Outlawed had me at “feminist western.” It had me at “Reese’s bookclub pick.” It had me at the publisher’s description: “The Crucible meets True Grit.” And reviews that compared it to The Handmaid’s Tale, but set in the Wild West.
05.01.2021 - 04:43 / tvguide.com
Nicolas Cage screaming F-bombs as loud as he can in History of Swear Words, a docuseries about all of the naughtiest words out there, and the return of Cobra Kai, the Karate Kid continuation that's become quite the hit. Our list of suggestions for the best shows and moves on Netflix in January is below, but here's the full list of what's new on Netflix in January. If you'd like even more hand-picked suggestions, click over to our full list of recommendations.
Season 3 available Jan. 1The
.Outlawed had me at “feminist western.” It had me at “Reese’s bookclub pick.” It had me at the publisher’s description: “The Crucible meets True Grit.” And reviews that compared it to The Handmaid’s Tale, but set in the Wild West.
Netflix has announced all of the new titles coming to Netflix in February of 2021 and there are some fan favorite movies and television shows on this list.
Friday, 11 p.m., HBO Musician/actor/painter John Lurie (right) stars in this new unscripted series in which he shares his reflections on what he’s learned in life — through the lens of his original watercolors.Sunday, 8 p.m., The CW The season premiere finds Kate’s friends and family hoping she may still be found — while a homeless 25-year-old, Ryan Wilder (Javicia Leslie, right), finds Kate’s Batwoman suit and becomes the superhero.Saturday, 8 p.m., Lifetime This original three-hour movie
Virgin River, and who can blame them? The romance series is an adaptation of a book series by author Robyn Carr and has shades of a Hallmark movie (in a good way!), so it's great for fans of romance novels.
Every week, discriminating viewers are confronted with a flurry of choices: new releases on disc and on-demand, vintage, and original movies on any number of streaming platforms, catalog titles making a splash on Blu-ray or 4K. This biweekly column sifts through all of those choices to pluck out the movies most worth your time, no matter how you’re watching.
We have recommendations for fans of horror, murder mysteries, animated shows, and much, much more. Where to Watch: Netflix Obviously we have to kick this list off with the most popular post-apocalypse show currently on TV.
Bridgerton and now you're ready for more steamy romance between dapper dudes and gowned gals, preferably with charming accents that will stir your insides. Shonda Rhimes' new series showed that period pieces don't have to be stuffy melodrama for your grandmama, but can be titillating tales of sins and secrets among attractive aristocrats.
Social media is abuzz about one of the first films that could be sweeping award season this year.
When this is all over—Covid, unrest, financial reconstruction—will Los Angeles still be the Movie Capital? Perhaps not.
With the end of 2020 came momentary relief as well as a stark reminder that we’ll continue to need to self-isolate. If anything over the past nine months, television has offered brief but soothing balms to increasing levels of tension and stress and while January doesn’t have a tone to offer in terms of new television (though plenty will still be binging the buzzy “Bridgerton” to be able to ignore that fact) there’s plenty of old, comforting favorites.
Bachelor the (Unauthorized Parody) Musical, which is currently making the rounds on . This parody musical is seriously spot on, highlighting the ridiculous nature of the ABC reality franchise. Created by Bachelor fanatic Richelle Meiss, Bachelor the Musical is an actual thing that ran to sold-out crowds at the University of California, Berkley for six months before expanding to a full-length musical, per .
2020 certainly helped companies such as Netflix as, with so many people stuck at home, they’ve taken to consuming as many films and TV series as possible.
BAGHDAD — A mock funeral procession marked the anniversary of the assassination of Iran’s top general and a senior Iraqi militia leader in a U.S. drone strike that heightened fears of a military escalation in the region.
If it’s some Netflix and chill you are after but you are looking for something different, why not try out something international?
Note: With the coronavirus pandemic delaying production on several shows, several of our picks below come with an asterisk, as delays could push premiere dates past 2021. Premieres Thursday, Jan. 7 on NBCIn recent years, NBC's must-see Thursday night sitcoms have been coming in bits and pieces rather than a full-fledged block, but two people who have been huge parts of NBC's glory days of yore — Cheers' and The Good Place's Ted Danson and 30 Rock's Tina Fey — are hoping to build a foundation
With a fresh wave of content, both new and old, heading to Netflix in the new year, another cycle of movies and television shows will be leaving the streaming service throughout the month. Notable films leaving Netflix include dramasDallas Buyers Club, For Colored Girls, The Hundred-Foot Journey and We Are Your Friends, along with lighthearted fare such as Pineapple Express, Mr.
direct to your inboxThe year 2020 has finally come to an end.But as Greater Manchester is placed under Tier 4 of the government's latest Covid alert system, the region is once again being advised to stay at home to save lives.Luckily, there are plenty of things on TV to keep us company while non-essential shops, cinemas, restaurants and bars remain closed.Films including Transformers, James Bond film Spectre, The Inbetweeners 2 and Pulp Fiction will be airing on Freeview channels this
Cobra Kai in January and new film Malcolm & Marie in February. The movie, one of the first feature films shot entirely during the pandemic, stars Zendaya and John David Washington as a couple whose marital issues all surface over the span of one tense night.
Did you know that some stars have earned over $100 million from making just one movie?