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5 votes
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Acclaimed Danish series 'Borgen' is back for a fourth season, which focuses on a geopolitical crisis brewing in Greenland
6 votes -
Gifted helmer Hlynur Pálmason interrogates the role of religion in Iceland's past – but it's really colonialism that's at question in his new film 'Godland'
5 votes -
Three Thousand Years of Longing | Official trailer
6 votes -
Westworld | Season 4 official teaser
6 votes -
House of the Dragon | Official teaser trailer
6 votes -
Broker / 브로커 | Movie trailer
5 votes -
Crimes of the Future | Official teaser
6 votes -
Russian Doll | Season 2 official trailer
6 votes -
Top Gun: Maverick | New official trailer
3 votes -
Why Iceland is punching above its weight on the international drama scene
6 votes -
Russian Doll | Season 2 date announcement (April 20th)
6 votes -
The BBC's Welsh crime drama Hidden is back for its third-and-final series this week
I thought I'd take the time to post about a series I've been looking forward to for over a year now. Hidden is a fantastic crime drama set in Wales, and a third series was announced early last...
I thought I'd take the time to post about a series I've been looking forward to for over a year now.
Hidden is a fantastic crime drama set in Wales, and a third series was announced early last year. The Welsh version, Craith, aired late last year. This week, the bi-lingual version airs on BBC One Wales and BBC Four. In my opinion it's the perfect crime drama: set in the mountains of North Wales, with a great soundtrack and unconventional storyline. Some shows focus only on the investigation and the victim, who probably just admits to the crime at the end. Not so here.
Sian Reese-Willams, who plays DCI Cadi John, explained what the series is about back in 2018:
It’s not a classic detective drama in that it deals with the whodunit and the police catching the bad man. It’s much more of a personal drama. It takes time to delve into the lives of everybody that gets caught up in the crime - the detectives, the victims, the family of the victims and even the bad guy. You’re trying to understand him.
It really plays with the idea of nature versus nature and almost tries to twist you into sympathising against your better judgement; it’s exciting and thought provoking. The characters are really interesting and it covers a lot of human emotion.
Here's another interview ahead of the second series.
Series two picks up around nine months after series one ends. We find Cadi trying to deal with the grief of losing her father, while trying to keep her head in her work.
It’s a difficult time for her - just as one begins to come through the initial shock of losing someone and start to try and deal with it, that’s the time that everyone around you starts to forget and move on. She’s also faced with dealing with the estranged daughter of the victim of the case, and the parallels she sees between the two of them are difficult for her to navigate professionally.
The first two series are on iPlayer now, and if you speak Welsh (or like subtitles) the third series is already on S4C Clic under the title Craith. Hidden is on BBC One Wales this Wednesday at 9pm, and BBC Four this Saturday at the same time.
2 votes -
The Blind Man Who Did Not Want To See Titanic / Sokea Mies Joka Ei Halunnut Nähdä Titanicia | Exclusive trailer
1 vote -
Margrete: Queen of the North / Margrete Den Første | UK trailer
3 votes -
Against the Ice | Official trailer
2 votes -
Elvis | Official trailer
7 votes -
The White Vault (Audio drama)
4 votes -
After Yang | Official trailer
5 votes -
You should see Belle
It's fairly rare to get the opportunity to get to watch a Japanese animated movie in theaters in the US, and earlier today I watched Belle in IMAX. It's honestly really hard to talk about the film...
It's fairly rare to get the opportunity to get to watch a Japanese animated movie in theaters in the US, and earlier today I watched Belle in IMAX.
It's honestly really hard to talk about the film in it's entirety. It's a really deeply layered film, and even with how extensive the previews for this film have been they don't really do a very good job of describing what the film is about. Even after saying that I don't really want to explain it because I think that it's best to just jump in and enjoy it - and frankly I'm not sure I could explain it very well without spoiling it. That being said, because it's so layered and there's so much content it talks about it can be hard to grasp the deeper meanings. I saw this movie with my husband and I can tell you that he definitely didn't get it. After reading a handful of reviews it looks like a number of critics didn't get it either. The good news is that you don't have to be a film major to enjoy it; it's still going to be plenty enjoyable even if you miss those meanings. It helps that the production on this film is utterly fantastic, and the sound design and music are particularly fantastic.
