The stars of acclaimed comedy 30 Rock are reuniting for a one-off special that will serve as a promotional event for network NBC.
28.05.2020 - 12:44 / theplaylist.net
When will the US government really fight back against the threat of terrorism and crime? Sure, police and law enforcement officials do their best, but in the new film “The Last Days of American Crime,” the government has figured out a way to stop all crime and it leads to some pretty insane results.
As seen in the trailer for “The Last Days of American Crime,” the film follows the story of an alternate future where the government sends out a massive signal that makes it impossible for any
.The stars of acclaimed comedy 30 Rock are reuniting for a one-off special that will serve as a promotional event for network NBC.
season 2 viewers were hit with a surprise on Monday night's episode when it comes to Ariela and her Ethiopian boyfriend, Biniyam's, relationship.It was revealed that the 29-year-old had a serious relationship with an American woman before, and has a two-year-old son.
Todd Spangler NY Digital EditorThe critics, so far, have a unanimous verdict: “The Last Days of American Crime,” Netflix’s new sci-fi/heist mashup that features scenes of police brutality and other gratuitous violence, is one of the worst films… ever.The movie, released on Netflix June 5, has a 0% Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes, which means none of the 25 critical reviews tabulated by the site were positive.“The Last Days of American Crime” joins only 42 other films (with at least 20
Harry Styles won't be performing a concert any time soon. The 26-year-old singer announced Wednesday that the North American leg of his Love On Tour has been pushed back to 2021 due to the ongoing threat of coronavirus.
boasts a rare 0% rating on Rotten Tomatoes? Is it the scene in which a man shoots up a captive woman full of heroin and attempts to rape her in what looks like Austin Powers’ bedroom? Or maybe the sequence where a disgusting man with no flesh burns a tied-up Bricke with a cigar in a trailer, sets it on fire and Ramírez still escapes looking like he’s en route to a photo shoot?How about the strong, but totally wasted premise? The US government is about to unleash a mind-controlling signal that
A poorly imagined crime flick that comes nowhere near justifying its 2.5-hour running time, Olivier Megaton's The Last Days of American Crime adapts a graphic novel in which the U.S. government has built a mind-control ray — maybe this is that 5G conspiracy the Alex Jones crowd has been ranting about? — that will soon prevent would-be villains from breaking the law.
Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticThese days, searching for solace amid a global pandemic and nationwide protests, film critics frequently find themselves referring to “the movie we need right now,” lavishing that cliché description on anything that offers the slightest comfort or context in a world turned upside-down. Let me assure you, Netflix’s “The Last Days of American Crime” is not that movie.
The New York Times newsroom is in open rebellion over an op-ed the newspaper's opinion section published Wednesday that called for the army to be deployed into American cities to crush nationwide protests over police brutality and systemic racism. In reaction to the op-ed, written by Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton and titled "Send in the Troops," dozens of Timesstaffers began tweeting out the same message on Twitter Wednesday evening in an open show of anger and solidarity.
By Michele Amabile Angermiller
A court in New York has thrown out a copyright infringement lawsuit filed against Netflix, Apple and Amazon over the use of an unlicensed children’s song in a documentary about a group of burlesque dancers. The case was dismissed on the basis that the inclusion of the song was ‘fair use’.
By Amanda N'Duka
By Nellie Andreeva
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By Jordan Moreau
Bill Clinton is writing a second political thriller with author James Patterson, about a former US president whose daughter is kidnapped.
Netflix has delivered a new trailer for The Last Days Of American Crime, a new movie coming very soon. The film is based on the graphic novel by Rick Remender and Greg Tocchini from back in 2009. Olivier Megaton directs from a screenplay by Karl Gajdusek, who wrote Trespass in 2011 and co-wrote the 2013 Tom Cruise movie, Oblivion.
The debut trailer for The Last Days of American Crime has just debuted, and the full movie will be available on Netflix in June 5!