When the banks committed the greatest fraud in US history, four outsiders risked it alt to take them down. Based on the unbelievable true story and best-selling book from the author of 'The Blind Side' and 'Moneyball', critics are calling 'The Big Short' "slick and funny".
What do the most ravishingly beautiful actress of the 1930's and 40's and the inventor whose concepts were the basis of cell phone and bluetooth technology have in common? They are both Hedy Lamarr, the glamour icon whose ravishing visage was the inspiration for 'Snow White' and 'Catwoman' and a technological trailblazer who perfected a radio system to throw Nazi torpedoes off course during WWII. Weaving interviews and clips with never-before-heard audio tapes of Hedy speaking on the record about her incredible life - from her beginnings as an Austrian-Jewish emigre to her scandalous nude scene in the 1933 film 'Ecstasy' to her glittering Hollywood life to her ground-breaking, but completely uncredited inventions - 'Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story' brings to light the story of an unusual and accomplished woman, spurned as too beautiful to be smart, but a role model to this day.
A hot shot reporter (Porter Wren) is seduced into an affair by a beautiful woman and tasked with investigating the mysterious death of her ex-husband. When suspicious circumstances lead Porter down a dark and violent path he must do everything to protect the ones he loves.
"Suburbicon" is a cold-blooded thriller set in the peaceful streets of suburbia. Here, the picket-fenced homes and manicured lawns look like the perfect place to raise a family...but when a home invasion turns deadly, Gardner Lodge (Matt Damon) and Margaret (Julianne Moore) soon discover that they must turn to blackmail, violence and revenge in order to survive.
Filmed at the BBC Radio Theatre, Sir Van Morrison performs an intimate 'In Concert' show. The Belfast born 'Van the Man' performs a selection of tracks, old and new, from his iconic back catalogue through to 'Keep Me Singing'. Tracks include the classic hit 'Brown Eyed Girl', 'Wild Night' and 'Cleaning Windows'. This intimate show is an up close and personal performance by the Grammy award winning Celtic soul troubadour who is arguably one of the most influential songwriters and performers in the history of popular music.
In Concert:
1. Too Late
2. Magic Time
3. Wild Night
4. Baby Please Don't Go / Don't Start Crying Now
5. Here Comes the Night
6. Every Time I See a River
7. Cleaning Windows / Be-Bop a Lula
8. Let it Rhyme
9. Whenever God Shines His Light
10. Sometimes We Cry
11. Going Down to Bangor
12. The Pen is Mightier Than the Sword
13. Keep Me Singing
14. Enlightenment
15. Carrying a Torch
16. Brown Eyed Girl
17. Jackie Wilson Said
18. In the Garden
Up on Cyprus Avenue:
- Cyprus Avenue
- Celtic Swing
- Cleaning Windows / Be-Bop a Lula
- Days Like This
- Precious Time
- Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
- Baby Please Don't Go / Parchman Farm / Don't Start Crying Now
- It's All in the Game
- Burning Ground
- Whenever God Shines His Light
- And the Healing Has Begun
- On Hyndford Street
Gabrielle (Lisa Gornick) meets acclaimed author Saul Bernard (Allan Corduner) at a book signing where she tells him about her own graphic novel 'How to Do It', an illustrated sexual guide. Intrigued by the project and Gabrielle's relationship with her younger girlfriend Olivia (Anna Koval), Saul offers advice and introduces Gabrielle to a publisher. A strong friendship develops between them both, but it soon becomes apparent that Saul's interest in Gabrielle's life goes far beyond any personal relationship.
"Professor Marston and the Wonder Women" is based on the extraordinary true story of the creator of one of the most iconic super heroes ever conceived, and the seductive secret life he kept from his fans. Harvard psychologist Dr. William Moulton Marston (Luke Evans) was roundly criticized for the creation of his feminist superhero, but it was his personal life, with his polyamorous relationship with his wife, Elizabeth (Rebecca Hall) and their lover, Olive (Bella Heathcote), that was more provocative than any adventure he had ever written.
After a series of murders bearing all the markings of the Jigsaw killer, law enforcement find themselves chasing the ghost of a man dead for over a decade and embroiled in a new game that's only just begun. Is John Kramer (Tobin Bell) back from the dead to remind the world to be grateful for the gift of life? Or is this a trap set by a killer with designs of their own?
