Why would you be watching Contagion or Outbreak right now? Sure, they’re relevant pieces of entertainment amidst the coronavirus pandemic. But we don’t need to be reminded of the current state of affairs. What we need is to turn our brains off and watch a fun action movie that’s also kind of about a potential virus threatening mankind.
And it looks like a lot of people are choosing that option, because Hobbs & Shaw is trending on Twitter as many would rather watch Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham kick ass.
Throwing on Hobbs & Shaw because I want some dumbhead fun and It Is Giving Me Dumbhead Fun. pic.twitter.com/Fj9ffNSiXc
— Rus McLaughlin (@rusmclaughlin) March 15, 2020
I hate Hobbs and Shaw but it's so addictive. I can't turn away from this foolishness. Comic book movies are more realistic than the Fast and Furious franchise.
— Pusha Bre (@IamRobBre) March...
And it looks like a lot of people are choosing that option, because Hobbs & Shaw is trending on Twitter as many would rather watch Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham kick ass.
Throwing on Hobbs & Shaw because I want some dumbhead fun and It Is Giving Me Dumbhead Fun. pic.twitter.com/Fj9ffNSiXc
— Rus McLaughlin (@rusmclaughlin) March 15, 2020
I hate Hobbs and Shaw but it's so addictive. I can't turn away from this foolishness. Comic book movies are more realistic than the Fast and Furious franchise.
— Pusha Bre (@IamRobBre) March...
- 3/16/2020
- by Ryan Beltram
- We Got This Covered
Bonnie Ferguson, Alex Proyas and Dean Kyrwood.
When Alex Proyas wrote the short film Mask of the Evil Apparition, he did not set out to evoke the tone of his 1998 sci-fi thriller Dark City, which was set in a nightmarish world with no sun.
But after filming for four days last week in Heretic Foundation, his new studio in Sydney’s inner west, the parallels are inescapable.
Bonnie Ferguson stars as Olivia, a young woman lost in a nocturnal, dreamlike city, with Dean Kyrwood as twin psychic brothers who try to help her find her way home as she is pursued by a shadowy cult known as The Mysterious Ones.
Alex King is Sandra, a young woman with a passion for disguise and mind games, and Goran D. Kleut portrays a roomful of identical characters.
Proyas, who is shooting the final scenes today, tells If: “The short has evolved into...
When Alex Proyas wrote the short film Mask of the Evil Apparition, he did not set out to evoke the tone of his 1998 sci-fi thriller Dark City, which was set in a nightmarish world with no sun.
But after filming for four days last week in Heretic Foundation, his new studio in Sydney’s inner west, the parallels are inescapable.
Bonnie Ferguson stars as Olivia, a young woman lost in a nocturnal, dreamlike city, with Dean Kyrwood as twin psychic brothers who try to help her find her way home as she is pursued by a shadowy cult known as The Mysterious Ones.
Alex King is Sandra, a young woman with a passion for disguise and mind games, and Goran D. Kleut portrays a roomful of identical characters.
Proyas, who is shooting the final scenes today, tells If: “The short has evolved into...
- 3/8/2020
- by The IF Team
- IF.com.au
After a 2018 mass shooting at a South Florida high school left 17 people dead and 17 more injured, Parkland students Emma Gonzalez, David Hogg and Jackie Corin found themselves at the forefront of a national conversation about gun control reform before they were even old enough to vote.
Two years after the tragedy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the survivors are again grappling with the legacy of that terrible day, this time in “Us Kids,” a documentary by Kim A. Snyder (“Newtown”) that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Through the eyes of the young activists, “Us Kids” chronicles the global impact of their efforts over the 18 months that followed, including the March for Our Lives movement and the Road to Change tour to mobilize the youth vote during midterm elections.
“We’re looking forward to using this film as a tool to facilitate more conversations about gun violence prevention around...
Two years after the tragedy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the survivors are again grappling with the legacy of that terrible day, this time in “Us Kids,” a documentary by Kim A. Snyder (“Newtown”) that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Through the eyes of the young activists, “Us Kids” chronicles the global impact of their efforts over the 18 months that followed, including the March for Our Lives movement and the Road to Change tour to mobilize the youth vote during midterm elections.
“We’re looking forward to using this film as a tool to facilitate more conversations about gun violence prevention around...
- 1/30/2020
- by Rebecca Rubin
- Variety Film + TV
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