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#Netflix Series The Lincoln Lawyer Trailer Debut
rickyvalero · 2 years
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Netflix Series The Lincoln Lawyer Trailer Debut
The trailer for #TheLincolnLawyer series coming to Netflix on May 13th has arrived. Check it out inside
We have all the details on the upcoming Netflix Series The Lincoln Lawyer for you today including the trailer and casting list. Release Date: May 13, 2022 Created for Television By: David E. KelleyDeveloped for Television By/Showrunner: Ted HumphreyExecutive Producers: David E. Kelley, Ted Humphrey, Michael Connelly, Ross Fineman, Barry Jossen, Tana JamiesonCast: Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Neve…
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aion-rsa · 3 years
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New on Netflix: August 2021 Releases
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We’re deep into the dog days of summer, but Netflix’s list of new releases for August 2021 feels like fall.
That is to say that Netflix has some really good library TV titles this month that harken back to the glory days of the fall TV network calendar. August 1 sees the arrival of two of the best NBC shows of all time: Tina Fey comedy 30 Rock, and life-affirming (American) football drama Friday Night Lights. If you’ve not seen either, catch up with them both. That’s an order.
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As for original offerings, Netflix has plenty of those this month as well. Intriguing TV series such as Top Secret UFO Projects: Declassified (Aug. 3), Brand New Cherry Flavor (Aug. 13), The Chair (Aug. 20), and Clickbait (Aug. 25) all arrive this month. Netflix also continues its path of anime domination thanks to Shaman King (Aug. 9), EDENS ZERO (Aug. 26), and spinoff film The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf (Aug. 23).
The biggest potential hits might be on the original film side of things. The Kissing Booth 3 (Aug. 3), Beckett (Aug. 13), and the Jason Momoa-starring Sweet Girl (Aug. 20) all make their debut this month. Those are, of course, complemented by some fun library titles on Aug. 1 like Catch Me If You Can, Inception, and Pineapple Express.
New on Netflix: August 2021
Coming Soon Comedy Premium League — NETFLIX SERIES  D.P. — NETFLIX SERIES 
August 1 30 Rock: Seasons 1-7 Beethoven Beethoven’s 2nd Beowulf Catch Me If You Can Darwin’s Game Deep Blue Sea The Edge of Seventeen Ferris Bueller’s Day Off Five Feet Apart Friday Night Lights: Seasons 1-5 Good Luck Chuck The Haunting in Connecticut 2: Ghosts of Georgia Hunter X Hunter (2011): Seasons 5-6 Inception The Lincoln Lawyer The Losers The Machinist Magnolia Major Payne My Girl My Girl 2 The Net The Original Kings of Comedy Pineapple Express Poms Seabiscuit Space Cowboys Team America: World Police
August 3 Pray Away  — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY Shiny_Flakes: The Teenage Drug Lord — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY  Top Secret UFO Projects: Declassified — NETFLIX SERIES
August 4 Aftermath American Masters: Inventing David Geffen  Cocaine Cowboys: The Kings of Miami — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY Control Z: Season 2 — NETFLIX SERIES  Car Masters: Rust to Riches: Season 3 — NETFLIX SERIES Cooking With Paris — NETFLIX SERIES
August 6 Hit & Run — NETFLIX SERIES Navarasa — NETFLIX SERIES  The Swarm — NETFLIX FILM  Vivo — NETFLIX FILM
August 8 Quartet
August 9 SHAMAN KING — NETFLIX ANIME
August 10 Gabby’s Dollhouse: Season 2 — NETFLIX FAMILY Phil Wang: Philly Philly Wang Wang — NETFLIX COMEDY SPECIAL UNTOLD: Malice at the Palace – August 10
August 11 Bake Squad — NETFLIX SERIES The Kissing Booth 3 — NETFLIX FILM La diosa del asfalto Misha and the Wolves — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY 
