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10 of the best space movies on Netflix that'll whisk you off to the stars The universe is an action-packed place. Image: mashable composite/netflix Space. The great beyond. The final frontier. Chances are, unless you're either an astronaut or you've got a few hundred thousand dollars to spare, you're probably not going to be escaping Earth's atmosphere anytime soon. But that doesn't mean you can't at least pay a fictional visit. For anyone who gets all shivery at the sight of a star-filled night sky, we've rounded up some of the best space movies on Netflix â from timeless classics like
/PRNewswire/ -- The 2021 P4G Seoul Summit kicked off for a two-day run in a virtual ceremony at Dongdaemun Design Plaza (DDP) in Seoul on May 30. The...
Let yourself be swept away by 'Space Sweepers' brandeishoot.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from brandeishoot.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Magical, dreamlike, tender: My First Summer is a spellbinding Oz film We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss By Brad Newsome Normal text size Stan There’s an exquisite tenderness to this spellbinding Australian film about two isolated teenage girls finding in each other solace, companionship and possibly even love. The tulle-skirted Grace (Maiah Stewardson), cycling through the harsh, dry bush, seems the epitome of the wilfully optimistic square peg. She’s out to have a stickybeak at a remote wooden house, where she unexpectedly finds Claudia (Markella Kavenagh) cowering in a shed, prepared to defend herself and her lovely old border collie with a pair of rusty secateurs.
Magical, dreamlike, tender: My First Summer is a spellbinding Oz film theage.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theage.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Magical, dreamlike, tender: My First Summer is a spellbinding Oz film brisbanetimes.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from brisbanetimes.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Whatcha Gonna Do With All That Junk? Arley Sorg and Josh Pearce Discuss Space Sweepers locusmag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from locusmag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Express News Service Cinema can do a lot of things. It can educate, inspire, even indoctrinate. But most of all, we mainly want cinema to entertain. Hence the enduring popularity of blockbusters. One such has found its way recently to Netflix. Billed as the first Korean space blockbuster, Jo Sung-hee’s Space Sweepers serves its purpose and provides entertainment in spades. The film is set in the dystopian near-future of 2092 when the earth has become nearly uninhabitable and a mega-corporation, named UTS, has created a lush, green orbiting colony that the lucky few can live in. The vast majority of humanity, however, are deemed non-UTS citizens and have to live on the dying earth or one of the grungy residential districts in space for non-citizens.
Netflix TAE-HO is a sweeper-up of other people’s orbital junk, a mudlark in space scavenging anything of value. In Jo Sung-hee’s new movie Space Sweepers, he is someone who is most alone in a crowd – that is to say, among his crewmates on the spaceship Victory. They are a predictable assortment: a feisty robot with detachable feet; a heavily armed yet disarmingly gamine captain; a gnarly but lovable engineer with a past. Tae-ho is played by Song Joong-ki, who also starred in Jo’s romantic smash hit A Werewolf Boy (2012). Song is the latest in a long line of South Korean actors whose utter commitment and lack of ego can bring the sketchiest script to life (think Choi Min-sik in revenge tragedy
Highlander Courtesy of Netflix With its infinite nature and endless possibilities, space has been a central point for several films, such as the legendary âStar Warsâ saga. Adding to the list is Koreaâs recent sci-fi film, âSpace Sweepers.â Intended to be a theatrical release, âSpace Sweepers” was recently delivered on Netflix and has already won audiences’ hearts by topping Netflixâs charts in multiple regions. The film supasses itself with not only brilliant performances and captivating scenes, but also delivers on powerful themes. Taking place in 2092 and due to Earthâs inevitable ecological deterioration, the ambiguous UTS organization builds a new home for selected citizens in space. The powerful corporation is led by James Sullivan (Richard Armitage), the antagonist who desires to abandon Earth for good. The dystopian film follows a crew aboard the spaceship, Victory, as they face distinct financial struggles. The crew encounters Dorothy (Park Ye-Rin), a highly dangerous young girl believed to be a robot capable of destroying anything in her vicinity. Dorothy is taken hostage as the crew capitalizes on this opportunity to exchange her for ransom. However, there is a change in plans when the crew becomes close with Dorothy and embarks on a mission to save both her and human civilization from utter annihilation.Â