All Hindi Movies List New

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Francesc Benjamin

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Jul 17, 2024, 9:49:44 AM7/17/24
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It's really disappointing that Apple once again has eliminated a feature on which millions of customers depend. I had dozens of movies in my iTunes Movies wish list, and multiple TV shows in my iTunes TV Shows wish list. All of these were future purchases, but I can't remember what they all were. This would be like Amazon deleting my Wish List of products; it makes no sense. None of them show in 'Up Next'. Why couldn't that have been a solution?

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Apple has a pattern of nixing features people like and use, or even removing entire applications on which millions of people depend, at their detriment and the company's detriment. Very disappointing.

There's no way to add titles to the Wish List. So that's definitely gone, but on the other hand you can remove titles from the Wish List, so you're obviously encouraged to stop using it. Apple wants it gone, but if they don't add it to the Apple TV app in stead, won't they lose a lot of potential sales? Strange decision.

These type of changes are extremely frustrating. I have over 500 movies in my library. I spent several thousand dollars over several years purchasing these movies. I should have some level of control over my digital library the same way I did when I had a physical movie collection. Apple did away with the "Western" genre at one point, which was frustrating. Their categories often are wrong on many movies. With this latest change they took away even the ability to see the number of movies in my library. I too had about 50 or so movies in my Wishlist so I could wait until they went on sale to purchase them. This is undoubtedly Apple putting profits ahead of convenience and even ahead of the user experience which they once dominated. Now their user experience has become terrible.

Yes, & let me tell you! I own well over 1600 movies via AppleTV, was a regular shopper, & I don't buy or even browse for movies anymore. Do they think they're going to increase sales by cramming TV into the movie menu? Do they think I'll buy or rent movies if they're just forced into my up next list (not to mention just completely lost there now)? It won't happen & hasn't happened since this horrifically bad downdate. I NEED a wish list to keep track of movies, contextually, to come back & buy or rent under various circumstances, not a bunch of movies lost in the ether; & that's exactly where they've all gone, never to be seen or considered for purchase ever again. Not to mention, having unpurchased wishlist movies in the up next list ruins the functionality of the of the up next list, too. I might put a movie or two in the up next list if I was intending to rent/purchase imminently - IF I had the option - but not in lieu of a wishlist. I don't need to worry about finances or kids buying movies etc when I'm using the up next list.

It's a mess, & the movies menu is SO UGLY now, with the "go to store" or "go to your purchases" buttons on that grey computer-looking screen. Yeah, I see my old wishlist there, taunting me with the old add-or-remove-from-wishlist buttons that aren't on any of the movies outside of the wishlist anymore. And that weird little drop-down grey-printed text menu thing in the corner instead of tabs... yuck. Don't mind that as an additional option but not the base format. Also don't use Apple+ as much now that it's buried & all mixed in & mixed up, either.

I don't even want to have to say it, but they really forced my hand with this one: I am seriously regretting buying movies from Apple instead of Amazon now. I trusted Apple movies to be more available & not look like a clearance rack when I'm shopping. I trusted Apple not to try & manipulate me. It's not just disappointing, it feels infuriating & insulting, like I'm being taken advantage of. Never been so upset by such a poor reformat before. It's made me question my entire relationship to Apple & AppleTV this time, & I'm pretty sure that wasn't what they intended. Almost ready to bail on AppleTV all together for a while. Obviously would like to see this "update" rolled back but reinstatement of the wishlist at very least. So upset with this one.

I'm very upset that my Wish List vanished. I spent lots of time curating the list, and had maybe 50-60 movies in it. I'm fed up with Apple just deleting things like this. Most apps for streaming have some type of "add to my list" button to push.

Log a film to tell us you watched it on a particular date, and to attach a review, rating and tags.We put all films you log with a date into your Diary,a great reference for when it comes time to compile your year-end list.

Stats include overview by week/year, highest rated decades, most watched and highest rated actors anddirectors, progress against milestone lists, genre, language and country breakdowns, and lots more.

This section shows our most popular lists, and a selection of recently added content. From here you can create a list of your own, browse more popular lists, or browse by the tags applied to each by its creator.

