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OWN is getting into the late-night business with The Nightcap with Carlos King premiering today.
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The world of reality TV has been around for 30+ years now but has exploded with niche shows and more drama over the past 10-12 years. One of the biggest names in that world is Carlos King, who has produced several seasons of shows like Real Housewives and other shows that have led him to his next adventure - The Nightcap with Carlos King as the first late-night talk show for OWN premiering today.
How to Watch The Nightcap with Carlos King Premiere today:
Watch The Nightcap with Carlos King Premiere online with fuboTV: Start with a 7-day free trial!
The self-proclaimed king of reality TV gets his own late-night show for OWN, which is expanding into the decades-old world of late-night talk shows:
King is the CEO of Kingdom Reign Entertainment, which over the years has produced shows like The Next:15, My Super Sweet 16, four seasons of The Real Housewives of Atlanta (6, 7, 8, 9), The Real Housewives of Atlanta: Kandi’s Wedding, I Dream of NeNe: The Wedding, Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta, Don’t be Tardy for the Wedding, two seasons of The Real Housewives of New Jersey (1 and 2), Season 25: Oprah Behind The Scenes and the recent hit show, Love & Marriage: D.C.
He has been around the reality TV world for a very long time, networking and creating relationships that all lead to him hosting a late-night talk show.
This new show will be an extension of Love & Marriage: D.C. while also a talk show with other celebrities and friends of King. It should be full of fun and games, drama and big moments that King has become known for over the years.
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Night Court - watch online: streaming, buy or rent
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Night Court is an American television situation comedy that aired on NBC from January 4, 1984 to May 31, 1992. The setting was the night shift of a Manhattan court, presided over by the young, unorthodox Judge Harold T. "Harry" Stone. It was created by comedy writer Reinhold Weege, who had previously worked on Barney Miller in the 1970s and early 1980s.
Currently you are able to watch "Night Court" streaming on Freevee Amazon Channel for free with ads or buy it as download on Apple iTunes, Vudu, Amazon Video, Google Play Movies. It is also possible to rent "Night Court" on Amazon Video online
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Russia's highest grossing film of all-time, this fantasy-thriller pits the respective forces that control the forces of Light and the forces of Darkness against each other.
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Supporting actors Mariyai Polshina , Galina Tyunina , Viktor Verzhbitsky , Zhanna Friske , Rimma Markova , more… Anna Dubrovskaya , Mariya Poroshina , Yuri Kutsenko , Aleksei Chadov , Ilya Lagutenko , Mariya Mironova Producers Konstantin Ernst , Anatoli Maksimov Studio 20TH CENTURY FOX Rating R (Restricted) Content advisory Foul language , nudity , smoking , violence Purchase rights Stream instantly Details Format Prime Video (streaming online video) Devices Available to watch on supported devices
TechnoMachinima1996 Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2017
The first time I saw this movie, I borrowed it from my local library and I regret that at first I neither got the point of the movie nor did I see that it was any big deal. The trouble I had with this movie at first was that I had absolutely no concept as to what to expect from it. I had never seen a preview and I never read about this movie, so I didn't have anything to go on and as such it all seemed strange to me at the time. Well after a couple more views of this movie things really began to sink in tremendously. The thing is this movie is not primarily an action movie. It is mainly a fantasy film taking place in modern 21st century Moscow, Russia. There is also some drama and comedy thrown in for good measure as well. We start the movie off in the Middle Ages featuring two warring tribes of supernatural beings comprising of shafeshifters, vampires, wiches, magicians, etc. known as Others. The Light Others are the good guys of whom look to see balance in the world and the Dark Others are