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      One Piece, Bridgerton, The Witcher… ces séries arrivent plus tôt que prévu sur Netflix

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Monday, 30 January, 2023 - 14:04

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      La saison 4 de You arrive plus tôt que prévu sur Netflix

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Friday, 25 November, 2022 - 10:30

    you-saison-4-netflix-avance-158x105.jpg You Saison 4 Londres

    Le professeur Jonathan Moore nous donne rendez-vous en février prochain pour sa rentrée sur Netflix. You se prononce à la britannique désormais.

    La saison 4 de You arrive plus tôt que prévu sur Netflix

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      Thank you for a successful Puss plush campaign

      comics.movim.eu / RandoWis · Thursday, 27 October, 2022 - 19:00

    

    Here’s hoping it was worth it!

    The campaign is over, but I’m just leaving the link here to look back on in the future: https://www.makeship.com/products/puss-plush

    The post Thank you for a successful Puss plush campaign first appeared on RandoWis .

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      Netflix TUDUM : 5 choses à retenir de l’événement

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Monday, 26 September, 2022 - 14:00

    netflix-tudum-recap-series-films-158x105.jpg Tyler Rake, You

    Si vous n'avez pas tout suivi de ce Netflix TUDUM, voici ce qu'il fallait retenir de l'événement de l'année.

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      12 Romantic Movies to Thaw Even the Coldest Hearts

      pubsub.dcentralisedmedia.com / LifehackerAustralia · Thursday, 11 February, 2021 - 20:45 · 6 minutes

    You’d be forgiven for not being thrilled about celebrating a(nother?) pandemic Valentine’s Day. It’s often a fraught, stressful occasion in the best of times. This year, it’s all a bit horrible.

    So instead — and whether you are single or happily coupled — plan a night in. Make a romantic dinner for two (or a pleasurable meal for one ) and cosy up to your streaming device to watch a romantic movie. But because this is 2021, no mere flighty rom-com will do. You need a love story that will revive a heart numbed by the havoc of the last 12 months, and we’ve got a dozen suggestions — how apropos.

    Beginners

    RIP to the recently departed Christopher Plummer, who gives an unforgettable, Oscar-winning performance as a terminally ill septuagenerian who only embraces his long-denied homosexuality in the waning years of his life, inspiring his sad sack son (Ewan McGregor) to take his own shot at building a genuine connection with a vivacious French actress (Mélanie Laurent). Based on his own relationship with his late father, Mike Mills’ film offers an essential reminder that it’s never too late to live genuinely. — Joel Cunningham, managing editor

    Find it on: YouTube

    Forgetting Sarah Marshall

    Written by and starring Jason Segel, my favourite rom-com follows a composer named Peter who leaves on a Hawaiian vacation in hopes of getting over his ex. Of course, his ex (Kristen Bell) is coincidentally there with her new boyfriend (Russell Brand), and the result is the type of comedy that wins through sincerity. There are a million things to praise about this movie, but what makes it unique is Peter’s subversion of the typical male lead. His earnestness is enough to get you to let your own guard down, and it also features a song for the ages, “Dracula’s Lament,” which is enough itself to help you embrace vulnerability, life’s shittiness, and comedy all at the same time. — Jordan C alhoun, deputy editor

    Find it on: Netflix

    When Harry Met Sally…

    When this now-beloved Nora Ephron/Rob Reiner collaboration was released in 1989, critics everywhere fell all over themselves to compare it (usually with some derision) to a Woody Allen film — but three decades later, the decade-spanning will they/won’t they romance between Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal has aged line a fine wine, while some entries in Allen’s celebrated ouvre have, er, not . Credit, I think, goes not only to Ephron’s perfectly crafted screenplay and its winning performances (including memorable supporting turns from the late Carrie Fisher and Bruno Kirby), but to the film’s ultimately hopeful outlook on love. Finding a person that fits with you is hard, but, as Crystal’s Allen-eqsue grump Harry eventually figures out, sometimes you do want to join a club that would have you as a member. — Joel Cunningham

    Find it on: Stan.

