48-year-old Mr. Black (Stephen Curry) is a retired, old-school sports journalist, whose mortality is staring him in the face. Mr. Black has a disease that is eroding his bones. He walks with a stick and rides an electric scooter. He has lived a full life, but has no intention of going gently into the night – especially when there’s so much to be angry about. And now because of his failing health, he is forced to move in with his daughter Angela and her sensitive boyfriend Fin, to receive extra care. Game on! As far as Mr. Black’s concerned, Fin is soft and will have to go, so he joyfully sets about dismantling the new-age twenty-something. What unfolds is a hilarious and relentless psychological arm-wrestle between a proud gen x-er and a bemused millennial where the winner gets to share a house with Angela and the loser moves out to never darken their doorstop again.
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A Pet Psychologist to the stars, a Real Estate Entrepreneur, a cutting edge Fashion Designer, a budding Museum Owner, an arts and crafts Influencer, and the future Earl of Gayhurst. 'Lunatics': the story of six characters coming to terms with themselves and the world around them - be it a haunting past or a pressurising future, finding love or chasing dreams. Starring Chris Lilley, Chris Lilley, Chris Lilley, Chris Lilley, Chris Lilley, and Chris Lilley. Premieres April 19, only on Netflix.
The Kids are Alright: By the mid-1990s, Jocelyn Moorhouse and husband PJ Hogan were A-list Hollywood directors. But then Moorhouse dropped out of sight and wouldn’t direct a movie for 18 years. Here they reveal why.
Cricket legends Kevin Pietersen, Graeme Smith and Outback Wrangler Matt Wright join forces in an expose on the rhino crisis and the new technologies and strategies to combat it.
As a little girl, Michelle Payne (Teresa Palmer) dreams of the impossible: winning the Melbourne Cup — horse-racing's toughest two-mile race.
What happens when you are in love with someone, you don't know how they feel about you, you have a job interview in the morning...and you cannot sleep?
This is a documentary about Afghanistan's first metal band, District Unknown, that existed on the fringes of Afghan society and beyond comprehension of conservative Islam.
'Happy Android' is a new 25-minute documentary from Brisbane filmmaker Jaina Kalifa. It focuses on Melbourne street performer Paul Cooper, who has entertained audiences around the world for 20 years as his loveable creation Tubby the Robot.