INFERNAL AFFAIRS 1-3:
Fra kl. 22.55 i aften viser TV2 Film alle tre Hongkong-film ud i én køre.
Jack J skrev:INFERNAL AFFAIRS 1-3:
Fra kl. 22.55 i aften viser TV2 Film alle tre Hongkong-film ud i én køre.
Jack J skrev:Kunne du ikke ha' sat oldskool-videobåndoptageren til at optage?
Vang skrev:Fik DR2 i øvrigt nogensinde vist Darios "Trauma" eller dummede de sig igen? Den er i hvert fald programsat på DR1 i morgen aften/nat (13/3) klokken halv et. Rart at se, at vi virkelig får noget for licenspengene. I gamle dage (monopoltiden, hvor cacaomælk kom i trekantede kartoner og sodavandsflasker var meget, meget mindre) kunne vi vente årtier på en film, nu vises den mindst tre gange med et par måneders mellemrum når den først er købt hjem
Nicolai skrev:Jack J skrev:Hvis de fucker op at vise en horrorfilm på Fredag den 13'ende, så er det næsten så grotesk, at man bør begynde at skyde mennesker fra et højt tag!
Ikke mere "Skytten" til den mand.
stacilayne skrev:Mysterious little towns, first popularly used in the original Twilight Zone series and brought along with creepy effectiveness in shows like Twin Peaks and American Gothic, are almost always a place I want to visit. There's just something about these seemingly idyllic settings (which are, of course, actually teeming with evil just behind those white picket fences) that lures me in every time.
The new series from Showtime, Meadowlands, is no exception. A person can only live there by invitation, and it's one that's impossible to refuse. "Everyone is here," explains one of the characters, "because they saw something or told something. Or… did something." At first, it seems to be part of a witness relocation program, but then the line blurs.
Brian Lowry skrev:"Meadowlands" owes a more-than-passing debt to Patrick McGoohan's paranoid 1960s classic "The Prisoner," albeit adding a family twist that won't remind anybody of "Father Knows Best." Focusing on two parents and their 17-year-old twins awkwardly sequestered in a mysterious, primary-colored English hamlet, this exceedingly dark eight-part series works largely thanks to the stellar combination of David Morrissey and Lucy Cohu as the central couple. Even after four episodes, the show's broader objectives remain fuzzy, but along the way, it provides another grimly bent view of family drama tonally reminiscent of FX's "The Riches."
Brugere der læser dette forum: Ingen og 11 gæster