    Chungking Express

    Two policemen (Takeshi Kaneshiro and Tony Leung), both hung up on different women, moon around Hong Kong. There’s about 30% too much eating of expired canned pineapple. Besides that one complaint, I deeply love this charming, quirky film. — Alice Bradley, editor-in-chief

    Find it on: The Criterion Channel

    A New Leaf

    Henry Graham (Walter Matthau) is a playboy who finds himself out of money and in need of a rich wife: Henrietta Lowell (Elaine May, who also directed) is a shy, hopelessly awkward woman with the wealth that Henry requires. Will Henry find love, or murder Henrietta out of frustration and disgust? I’m not going to say, but then, this isn’t in “Most Murdery Movies.” — Alice Bradley

    Find it on: YouTube

    Moonlight

    Often best remembered for the way its Best Picture Oscar win happened, we might be distracted from why it won: Moonlight is a work of art. Directed by Barry Jenkins, the story follows three stages of a boy’s life as he navigates being Black and gay through his boyhood, teens, and finally as an adult. It speaks on themes of Blackness, masculinity, and sexuality, and even aside from dozens of awards that celebrate its accomplishments, it would be worth it enough to watch the romantic dinner scene in the film’s third act. — Jordan Calhoun

    Find it on: Netflix

    The Shape of Water

    Guillermo del Toro’s Best Picture winner has been referred to as “that movie where the lady fucks a fish” and, well, I can’t quite disagree. But it’s story of a meek janitorial worker at a secret government lab who forges an unexpected connection with a creature from another world is as touching a portrait of barrier-breaking love as it is a weird and imaginative science-fictional tale. If Sally Hawkins and Doug Jones can make it work despite language barriers, special differences, and a maniacal government agent (Michael Shannon), maybe love really can conquer all. — Joel Cunningham

    Find it on: YouTube

    Secretary

    Lee Holloway (Maggie Gyllenhaal) gets a job as secretary to a demanding lawyer, Edward Grey (James Spader). What happens next is 50 Shades of … Spader. Managing editor Joel Cunningham called this a “bold choice,” but I stand by this as a love story. What’s more romantic than two people with compatible kinks finding each other? — Alice Bradley

    Find it on: Amazon Prime Video

    The Half of It

    Our most cynical natures need a cynical lead character to feel realistic enough break into our hearts, and I knew The Half of It ’s Ellie Chu would deliver from her opening warning that this one’s not a happily-ever-after love story. As it turns out, Ellie would find love in a place she least expected, but she’d find other things along the way that matter more. Written and directed by Alice Wu, this immigrant LGBT coming-of-age teen love story charming, unique, funny, and, perhaps most importantly, doesn’t make happily-ever-after the ultimate goal for a young girl who has so much else ahead of her. — Jor dan Calhoun

    Find it on: Netflix

    The Big Sick

    Touching and hilarious in equal measure, The Big Sick illustrates that love can endure through any hardship. Kumail Nanjiani (of Silicon Valley fame) plays a working standup comedian and Uber driver who hooks up with a psychology student (Zoe Kazan) that hits the rocks due to cultural differences, then grows more complicated when she develops a mysterious illness. Considering it is based on the real-life relationship between Kumail and his wife and co-screenwriter Emily V. Gordon, you can guess how it ends — which really makes it that much more of a balm in these shitty times. — Sam Blum, staff writer

    Find it on: Netflix

    About Time

    Everyone loves Love Actually (unless they hate it), but my favourite Richard Curtis movie is this later effort, in which a man (Domhnall Gleeson) who discovers he has the power to move through time realises that true happiness isn’t found in changing the past, but embracing the magic of every present moment. (Which, to be fair, is probably easier when you’re rich, live in a gorgeous seaside home, and are married to Racel McAdams, but still, life lessons and such.) — Joel Cunningham

    Find it on: Netflix

    Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

    I miss the days when screenwriter Charlie Kaufman didn’t direct his own projects; outside collaborators seem to have helped him temper the misanthropic doomer tendancies that have made his more recent works such downers. Consider this, his best film, directed with understated whimsey by Michel Gondry: A dysfunctional couple (played by Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet) makes use of weird new tech (“Technically speaking, the procedure is brain damage,” the doctor notes) to erase their memories of one another from their minds, but still manage to find one another again, suggesting even (possibly) doomed love is better than no love at all. — Joel C unningham

    Find it on: Digital rental

    The post 12 Romantic Movies to Thaw Even the Coldest Hearts appeared first on Lifehacker Australia .