Aaron Paul in Ash, Michael Douglas with America’s Burning, Claes Bang is Wiliam Tell – Streaming Guide for April 22

Aaron Paul in Ash, Michael Douglas with America’s Burning, Claes Bang is Wiliam Tell – Streaming Guide for April 22 from FilmsGoneWild.com


Ash Starring: Aaron Paul

Ash

Starring: Aaron Paul, Directed by: Flying Lotus

When a woman wakes up on a distant planet and finds the crew of her space station viciously killed, she must decide if she can trust the man sent to rescue her. But as their investigation into what happened sets in motion a terrifying chain of events, he begins to wonder how innocent she really is….

Critics say:

There are worse sci-fi/horror movies, but ‘there are worse movies’ is never the praise one likes to think it is. The word ‘Competent!’ rarely makes it into a movie’s marketing materials no matter how accurate it is.

— William Bibbiani, TheWrap

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Aaron Paul in Ash, Michael Douglas with America’s Burning, Claes Bang is Wiliam Tell – Streaming Guide for April 22 from FilmsGoneWild.com

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America’s Burning Starring:  Michael Douglas

America’s Burning

Starring:  Michael Douglas Directed by: David Smick

From Executive Producers Michael Douglas and Barry Levinson, America’s Burning draws on an amazing collection of thinkers and strategists, from James Carville and Amy Chua to Ian Bremmer and Leon Panetta, as New York Times best-selling author David Smick guides the viewer on a journey to discover the reasons for today’s hate and division — and rising risk of civil war. For 40 years, the US economy has been a paradox. It’s been an extraordinary wealth-creating machine, but only for the half of the country that owns stocks. Capitalism has, as James Carville put it, become “a racket” — the ultimate corporate insider’s club, a system centrally controlled by the well-connected few. As a result, the middle class is shrinking and the American Dream’s promise of social mobility for all who work hard is dying. A new Velvet Rope Society of brains and money has cut itself off from the rest of America. Working families feel forgotten and angry, but it doesn’t have to be this way. America has an impressive history of resilience. Narrated by Michael Douglas, the film shows why our best days could still lie ahead.

Critics say:

Despite its “preaching to the choir” tone, this documentary is a well-edited, articulate examination of why so many Americans feel disillusioned with their country.

— Louisa Moore, Screen Zealots


Aaron Paul in Ash, Michael Douglas with America’s Burning, Claes Bang is Wiliam Tell – Streaming Guide for April 22 from FilmsGoneWild.com

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William Tell Starring:  Claes Bang

William Tell

Starring:  Claes Bang, Tobias Jowett, Connor Swindells,   Directed by :Nick Hamm

1307, the Holy Roman Empire is in turmoil. As its grip on Europe loosens, new dynasties such as the Austrian Habsburg Family encroach on new lands, desperate for power. Switzerland, the once peaceful country, is overwhelmed and bows under the Austrian might. When the local huntsman William Tell sees a farmer begging for help after murdering a cruel Austrian governor, he reluctantly agrees to guide him to a safe location. But as he meets with more comrades along the way, Tell realizes that this act of violence is a larger sign of what’s to come with the growing Swiss resistance. Tell is drawn into the madness when the cruel Austrian Viceroy Gessler orders him to shoot an apple from his son’s head for refusing to bend the knee to Austrian authority. Once Tell’s family has been threatened, there is no turning back. Tell not only commits to joining the resistance but ends up leading the fight against the Austrian forces. Scarred by his own experience in the depravity and destitution of war during the Crusades, he comes to realize what matters most: his family and preserving his country’s independence for future generations.

Critics say:

It seems a bit of a stretch to think that this is going to end up as the first installment in a long-running MCU-style series of hard-edged escapist adventures loosely based on history. But stranger things have happened.

— Matt Zoller Seitz, RogerEbert.com

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