeks. Lots of fighting, lots of parkour, lots of martial arts drills which I was pretty crap at initially, if were being honest, Kirby says. Then once I started to get the basics down, we could add things, take things away, create combinations of moves. I was doing a play at the time [Julie, a riff on August Strindbergs Miss Julie at the National Theatre], sometimes two shows a day Id get up at 7am, train for three hours, rehearse, do a performance at night. So, lots of soreness as well. But I ended up loving it.

Then there were the more complicated stunts the ones involving, say, Kirby being inside a car as it was rotated 360-degrees on a gimbal, with the actress strapped into her seat but still flying about every which way. Or one in which the actor was wired to the outside of car that Statham is driving and drifting at some impressive speeds. (You need a willing participant to make these types of things work, Leitch says. But there were a few things where even we were going, So Vanessa, you really want to do this?') Mention that last one to Kirby, and she replies, Maybe its crazy to say this, but after a while on this shoot, these dangerous stuntsyou kind of get immune to it. You know, Strap myself to a moving car?' She adopts a singsong voice. Just ano-ther daaaaay on the job!' It eventually got to the point where Id go, Oh, today I just have to repeatedly punch someone? Easy!'

And while neither of Kirbys next few projects an untitled low-budget collaboration with Gimme the Loot director Adam Leon; The World to Come, a character study about two women in love set in the 1800s will require her to flip a man by the neck using only her coat, she is now ready, willing and able to employ her new skill set on demand. Its funny, I was thinking about Princess Margaret, she says, referencing her Crown character. I look back on her now, and think, well, half of the time, all she really wanted to do was fight! And she never could. With Hattie, I finally got to do that. So in that way, the role was cathartic. Kirby drops her voice to a conspiratorial whisper. Im in a movie where I get to fight the Rock. And I get to win.

A Tribute to D.A. Pennebaker: Dont Look Back

Stream Movies 2020 Online free



Had D.A. Pennebaker never done anything but hop a flight to London, 16mm camera in tow, and follow around a scrawny young singer who jousted with journalists, was worshipped as a frizzy-haired god and entertained himself with entourage-fueled shenanigans, he would still have secured himself a place in rock history and film history. The best-known picture of the documentarian, known as Penny to friends and colleagues, finds the then-39-year-old wearing a top hat, jauntily tilted to one side. A camera is hoisted on his shoulder, covering one half of his face. His left index finger is pointing up and placed in front of his eye. Hes in the background, right where he always wanted to be. He looks happy to have a ringside seat to history being made. Sitting right in front of him, uncharacteristically in focus, is his subject: the 65 edition of Bob Dylan.

D.A. Pennebaker, Legendary Documentarian, Dead at 94Inside Criterion's Incredible Restoration of Dylan Doc 'Don't Look Back'

We take it for granted now that Dont Look Back, the chronicle of Dylan confronting the modern celebrity game and giving it the Bronx cheer, is the definitive look at the troubadour poised between reluctant prophet and full-on rock star. It took Pennebaker two years to get anyone to show the film in public; he eventually found a porn-theater operator in San Francisco to give it a screen in a small moviehouse, where it ran for over a year. The litany of put-ons and put-downs captured on film still drop jaws. The all-access pass we get still feels thrillingly, and sometimes uncomfortably intimate. (See: Donovan.) You are there in the Royal Albert Halls audience as he plays. You are there in the backrooms as Albert Grossman negotiates deals and in the middle of entourage banter. You are there next to Dylan, getting impatient with reporters, goofing with Joan Baez and Bob Neuwirth, and almost catching up to that thin, mercurial sound he was chasing. You are there because Pennebaker was there.

The filmmaker, who died of natural causes on August 1st at the age of 94, had a knack for being at the right place at the right time, his finger on the Arriflex trigger. He knew that the closer you could get, and the more you could blend into the scenery so the subject forgot you were there, the more likely you were to capture something akin to truth 24 frames per second. Donn Alan Pennebaker had originally studied to be an engineer before a brief apprenticeship with Francis Thompson led him to nonfiction filmmaking. Early works, like Daybreak Express (1953) and Baby (1954) were essentially experimental shorts, with the former demonstrating a nice blend of music and image and the latter proving to D.A. that, in his own words, I should be watching, not directing.

Soon, hed join a documentarian murders row Robert Drew, Richard Leacock, Albert Maysles, Terence Macartney-Filgate and help form a filmmaking unit at Time Inc. Works like Primary (1960) and Crisis (1963) arent just Kennedy-era political time capsules. They helped give birth to an entirely new form of observational moviemaking, often dubbed direct cinema. They are Documentary 2.0s ground zero. [President Kennedy] never saw us as the six oclock news, Pennebaker would say at a panel in 2016. We were history cameras.

Part of the reason Drew & Co. were able to capture moments on the fly was thanks to a technological innovation that Pennebaker helped initiate, in the form of a new camera that could sync-sound with images much more efficiently. (They made Life magazine foot the bill.) Hed further customize his weapon of choice when he went off his own, making it more lightweight and adding a grip that could allow someone to mount it on their shoulder. Thats the camera you see in that famous Dont Look Back shot. Thats the one hed bring to Monterey International Pop Music Festival in 1967, loaded with new high-speed film, when he was invited to cover the event, resulting in Monterey Pop (1968), widely recognized as the first modern concert movie. (Jazz on a Summers Day came in 1959, but this was a whole new ballgame.) Hendrix setting his guitar on fire. The Who smashing their gear. Otis Redding and Janis Joplin, in all of their ragged soul-shouting glory. Mama Cass fangirling out and Mickey Dolenz bopping blissfully to Ravi Shankar. Welcome to the Sixties. Have a nice trip.

Pennebakers music docs god, those music docs. They form their own separate canon. Penny was there at the Hammersmith Odeon in 1973 when David Bowie performed the final Ziggy Stardust concert, which is why we can still thrill to see the performer in his silver spaceman tunic singing about leper messiahs and rock & roll suicides. (Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, 1973.) He was in Toronto in 1969 when John Lennon performed alongside Little Richard, Eric Clapton and Bo Diddly. (John Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band: Sweet Toronto, 1971.) He and his longtime professional/life partner Chris Hegedus were at the Rose Bowl in 1988 when Depeche Mode finished off their Music for the Masses tour (Depeche Mode 101, 1989.) in Pasadena and at the Ryman in Nashville, Tennessee in 2000 when Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch and more perform old-timey cuts from the bestselling bluegrass soundtrack to O Brother Where Art Thou? (Down From the Mountain, 2000.)

What strikes you the most about these movies arent just the grand performances but the smaller, off-the-cuff moments he gets from these famous people: Dylan typing away in London; Mama Cass mouthing wow! after Ball and Chain; Bowie joking with his wife Angie about make-up; T-Bone Burnett trying to get a bluegrass guitarist, of all folks, to speed up a tempo; Dave Gahan singing along to Roxy. Musics Love Is the Drug while playing pinball. And with Depeche Mode 101, Pennebaker and Hegedus had the foresight to embed two fellow filmmakers on a bus that was taking a gaggle of teen-to-twentysomething superfans across the country to that Rose Bowl show, capturing all of their interactions and arguments and drunken revelry. What happens, in other words, when people stop singing the lyrics to Stripped and start getting real? An IRL star is born. Three years later, MTVs The Real Word would codify the notion into an industry.

That combination of putting you in the middle of something as a spectator and behind the scenes as a participant simultaneously wasnt just confined to his music-related projects. Town Bloody Hall (1979) the unsung gem of his vital filmography watches as Norman Mailer and a whos who of second-wave feminists spar in a 1971 intellectual summit in New York City. It took Hegedus convincing D.A. that the footage, which theyd been sitting on for years, could actually be cobbled together in to something usable; to watch this verit masterpiece today is both a thrilling time warp and a sobering reminder that plus a change, etc. The War Room (1993) drops you in the room where it happens as Bill Clinton and his strategists, including George Stephanopoulos and the ragin Cajun himself, James Carville, plot his presidential campaign you wont find a more insightful look at how the political sausage gets made in the 90s and how that was continuously morphing before our eyes. Original Cast Album: Company (1970) catches every bitchy, bleary-eyed, brilliant moment of Stephen Sondheim and the late, great Hal Prince putting the cast members of the Tony-winning play through their soundtrack-recording paces. The fact that people are catching up to this singular cringe-comic doc thanks to Documentary Nows pitch-perfect parody feels like major win-win.

This is what great observational documentarians do: They capture something large in the foreground and something telling in the periphery, preserving everything in amber yet making it all feel so alive. This is what Pennebaker did throughout his career, from the very beginning up until the end, as his last film Unlocking the Cage a 2016 portrait of the animal-rights activist Stephen M. Wise that he co-directed with Hegedus can attest. His contributions regarding how we look at the history of the later half of the 29th century is profound. His impact on nonfiction filmmaking isnt just invaluable but unfathomable. If a new generation of filmmakers is going to be interested in the film form called documentary,' he notes in the book Imagining Reality, it will only be because it throws off new sparks, not old news. Pennebaker turned that concept into a genuine reality every time he turned on a camera and pointed. And each time he did it, he never looked back.