Sign up to FREE email alerts from our Money Saving Club Newsletter
12.07.2021 - 20:39 / theplaylist.net
Relentless and brutal, Andrew Haigh’s “The North Water” is the story of two men who are practically of different species and how they bounce off each other in the middle of nowhere. Reportedly filmed further north than any other production in history, Haigh’s 5-part adaptation of the highly acclaimed novel by Ian McGuire premieres on July 15 on AMC+ and will likely migrate to the cable channel AMC eventually, just as “Gangs of London” did in 2021 after its 2020 AMC+ launch.
Sign up to FREE email alerts from our Money Saving Club Newsletter
Early on in “Thief,” Michael Mann’s 1981 feature debut, James Caan’s Frank stares out at a body of water enveloped by a sky that seems to go on forever. He’s just returned from another successful heist in Mann’s subterranean underworld, and he wants out.
Two of our best exports Brendan Gleeson and Colin Farrell are reuniting for a brand new movie and you can be part of the action as extras are needed.
Get the biggest City transfer window stories, analysis and updates delivered straight to your inbox
Colin Farrell is fueling up!
Colin Farrell is explaining why he chose to wear a fat suit rather than gaining weight for his role in “The Batman”.
Colin Farrell is opening up about his transformation into Penguin for The Batman.
AMC+ (BBC Two in the UK), the five-episode miniseries is set in the 1850s and follows Patrick Sumner (Jack O’Connell), a disgraced ex-army surgeon who joins a whaling expedition to the Arctic.
Daniel D'Addario Chief TV CriticThough it’s plenty punishing, AMC Plus’ new limited series “The North Water” has something richly escapist about it: The show, set on a whaling ship in the 1850s and shot within the Arctic Circle, creates a sense of chilliness that will permeate one’s bones on even the hottest summer night.In this adaptation of Ian McGuire’s historical-fiction novel, Jack O’Connell plays Patrick Sumner, a British army surgeon running from his past; he signs on to be a doctor on a
Love Island’s Hugo Hammond is being defended by fans after the girls of the villa "turned their nose up" at the suggestion he looks like Jamie Dornan. On Saturday’s episode of Unseen Bits, the boys of the show spoke about who they’ve been compared to in the past.
EXCLUSIVE: Growing South Korean streaming service Watcha is having a busy Cannes, landing local rights to three buzz titles here in the festival.
Jodie Turner-Smith looks like a goddess while walking the red carpet at the premiere of her movie After Yang during the 2021 Cannes Film Festival on Thursday (July 8) in Cannes, France.
Peter Debruge Chief Film Critic“After Yang” takes place far enough in the future that it doesn’t seem unusual for a family to have acquired a virtual big brother for their adopted Chinese daughter. The robot — or “techno-sapien,” as such advanced appliances are politely referred to in the race-blind, android-accepting society writer-director Kogonada neatly imagines — has ceased to function, and the man of the house (Colin Farrell) has the tricky task of getting him fixed.
Quickly becoming one of the greatest humanist filmmakers we have with the most superb eye for composition in cinema, South Korean director Kogonada delicately breaks your heart in the luminous and exquisitely crafted “After Yang.” If you have children (and or can acutely recall your childhood), you know that precise moment in time when your child starts to gently, curiously inquire about death—what happens to us when we die— and then begins to sadly grapple with the concept that all things die,
Andrew Haigh is one of the most respected English filmmakers working today because of the humane and tender qualities he lends his projects. Whether it’s his LGBT-themed dramas like “Weekend” and “Looking,” or the truly excellent “45 Years” from 2015, Haigh brings a subtle and tender style reminiscent of a novelist’s sensibility.
Colin Farrell got emotional as he discussed the homelessness crisis in Los Angeles while speaking to guest-host Wanda Sykes on Wednesday’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live!”
here.Hit with delays amid the pandemic, the film - which is the fifth installment in the franchise - was given the green light back in 2016.It comes after Hollywood stars Robert Pattinson and Colin Farrell headed to Glasgow last month to shoot final scenes for the long-awaited new Batman movie.Parts of The Batman were filmed there in February last year after the city was chosen as a location for the Caped Crusader’s home, Gotham City.