NetflixNetflixUNLIMITED TV SHOWS & MOVIESSIGN INA medical student-turned-zombie tries to retain her humanity by eating brains at the morgue and finds she has an uncanny new gift for solving McIver, Malcolm Goodwin, Rahul KohliCreatorsDiane Ruggiero-Wright, Rob ThomasEpisodesiZombieOnce a doctor on the fast track, Liv Moore is now a zombie turned crime-solver who gets insights from eating the brains of murder eating the brain of a murdered artist, Liv absorbs traces of the victim's artistic passion. Later, the zombie who turned Liv asks for a hit-and-run death of a mild-mannered suburban dad takes a surprising turn. Liv grapples with human feelings for new case involving a brutal gang murder puts suspicions about Clive's past into Liv's head. Major finally makes a decision on his new new acceptance of her life as a zombie hits the rails when she has to eat the brain of an extreme sports fanatic who was an old cheers Liv on when a dead hacker's brains turn her into an obsessed gamer. But things get complicated when an unexpected guest comes to Seattle's zombie plague continues, Liv and Clive investigate the death of a pregnant woman whose brains bring out Liv's maternal murder of a radio show host who doled out relationship advice has Liv digesting some new insights about everyone's Blaine and Major continue to circle each other, Liv and Clive's newest investigation places them in a game of paintball that could turn and Major both have trouble coping with recent events, while Clive and Liv investigate a case linking psychotic episodes to a new energy suspicious suicide puts Clive and Liv on a case involving Major. When Liv is able to eat the victim's brains, a strange paranoia comes into thinks like a high-schooler to solve the murder of a drunken teenager. Later, she makes a shocking discovery about Ravi continues working on his cure, some old cases come back into focus for Liv and Clive ... and another one could leave Major in the eats the brains of a grumpy old man, Ravi and Major discover a curious side effect of the zombie cure, and Blaine moves his business to new and Liv look into the murder of a fraternity brother, Ravi and Major try to score some utopium, and Blaine schemes to expand his drug learns that a trophy wife pushed to her death has some startling secrets, and Peyton returns to lead a task force combating the utopium goes country after eating the brains of an aspiring singer, and Blaine goes after the thug who tainted the utopium at the boat Blaine and Ravi use newly cut utopium to search for a cure, Liv eats the brains of a youth basketball coach to track down his becomes a gambling junkie after eating a lawyer's brains, and Major discovers the FBI is on the trail of Vaughn's illicit Max Rager turns goth after she consumes the brains of a morbid magician, and Blaine asks Liv to help him find out who has been killing the comes under suspicion when his stalker ex-girlfriend is killed, and Liv gets more than a little jealous herself after eating the woman's brains of a self-styled "superhero" vigilante turn Liv into a caped avenger, and Blaine gets closer to discovering how the utopium got and Liv look into a murder on the set of a zombie-themed TV show, and Ravi reveals to Liv and Major that the zombie cure is only librarian who secretly writes sexy fiction turns up poisoned, Dale and Peyton tangle over Blaine's fate, and Liv and Drake get decapitated bodies wash ashore, leaving Liv no brains to eat for clues. Meanwhile, Peyton's boss goes missing, and a utopium turf war eats the brains of a pathological liar to uncover the truth about the utopium couriers buried in the field, and Blaine discovers Major's all sunshine and rainbows for Liv after she eats the brains of a cheery coffee shop owner, and Mr. Boss settles an old score with and Liv look into the slaying of a scientist connected to Vaughn and Max Rager, and Blaine faces a tough choice when he turns to Ravi for Liv eats the brains of a stripper to help Peyton's case against Mr. Boss, and Ravi discovers the new cure has unexpected side gets her pre-zombie personality back after eating the brains of a super-competitive student, and Major and Ravi scheme against they find themselves fresh out of brains, Liv and Ravi turn to Blaine for help. Meanwhile, the FBI arrests Major for the Chaos Vaughn parties to celebrate selling Max Rager to mercenaries, Liv, Clive and Major move in to free Drake and other captive the aftermath of the Max Rager massacre, Liv investigates Vivian's plan to turn Seattle into a zombie homeland, and Ravi works to improve the and Major butt heads after eating the brains of a moody teen and her dorky father, and Clive