Nunutee - Teacher Dismissed Vacation Shirt
Buy this shirt: Click here to buy this Nunutee - Teacher Dismissed Vacation Shirt
It’s the Teacher Dismissed Vacation Shirt Furthermore, I will do this perennial question: With streaming platforms constantly offering new content, what exciting thing will be on (and actually worth turning in for) in the coming days? Well, we’re here to help you sort through the chaff. Here are five things to watch over the holiday weekend. Eric Bana and Genevieve O’Reilly in The Dry How I wish we had more films like The Dry. A highly enjoyable, richly atmospheric crime drama set in a rural Australian town where an appalling murder has just taken place, The Dry is simultaneously throwback and modern feeling. Its star, Eric Bana (who looks fantastic in a white shirt and sunglasses), plays a Melbourne detective returning home to attend a funeral, and maybe stay a few extra days to make sense of the violence that has transpired there. He is brooding, tight-lipped, and, yes, has a secret in his past. There is a gorgeous, unaccountably available old friend (played by Genevieve O’Reilly) for him to reconnect with and a bunch of roughneck locals to give him a hard time at the hotel bar. We used to have movies like this—simple, competently written, grown-up entertainments that didn’t involve extended universes or CGI. (The Dry is based on a best-selling crime novel by Jane Harper.) But The Dry isn’t only for nostalgists. The title refers to an endless drought afflicting this corner of Australia, and the scenes of climate devastation are piercing, extremely 2021, and add to the feeling of menace in the dusty air. —Taylor Antrim
Produced to coincide with the Teacher Dismissed Vacation Shirt Furthermore, I will do this museum’s 150th anniversary, Inside the Met—a three-part documentary from British filmmaker Ian Denyer—came to tell a rather unexpected story. More than examining the day-to-day work of its staff (from president Daniel Weiss and director Max Hollein to various curators, conservators, designers, and even the florists who tend to the Great Hall each morning), the film also examines how the Met fared during the pandemic—when, just after balancing its books, it suffered some $150 million in losses—and reconsidered its approach to diversity and inclusion after last summer’s protests for racial justice. Catch up on last week’s first two chapters, “The Birthday Surprise” and “All Things to All People?,” before tuning in for the finale, “Love and Money,” tonight at 9 p.m. —Marley Marius
Nhận xét
Đăng nhận xét