Hulu has always been the streaming service for the people who want to get their money’s worth and this month with some brand new animes, some original shows and movies, and a Marvel series they will get it. So, start the first month of the new year with Hulu’s entertaining offerings and handpick what to watch this month CinemaBlind is always here to help you.
Ishura Season 1 (January 3)
Anime is one of the most popular and creative platforms for telling out-of-this-world stories and over the years, it is becoming more and more mainstream with some animes like Attack of Titan, Demon Slayer, Jujutsu Kaisen, and many more becoming even more popular than your average streaming shows. Hulu has always been ahead in the anime game in the US, if we compare it to other streaming services this month we will see the second part of The Devil is a Part Timer!
Ishura Season 1 (January 3)
Anime is one of the most popular and creative platforms for telling out-of-this-world stories and over the years, it is becoming more and more mainstream with some animes like Attack of Titan, Demon Slayer, Jujutsu Kaisen, and many more becoming even more popular than your average streaming shows. Hulu has always been ahead in the anime game in the US, if we compare it to other streaming services this month we will see the second part of The Devil is a Part Timer!
- 1/13/2024
- by Kulwant Singh
- Cinema Blind
Stars: Richard Harmon, Echo Andersson, Sara Thompson, Marina Stephenson Kerr, Erik Athavale, Gwendolyn Collins, Zoe Fish, Kristen Sawatzky, Adam Brooks | Written by Bj Verot, Ken Janssens | Directed by Bj Verot
Don’t Return focuses on a college student who, after the death of his father, returns to his family home (the opposite of the UK retitling of this film!) along with his best friend and girlfriend, only to uncover some bad memories from his childhood that he didn’t even realise were there.
Much of Don’t Return feels as formulaic and uninspiring as the title but the are glimmers of what could have been. Its shining light might just be its two leads. Richard Harmon plays Rodger, the brilliant mathematical college student returning home. It’s a fairly understated performance, the character isn’t very flash and Harmon is, like his co-lead Echo Andersson, best when the scenes are at their most emotional.
Don’t Return focuses on a college student who, after the death of his father, returns to his family home (the opposite of the UK retitling of this film!) along with his best friend and girlfriend, only to uncover some bad memories from his childhood that he didn’t even realise were there.
Much of Don’t Return feels as formulaic and uninspiring as the title but the are glimmers of what could have been. Its shining light might just be its two leads. Richard Harmon plays Rodger, the brilliant mathematical college student returning home. It’s a fairly understated performance, the character isn’t very flash and Harmon is, like his co-lead Echo Andersson, best when the scenes are at their most emotional.
- 5/11/2022
- by Alain Elliott
- Nerdly
Stars: Richard Harmon, Echo Andersson, Sara Thompson, Marina Stephenson Kerr, Erik Athavale, Gwendolyn Collins, Zoe Fish, Kristen Sawatzky, Adam Brooks | Written by Bj Verot, Ken Janssens | Directed by Bj Verot
No, not that 15 year old (alright but instantly forgettable) horror starring Sarah Michelle Gellar, this is an all new horror movie with the same (also instantly forgettable) name.
This one focuses on a college student who, after the death of his father, returns to his family home along with his best friend and girlfriend, only to uncover some bad memories from his childhood that he didn’t even realise were there.
Much of The Return feels as formulaic and uninspiring as the title but the are glimmers of what could have been. It’s shinning light might just be its two leads. Richard Harmon plays Rodger, the brilliant mathematical college student returning home. It’s a fairly understated performance, the...
No, not that 15 year old (alright but instantly forgettable) horror starring Sarah Michelle Gellar, this is an all new horror movie with the same (also instantly forgettable) name.
This one focuses on a college student who, after the death of his father, returns to his family home along with his best friend and girlfriend, only to uncover some bad memories from his childhood that he didn’t even realise were there.
Much of The Return feels as formulaic and uninspiring as the title but the are glimmers of what could have been. It’s shinning light might just be its two leads. Richard Harmon plays Rodger, the brilliant mathematical college student returning home. It’s a fairly understated performance, the...
- 11/26/2021
- by Alain Elliott
- Nerdly
"Roge – I think there's a naked murder ghost in your house." Uncork'd Ent. has released the official US trailer for a Canadian horror thriller titled The Return, the feature debut of Canadian filmmaker Bj Verot. This first premiered at festivals last year, and won Best Feature at the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival, and Best Actor (for Harmon) at the NYC Horror Film Festival. After the death of his father, a brilliant college student returns to his family home where he learns that the horrors from his childhood aren't as dead and gone as he once thought. These memories boil over into reality culminating in an intense showdown with the terror that has come back. Richard Harmon and Sara Thompson, both from The CW's series "The 100", co-star in the film along with Echo Andersson, Marina Stephenson Kerr, Zoe Fish, Erik Athavale, and Gwendolyn Collins. The FX look a bit cheap,...
- 8/9/2021
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Watch the Short Film Sleep Tight: "Josh is a young gamer confined to a wheelchair. He is also a teenager craving a bit more independence and wants to assert himself, especially with his father Frank, who is having a bit of a mid-life crisis himself.