faces questions about his slain young friend out on a guru's brains, Liv joins Clive to solve his murder. Ravi tries to mend fences with Peyton, and Major's time runs investigates the murder of an office worker whose brains turn Liv into a shameless gossip. Major braves danger in his quest to find brains of a dominatrix turn Liv into a domineering "bad cop" as she and Clive look for a suspicious peeping Tom. Major faces a wrenching morphs into a flighty, manipulative drama queen while searching for a nightclub DJ's killer. Blaine reveals a dramatic secret about the becomes a cheery optimist while investigating the murder of a sweet but philandering preschool teacher. Blaine faces a reckoning with his brains of an obnoxious internet prankster lead Liv and Clive into a twisted tale of murder. Ravi must infiltrate a group of anti-zombie geeked-out brains of a role-playing game fanatic send Liv on a quest to find a killer. Ravi tries to stall the plans of zombie-hating visions of her dead ex, Liv helps Peyton with a tangled case of suicide and murder. Ravi schemes to rescue Don E. from the zombie a deadly standoff, Liv and Clive race to track down the zombie hunters' leader. Peyton follows a lead deeper into a gets flirty on the brains of a promiscuous doctor conducting a mysterious investigation. Chief zombie-hater Harley Johns gives everyone a brews at Fillmore-Graves as Discovery Day draws nigh, and Liv uncovers the grim conspiracy behind the deadly flu Seattle now a militarized zombie quarantine zone, Liv investigates the grisly death of a rabid football fan killed in a brains-processing brains of a socialite murdered with a golf ball turn Liv into an insufferable bore. Meanwhile, a violent zombie prophet gains a cult death of a hopeless romantic killed while being smuggled into Seattle puts Liv and Clive on the trail of a ruthless brains black and Clive use Ravi as bait in a plan to flush out the human smuggler. Hunting for an explosive video, Major's team runs afoul of the zombie channels a scrappy hockey player as she and Clive investigate a multiple zombiecide. A brains shortage propels Fillmore-Graves to drastic pretentious actress's brains help Liv when she goes underground to keep Mama Leone's smuggling network alive. Ravi takes a big risk to help the brain of a "professional wingman" turns Liv into a playboy who goes out on the town with Clive and Ravi. Major is given an important she consumes the brains of a slain live-action role-playing knight, Liv helps Clive uncover dark secrets among a group of zombie locks down Seattle to catch a serial zombie-killer, Blaine targets the mayor, and Liv, Peyton and Ravi clash over the fate of Ravi studies Isobel's condition, Fillmore-Graves interrogates one of Liv's coyotes. Brother Love tries to bring Blaine into the undercover sting takes an unexpected turn. Brother Love stokes the fires of zombie rage. Liv takes action as Isobel's condition Major whisks Liv out of Seattle for her own protection, Ravi eats the brains of a narcissist to help Clive investigate Brother Love for outside world further isolates Seattle while Peyton, Ravi, Clive and Major race to save Liv from execution for her work as in Seattle skyrocket after zombie-on-human violence exacerbates a brains shortage. Ravi warns a colleague about the downside of a on fitness guru brains, Liv helps Clive with the convenience store case. Peyton tangles with city council over a zombie-positive PR panics when he and Liv go undercover at a dance competition to solve a murder-by-poison. Anti-zombie fervor grips a junior high and Clive follow a twisty tech trail to investigate a visionary entrepreneur's murder. Blaine tries to charm his way into a journalist's Al wraps up her explosive story, Blaine falls under suspicion for killing his swaggering teenage neighbor. Major suffers mysterious memory scrambles to source more brains when Seattle's supply runs critically short. Scandalous publicity takes down Blaine - but not for brains of a sharp-tongued top chef help Liv and Clive corner a killer. A lethal attack sends Major hunting for a mole inside up on the brains of a slithery salesman, Liv and Ravi compete to solve a murder. Major tries to convince top Washington brass to spare to the '90s help Liv and Clive with a teen beauty contest murder case. Ravi and Peyton track down clues to the original tainted a city on the edge, the brains of a popped turn Liv into a hardboiled gumshoe tracking down a pinched dose of zombie cure worth killing uses Major as "gigolo bait" in his hunt for the missing kids, and Liv brings the glam searching for the killer of a flamboyant drag Major faces a changing of the tide in Seattle, Liv, Clive and Ravi undertake a mission impossible in Atlanta to retrieve the final zombie Liv, Ravi and Clive race to finalize the cure, Peyton faces a showdown with Blaine, and Major takes a bold gamble to save Seattle once and for DetailsWatch offlineAvailable to downloadCastRose McIverMalcolm GoodwinRahul KohliRobert BuckleyDavid AndersAly MichalkaBryce HodgsonRobert KnepperMore Like ThisComing Soon