the villains of whom desire nothing more than chaos. Out of fear that the two groups of Others would completely annihilate eachother, Guesser, the leader of the Light Others and Zavulon the leader of the Dark Others, along with the main Inquisitor, decide to forge a truce via a peace treaty. From then on the Light Others formed the Night Watch and The Dark Others formed the Day Watch to keep an eye on eachother so that the peace treaty isn't breached. Several years pass, the year is 1992 and we get introduced to our main character, Anton Gorodetsky. Anton goes to a psychic named Ms. Schultz to have her use her powers to punish his wife, Irina Petrova, for running off with another guy. His chosen punishment is having Ms. Schultz specifically use her powers to kill the unborn baby that Anton believes to be from her new guy. Before this evil spell is completed the Night Watch soon intervene and totally put a stop to it. They arrest and interrogate Ms. Schultz while allowing Anton to know that he is an Other. 12 years pass and Anton is now an operative with the Night Watch and of course, a Light Other. Anton now has a two big tasks ahead of him as he must not only save the life of a young boy of whom Dark Other vampires are after but also to end a curse that a beautiful young female doctor has on her that could put an end to the world. The concept of light vs dark may not be a new idea in particular with Star Wars and many other movies having come up with it first, but this movie does a remarkable job of just simply using that idea yet doing it in a considerably different and unpredictable manner. This movie seems to take some great influence from Star Wars in many way for sure. That alone is awesome. Otherwise, you get a very fresh, original, and unique kind of movie concept. Just the concept of there being powerful, supernatural beings to look and can act just like us and yet secretly have powers and an agency that is a total secret, is such a cool concept. A little Men In Black like but not a whole lot. You might think of them as the CIA of the supernatural world. You meet some very interesting characters such as such as Guesser, Zavulon, Olga, Alice, Bear, Tiger Cub, Yegor, Svetlana, Semyon, and Kostya to name several. Each one of them has their own personal power. In some cases their namesake tells you what that power is. The CGI is awesome and blends well with its surroundings. I especially love the transformations from human to animal and from animal to human. Very well done and edited. The special effects for the Gloom where interesting as well. Such characters such as Anton, Olga, Bear, and Tiger Cub prove to be charming, funny, and very likable characters that you can get behind. The character development is just enough so that you can get a sense of the characters thoughts on things and about their quirks and whatnot. Not every character is 3 dimensional but the right ones are. The pacing to this movie is a little slow at first but it moves along at a comfortable pace once the chief plot elements come together with occasional slower parts to develop a character or plot point. So it's all good there. The villains are quite charismatic enough to make them memorable, iconic, and carry a slick, shrewd, and diabolical sensibility about them. The chief women in the movie are all very attractive eye-candy. Tiger Cub, Olga, the Vampiress, Svetlana, Irina, and Alice are all drop dead gorgeous and very hot. My only complaint is not with the movie but rather just the way that for some reason the animated and interactive subtitles are nowhere to be seen. Like many people those creative subtitles were one of the things that drew me to this awesome flick. The lack of them is disappointing. As for the transfer well I love what was done with the picture quality and the colors. It's a crisper and much sharper picture and the colors are brighter. The Blu-Ray and my HDtv both make everything on the screen seem to come to life in a highly visually stunning way adding further to the already awesome visuals and special effects. Overall, if you are into: action, fantasy, unique, original, and creative ideas, magical human beings that represent the good side and other ones that represent the evil side, comedy, attractive people, interesting characters, and a suspense laden race against time to save the world then Night Watch is definitely for you.