August 12 AlRawabi School for Girls — NETFLIX SERIES Lokillo: Nothing’s the Same — NETFLIX COMEDY SPECIAL Monster Hunter: Legends of the Guild — NETFLIX ANIME
August 13 Beckett — NETFLIX FILM Brand New Cherry Flavor — NETFLIX SERIES Fast & Furious Spy Racers: Season 5: South Pacific — NETFLIX FAMILY Gone for Good — NETFLIX SERIES The Kingdom — NETFLIX SERIES Valeria: Season 2 — NETFLIX SERIES
August 15 Mother Goose Club: Seasons 3-4 Rascal Does Not Dream of Bunny Girl Senpai: Season 1 Winx Club: Season 6
August 16 Walk of Shame
August 17 Go! Go! Cory Carson: Season 5 — NETFLIX FAMILY UNTOLD: Deal with the Devil — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY 
August 18 The Defeated — NETFLIX SERIES Memories of a Murderer: The Nilsen Tapes — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY Out of my league — NETFLIX FILM The Secret Diary of an Exchange Student — NETFLIX FILM
August 19 Like Crazy
August 20 The Chair — NETFLIX SERIES Everything Will Be Fine — NETFLIX SERIES The Loud House Movie — NETFLIX FAMILY Sweet Girl — NETFLIX FILM 
August 23 The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf — NETFLIX ANIME
August 24 Oggy Oggy — NETFLIX FAMILY UNTOLD: Caitlyn Jenner — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY 
August 25 Bob Ross: Happy Accidents, Betrayal & Greed — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY Clickbait — NETFLIX SERIES John of God: The Crimes of a Spiritual Healer — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY Motel Makeover — NETFLIX SERIES The November Man The Old Ways Open Your Eyes — NETFLIX SERIES Post Mortem: No One Dies in Skarnes — NETFLIX SERIES Rainbow High: Part 2 Really Love The River Runner Tayo the Little Bus: Season 4 The Water Man
August 26 EDENS ZERO — NETFLIX ANIME Family Reunion: Part 4 — NETFLIX FAMILY 
August 27 He’s All That — NETFLIX FILM  I Heart Arlo — NETFLIX FAMILY Titletown High — NETFLIX SERIES
August 28 Bread Barbershop: Season 2 Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha — NETFLIX SERIES
August 31 Sparking Joy — NETFLIX SERIES UNTOLD: Crime and Penalties – — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY 
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Leaving Netflix: August 2021
August 1 American Assassin
August 4 #cats_the_mewvie
August 7 The Promise
August 9 El Cartel: Season 1 El Cartel 2: Season  Nightcrawler
August 12 Safety Not Guaranteed Scary Movie 5
August 14 Mother Goose Club: Seasons 1-2
August 15 Jericho: Seasons 1-2 Wish I Was Here
August 20 Kill the Irishman Norm of the North: Keys to the Kingdom The Founder
August 22 1BR 
August 26 The Angry Birds Movie 2
August 27 A Princess for Christmas
August 29 Strange but True
August 30 Casino Royale The Eichmann Show Full Out Quantum of Solace Stranger than Fiction
August 31 Adrift Angel Eyes The Big Lebowski Chinatown The Departed Election The Girl Next Door Hey Arnold! The Movie  Hot Rod Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events (2004)  Love Actually  Love Happens The Manchurian Candidate Monsters vs. Aliens The Muppets Muppets Most Wanted Nacho Libre Moon Kingdom Pootie Tang  The Prince & Me Resident Evil: Afterlife Resident Evil: Extinction The Ring Road to Perdition The Social Network Superbad The Time Traveler’s Wife
The post New on Netflix: August 2021 Releases appeared first on Den of Geek.
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weekendwarriorblog · 5 years
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The Weekend Warrior 12/13/19: JUMANJI: THE NEXT LEVEL, BLACK CHRISTMAS, RICHARD JEWELL, BOMBSHELL and more!
Woooooooo!!! We’re starting to get to the end of the year with only three more weekends of new movies before we’re into 2020, which on one hand, has to be better than 2019, but maybe not in terms of box office with no “Avengers” or “Star Wars” movie in sight.