From an academic perspective this film literally pulls off every trick in the animation and filmmaking books. It uses traditional style 2D animation, it's got 3D animation, some scenes use a mixture of the two. It has computer-generated tweening at times, and in other times the 2D drawings are morphed to animate them and create the illusion of life. The director Mamoru Hosoda has a pretty long track record at this point and this film has aspects that show off his signature aesthetics and unique techniques that he has developed over the years. And he does so to a great effect; I found myself being strongly emotionally affected by several of it's scenes. Of those highly affecting scenes, not all of them evoked tears; there were also plenty of times where I found myself almost laughing because the scenes were full of positivity.
While it's tempting to consider this a retelling of Beauty and Beast from the previews, the film is so much more than that. Even the most basic understanding you could take from this film would not support that position. In fact the "beast" of this story is not even a romantic interest.
The thing that endears me personally to this movie so much is that there are two dramatic scenes that are handled so realistically and naturally it felt like I was reliving portions of my own life. There is a scene early on where the main character tries to sing quietly to herself when she's all by her lonesome but is so overcome with emotions that she not only can't hold a single note, the act makes her throw up. And in the last act there is a scene where a boy is suffering from emotional abuse from his father and is completely unable to trust people who are trying to help him. He's been too hurt by people who promised to help but eventually left him in the same situation, allowing more abuse to happen.
There are many reasons that I would recommend watching this movie, but I wanted to recommend this movie to this community in particular because I think that some of the messages this movie was made to tell will resonate with the people here. The film is a struggle to answer the question "why should we help other people?" The film also has a lot to say about how we treat each other over the internet, as you may have already surmised.
10 votes -
Bel-Air | Official trailer
13 votes -
Drive My Car | Trailer
5 votes -
The Northman | Official trailer
8 votes -
‘Y: The Last Man’ paints a thoroughly grim picture of a world without Y chromosomes: TV review
7 votes -
Why is every young person in America watching ‘The Sopranos’?
19 votes -
Licorice Pizza | Official trailer
2 votes -
The Tragedy of Macbeth | Official trailer
4 votes -
Emmys: ‘The Queen’s Gambit’ wins best limited series
5 votes -
Netflix hit with $5M suit over “sexism” of ‘Queen’s Gambit’ line about Soviet chess legend
11 votes -
Ninjababy | Trailer
3 votes -
Don't Look Up | Official teaser trailer
10 votes -
C'mon C'mon | Official trailer
8 votes -
Enforcement / Shorta | Official trailer
3 votes -
Cry Macho | Official trailer
2 votes -
Film-makers buckle under relentless appetite for Danish TV – a victim of its own success, the industry behind cult dramas such as The Killing struggles amid bullying claims
10 votes -
Lamb / Dýrið | Official trailer
6 votes -
The Last Duel | Official trailer
8 votes -
Mia Hansen-Løve pays tribute to Swedish auteur Ingmar Bergman with Cannes film 'Bergman Island'
5 votes -
Compartment No 6 review – meet-uncute train romance is a Finnish 'Before Sunrise'
3 votes -
How David Fincher’s ‘Dragon Tattoo’ marked the end of the big-budget adult drama
7 votes -
Kevin Can F**k Himself S01E01-02 - 'Living the Dream' & 'New Tricks'
2 votes -
Show recommendation: Veneno (2020)
4 votes -
tick, tick... BOOM! | Official teaser
8 votes -
'Katla' is a new Netflix original series from Iceland – a cross between Stanisław Lem's 'Solaris' and the French series 'The Returned'
6 votes -
Pig | Official trailer
10 votes -
Bergman Island | Trailer
2 votes -
The Sopranos: Pine Barrens oral history
6 votes -
Betrayed review – This account of the internment of a Jewish boxer from Oslo packs an emotional punch, but pulls back from displaying any real horrors
5 votes -
BBC crime drama Hidden commissioned for third series
7 votes -
The Queen's Gambit (Netflix) - Discussion thread
I finished this the other day and given how popular it is, I'm surprised there's been no discussion thread here. No spoilers in this top post but go ahead with spoilery discussion in comments....
I finished this the other day and given how popular it is, I'm surprised there's been no discussion thread here. No spoilers in this top post but go ahead with spoilery discussion in comments.
- Network: Netflix
- Format: 7 episodes mini-series (45-70min runtime)
- Drama set in the 60s-80s, based on a book, that follows an orphan chess prodigy and follows her as she grows up into the chess world.
I'll greatly recommend it. Quick and high quality. Wonderful acting.
12 votes