Lily Rose Depp about how she connected with her “nosferatu” character
Lily Rose Depp will sit down with USA Today film critic Brian Truitt to talk about the new Gothic horror film, Nosferatu.
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While planning for July 4th, take a deep dive into Jayne Mansfield and sneak up on the women in the garden.
Several new streaming films have arrived at various streaming services such as Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video on Amazon, Disney+, and more. The theatre release is finally coming back, with sci-fi horror flicks set in Looney Tunes Animated Comedy and Deep Space, and original fares like Steven Spielberg’s debut from the filmmakers.
Here are 10 new and well-known movies you can stream now:
‘ash’
A quirky paranoia space thriller that turns into Gonzo’s Gore Fest. Isa Gonzalez plays an astronaut waking up on an alien planet. Watching the many dead crews without knowing who she is, she needs to figure out whether the rescuer (Aaron Paul) is on the level.
Where to see: trembling
“The day the Earth exploded”
Who would eat up alien invasions…wait, what? Duffy Duck and the Porky Pig? ! This Rooney Tunes animated comedy features the iconic “Toon Twosome” as roommates and colleagues at the chewing gum factory, which reveals mind control plots as new flavor launches turn people into zombies.
Where to see: Max
“KPOP Demon Hunter”
Catchy music, anime style and some horror are combined in this kid-friendly action comedy. When members of the Korean pop trio Huntrix are not busy being megastars, they protect their fans from supernatural dangers. But dark secrets and hormones become a problem thanks to their latest enemies.
Where to see: Netflix
‘Love me’
Are you ready for a romantic comedy between inanimate objects? Hundreds of years after humanity is wiped out, Smartbuoy (Kristen Stewart) turns on and attacks friendship with the last satellite launched into space (Steven Yong). This strange couple literally becomes more realistic over time, trying ice cream for the first time and opening up to each other.
Where to see: Paramount+
“Minecraft Movie”
Children will love it. So does anyone have a soft spot for the brilliant weirdness of “Napoleon Dynamite.” The adventure focuses on the incongruence packed into a fantasy world where unhinged Jack Black sings about lava chicken and Jason Momoa, who is on the brunt of the gag, taking the most of their creativity.
Where to see: Max
“My mom Jane.”
Mariska Hargitay knew he was one of the top police officers on television. What we didn’t realize is that she is also a talented documentary. Hargitay was only three years old when film star mom Jane Mansfield passed away. The film is her way of figuring out who Mansfield is. The documentary reveals that he reveals his biological father, Harugitey, while cutting off sex symbols from real people.
Where to see: Max
“Nosferatu”
Do you live on Prime Day? and A gothic stirrer with strange romance and blood soccer? The remake of Robert Eggers horror classics has finally arrived at Amazon. Lily Rose Depp is a woman who is an obsession with the undead mustache threat (Bill Skarsgard).
Where to see: Prime Video
“Don’t feed the kids.”
Her first feature film, directed by Destry Allyn Spielberg – yes, daughter of that Spielberg – Instead of running children and teens, the pandemic creates a fierce world where adults are hit (Michelle Dockery). Spielberg then shows her true temper by proudly pulling off a twist that makes her totally terrifying.
Where to see: pipe
“Sally”
This obvious documentary about Sally Ride clearly mentions that she is the first American woman in the universe, but it is more interested in her personal life. The film delves into her tennis roots, the misogyny she regularly dealt with at NASA, and the lesbian romance she kept private for 27 years as she knew it was unacceptable.
Where to see: Disney+, upstream
“Woman in the garden”
Daniel Deadwiller stars as a wounded widow, and the single mother is knocked on the loop by tragedy when the mysterious woman in a black veil appears out of nowhere to haunt the family’s garden. It is psychological fear that delves deep into depression and mental health, and there are disastrous consequences that impose much on audience interpretations.
Where to see: peacock