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Sony Pictures is releasing the second-to-last sequel of the weekend, JUMANJI: THE NEXT LEVEL, which brings back all of your faves, including Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart, Jack Black, Karen Gillan, and introduces a new character played by Awkwafina. I reviewed the movie over at The Beat, and also discussed its box office prospects
I also will have a review of Sophia Takal’s horror remake BLACK CHRISTMAS (Universal) over at The Beat, but that’s mainly interesting since it’s the second remake of the ‘70s horror movie, this one produced by Blumhouse.  I really liked Sophia Takal’s previous movie Always Shine, so I’m definitely interested to see what she does with a mainstream horror film.
You can read my reviews of both those movies over at The Beat, although the Black Christmas review is embargoed until Thursday night… make of that what you will. Plus you can read more about the three wide releases over at my weekly Box Office Preview.
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One movie I haven’t reviewed over there is Clint Eastwood’s latest, RICHARD JEWELL (Warner Bros.), which stars Paul Walter Hauser as the famed Atlanta security guard who discovered a bomb in the city’s Centennial Park and was then accused of planting the bomb there to be seen as a hero. The movie also stars Sam Rockwell (as Richard’s lawyer), Kathy Bates (as Richard’s mother), Jon Hamm as the FBI guy who is after him and Olivia Wilde as the Atlanta reporter who first breaks the story about Jewell being a suspect. I’m going to try to write a mini-review for this one, but long and short of it, is that this is another really good movie from Eastwood, and if I get a chance, I will write more about it soon.
LIMITED RELEASES
There are a bunch of great movies coming out in limited release, some that will expand wider later in the month.
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First and foremost is Jay Roach’s BOMBSHELL (Lionsgate), starring Charlize Theron as Megyn Kelly and Nicole Kidman as Gretchen Carlson, and if you know those names, then you might already realize that this film written by Charles Randolph (The Big Short) is about the Fox News sexual abuse scandal. Margot Robbie also stars in this one, as does John Lithgow as Roger Aisles, plus there’s lots of other great character actors in roles as people you might know from the news (both on camera and behind the scenes).  I was hoping to write a fuller review of this and maybe still will but didn’t have time before getting this column out. Regardless, this is a very intriguing and entertaining film (just like The Big Short) with fantastic performances by all. The movie will expand nationwide next Friday.
Josh and Ben Safdie are back with UNCUT GEMS (A24), starring Adam Sandler as a New York jewelry merchant who gets his hands on a rare South African gem, and then spends the entire movie trying to get it back after lending it out to star basketball player Kevin Garnett (playing himself). I wasn’t really a very big fan of the Safdies’ Good Time, which Millennial critics tend to cream all over, but Uncut Gems is definitely better even if it’s similarly manic. Sandler’s definitely good in the role, but awards-worthy? Not even close… I think this ia good movie being sold by people as a great movie, and I couldn’t disagree more. If you liked Good Time, you’ll probably like this, too. This will be nationwide on Christmas Day.
Terrence Malick is also back, continuing his amazingly prolific degree of filmmaking in his mid-70s with A HIDDEN LIFE (Fox SEarchlight), a three-hour drama about an Austrian farmer (August Diehl) who refuses to swear allegiance to Hitler as WWII begins, which first makes him a bit of a pariah in his rural community but eventually gets him thrown in prison for treason. Valerie Pachner is quite terrific as his wife, and the movie has some great smaller roles for Matthias Schoenaerts, the late Michael Nyqvist, Bruno Ganz and Jürgen Prochnow. If you’re a fan of Malick’s better films than
Kristen Stewart plays French New Wave actress Jean Seberg in Benedict Andrews’ SEBERG (Amazon), about how the actress got into a relationship with Hakim Jamal (played by Anthony Mackie), causing trouble for her career. The movie also stars Margaret Qualley (Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood), Jack O’Connell, Zazie Beetz and Stephen Root, and it will get a limited release this weekend.