Willem Dafoe stars in a career defining performance as a reluctant father figure to the residents of a motel set against the backdrop of a Disneyland resort. From critically acclaimed director Sean Baker (Tangerine) 'The Florida Project' is a wonderful film about the innocence of childhood and the social divide that often touches all sides of humanity.
In 1940, New York City became the centre of activity for an emerging folk scene. Alongside leading lights such as Lead Belly and Josh White were two white musicians and performers, Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie. These artists in particular would become pioneering figures in the redefinition of American Folk, penning their own material in the mould of the traditional tunes that had inspired them, and using music and lyrics as a vessel for political commentary. But by the mid-1950s ill-health plagued Guthrie and the post-WW2 anti-communist 'witch-hunt' had almost put an end to Seeger's career. Folk refused to die however and by the late '50s a new breed of musicians - having seen Rock 'n' Roll morph into a sad parody of its former glory - were again looking to the past for inspiration. One such performer was Robert Allen Zimmerman out of Minneapolis. Informed and influenced by Woody Guthrie, he travelled east, hit the city, and the rest, as they say, is history. But while the now re-named Bob Dylan would of course compose and perform the songs around which virtually the entire revival was based, and epitomise the scene like no other, this young man was no finger-in-the-ear traditionalist. As quickly as he became embroiled in, and subsequently known as the face of, New American Folk, he was jumping ship and moving swiftly on. This film tells the story of Dylan's entry into and departure from the US Folk Revival, and features new interviews with many of the big players from the scene as it unfolded, as well as an abundance of timely footage, rare performances, archive media and numerous other features, which all at once make for the finest programme yet to emerge on this period of Bob Dylan's career.
Al Pacino heads the star cast as Michael Corleone, heir to the criminal empire established by his Mafioso father, the late Don Corleone. The time is mid-1940's: Michael is now in charge of all gambling activities in Nevada, making certain that any and all political or mob enemies are quickly bought off, compromised, or disposed of. Throughout the film, Michael's travels are paralleled with the early experiences of his father, played in flashbacks by Robert DeNiro.
In 1964, while on a short trip to Paris, the American writer and art-lover James Lord (Armie Hammer) is asked by his friend, the world-renowned artist Alberto Giacometti (Geoffrey Rush), to sit for a portrait. The process, Giacometti assures Lord, will take only a few days. Flattered and intrigued, Lord agrees. So begins not only the story of a touching and offbeat friendship, but, seen through the eyes of Lord, a uniquely revealing insight into the beauty, frustration, profundity and, at times, downright chaos of the artistic process. 'Final Portrait' is a bewitching portrait of a genius. It is a film which shines a light on the artistic process itself, by turns exhilarating, exasperating and bewildering, questioning whether the gift of a great artist is a blessing or a curse.
Ryan Bingham (George Clooney) is truly living the high life. Flying all over the world on business, he never stops moving until he meets Alex (Vera Farmiga), a fellow passenger and learns that life isn't about the journey, but the connections we make along the way. Acclaimed by critics and audiences everywhere, 'Up in the Air' is light and dark, hilarious and tragic, bouncy and brainy, romantic and real.
Rowan Atkinson returns as legendary French detective Jules Maigret for two more films set in 1950's Paris.
1. Night at the Crossroads
Maigret (Rowan Atkinson) interrogates suspected murderer Carl Andersen (Tom Wlaschiha) for hours. But despite his best efforts, Andersen's story never slips - he insists he's innocent. So why was the body of a diamond dealer found on his property, in his car, killed with his gun? And why did he and his mysterious sister Else (Mia Jexen) try to run away?
2. Maigret in Montmartre
Arlette (Olivia Vinall), a stripper from one of the area's seedy nightclubs, reports a conversation she overheard about an imminent murder. But it's not until Arlette is found strangled that her report is taken seriously.
Dr. Steven Murphy (Colin Farrell) is a renowned cardiovascular surgeon presiding over a spotless household with his ophthalmologist wife Anna (Nicole Kiclman) and their two exemplary children. Lurking at the margins of his idyllic suburban existence is Martin (Barry Keoghan), a fatherless teen who Steven has covertly taken under his wing. As Martin begins insinuating himself into the family's life in ever-more unsettling displays, the full scope of his intent becomes menacingly clear when he confronts Steven with a long forgotten transgression that will shatter the Murphy family's domestic bliss.
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