Netflix subverts prison-drama genre with wit and poignancy
By Chloe Finch | Aug. 7, 2013Beware, network and cable TV: Netflix is climbin’ in yo windows and snatchin’ yo people up.
Beware, network and cable TV: Netflix is climbin’ in yo windows and snatchin’ yo people up.
Gainesville’s monsoon season is in full swing, and that means it’s time for indoor yoga, time to curl up with a decent book or time to induce cerebral atrophy by being sucked into a Netflix marathon.
It was only a matter of time—measured by thornless roses and bad elevator music—before Desiree Hartsock’s heart was shattered.
This season has always been a great one for summer blockbusters, but it's not always the best time for TV.
So I didn’t actually do much eating at The Swamp Restaurant the day I sat with actresses Jamie Denbo and Jessica Chaffin to talk about their roles in the upcoming comedy, “The Heat.”
Winter is coming.
The end is near.
Attention reality TV junkies: Think you’ve heard all there is to know about the casts of MTV’s most notorious reality shows “16 and Pregnant” and “Teen Mom”? Have you watched every episode more than once, perused the tabloids and blog headlines, followed the tweets, and perhaps even Googled paparazzi photos more times than you’d like to admit?
Summer is a time for movies and a time for love. This week’s What To Watch movie combines them both.
Gator alum Ryan Lochte has spent the past year winning Olympic gold medals, hitting up the Midtown scene in search of a lady friend and filming a reality miniseries.
Shailene Woodley will play Hazel Grace, and I don’t know how I feel about it.
Welcome to Westeros, home of the seven kingdoms and the popular HBO epic, “Game of Thrones,” which premiered its third season Sunday.
In “Ginger & Rosa,” the newest film by Sally Potter, two teenage girls lean on each other to bear the heavy weight of adolescence while growing up in 1962 London.
Lost in an endlessly growing queue and buried underneath thousands of rows of titles, there are these few hidden gems of Netflix.
Timeless Disney tales were likely staples of your youth: on VHS, in books and the theme of your birthday party.
Being funny is just another day in the life of Trevor Moore.
If you’re a fan of snowy mountain panoramas, frosty bearded men and the treacherous Siberian wilderness, then you need to see “Happy People: A Year in the Taiga,” now showing at the Hippodrome.
The sixteenth season cast of “Dancing with the Stars” was announced last week, and middle-aged women everywhere picked their early favorites.
The Academy Awards. The Oscars. The biggest, longest, most glamorous night in motion pictures. This was a varied year in cinema, and the industry’s most celebrated evening had no shortage of stars and surprises.
With Sundance Film Festival wrapping up late last month, cinema enthusiasts who prefer to stay local won’t have to travel far for a film festival experience this weekend.