Ence moment, vous pouvez regarder "World Trade Center" en streaming sur Canal+. Il est Ă©galement possible de louer "World Trade Center" sur Google Play Movies, Orange VOD, Microsoft Store, YouTube, Canal VOD, Bbox VOD, Rakuten TV, Universcine, Amazon Video, Apple iTunes en ligne ou de le tĂ©lĂ©charger sur Universcine, Apple iTunes, Google Play Movies, Spike Lee, Exultant at the EpicenterâThe filmmakerâs epic new documentary series, âNYC Epicenters 9/11-2021œ,â is an alternately mournful and irreverent tribute to New Lee/HBOPublished Aug. 23, 2021Updated Aug. 28, 2021Spike Lee, like the city heâs from, exudes a kind of brash resilience. His resting facial expression says âTry me.â In New York, it can feel as if trials await around every corner. Hardship here is a kind of birthright, whether of the quotidian variety the gantlet of garbage smells in the summertime or the catastrophic the Sept. 11 attacks, the first spring of the Covid-19 pandemic.In his new eight-hour documentary series âNew York Epicenters 9/11-2021œâ â the first of its four installments premiered Sunday on HBO â Lee memorializes the indefatigable spirit of New York. Dozens of New Yorkers, appearing ringed by a faint blue glow in front of a dark backdrop, testify in interviews that chronicle each phase of the two disasters. The first two installments focus on the pandemic; the latter two hark back to the World Trade Center of the faces are well known â Senator Chuck Schumer, Mayor Bill de Blasio, Rosie Perez â but the bulk of story is told from the perspectives of those who were seen the least and saw the most health care workers, firefighters, activists and survivors. They form a kind of chorus, with Lee, as the conductor, slowing things down or speeding them up as individual memories harmonize and D. Wagner for The New York TimesRecently, I spoke to Lee by video call about making the series, about his own sense of grief and about why he still questions what caused the collapse of the World Trade Center buildings. These are edited excerpts from the was the initial germ of the idea for this series? Why did you want to make a documentary tying together New Yorkâs experience of the pandemic and 9/11?Well, something that gets overlooked is that Iâm a documentary filmmaker, too. But for me, itâs still narrative. I donât really put in the segmentation, as two different categories. And Iâm a New Yorker â it just made sense with the ⊠I donât like to use the word anniversary, but with 20 years coming up since 9/11, and with people often saying of New York during Covid, âThis is the epicenter,â it was did you see as the connection between the two events?Well, I think that weâre honoring the people who lost their lives, people who lost lives with 9/11 related illnesses. And also the more than 600,000 Americans who are no longer here because of Covid. More Americans have died of Covid-19 than Americans have died in World War II, the Korean War, Vietnam, Iraq and ironically, Afghanistan. said you interviewed over 200 people for the series â political leaders and actors, along with health care workers and activists. Who were you looking for?Well, we have great researchers â Judy Aley led a phenomenal crew. And I have people I know, and people I read about in The New York Times. We just wanted to be as well-rounded as possible, a kaleidoscope of witnesses. Thatâs what I call them Theyâre witnesses. The only people who said no was NYPD. They donât look good in this. And that footage [of police officers assaulting Black Lives Matter protesters in 2020] does not lie. They were cracking didnât want to talk to you? They couldnât defend themselves?They saw âDo the Right Thing.