One night Josh asks to keep the light on as his father helps him get to bed. Josh hopes to exercise a little autonomy in his life, but Frank resists, seeing the request as proof that Josh is still a young child in need. But as it turns out, when the lights go out, Josh discovers he's not alone -- and needs his dad more than ever.
Written and directed by Lewis Taylor, this horror-comedy is as much about a transition in a father-son relationship as it is about things that go bump in the night. But these weighty themes are offset by a stream of cheeky British wit,...
One night Josh asks to keep the light on as his father helps him get to bed. Josh hopes to exercise a little autonomy in his life, but Frank resists, seeing the request as proof that Josh is still a young child in need. But as it turns out, when the lights go out, Josh discovers he's not alone -- and needs his dad more than ever.
Written and directed by Lewis Taylor, this horror-comedy is as much about a transition in a father-son relationship as it is about things that go bump in the night. But these weighty themes are offset by a stream of cheeky British wit,...
- 7/22/2021
- by Jonathan James
- DailyDead
Along with a few fast-forgotten dogs, Simon Barrett has written some of the more enjoyable U.S. horror opuses over the last two decades, from 2004’s period ghost story “Dead Birds” through a series of Adam Wingard films that laid career path to that director’s current big-budget assignment “Godzilla vs. Kong.”
You might expect Barrett’s own belated feature directorial debut to expand upon the clever, blackly humorous genre mayhem of his best Wingard projects like “The Guest” and “You’re Next.” But “Seance” proves a disappointingly boilerplate retro slasher that’s pedestrian on every level from concept to execution. It’s not terrible, only so devoid of imagination, wit or novelty (as well as scares) that it seems a perversely generic choice with which to launch a new career phase. Rlje Films is releasing to U.S. and Canadian theaters, VOD and digital May 21, with co-distributor Shudder expected to...
You might expect Barrett’s own belated feature directorial debut to expand upon the clever, blackly humorous genre mayhem of his best Wingard projects like “The Guest” and “You’re Next.” But “Seance” proves a disappointingly boilerplate retro slasher that’s pedestrian on every level from concept to execution. It’s not terrible, only so devoid of imagination, wit or novelty (as well as scares) that it seems a perversely generic choice with which to launch a new career phase. Rlje Films is releasing to U.S. and Canadian theaters, VOD and digital May 21, with co-distributor Shudder expected to...
- 5/20/2021
- by Dennis Harvey
- Variety Film + TV
Can college sweethearts found love again years later, during the holiday season, no less?
We would like to think that they can, and that's the question that's posed on Let's Meet Again on Christmas Eve.
Kyla Pratt, a Lifetime Christmas film veteran, returns this holiday season as Corrine, a young woman who may have let the love of her life go after college.
According to the synopsis, Corrine and Rob (Brooks Darnell) were young sweethearts with their lives ahead of them, but when they jumped on individual opportunities on opposite sides of the globe, they parted ways.
However, they made a deal. Corrine and Rob both agreed that two years later, on Christmas Eve, they would meet up once more to determine if they truly were meant for one another.
But, of course, life had other plans, and it left one of them at their spot waiting, and the other person didn't show.
We would like to think that they can, and that's the question that's posed on Let's Meet Again on Christmas Eve.
Kyla Pratt, a Lifetime Christmas film veteran, returns this holiday season as Corrine, a young woman who may have let the love of her life go after college.
According to the synopsis, Corrine and Rob (Brooks Darnell) were young sweethearts with their lives ahead of them, but when they jumped on individual opportunities on opposite sides of the globe, they parted ways.
However, they made a deal. Corrine and Rob both agreed that two years later, on Christmas Eve, they would meet up once more to determine if they truly were meant for one another.
But, of course, life had other plans, and it left one of them at their spot waiting, and the other person didn't show.
- 12/2/2020
- by Jasmine Blu
- TVfanatic
The talking pirate ship Laughingstock always tells Percy, "You have to go inside..." But tonight, it is Mike Painter (Paul Schneider) who will have to look inside himself to face his past and potentially save his present in the finale of Channel Zero: Candle Cove. Ahead of the finale's premiere tonight on Syfy, Daily Dead joined several other journalists on a conference call with showrunner Nick Antosca to discuss The Tooth Child, the huge reveal of episode five, and what's to come in the final episode of the anthology series' first season. [Spoiler warning for those who haven't watched the first five episodes of Candle Cove.]
Nick Antosca discusses why Eddie chose to involve Mrs. Booth in his plans:
"She was a target of opportunity. He goes after children because they're his peers and because they're vulnerable psychologically, and it's like Mike says, children's minds can be molded. In the moment where Mrs. Booth has her seizure, she's totally psychologically vulnerable. He uses his ability to influence her.
Nick Antosca discusses why Eddie chose to involve Mrs. Booth in his plans:
"She was a target of opportunity. He goes after children because they're his peers and because they're vulnerable psychologically, and it's like Mike says, children's minds can be molded. In the moment where Mrs. Booth has her seizure, she's totally psychologically vulnerable. He uses his ability to influence her.