Stephen and Robbie Amell star in Jeff Chan’s Code 8 (Elevation Pictures), Robbie playing Connor Reed, a guy with superpowers living in a world where those with powers are minimalized and living in poverty. In desperate need of money to help his ailing mother, Connor gets in with a powered thug named Garrett (played by his cousin, Stephen) to use his powers for elaborate heists. It’s a surprisingly good movie, mainly due to Jeff Chan’s ability to create a big movie on a seemingly limited budget.
You can check out the trailer and Chan’s original short film that inspired the feature below, and my interview with Robbie Amell will be on The Beat on Thursday sometime.
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Steven Luke’s The Great War (Saban/Lionsgate), opening in select cities Fridays, takes place during the last days of WWI where a regiment of African-American “Buffalo Soldiers” are trapped behind enemy lines. When one escapes, he asked to join an all-white troop to find the survivors.s
An interesting doc, especially for lovers of dance, is Alla Kogvan’s documentary Cunningham (Magnolia), which uses 3D technology to explore the life and work of the late choreographer Merce Cunningham (who would be celebrating his centennial anniversary this year), combining archival footage with newly-created performances of Cunningham’s greatest work. This movie reminded me quite a bit of Wim Wenders’ doc Pina in that I enjoyed this, despite having zero to no interest in dance in general. It will open at the Film Forumin New York on Friday, as well as Film at Lincoln Centeruptown, the Royal in L.A, the Arclight in Sherman Oaks and Edwards Westpark 8 in Irvine.
Xavier Dolan’s latest film The Death and Life of John Donovan (Momentum), stars Kit Harington, Natalie Portman, Susan Sarandon, Kathy Bates, Thandie Newton, Jacob Tremblay and more. It’s about the relationship between a young actor and a TV star that takes place ten years after the latter’s death. It will open in select cities and On Demand.
Lastly, there’s Danny Abeckaser’s MAFIA drama Mob Town (Saban Films), starring David Arquette, Jennifer Esposito, Jamie-Lynn Sigler and PJ Byrne.
Also, next Monday, Trafalgar Releasing is releasing Gorillaz: Reject False Icons, a new concert doc about Damon Alban’s Blur spin-off group with comic artist Jamie Hewett.
STREAMING AND CABLE
Michael Bay’s action-comedy 6 UNDERGROUND (Netflix), starring Ryan Reynolds, will get a very limited release Weds. before debuting on the service on Friday. I really don’t know much about it other than it’s about six specialists come together to do stuff.
REPERTORY
METROGRAPH (NYC):
This weekend, the Metrograph begins a fairly self-explanatory series called “Malick: The First Four Films” to coincide with the release of A Hidden Life (see above), although 2005’s The New World won’t screen until next weekend. Also, the theater also continues its annual “Holidays at Metrograph” series with Billy Wilder’s 1960 Oscar winner The Apartment screening Saturday and Sunday. Welcome To Metrograph: Redux continues with David Lean’s Brief Encounter  (1945) on Wednesday and Otto Premingers’ Bunny Lake is Missing  (1965) on Friday and Saturday. This week’s Late Nites at Metrograph  is David Lynch’s Dune (1984) while Playtime: Family Matinees is the 1992 The Muppet Christmas Carol.
ALAMO DRAFTHOUSE BROOKLYN (NYC)
Tonight’s “Weird Wednesday” is Blue Vengeance from 1989, while the weekend’s “Kids Camp” is last year’s animated The Grinch. On Monday evening is a 10thanniversary screening of Vernon Chatman’s Final Flesh. Tuesday’s “Terror Tuesday” is the original Black Christmas from 1974 (already sold out), and “Weird Wednesday” is the 1985 thriller Trancers, hosted by John Torrani.
THE NEW BEVERLY (L.A.):
The Weds. Afternoon Classics matinee is The Thin Man (1934), starring William Powell and Myrna Loy, while Friday’s “Freaky Fridays” offering is the original 1933 James Whale movie The Invisible Man. The Weds/Thurs double feature is Todd Haynes’ Carol (2015) and Far from Heaven (2002) with DP Ed Lachman appearing on Weds (sorry, sold out!). Saturday and Sunday offers the Kiddee Matinee of A Christmas Story, as well as a special “Holiday Edition” of the New Bev’s Cartoon Club. Friday’s midnight is Tarantino’s own Reservoir Dogs, while Saturday midnight is the holiday horror film Don’t Open Till Christmas (1984). Monday’s Matinee is Bad Santa, starring Billy Bob Thornton and Monday night’s screening is Ingmar Bergman’s Fanny and Alexander (1982).
