Academy Award® nominees Sylvester Stallone, Scott Eastwood, Mike Colter and Willa Fitzgerald star in this explosive action thriller about two married spies caught in the crosshairs of an international intelligence network that will stop at nothing to obtain critical assets. Joe (Scott Eastwood) and Lara (Willa Fitzgerald) are off-the-grid agents whose quiet retreat in a winter retreat is blown to smithereens when members of the old guard suspect the two may have joined an elite team of renegade spies known as ALARUM.
Read MoreAbrams’ “Lost” almost had a very different cast
The survivors of a plane crash are forced to work together to survive on a seemingly deserted tropical island. J.J. See which A-listers missed out on one of the most popular TV shows of all time. The character Sawyer was originally supposed to be an older, slick, suit-wearing city con from Buffalo, NY. However, when Josh Holloway forgot a line during his audition and subsequently kicked a chair in frustration and cursed loudly, the writers liked the edge he brought to the character Sawyer and decided to write Sawyer as more of a grittier Southern drifter instead.
The weird opening credits were created by JJ
Jin and Sun are married and share the surname “Kwon,” which becomes a major plot point in the final season. However, when Koreans marry, the wife never takes her husband’s surname. In fact, marrying someone with the same surname is not even permissible in Korea, except in rare cases. [Repeat line] Desmond Hume: See you in another life, brother. Abrams on his laptop in black and white as an homage to The Twilight Zone.
Cut from Lost: The Journey (2005)
At first glance, Lost seems like an impossible concept: a group of people stranded on a mysterious island. How many storylines can you POSSIBLY pull from that before the idea is completely worn out? That’s a legitimate concern, but in the case of Lost, it’s completely unfounded. Unlike many shows today, where the plot drives the characters, Lost is actually the opposite: the characters drive the plot. This isn’t CSI or Law and Order, where every week is a variation on the same theme.
Yes, mysterious things happen
With Lost, you have a group of fascinatingly different, tragically flawed characters who must somehow learn to survive together while trying to keep their secrets hidden. This is a method that leads to disaster. After living together for a long time, the characters will find that it is impossible to keep their past a secret. Yes, there is a monster on the island. Yes, there is often a sense of fear in the air.
And it is fascinating to watch
But for me, the external problems that the island itself brings are NOTHING compared to the INTERNAL problems that the characters have to deal with, both with themselves and with each other. That is where the REAL drama lies.
Read MoreBig Nick is back on the hunt in Europe and closing in on Donnie, who is embroiled in the treacherous world of diamond thieves and the infamous Panther Mafia, as they plot a massive heist of the world's largest diamond exchange.. Gerard Butler has stated in an interview that the film will have a more European feel to it, with the film taking place in the diamond district of Marseilles this time around.. Follows 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018
Read MoreThe fast-paced supernatural RPG, Breath of Death VII, is resurrected and remastered! Embark with our undead heroes on a bone-chilling post-apocalyptic adventure through an undead world, now more alive than ever, to uncover the mysteries of the past.
Read MoreWhen a man returns to his hometown on the beach in Australia, he is humiliated in front of his teenage son by a local group of surfers who claim ownership of the remote beach of his childhood. The film received a six-minute standing ovation at the 77th Cannes Film Festival… The story unfolds as Cage arrives at a beach that holds great meaning for him. But when he is ridiculed and forbidden from surfing there with his son, it sets off a series of events that gradually detach from reality and leave the audience questioning even the reality we are witnessing. One aspect I appreciate is the exploration of the sunk cost fallacy, the tendency to persist in an effort we have invested in even when the current costs outweigh the benefits. Having recently faced a similar decision, I understand how difficult it is to back down and accept defeat. Watching this in the GL Theater with Cage and the rest of the crew was a very enjoyable experience.😄
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