Adding tags as you log films lets you easily recall them based on any criteria. Tags can be used to encode how, where or with whom you saw a film, or to categorize films by your own genre or content taxonomy.

To quickly move a film to another position when editing, show List Numbers, then click the number of the entry to move. Type a new position and hit Return. The film will instantly move to that position.

Pro accounts unlock additional capabilities: an all-time Stats page and annual Year in Review pages for each year of activity. Filter your activity view, filter film lists by service availability, clone lists and more!

I was using Freebase to get all movies/films there for my website, but it's getting shut down soon. so I was searching for another free database for movies and came across Wikidata. To be honest it's too complicated to understand how to query all the movies.

For the moment, the best way to do this query is to use the wdq.wmflabs.org API, where this query translate as: =claim[31:11424] (avoid making this query in a browser as it will probably make it crash due to the ). At the moment I'm writting, this requests returns 157038 items in the form of numeric ids (ex: 125). To get the Wikidata ids, just add a leading Q -> Q125.

The Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) films are a series of American superhero films produced by Marvel Studios based on characters that appear in publications by Marvel Comics. The MCU is the shared universe in which all of the films are set. The films have been in production since 2007, and in that time Marvel Studios has produced and released 33 films, with at least 11 more in various stages of development. It is the highest-grossing film franchise of all time, having grossed over $29.8 billion at the global box office. This includes Avengers: Endgame, which became the highest-grossing film of all time at the time of its release.

By 2005, Marvel Entertainment had begun planning to produce its own films independently and distribute them through Paramount Pictures.[1] In June 2007, Marvel Studios secured funding from a $525 million revolving credit facility with Merrill Lynch.[2] Marvel's plan was to release individual films for their main characters and then merge them in a crossover film.[3]

Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige said in November 2013 that releases each year would ideally include one film based on an existing character and one featuring a new character, feeling that would be "a nice rhythm", though this was not always the case as shown by two sequels being released in 2013 (Iron Man 3 and Thor: The Dark World).[4] Feige elaborated in July 2014 that this model was being followed for 2014 and 2015 and he felt it would be "fun to continue that sort of thing".[5] After the reveal that month of multiple release dates for films through 2019,[6] in which some years had three films scheduled, Feige said there was no "number cruncher" telling the studio to increase their film output and the change was based on them "managing [existing] franchises, film to film, and when we have a team ready to go, why tell them to go away for four years just because we don't have a slot? We'd rather find a way to keep that going."[7] After the titles for these films were revealed in October 2014,[8] Feige said the studio was "firing on all cylinders right now" and this made them comfortable with increasing to three films a year in 2017 and 2018 without changing their production approach.[9] On the potential for so-called "superhero fatigue", Feige stated that, though each of the films are based on Marvel Comics and feature the "Marvel Studios" logo, he believed each film had unique qualities that differentiated them from the others and from non-Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) superhero films. For example, he noted how the studio's 2016 releases, Captain America: Civil War and Doctor Strange, were "completely different movies". The studio hoped to continue to surprise audiences and "not [fall] into things becoming too similar".[10]

In February 2014, Feige said Marvel Studios wanted to mimic the "rhythm" of comic book releases by having characters appear in their own films and then come together for crossover events,[11] with Avengers films acting as "big, giant linchpins" within the shared universe.[12] On expanding the number of characters in the universe and letting individual films breathe and work on their own, as opposed to having Avenger team-ups outside of Avengers films, Feige said their plan was to teach general audiences "about the notion of the characters existing separately, coming together for specific events and going away and existing separately in their own worlds again. Just like comic readers have been doing for decades... people sort of are accepting that there's just a time when they should be together and there's a time when they're not."[13]

Discussing how much story is developed for future MCU films, Feige said in September 2015 that "broad strokes" and occasionally "super-specific things" are determined far in advance. He said there was enough leeway to "have room to sway and to move and to go and to surprise ourselves in places that we end up" and that each film would feel satisfying on its own, but still interconnected to the larger universe and as if it had been planned years ahead of time. The studio has contingency plans for times when they are unable to secure a certain actor to reprise a role, and are able to respond to surprises such as the right to use Spider-Man becoming available in February 2015.[14]

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