Tofind a list of all shows and movies that you purchased or rented in the iTunes Store, open the Library tab and select TV Shows or Movies. On your iPhone and iPad, the Library tab also shows your recent purchases and any home videos that you transferred to your device. To see more of your recently purchased content, tap See All.
Thank you for your helpful reply. I had looked at the Library tab before but failed to see the Home Movies section. There was one movie there, the last slideshow I had just added to iTunes on my mac. The other 11 movies listed in iTunes are not there. Perhaps I'll try re-adding them to iTunes and see if they also get transferred. This iPad is my new one, is it possible that the 11 movies were not transferred over from my old iPad with my other data?
My main concerns with all of this are (1) learning how to move data back and forth between Mac and iPad/iPhone (and finding it on the new device!) and (2) not ending up with multiple copies that unnecessarily take up lots of RAM.
Well this is embarrassing. Since I wrote my previous response I realized that I had been looking at my iPhone not my iPad. When I went to check my iPad everything was just where you said it would be. Thanks again.
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To pull the shoot off, Marvel seemed to shut down the place every night for a couple of days. But even when major attractions or roads are temporarily closed for filming, the crew members have always been unfailingly polite to me.
I actually think the crews do a good job of minimizing disruption for Camden residents. In fact, we're often encouraged to apply for work placements, which is nice for those trying to get experience in the entertainment industry.
Massive studio complexes like MTV Global and Associated Press blend into the background here. I don't imagine many tourists even realize live shoots are happening right beside where they're shopping or eating.
JustWatch has upped its game in recent years, greatly expanding by acquiring rival GoWatchIt. It has a large list of supported subscription services, including newer ones such as Apple TV+, Disney+, HBO Max, Paramount+, and Peacock. It also works with several free ad-supported ones.
Like the other services, Watchworthy lets you limit your results to shows from services you have access to. You can filter shows by air date, streaming service and genre, or even by MPAA rating if you have kids. There are also curated content selections based on themes such as The Weekly Buzz, Workplace Comedies, Funniest Shows, or British Sitcoms, organized by their Worthy score. Once you select a show, you can start watching it either directly from your device or by casting it to your TV.
The newest entry to this group, Qewd is a free app for Android and Apple mobile devices. It not only helps you find where shows and movies are streaming but also adds a social element that lets you get recommendations from your network of friends, family, and even brands and influencers you follow.
Cars and movies were born and developed at the same time, from the late 19th century to the early 20th, a moment when movement and speed fascinated new generations and opened opportunities for new horizons.
On the frame, we can see 30 cable cars, four horsecars, and, gloriously, three automobiles. At first, we think Market Street was filled with the new modern machines, but in reality, these three bold drivers were moving their cars around horses, carts, pedestrians, and, of course, the cable cars.
In 2015, the museum closed for a whole year for a large-scale renovation. The architects of Kohn Pedersen Fox reinvented the exterior of the museum which now looks like a massive vehicle in motion. The galleries were redone, giving more space for the pieces to be seen in the context of the films and series they have starred in, and ensuring more safety to display complex cars and moving machines of all kinds.
Since 2012, another auto enthusiast has been at the helm of the museum. With a background in management, business, and marketing, from parks like Disneyland and SeaWorld to his own motorsports team, Terry Karges took the helm when the Petersen Museum was on the cusp to have a new look.
In addition to a complete redo of the inside and out of the museum, Karges created new projects to engage new generations not only to interest them in cars, but also to excite and inspire them as future designers, engineers, artists, and creatives. Supported by businesses and the Petersen Foundation, the museum offers guided visits, virtual events, and classroom programs in schools.
However, in the pre-digital age, the chase in a Bond movie was a bit more complex than the efforts of pioneers of the motion picture: a Bond chase requires rigorous planning, excellent timing, a master editor, daredevil-ish stunt drivers, and the detachment of producers prepared to destroy some of the most beautiful and elegant automobiles.
Golden Globe(s), Cecil B. Demille and Golden Globes Statuette design mark are the registered trademarks and service marks and the Golden Globe statuette the copyrighted property, of Golden Globes, LLC. Copyright Golden Globes, LLC. Hollywood Foreign Press Association is a registered trademark of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. All rights reserved.
Once you connect your digital retailers to Movies Anywhere, we bring your eligible movies from all of your connected accounts into one synced collection. All you have to do is connect your digital retailer accounts to your Movies Anywhere account and we do the rest. We also make sure all of your eligible movies are available to watch on all of your connected accounts.
Cinematography is the illusion of movement by the recording and subsequent rapid projection of many still photographic pictures on a screen. Originally a product of 19th-century scientific endeavour, cinema has become a medium of mass entertainment and communication, and today it is a multi-billion-pound industry.
The first to present projected moving pictures to a paying audience were the Lumire brothers in December 1895 in Paris, France. They used a device of their own making, the Cinmatographe, which was a camera, a projector and a film printer all in one.
At first, films were very short, sometimes only a few minutes or less. They were shown at fairgrounds, music halls, or anywhere a screen could be set up and a room darkened. Subjects included local scenes and activities, views of foreign lands, short comedies and newsworthy events.
By 1914, several national film industries were established. At this time, Europe, Russia and Scandinavia were the dominant industries; America was much less important. Films became longer and storytelling, or narrative, became the dominant form.
As more people paid to see movies, the industry which grew around them was prepared to invest more money in their production, distribution and exhibition, so large studios were established and dedicated cinemas built. The First World War greatly affected the film industry in Europe, and the American industry grew in relative importance.
This system proved unreliable and was soon replaced by an optical, variable density soundtrack recorded photographically along the edge of the film, developed originally for newsreels such as Movietone.
In 1952, the Cinerama process, using three projectors and a wide, deeply curved screen together with multi-track surround sound, was premiered. It had a very large aspect ratio of 2.59:1, giving audiences a greater sense of immersion, and proved extremely popular.
Specialist large-screen systems using 70mm film were also developed. The most successful of these has been IMAX, which as of 2020 has over 1,500 screens around the world. For many years IMAX cinemas have shown films specially made in its unique 2D or 3D formats but more recently they have shown popular mainstream feature films which have been digitally re-mastered in the IMAX format, often with additional scenes or 3D effects.
While cinemas had some success in fighting the competition of television, they never regained the position and influence they held in the 1930s and 40s, and over the next 30 years audiences dwindled. By 1984 cinema attendances in Britain had declined to one million a week.
Today, most people see films on television, whether terrestrial, satellite or subscription video on demand (SVOD) services. Streaming film content on computers, tablets and mobile phones is becoming more common as it proves to be more convenient for modern audiences and lifestyles.
In the past 20 years, film production has been profoundly altered by the impact of rapidly improving digital technology. Most mainstream productions are now shot on digital formats with subsequent processes, such as editing and special effects, undertaken on computers.
Cinemas have invested in digital projection facilities capable of producing screen images that rival the sharpness, detail and brightness of traditional film projection. Only a small number of more specialist cinemas have retained film projection equipment.
In the past few years there has been a revival of interest in 3D features, sparked by the availability of digital technology. Whether this will be more than a short-term phenomenon (as previous attempts at 3D in the 1950s and 1980s had been) remains to be seen, though the trend towards 3D production has seen greater investment and industry commitment than before.
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