The Bodyguard Movie Streaming Australia

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Alexandrie Gallup

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Aug 5, 2024, 4:01:57 AM8/5/24
to stabnaboojac
Aformer Secret Service agent grudgingly takes an assignment to protect a pop idol who's threatened by a crazed fan. At first, the safety-obsessed bodyguard and the self-indulgent diva totally clash. But before long, all that tension sparks fireworks of another sort, and the love-averse tough guy is torn between duty and romance.

Our data shows that the The Bodyguard is available to stream on Binge and Foxtel Now. We also checked other leading streaming services including Prime Video, Apple TV+, Disney+, Google Play, Netflix, Stan. The Bodyguard is not available on any of them at this time.


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"Yeah. Finished that last night," says the lawyer, bearing the same look of mild irritation a Boots cashier gives you when you can't get your pennies off the counter because your fingers have become as useful as two fat saucissons.


Here's the problem: while streaming giants have allowed us to gorge on bottomless television like a Soho Chinese buffet, they have also served a death blow to British small talk. They've sucked the life out of the office tea-break and butchered the drunken pub debate. No one is able to discuss what they're watching, because no one is watching it at the same time. Instead, we're just running around with our hands over our ears squealing: "Don't spoil it!!!"


Eschewing (mostly terrible) prime time TV for Netflix or Amazon Prime, viewers can micromanagage the pace at which they consume; dosing it out depending on their mood. Stressed? One episode. Sad? Three episodes. Hungover? The whole damn series. Sometimes, you have to do it secretly, having promised a signifcant other you would "wait to watch the next one!" Snaking your partner with a Netflix episode has eclipsed choosing where to eat as the biggest contretemps among couples. There's even a meme for it: a cake iced with the words: "I'm sorry I watched it without you."


A month later and we've been thrown another BBC bone: Bodyguard, a thriller from Jed Mercurio (Line Of Duty) starring Richard Madden and Keeley Hawes, which has pulled in more viewers than any television drama in the last decade. Charting the volatile relationship between the Home Secretary (Hawes) and her bodyguard (Madden) this six-parter is dramatic, sexy, and ridiculous enough to be fun, while not as stupid as to be shameful. (This isn't Doctor Foster.)


And, since May, I've noticed my social life change for the better. My flatmates and I have spent more time together in the last three months than the entirety of 2017. My boyfriend and I have stopped arguing about betraying each other with Sky Atlantic's Succession and this fresh conversational juice has even stopped my mother asking me what I ate for lunch. The pub is now a Brexit-free zone.

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