- 11/16/2016
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Giving horror fans enough nightmare fuel to last them until next Halloween, Channel Zero: Candle Cove has cranked up the fright factor to eleven over its first four episodes. Over the past couple of weeks, Daily Dead, along with other journalists, had the opportunity to take part in conference calls with showrunner Nick Antosca, who discussed adapting Kris Straub's unsettling creepypasta, how the show found a home at Syfy, getting Greg Nicotero's help in designing the look of The Tooth Child, and what to expect in season 2, which will focus on Brian Russell's NoEnd House.
Nick Antosca on which puppet-like character scared him growing up and having Don Mancini (Child's Play films) in the writers' room for Candle Cove:
When I was a kid, they used to play that [Child's Play] on USA all the time. I remember seeing Child’s Play 2 and Chucky killing the teacher,...
Nick Antosca on which puppet-like character scared him growing up and having Don Mancini (Child's Play films) in the writers' room for Candle Cove:
When I was a kid, they used to play that [Child's Play] on USA all the time. I remember seeing Child’s Play 2 and Chucky killing the teacher,...
- 11/2/2016
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Big changes are afoot at ABC's "Body of Proof" for Season 3.
TVLine was the first to report thatJohn Carroll Lynch is leaving the ABC medical drama to join "Do No Harm."
Lynch, who played homicide detective Bud Morris in the first two seasons of "Body of Proof," guest starred in the pilot for the NBC crime drama. In "Do No Harm," he had a brief scene as the Na sponsor of protagonist Dr. Jason Cole -- and his alter ego Ian Price -- played by "Rescue Me's" Steven Pasquale.
But Lynch is not the only one moving on from "Body of Proof." According to The Hollywood Reporter, Nicholas Bishop, who played medico-legal investigator Peter Dunlop on the series' first two season, is also leaving "Body of Proof" behind.
TVLine later reported that Sonja Sohn also won’t be returning for "Body of Proof" Season 3. Sohn, who has also been...
TVLine was the first to report thatJohn Carroll Lynch is leaving the ABC medical drama to join "Do No Harm."
Lynch, who played homicide detective Bud Morris in the first two seasons of "Body of Proof," guest starred in the pilot for the NBC crime drama. In "Do No Harm," he had a brief scene as the Na sponsor of protagonist Dr. Jason Cole -- and his alter ego Ian Price -- played by "Rescue Me's" Steven Pasquale.
But Lynch is not the only one moving on from "Body of Proof." According to The Hollywood Reporter, Nicholas Bishop, who played medico-legal investigator Peter Dunlop on the series' first two season, is also leaving "Body of Proof" behind.
TVLine later reported that Sonja Sohn also won’t be returning for "Body of Proof" Season 3. Sohn, who has also been...
- 6/7/2012
- by Jaimie Etkin
- Huffington Post
Big changes are afoot at ABC's "Body of Proof" for Season 3.
TVLine was the first to report thatJohn Carroll Lynch is leaving the ABC medical drama to join "Do No Harm."
Lynch, who played homicide detective Bud Morris in the first two seasons of "Body of Proof," guest starred in the pilot for the NBC crime drama. In "Do No Harm," he had a brief scene as the Na sponsor of protagonist Dr. Jason Cole -- and his alter ego Ian Price -- played by "Rescue Me's" Steven Pasquale.
But Lynch is not the only one moving on from "Body of Proof." According to The Hollywood Reporter, Nicholas Bishop, who played medico-legal investigator Peter Dunlop on the series' first two season, is also leaving "Body of Proof" behind.
TVLine later reported that Sonja Sohn also won't be returning for "Body of Proof" Season 3. Sohn, who has also been with...
TVLine was the first to report thatJohn Carroll Lynch is leaving the ABC medical drama to join "Do No Harm."
Lynch, who played homicide detective Bud Morris in the first two seasons of "Body of Proof," guest starred in the pilot for the NBC crime drama. In "Do No Harm," he had a brief scene as the Na sponsor of protagonist Dr. Jason Cole -- and his alter ego Ian Price -- played by "Rescue Me's" Steven Pasquale.
But Lynch is not the only one moving on from "Body of Proof." According to The Hollywood Reporter, Nicholas Bishop, who played medico-legal investigator Peter Dunlop on the series' first two season, is also leaving "Body of Proof" behind.
TVLine later reported that Sonja Sohn also won't be returning for "Body of Proof" Season 3. Sohn, who has also been with...
- 6/7/2012
- by Jaimie Etkin
- Aol TV.
Casey Anthony's getting a new look. A week into the filming of the Lifetime movie Imperfect Justice, the role of the woman acquitted last year of murdering her 2-year-old daughter has been recast. Canadian actress Holly DeVeaux has dropped out of the project, replaced by Virginia Welch, an actress who has starred in several independent films and commercials. According to a source close to the production, the decision for DeVeaux to leave the production was mutual. "Holly moved on and they recast the role," says the source. "This is one of those decisions that happens all the time. Holly was...
- 6/6/2012
- by Steve Helling
- PEOPLE.com
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