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Trailer Thread: H8te Watching


AncalagonTheBlack

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5 minutes ago, JEORDHl said:

Looking forward to S3 of Atlanta, nice surprise it's airing so soon. 

Sucks that season four is the last season though. At least they filmed them back to back so we shouldn't have to wait long.

Speaking of the filming of FX shows What We do in the Shadows finished filming season four the other day. Can't wait for that to come back. 

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3 hours ago, RumHam said:

Sucks that season four is the last season though. At least they filmed them back to back so we shouldn't have to wait long.

Speaking of the filming of FX shows What We do in the Shadows finished filming season four the other day. Can't wait for that to come back. 

If I've got it right, the HBO series starting up today, Our Flag Means Death, a comedy pirate thing, is the same team as What We Do In The Shadows.

https://www.tvinsider.com/1034155/our-flag-means-death-rhys-darby-taika-waititi-stede-bonnet-blackbeard-hbo-max/

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Outer Range looks interesting, but it gives me True Detective vibes. The creator, Brian Watkins, is a playwright who has nothing else in his IMDB credits, which is unusual. This is not the first time he's written something set in Wyoming -- here's an NYT review of his play Wyoming. And I found a little more information online which suggests that the void he's talking about is... well, something more concrete rather than some sort of personal crisis:

 

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Outer Range was created by playwright Brian Watkins, which was initially a spec script bought by Amazon, then developed and shot throughout the height of the pandemic. The show follows Brolin's patriarch, Royal Abbott, as he tries to protect his family and his land from a rival ranch. It will also look to uncover the mystery of a mysterious metaphysical void that has appeared on Abbott's property without explanation, sparking a chain of events that unravel secrets of the past and mysteries of the future.

The Terminal List, OTOH, just looks like every other grounded action show these days.

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AMC+ is ready to bring eight days of spaghetti western carnage to its platform with their new dramatic series That Dirty Black Bag. Starring Dominic Cooper (Preacher, Spy City) as the unshakeable sheriff and Douglas Booth (The Dirt, Loving Vincent) as a ruthless headhunter, the show brings its heavily stylized, well-casted take on the classic genre to the streamer on March 10.


‘That Dirty Black Bag’ Review: Tipping a 10-Gallon Hat to Spaghetti Westerns
Mauro Aragoni’s eight-episode series pays homage to films of old with a story of a roaming bounty hunter

After starring as Jesse Custer for the television adaptation of Preacher, fan-favorite actor Dominic Cooper is back in the saddle for a decidedly less supernatural western with the new miniseries That Dirty Black Bag.

The eight-episode miniseries is created by Mauro Aragoni, and -- in true spaghetti western tradition -- filmed across Europe and North Africa instead of the American Southwest. In an exclusive clip from the AMC+ original series, Sheriff Arthur McCoy and his deputies have a tense standoff with bounty hunter Red Bill at a remote cabin on the open prairie. As the two men stare each other down suspiciously, ready to gun each other down at a moment's notice, level heads prevail and McCoy lets Bill walk away without further bloodshed.

Portrayed by Douglas Booth, Bill has gained notoriety across the Old West for his propensity to carry his dead bounties' heads with him in a sack, figuring they're easier to cart around than an entire corpse. This gruesome strategy quickly leads him into a clash with McCoy, as gunslingers and bandits vie for control of the lawless Wild West. Joining Cooper and Booth is Aidan Gillen (Game of Thrones) as a cannibalistic madman and preacher named Butler who plans to put Red Bill on his unholy menu as old rivalries and deadly feuds are poised to consume the frontier town.

Alongside Cooper and Booth, also stars Niv Sultan (Tehran), Guido Caprino (The Miracle), Christian Cooke (The Promise, Ordeal By Innocence), Travis Fimmel (Vikings, Raised By Wolves), Aidan Gillen (Game of Thrones, Kin).

 

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Tokyo Vice is an upcoming crime drama based on the 2009 book of the same name by Jake Adelstein that is set to premiere on April 7, 2022, on HBO Max. Starring Ansel Elgort and Ken Watanabe. The drama captures Adelstein's daily descent into the neon-soaked underbelly of Tokyo, where nothing and no one is truly what or who they seem. Streaming April 7 on HBO Max.

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