FILM FORUM (NYC):
“Scorsese Non-Fiction” will continue through December 17 with screenings this week of Rolling Thunder Revue and Shine a Light, as well as another screening of A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese through American MoviesFriday, and screenings of the classics The Last Waltz and No Direction Home: Bob Dylan on Sunday.The 70th anniversary 4k restoration of Alec Guinness’ Kind Hearts and Coronets will continue through December 19 with screenings at 12:30 and 6:10pm each day. This weekend’s Film Forum Jr. is the Disney animated film The Aristocrats (1970).
EGYPTIAN THEATRE (LA):
After an encore screening of Auntie Mame (1958) on Thursday, the Egyptian will screen a David O. Russell hosted screening of Tourneur’s 1919 film The Broken Butterfly with musical accompaniment on Friday. Saturday night is “Retroformat 10thAnniversary” sponsored by the George Lucas Family Foundation, showing two hours of movies from the early 20thCentury with musical accompaniment. Saturday night is a Spike Jonze double feature of Being John Malkovich and Three Kings, while Adam Driver will continue his awards campaign run by appearing for a double feature of Noah Baumbach’s Marriage Storywith Jim Jarmusch’s Paterson.
AERO  (LA):
Terry Gilliam will be appearing in person on Friday night for a TRIPLE FEATURE (!!!) of The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, Time Banditsand The Adventures of Baron Munchausen… which makes me really wish I lived in L.A. On Saturday, screenwriters Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski will screen their new movie My Name is Dolemite along with Tim Burton’s Ed Wood  (1994). Edward Norton and Primal Fear  (1995) producer Hawk Koch will appear on Sunday afternoon for a double feature of the latter (in which Norton stars) along with Norton’s own new film, Motherless Brooklyn. Tuesday’s “Christmas Noir” Is Nicholas Ray’s debut TheyLive By Night (1949).
MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE (NYC):
MOMI’s own Terrence Malick series ends this weekend with screenings of Voyage of Time: Life’s Journey on Friday and Sunday, The New World: Limited Releas Version on Saturday, as well as The Thin Red Line on Sunday evening. Monday, there is a free screening of Martin Scorsese’s Casino (1995) as part of “Martin Scorsese: Four Movies over Four Decades.” Saturday’s family matinee is Hiroyuki Morita’s 2002 film The Cat Returns, while John Cassavetes’ Gloria (1980) will screen on Sunday afternoon as part of the ongoing “Always on Sunday: Greek Film Series.”
MOMA  (NYC):
This week’s new series is called “The Wonders” and it’s the first American retrospective of writer-director Alice Rohrwacher and the actress Alba Rohrwacher. I’m really not that familiar with either although Rohrwacher’s Happy as Lazzaro last year was fairly well-received.Modern Matinees: Iris Barry’s History of Filmal so continues this week with Hamlet  (1920) today, Greed  (1924) tomorrow and a program called “Great Actresses of the Past 1911 – 1916” on Friday.
IFC CENTER (NYC)
Weekend Classics: May All Your Christmases be Noir will be screening Charles Laughton’s 1955 film The Night of the Hunter, starring Robert Mitchum;  Waverly Midnights: Spy Games will screen Hitchcock’s North by Northwest; and Late Night Favorites: Autumn 2019 will show Aliens and Eraserhead.
FILM AT LINCOLN CENTER (NYC):
Not much to report except that there will be an encore screening of the 2001 Korean blockbuster My Sassy Girl on Thursday afternoon.
ROXY CINEMA (NYC)
Continuing its Nicolas Cage vintage series with 1991’s Zandalee on Wednesday, Barbet Schroeder’s Kiss of Death (1995) on Thursday and Sunday.
LANDMARK THEATRES NUART  (LA):
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