Line of Events
Two high school nobodies make the decision to crash the last major celebration before the new millennium on New Year’s Eve 1999. The night becomes even crazier than they could have ever dreamed when the clock strikes midnight.
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Two high school nobodies make the decision to crash the last major celebration before the new millennium on New Year’s Eve 1999. The night becomes even crazier than they could have ever dreamed when the clock strikes midnight.
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Following the events of The Batman (2022), Oz Cobb, a.k.a. Except for the bat signal in the final shot of the season finale, we never got our Robert Pattinson cameo in "The Penguin." In this short video, IMDb tries to answer: Where the heck was Batman?. Colin Farrell fought hard to have his version of The Penguin smoke tobacco in The Batman (2022) but was unsuccessful.
For his own series however, the character is depicted as an occasional tobacco user, with a preference for cigars.. An umbrella drops and the logo changes to the Warner Bros logo.. Featured in The Graham Norton Show: Lady Gaga/Demi Moore/Colin Farrell/Richard Ayoade/Jack Savoretti (2024).
Absolutely nailed the tone and atmosphere. Gritty and grimy and dark, but Farrell is able to capture that glimmer of charm Gandolfini's Tony Soprano did.There are similarities to the sopranos especially in tone. A lot of dark stuff goes down in this opening episode, but there's still comedic moments that match the tone and don't undermine it.Where to start with Farrell.
Love to see talented star actors go all in on roles like this, and the makeup/cgi or whatever exactly they did with transforming him into the penguin physically not only passes the eye test, it looks incredible realistic. There is always the risk that if the make up job isn't good enough or is just a little off, it can completely distract. In the penguin, it adds to his performance and the overall quality of the show because it's such a damn good job.
I'm maybe a little biased because he is one of my favorite actors prior to this show, but I think this is going to get him well-deserved accolades.I never really tune into new shows right away because I like to watch the episodes all at once, but I wanted to see how this one actually came out.Didn't disappoint, in fact blew me away.
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Following a mysterious treasure map, the kids venture into a grand underground kingdom filled with winding passages, incredible traps, and a long-lost pirate ship full of golden doubloons. They try to stay one step ahead of a family of clumsy villains and a gentle monster with a face only a mother could love. [Warner Bros.]
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Fleeing post-war Europe, visionary architect Laszlo Toth arrives in America to rebuild his life, work, and marriage to his wife, Erzsébet, after being forced to separate during the war due to changing borders and regimes. Alone in a strange new country, Laszlo settles in Pennsylvania, where wealthy and prominent industrialist Harrison Lee Van Buren recognizes his talent for building. But power and inheritance come at a high price…
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After 20 years, Odysseus finally returns to Ithaca, where he finds his wife held captive by rival suitors for the kingdom, and his son facing death. Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche have appeared together in a film for the third time.
They previously worked together in Wuthering Heights (1992) and The English Patient (1996). Penelope: How can men go to war but never return home?
First of all, it’s a small part of the story of the Odyssey, which is why it’s called "the return". What I liked most about it is that there is no CGI and stupid computer scenes, as we have seen in most Hollywood films.
The views from the places around the sea and everything are natural. The palace is old and real and very beautiful.
First time I saw a very low budget movie but it’s actually very good.
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On an empty road in the middle of the night, Shula stumbles upon her uncle’s body. As funeral proceedings unfold around them, she and her cousins uncover the buried secrets of their middle-class Zambian family in filmmaker Rungano Nyoni’s surreal and vibrant reckoning with the lies we tell ourselves.
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