![]() ![]() ![]() October 11Ĭult Japanese filmmaker Sion Sono, who won the Midnight Madness People’s Choice Award at TIFF for 2013’s Why Don’t You Play In Hell?, directed this film, which was apparently inspired by real-life multiple murders. Aaron Paul returns, obviously, along with nearly a dozen cast members from the original show… though Gilligan is keeping a pretty tight lid on who they are, for obvious reasons. Art imitating life? October 18ĭid you ever wonder what happened to Jesse Pinkman after he drove off into the darkness at the end of Breaking Bad’s final episode? Vince Gilligan did, so he took some time off from the prequel series Better Call Saul to make a movie that shows us the rest of Jesse’s journey. Created and written by Timothy Greenberg (The Daily Show) and directed by Little Miss Sunshine directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, the eight-episode show feels like Rudd’s attempt to shake up his nice-guy image – by playing his evil twin. The latest surreal dark comedy series to hit Netflix stars Paul Rudd in a dual role: playing a depressed man who visits some sort of experimental spa to rejuvenate his stagnant life only to wind up confronted by his cranky old self. Now, Slate mixes performance footage with documentary elements for a hybrid special that shows us how she managed to get comfortable in front of an audience. If you’ve seen Obvious Child, you know Jenny Slate is pretty good at stand-up comedy… but the actor, writer and children’s book author almost never performs live, thanks to a very bad case of stage fright (which she discussed with NOW in this 2014 interview). Now he’s exec-producing and starring in this series, playing the late father to a young child who could become the Black Superman… or something else. In Black Panther, Jordan found new emotional depths as a supervillain shouldering the weight of history. In 2012’s found-footage thriller Chronicle, he played a teen goofing around with newfound superpowers. Jordan is finding fascinating ways into the superhero genre. The feature adaptation stars Patrick Wilson and Laysla de Oliveira, and is written and directed by Vincenzo Natali, the Toronto filmmaker who’s spent the last few years making gorgeous television like Hannibal, Lost In Space and Westworld – and who showed a facility for building whole worlds out of limiting premises in his early features Cube and Nothing. Stephen King and Joe Hill’s 2012 novella has a very simple premise: adult siblings go into a field of grass in search of a lost child, and discover they can’t get out. Meanwhile, Slate’s awkward Missy gets her very own Hormone Monstress (Thandie Newton) and Mulaney’s even more awkward Andrew tries to recover from his shocking heel turn in the Valentine’s Day special. The new season finds the animated comedy’s hapless suburban seventh-graders – voiced by co-creator Nick Kroll, John Mulaney, Jessi Klein, Jason Mantzoukas and Jenny Slate – find their ongoing struggle with puberty further complicated by the arrival of a magnetic new classmate (Ali Wong). The series will unfold in three phases, starting with a four-episode drop devoted to the audition process. It’s probably fair to say the series is the first “big-budget” hip-hop reality competition, which also happens to be Netflix’s first music talent show. search for America’s next rap superstar, American Idol-style. Shadily billed in a trailer as hip-hop’s first “legit TV competition” (Um… what about the The Road To Stardom With Missy Elliott!?), the three-week, 10-episode Rhythm + Flow sees judges Cardi B, Chance The Rapper and T.I. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |