The pair escape to Milan's village, where the disguise is maintained through a traditional wedding. Her influential legacy and late-in-life motherhood also are part of the film directed by Amy Scott.A gay male couple in Sarajevo, Kenan, a Bosnian, and Milan, a Serb, plan to emigrate to the gay-friendly Netherlands, but the war strands them in Serb-controlled territory, and Kenan adopts female drag to avoid being found out as a circumcised Muslim. “Sheryl,” debuting Friday on Showtime, includes footage from two decades of touring as it covers the obstacles she faced from sexism in the music industry, her driving need for perfection and struggles with depression and cancer. A documentary about Sheryl Crow is described as an “intimate story of song and sacrifice,” detailing her life and career through interviews with the Grammy-winning musician and friends and collaborators including Laura Dern, Emmylou Harris and Joe Walsh.
#TEEN BOYS GAY VIDEOS BLOGSPOT SERIES#
Akiva Goldsman (“Star Trek: Picard”) wrote and directed the series premiere of the 10-episode season debuting weekly beginning Thursday. Also in the cast: Rebecca Romijn as Number One, Ethan Peck as Science Officer Spock, Jess Bush as Nurse Christine Chapel and Celia Rose Gooding as Cadet Nyota Uhura. Enterprise, when Christopher Pike (Anson Mount) commands the ship on its search for new worlds. The Paramount+ series is set during the pre-Capt. “Star Trek: Strange New Worlds” offers another twist in the space saga that keeps on giving.
Directed by Kief Davidson (“The Ivory Game”), the docuseries premieres Wednesday on Netflix. “Meltdown” relies on the perspective of engineer and whistle-blower Richard Parks and members of the community that lived through the partial meltdown of one plant reactor. commercial nuclear power plant operating history. The four-part documentary uses re-enactments, archival footage, home video and interviews to detail what is considered the most serious accident in U.S. “Meltdown: Three Mile Island” examines the Pennsylvania nuclear power plant’s brush with disaster in 1979. Rex‘s “The Slider,” Rod Stewart‘s “You Wear It Well,” Little Feat‘s “Easy to Slip,” David Bowie‘s “Moonage Daydream” and The Temptations‘ “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone.” The Black Crowes' album is titled “1972” and frontman Chris Robinson says that year was a watershed, saying "some of the greatest rock ‘n’ roll songs ever made came out of that year.” There are renditions of The Rolling Stones‘ “Rocks Off,” T. It's the 50th anniversary of 1972 and The Black Crowes are celebrating with an EP of covers from songs that came out that year. Catch the result on “Saturday Night Live” the day after the album drops. The band says the seven tracks are split into a side “channeling the fear and loneliness of isolation” and the other "expressing the joy and power of reconnection.” Second single “Unconditional I (Lookout Kid)” is definitely from the latter, with the lyrics “Some people want the rock without the roll/ But we all know there’s no God without soul.” The band has tapped Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich to produce alongside the band’s Win Butler and Régine Chassagne.
Arcade Fire's sixth album, “WE,” is only about 40 minutes long but there's a lot in those 40 minutes, ranging from throbbing, chilly electronica to earnest camp-fire singalongs. Adapted from Sarah Dessen’s 2009 novel, set in a seaside town over summer, it stars Emma Pasarow and Belmont Cameli as two insomniac teens who connect on moonlight walks. I Still Love You.” In “Along for the Ride,” debuting Friday on Netflix, Alvarez makes her directorial debut.
Sofia Alvarez penned two well-received Netflix teen rom-coms adapted from Jenny Han’s novels: 2018′s “To All the Boys I’ve Ever Loved” and its 2020 sequel, “To All the Boys: P.S. As of May 1, the Criterion Channel is hosting a 15-film series devoted to the Austin, Texas, auteur, streaming films from Linklater’s Gen X-defining breakthrough “Slacker” to his years-in-the-making Oscar-nominated hit “Boyhood.” If you haven’t seen them, keep an eye out for some less heralded gems like the well-observed backstage drama “Me and Orson Welles” and the black comedy “Bernie,” with a tour-de-force Jack Black. If the radiant “Apollo 10 1/2,” recently released on Netflix, reminded you of the warm and wistful pleasures of Richard Linklater’s deceptively modest films, a new Criterion Channel series will be a welcome sight.