As we approach the half-way mark in June, it’s clear that 2020 isn’t going so hot. Good news is in short supply, as the world deals with a pandemic and the US is in the middle of a social uprising.
28.05.2020 - 12:46 / theplaylist.net
If you’ve been a regular viewing of David Lynch’s recent YouTube work, you know that the filmmaker has been taking the time to post daily weather updates during the lockdown. But it appears that tomorrow, the filmmaker is breaking up that stream of videos to post something that will attract more than just amateur meteorologists.
According to the filmmaker, Lynch is set to premiere his short film, “Fire (Pozar),” on his YouTube channel. Continue reading David Lynch To Release Long-Awaited Short
.As we approach the half-way mark in June, it’s clear that 2020 isn’t going so hot. Good news is in short supply, as the world deals with a pandemic and the US is in the middle of a social uprising.
David Lynch has shared the first instalment of his 2002 web-series Rabbits via YouTube – you can watch it below.The 15-minute episode, uploaded earlier today (June 9), is the latest in an ongoing run of lockdown unearthings from the renowned filmmaker.Initially made available via Lynch’s official website in the ’00s, the short sees three human-rabbit characters conversing in a dark, old-fashioned living room.
Marc Malkin Senior Film Awards, Events & Lifestyle EditorParamount Pictures has announced that it is offering free digital rentals of Ava DuVernay’s “Selma” for the rest of the month.The news comes less than 24 hours after star David Oyelowo said that Oscar voters told the studio that they would not support the film after the cast wore T-shirts that said “I Can’t Breathe” to the Los Angeles premiere in protest of the killing of Eric Gardner.“Members of the Academy called in to the studio and
«Will history stop repeating itself?» Spike Lee asks as much at the start of a minute-and-a-half-long short film he shared on Twitter, which splices clips from his 1989 film,, with footage of the police killings of Eric Garner in 2014 and George Floyd in May.
"Will history stop repeating itself?"
Over 30 years later and “Do the Right Thing” still sadly rings true.
By Nellie Andreeva
The daily series gives fans an insight into the director's creative process
The director shot the film himself
Martin Scorsese is set to join the ranks of David F. Sandberg and Lotta Losten, Spike Lee, Michel Gondry, and other filmmakers as people who have taken their time in COVID-19-induced lockdown to create something new.
Back in early March — you know, when concerts were still possible — Billie Eilish shared an amazing video to kick off her Where Do We Go? tour.
JK Rowling may be known for her Harry Potter series but the author proves she still has plenty of magical stories to go around, and she makes a surprise announcement.
The film initially premiered at her 'Where Do We Go?' world tour
Funnyman David Walliams might be celebrating the release of his latest book Slime but thanks to lockdown, he’s already got his next one done and dusted!
By Bruce Haring
The project has been in the works since 2015