âWhich of the subjects moved you the most?The most moving thing to me, not including archival footage, are the interviews with the people who lost loved ones. Those are hard interviews to do because they know why theyâre there. And they know I got to ask tough questions. People just bare their souls. It was very, very emotional. For me, I canât comprehend what theyâre going through. But to see â itâs hard to ask questions where you know people are going to break down. Thatâs not easy; itâs not fun. But I got to ask those was struck by how you show up in many of those moments. We hear you chime in with a word of support or encouragement. What goes through your head when youâre sitting across from someone baring their soul like that?I try not to cut them off. Iâm not successful all the time, but itâs part of my job. We want people to be informed. And this is very important, Reggie I think that they trust me. The people ⊠not the NYPD, but these people trust that itâs not going to be exploitative; itâs going to be the best possible look. And I do not want to betray their hear 600,000 with Covid, or you hear 3,000 plus with 9/11 â those are just numbers; cold. But those numbers are human beings. People who are loved by their spouses, children, friends, relatives. Who are those people? Who are those Afghans who were on the landing gear of the plane and fell? Youâve got to bring the human element, you know? It just canât be a other thing that it shows you, in kind of a cruel way, is that life goes on. If you saw âCrooklyn,â I lost my mother when I was a sophomore in college. She never got to see any of my stuff. And sheâs with me all the time, but, you know, life goes on. I think that interviews with these individuals whoâve lost loved ones, I feel they understand that, too. You canât replace the love of a loved one, and youâre going to miss them forever, but life goes on. I think thatâs something very important thatâs in this you think your own experience grieving your mother helped you to bond with your subjects?Oh, yeah. My mother, my grandparents. Oh, yeah. It gives you understanding. Everybodyâs different. But losing loved ones is losing loved ones. So I can speak, I think, knowing what that loss is, even it ever too much? How do you handle grappling with 20 years worth of grief?Itâs compassion. Do you remember LaChanze, the actress?Yes, her husband, Calvin Gooding, died on Sept. 11 while she was was crying for her. That broke me down. Not to negate anybody elseâs loss, but when she broke down, I broke down. But thatâs my job. And thereâs humor in a lot of the film, too. It wasnât planned like that, but there were moments where humor just came a lot of lighthearted boostering for your favorites the Yankees, the Knicks, Morehouse, wasnât conscious. Itâs just who I am. Even âDo the Right Thing,â a very serious film, thereâs humor in that. Thatâs something thatâs just part of my makeup. I think Iâm successful with my documentaries because I donât want people to feel that theyâre being interviewed â weâre just having a conversation. The cameras happen to be here, but weâre just chopping it up, you know?Right. Even with the edit, thereâs a playful irreverence at times. You insert snippets of âA Few Good Menâ and the music video for Shaggyâs âIt Wasnât Me.â That style is different from what you did with âWhen the Levees Broke,â about Hurricane Katrina, which is much more sober. Has your approach evolved since then?The difference is this Iâve only visited New Orleans. I did not grow up there. New York is home. Itâs in my DNA in a way that New Orleans is something you learned about from your research that you didnât know before?I didnât know about the maritime exodus [after the World Trade Center attacks]. Over half a million New Yorkers got off the island [by boat] â more than last episode of the series devotes a lot of time to questioning how and why the towers fell. You interview several members of the conspiracy group Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth. Why did you want to include their perspective?Because I still donât ⊠I mean, I got questions. And I hope that maybe the legacy of this documentary is that Congress holds a hearing, a congressional hearing about 9/ donât buy the official explanations?The amount of heat that it takes to make steel melt, that temperatureâs not reached. And then the juxtaposition of the way Building 7 fell to the ground â when you put it next to other building collapses that were demolitions, itâs like youâre looking at the same thing. But people going to make up their own mind. My approach is put the information in the movie and let people decide for themselves. I respect the intelligence of the but you donât say âmake up your own mindâ about whether or not the vaccine is poison, or âmake up your own mindâ about whether Joe Biden was legitimately are going to think what they think, regardless. Iâm not dancing around your question. People are going to think what they think. People have called me a racist for âDo the Right Thing.â People said in âMoâ Better Bluesâ I was antisemitic. âSheâs Gotta Have It,â that was misogynist. People are going to just think what they think. And you know what? Iâm still here, going on four decades of filmmaking. sQkfW35.