Must-Watch Amazon Prime Movies Coming In 2021 And Beyond
Must-Watch Amazon Prime Movies Coming In 2021 And Beyond
By Ryan Ariano/April 12, 2021 8:45 pm EDT/Updated: April 12, 2021 8:45 pm EDT
Founded in 2010, Amazon Studios has long been at the forefront of the streaming revolution. Originally an added benefit for subscribers to Amazon Prime, the studio s projects have become synonymous with the subscription service.
By combining the development of original series and films as well as acquiring other projects, Amazon has built up a huge in-house roster of programming available to Prime subscribers. Amazon Studios even made history by being the first streaming service to win Academy Awards, for
Left, Tereza Linhartova. Right, Riverhead Books.
Truly, God bless Helen Oyeyemi. She started her career in 2005 writing books that were already pretty weird, and in the years since, her books have only gotten steadily weirder. And her latest novel,
Peaces, is very very weird.
Oyeyemi often plays with fairy tales, smashing them into fragments and gluing them back together in disturbing and vicious new configurations. But
Peaces, which takes place on a moving train and features two pet mongooses, is less a fragmented fairy tale than it is a riff on the kind of cozy middle-grade children’s literature where kids are always running off on enchanted vehicles of some sort to have a series of magical adventures.
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Skip or stream: ‘Truffle Hunters,’ ‘Tom & Jerry,’ ‘Billie Holiday,’ ‘Tiny Perfect Things’
Dana Barbuto
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Need something to do while repeatedly hitting refresh on the COVID-vaccination website? Try taking one of these new streaming flicks for a spin. They include a quirky documentary, a music biopic, a modern update to a beloved cartoon and a teen time-loop movie. Skip or stream? Read on and find out.
“THE UNITED STATES VS. BILLIE HOLIDAY:” Andra Day’s Golden Globe-winning performance is the lone reason to check out director Lee Daniel’s chronicling of the FBI’s harassment of the legendary singer as she repeatedly battles her dependence on heroin. Day dazzles, oscillating between blues diva crooning standards like “All of Me” to smack junkie to civil rights activist. It’s a big ask and Day answers, but her great performance is stuck in a middling movie born of a muddled script by playwright Suzan-Lori Park culled from Johann Hari’s