MisterCairo
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 7,005
- Location
- Gads Hill, Ontario
Gangs of London on AMC. My goodness but this was an awesome episode. Absurdly graphic violence and a great advancement in the internecine conflict. Great stuff.
Currently watching the deconstruction of the Superhero mythos. "Invincible" is an animated offering on Amazon Prime, the same network that has already given us similar fare with "The Boys". Like the latter it's based on a graphic novel/comic books series from a non Marvel or DC universe. The "Falcon and the Winter Soldier" on Disney+ comes from several runs of comic books where Captain America's shield is given (temporarily) to someone else while he goes on walkabout. I found both thoughtful, challenging and worth watching living in a world saturated with capes and cowls.
Worf
We love movies and with Netflix/Prime we now have the world of movies at our fingertips without leaving the house.I got rid of my television in 2008. The only things I watched just before getting rid of it, were House MD and the BBC's rolling news channel.
Since getting rid of it, I haven't missed it. The gogglebox has been turned on at other people's homes when I've visited friends and family, but I didn't pay much attention to it. Anything I did see, just reassured me I did the right thing in getting rid.
My family bought all five seasons of The Twilight Zone (1959-1964) a few months ago, and I'm still on season one, but I'm loving it!
We love movies and with Netflix/Prime we now have the world of movies at our fingertips without leaving the house.
We own a motorhome and will buy DVD's (boxed sets) to watch when on the road as a break from playing Scrabble in the evenings. We have watched "Wolf Hall" 3 times now and will likely watch it again.I don't use any streaming services, but will occasionally buy a DVD or box set.
My family bought all five seasons of The Twilight Zone (1959-1964) a few months ago, and I'm still on season one, but I'm loving it!
I love all the Alfred Hitchcock movies I've seen, so I'm sure I'll like the episodes, too. I just have to get ahold of them. I actually just watched The Trouble With Harry last night. It was very good, but I think Shadow of a Doubt is still my favorite.There was nothing like coming home from a late shift of work with a hot-ham-and-cheese sandwich and flopping down in front of back-to-back late-night reruns of "Twilight Zone" and "Alfred Hitchcock Presents." If you like the former, you're sure to like the latter as well!
There was nothing like coming home from a late shift of work with a hot-ham-and-cheese sandwich and flopping down in front of back-to-back late-night reruns of "Twilight Zone" and "Alfred Hitchcock Presents." If you like the former, you're sure to like the latter as well!
I love all the Alfred Hitchcock movies I've seen, so I'm sure I'll like the episodes, too. I just have to get ahold of them. I actually just watched The Trouble With Harry last night. It was very good, but I think Shadow of a Doubt is still my favorite.
I haven't seen I Confess. It isn't part of the collection I have, but now I've got to see it. I'm crossing my fingers that the library has it!Every time I think I have a favorite Hitchcock movie, I see a different one again (I've seen most of them, at least, a few times) and my opinion shifts. Now, I think about favorite Hitchcock movies more in terms of periods - his early films, the '40s, the "big" '50s movies, etc.
Another angle I've found I've been enjoying is rewatching his "lesser" efforts as, once you get past thinking they aren't as good as his "best," you really appreciate them for how good they still are. "I Confess" is one of my favorites in this latter category (comments here: #27745).