H. Bala Reviewed in the United States on September 30, 2007
3.5 out of 5 stars for NIGHT WATCH. In the eternal struggle between darkness and light, a balance must be maintained. Long ago, a pact was made which granted to every person the free will to choose which side to join. To ensure this liberty, the forces of darkness assembled the Daywatch. And, for the light, the equivalent is the Nightwatch. 12 years ago, a man named Anton made a malevolent deal with a witch. To regain his straying wife, he accepted the sin of the dark magic intended to consume his wife's unborn child, a child not his own. But agents of the Nightwatch arrived just in time and the foul act was aborted. Moments later, Anton's nascent precognitive abilities surfaced, his Otherness confirmed. The Nightwatch quickly brought him into the fold. Cut to the present. Anton, now a full-fledged Nightwatch member (never mind that his skills in field work are dubious), receives instructions to track down a boy mesmerized by a vampire. En route, he glimpses a girl on the subway and undergoes a shocking bout of clairvoyance. The Vortex of Damnation, the source of all Darkness, hovers above this cursed girl. A prophecy is recalled, proclaiming the arrival of a powerful entity who must decide between good and evil, of which choice will once and for all tip the balance towards one side. The final battle draws near. NIGHT WATCH is the aggresively-shot cinematic adaptation of Russian author Sergei Lukyanenko's popular contemporary dark fantasy novel, and it's fairly good and made a lot of rubles in its native box office. Despite its flaws, I quite enjoyed the movie experience and particularly appreciated the film's frenetic energy. NIGHT WATCH unveils a world become a feverish and apocalyptic nightmare - inhabited by vampires, magicians, bestial shapeshifters, and others of that supernatural ilk - and so what if the production values don't quite live up to the immense scale of the story? The actors are enthusiastic and the dark fantasy/horror elements are for the most part intriguingly envisioned (Anton's tension-wracked clash with the vampire lovers near the beginning is a must-see). A nice quirk is Anton's assigned partner Olga, who had just completed serving out 60 years of punishment trapped in the shape of an inanimate owl figure. The movie does suffer from an occasional lack of clarity, the storyline feeling somewhat scattershot. I kept my eye on the screen for every second, but I have a feeling I missed out on some of the nuances (I actually might have to read the book now). My confusion wasn't abated by the actors' lines which now and then proved to be incomprehensible, but my crappy ear for accents is probably at fault here. The camera work is gratifyingly, sometimes jarringly, hectic and is key to lending a deliciously gothic atmosphere, but it sometimes lapses into the amateurish; it's no biggie, though, and I liked the effort. Fans of fantasist Sergei Lukyanenko know that there are several sequels to Night Watch. So it's no real surprise that this flick ends without a definitive resolution. In fact, the ending ratchets up the intensity and heightens even further that already prevailing sense of foreboding. I've already ordered the film sequel DAY WATCH, and I can't wait to watch it. But I should get a flashlight.
TBS Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2007
There are creatures amongst us, some light and some dark, committed to a truce to end an otherwise catastrophic form of eternal conflict. Enter the Night Watch, the guardians that keep the Dark in check, and the Day Watch, that do the reverse. Both sides await the coming of a prophesized "other" who will choose his prospective side and shift this otherwise eternal variation of static warfare, however, and the time seems to be coming soon. Enter Anton, a seemingly innocuous man with a love he wants to preserve, who is told that his love is pregnant - that the child is not his - and that the only way his love can be preserved is through the death of an innocent. Reluctantly Anton agrees to this but, in the midst of the witchery, the Night Watch comes in and stops the procedure. In the middle of that, Anton finds out that he is what is referred to as one of The Others; that things are happening around him, that he can see things that were previously unseen and do things in conjunction with either the light or the dark, and that he is changed. And the story begins building from there. While the DVD version of the movie isn't very popular, this is actually a really unique take on the world of the supernatural. Vampirism is explained here, shapeshifters are seen, and some of the strangest clashes between Light/Dark cultures are explored by Anton and the characters around him. This makes for a great story that keeps on keeping on, dragging itself deeper and deeper into a world that seems so alien when setting side-by-side with our own. I liked that; there was a lot of time spent building a world inside the world but there wasn't a lot of time spent dumbing it down so a viewer could watch it. It simply is the way it is, it has the rules it has, and the "why" isn't always explained. This, combined with the fact that we see the coming of the other and w also witness how the ripples of one action melds into a forest of other actions, really makes a person watch. As Anton himself says, "curse" isn't simply a word. The other thing about the movie is the visuals, which are absolutely mindblowing. Some of the things that happen are simply amazing, either by conflict or by the traversing of something called "the gloom," and then there is the bigger saga that simply looks good while the movie plays out. The whole of the movie looks good, too, from the beginning shots that explain the battle between the forces to series where Anton is simply "looking" at a boy while trying to follow him. Perhaps it was because the movie was Russian or perhaps it was because some people found the format of the tale unappealing - it was more of a chapter than a complete tale, but the chapter was self-contained and told a story all its own - or the unheralded release of the movie made it unappealing. Whatever the reason, this movie should have gotten a lot more acknowledgement than it did because the storyline and the visuals combine to make something grand. Again, this is a really interesting tale and would be good for anyone that wants something different from the obvious stories set to supernatural tones. The one thing to keep in mind is that the disc is double-sided and one side is dubbed and the other side is in Russian (with subtitles). I'm personally a fan of original language movies so I'm glad I noticed the Russian side of the movie, but I could see how this could confuse (and turn people off to the movie). The disc also comes with an extended ending with optional commentary and "sneak peaks" of the sequels. It really is worth the watch - and a bit more.
