
Why 'MacGruber' Deserves To Find An Audience On TV Stream It Or Skip It: 'Being the Ricardos' on Amazon Prime Video, in Which Nicole Kidman Rolls Loaded Dice in Playing Lucille Ball Stream It Or Skip It: 'Jim Gaffigan: Comedy Monster' On Netflix, Pondering The Pandemic While Pretending It Has Passed

Stream It or Skip It: 'The Christmas House 2: Deck Those Halls' on Hallmark Doubles the Feels and the Fun Stream It or Skip It: 'Under the Christmas Tree' on Lifetime Is the Lesbian Holiday Romcom You've Been Waiting For Stream It or Skip It: 'Christmas Takes Flight' on CBS Wonders If a Small Town Pilot Can Win over a Scrooge's Heart And, if you're looking for even more stuff to watch, check out our list of the best movies on Disney+.Stream It Or Skip It: 'Christmas Is Canceled' On Amazon Prime Video, Where A Widowed Dermot Mulroney Starts Dating His Daughter's Frenemy Rent/Buy They Shall Not Grow Old on Amazon.Įach of these documentaries would make for a perfect double-feature with The Beatles: Get Back and have at least one thing in common with Peter Jackson's groundbreaking docuseries. Honestly, They Shall Not Grow Old is an absolute achievement and is a must watch. Why it’s worth checking out: Prior to restoring 60 hours of video for The Beatles: Get Back, Peter Jackson went through nearly 100 hours of black-and-white footage from World War I, digitized it, cleaned it up, and colorized it to make it look like it was shot a day ago and not 100 years earlier.

Peter Jackson’s 2018 documentary They Shall Not Grow Old combines restored footage from World War I and combines it with recordings of veterans sharing their experiences during the “war to end all wars.” Rent/Buy George Harrison: Living in the Material World on Amazon. Stream George Harrison: Living in the Material World on HBO Max. George Harrison: Living in the Material World is a perfect companion piece as it focuses more on what made “the quiet Beatle” tick, and explores his aspirations. Why it’s worth checking out: Throughout The Beatles: Get Back, it seems like George Harrison is preparing for what comes next in his journey (the documentary even shows Harrison piecing together what would become the title track of his triple-album All Things Must Pass) and begins to expand his musicianship. More importantly, the documentary film explores Harrison’s spiritual journey and how his many visits to India forever changed his life. Directed by Martin Scorsese, the two-part HBO documentary follows Harrison from his childhood, through the formation of The Beatles, in the middle of Beatlemania, the final years of the band’s existence, and what followed after the split.

Released 10 years after the late Beatles' November 2001 death, George Harrison: Living in the Material World takes a look at the personal, professional, and spiritual life of the influential musician. (Image credit: HBO) George Harrison: Living In The Material World (HBO Max)
