![]() Writers: Ryan Coogler and Joe Robert ColeĬast: Chadwick Boseman, Michael B. Thrilling, beautifully shot and deliciously nauseating in that uncanny valley way, Cam is a tightly crafted trip down the rabbit hole of identity. Writer Isa Mazzei previously worked as a cam girl herself and that unique perspective lends a sense of respect and dignity to sex workers that is too often missing in their on-screen depictions. Led by The Handmaid's Tale star Madeline Brewer, Cam follows an ambitious online sex worker who wakes up to a nightmare when she tries to log onto her camming account and discovers her identity has been taken over by an exact replica. Clever to boot, a bit sexy, and demented in all the right ways Cam is a refreshing, candid look at the cost of our online identities and the terror of losing your sense of self. This vibrant little dopplegänger thriller earned a cult of enthusiastic fans when it made the festival rounds this year, where it was immediately scooped up by Netflix out of Fantasia. Haleigh FoutchĬast: Madeline Brewer, Samantha Robinson, Patch Darragh, Melora Walters, Imani Hakim, Devin Druid It’s an intriguing tale in its own right, but Shirkers’ secret weapon are the women themselves and their complicated creative relationship, which gives the documentary a shine of crackling personality, making it a true pleasure to watch. When the film was recovered 20 years later, Tan took it upon herself to give their lost film new life in the form of a documentary, which uses footage from the original 16mm print along with plenty of nostalgia-packed memorabilia from their teen years to tell the tale of the making, loss and recovery of the film that should have been. In 1992, Sandi Tan and her friends Sophia Siddique Harvey and Jasmine Kin Kia Ng (who is one of the most downright charming, hilarious people to be on screen this year) made Singapore’s first indie film “Shirkers,” but took a devastating blow when their creepazoid mentor Georges Cardona disappeared with the footage. The fascinating tale focuses on the case of a stolen film and it’s a doozy. – Matt GoldbergĪ little bit punk rock, a little bit whimsical, and lovable all the way through, Shirkers is one of the more delightful documentaries in recent memory. Even if you’re not a Coen Brothers die-hard, there’s still plenty to enjoy and ponder in their Netflix movie. While folks will argue over which shorts are the best (I personally haven’t been able to shake “The Gal Who Got Rattled”), even the weakest Coens is better than the best work of other filmmakers. The anthology movie contains six stories of varying tone from the riotous “Ballad of Buster Scruggs” to the deeply melancholy “Meal Ticket”, but they all have something do with death, with the western genre used as a cohesive baseline. The Ballad of Buster Scruggs may not go down as an all-time great Coen Brothers movie, but it helps to crystalize their themes on death and morality as clearly as some of their best works. Life is short, so get bingeing.Cast: Tim Blake Nelson, Tyne Daly, James Franco, Brendan Gleeson, Bill Heck, Grainger Hines, Zoe Kazan, Harry Melling, Liam Neeson, Jonjo O’Neill, Chelcie Ross, Saul Rubinek, Tom Waits, Clancy Brown, Jefferson Mays, Stephen Root, and Willie Watson So we’ve put together a list of the 40 Netflix originals series you absolutely must make time for – leaving off shows that originated elsewhere before the platform picked them up (sorry, Black Mirror ) and documentaries (sorry not sorry, Tiger King ). But just when it seems like Netflix has been left in the dust of the revolution it started, it drops something like Squid Game, and ends up right back at the centre of the entertainment conversation.Įven factoring in its increasingly frequent fallow periods, Netflix has already created so many must-watch shows that most of us won’t ever get to half of it. Of course, that innovation came back to bite them, as they now have to compete with everyone from Hulu to Disney+ to friggin’ FreeVee. Starting with House of Cards way back in 2013, the platform broke down the door for on-demand series to become their own form of prestige TV. Whatever you think of Netflix, there’s no denying the streamer has changed the game when it comes to original programming.
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