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Entries in HBO Max (12)

Thursday
Oct142021

"Oh, a moving painting. But with sound."

I was painting a painting about four foot square. It was mostly black but it had some green plant and leaves coming out of the black. And I was sitting back, probably taking a smoke, looking at it and from the painting, I heard a wind and the green started moving. And I thought, 'Oh, a moving painting. But with sound.' And that idea stuck in my head, a moving painting.

David Lynch on discovering his calling at art school in Philadelphia in David Lynch - The Art Life (2016) currently streaming on HBOMax

Wednesday
Sep012021

"The Other Two" Shines by Putting Molly Shannon in the Spotlight

Wouldn't you watch a Molly Shannon talk show?

By: Christopher James

Creators Chris Kelley and Sarah Schneider should “Pat… themselves on the back” for another great season of The Other Two. Season two roars back with a new vigor as it re-centers the show around the Dubek matriarch, Pat (Molly Shannon), and her newfound success as a talk show host.

Last season saw the Dubak family thrust into the spotlight once the youngest son, ChaseDreams (Case Walker) has a viral hit and becomes an overnight pop sensation. Now, Chase is off to NYU (but not Tisch, as the show hilariously notes) and Pat has become a talk show host that rivals Chase in terms of popularity.

As for the titular Other Two Dubek siblings, they are… doing all right. At the very least, they are in better positions than last year...

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Mar272021

What Other Movies Should Get The Justice League Snyder Cut Treatment?

 

Sequel culture has led to remake culture and now... recut culture?  HBO Max recently released Zack Snyder’s four hour cut of Justice League to subscribers. Snyder left the film in 2017 in the wake of his daughter’s suicide, leaving the project in the hands of Joss Whedon. When the film was released in November, Justice League was savaged by critics and audiences alike. The two hour film had very little character development, laughable dialogue, an unmemorable villain, bad CGI and made very little sense. Sequel culture has led to remake culture and now to recut culture of movies of the recent past.

While we prefer new movies and the classics to reworking old-IP, why not join in on the fun and ponder the alternate realities of what could’ve been had Justice League been 4 hours or had Mrs. Doubtfire been rated R? If streamers have hoards of IP and buckets of money, what other cuts of old movies should they bring to life?

Here are ten suggestions…

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Feb162021

Review: Judas and the Black Messiah

by Lynn Lee

The flame that burns twice as bright burns half as long.  That isn’t Fred Hampton’s epitaph, but it could well be.  Only in his case, it wasn’t even half – more like a quarter.  At the age of 21, Hampton was already one of the brightest lights in the Black Panther Party when he was assassinated in his own home by the Chicago police, with help from the FBI, in 1969.  The most tragic aspect of his premature demise wasn’t that he was just getting started; it was that he had accomplished so much in such a short time and gave every indication he could have done so much more had he lived.  The second most tragic aspect was the identity of his betrayer: an African American FBI informant who had embedded himself in Hampton’s inner circle.

Both of these aspects get their due in Judas and the Black Messiah, the first non-documentary film to focus on Hampton and the man (and Man) who brought him down...

Click to read more ...

Thursday
Jan142021

Review: Search Party (Season Four)

by Christopher James

Alia Shawkat returns as Dory Sief in the new fourth season of Search Party on HBO Max.Who doesn’t love a good quarantine binge? The minute HBO Max (finally) came on Roku, I began my binge of the first three seasons of Search Party. The beloved, niche TBS comedy about self-absorbed Brooklyn-ites became a strange, but satisfying watch during the day. Sure, the characters were unlikable enough to make the cast of Girls look like saints. Still, I couldn’t stop watching. Maybe that’s because there’s something satisfying about watching the character’s schemes and cover ups come unraveled. What began as a simple search party for a Facebook friend spirals into a murder trial three seasons later. The show continues to take big swings in season four that eventually pay off to be a highly memorable season of TV.

The fourth season, available on HBO Max today, takes us simultaneously further from and closer to that first season premise...

Click to read more ...