DesertGypsy Reviewed in the United States on March 22, 2022
I don't know why this doesn't have better reviews. It's a great take on the oldest story ever told. Good Vs Evil. It's not Oscar award material, but I don't think anyone is going into to i with that in mind. I love the stoic view point it takes, Those on the side of Good are not always that good, and those on the side of Dark are not always that evil. Not ground breaking but enjoyable none the less.
James W. Picht Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2006
Night Watch is an interesting, imaginative film. The special effects are quite good by Russian film standards, though not particularly new or special by the standards of such films as The Matrix. They're prominent, but they don't drive the film, else it wouldn't be a particularly good film. What does drive the film are plot and an interesting premise. By now you know both plot and premise, so I won't bother providing a synopsis here. This film has at its core the struggle between good and evil (something we find in most of the literature ever written and most films ever made), but the relationship between the two is a bit unusual. The principal character for good (the Night Watch), Anton, lives across the hall from an agent of evil (the Day Watch) and is on rather chummy terms with him. When good and evil aren't engaged in apocalyptic struggle, they go after each other like bureaucrats and lawyers. An evil witch is arrested by the Night Watch and written up (complete with forms) for black magic against an innocent much like she might expect to be written up for hygiene violations in her restaurant kitchen. The dialogue is nearly along the lines of, "what, a nice old lady like me? Anyway, this was entrapment!" "Yeh, yeh, tell it to the judge." Anton creates a mini-crisis when, rather than arrest a vampire, he kills him. His Day Watch neighbor, also a vampire, is put out and affronted by this, not driven into a vengeful rage. Seldom has the war between good and evil seemed so civilized. This film is very Russian. The attitudes of the characters and the modus operendi of the Day and Night Watches have a certain post-Soviet weariness to them, a certain sense of sloppiness. The chuminess I noted above is part of that. If the war between good and evil is bureaucratic and tame, it's because both sides are morally lax. There's no sense of outrage for good or evil done, no sense that ends can't be justified by means. When a good but cursed woman seems set to set off the apocalypse, the leader of the Night Watch (a good guy, an agent of Light, remember) tells his operatives to find a way to lift the curse or kill her for the greater good. Agents of good and evil seem to operate on the basis of rational utilitarian concerns, not on irrational principle. It's a perspective that seems very much conditioned by Soviet theory and practice. Parts of the movie were confusing. Some sequences were so sudden or frenetic that I had no clue what had just happened. It's nice to be able to go back and rewatch them (though in a couple of cases I'm as baffled as I was the first time), but this is still confusing. There are some plot holes that are flung past us so quickly that the director may hope we don't notice, and in some cases he's probably right. There are some surprises that are entirely unsurprising (I figured out the identity of the Great Other and his or her (no spoilers from me) relationship to Anton before the Great Other even made it onto the screen), but there are also some genuine surprises and a few good startles. This is
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