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cryptofo
17.06.2021 4:54:16

Please go to the DVD Netflix home page by clicking the button below. [links]


TigerWolf
30.04.2021 22:13:47

The requested page does not exist. We will try to automatically redirect you to our home page in 10 seconds. here


komoto
10.06.2021 13:06:43

Since 1998, DVD Netflix has been the premier DVD-by-mail rental service. Make your movie list and get Blu-rays and DVDs conveniently delivered to you with free shipping both ways. Most of our subscribers receive their discs within two business days. Start your free trial today.


diggler
11.05.2021 22:44:55

here


muftimoh
24.05.2021 2:22:09


Astro
10.06.2021 17:49:33


mnem0sys
19.06.2021 6:08:42

I too have been watching more nature documentaries to relieve stress and take my mind off the pandemic. It’s true that it can be depressing to see what people have done to wildlife, but these docs nonetheless remind me of the beauty of nature, a cause worth fighting for that’s larger than humanity.


scepticus
02.06.2021 5:56:59

The filmmakers originally intended to document the ongoing conservation successes and help promote tourism to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. But violent conflict erupted just weeks after they started filming, and the filmmakers quickly shifted focus to document the dangers and struggles behind the scenes. here


bombus
20.06.2021 12:29:24

“Treeline” rocked me to the core! There are others who are connected to and love trees as much as I. Thank-you so much🌲💕🌎


kseistrup
30.04.2021 3:24:48

And if we missed anything, write in with your favorites in the comments.


julia6roberts
09.05.2021 0:59:09

Most people consider ivory poachers lone villagers who take desperate actions to feed their families. But the truth is that poaching is orchestrated by complex and sophisticated international organized crime rings on the scale of the drug trade. These crime syndicates murder one elephant every 15 minutes and threaten thousands of people with violence.


qsharleenmcbrideb
23.06.2021 16:43:56

Into the Grand Canyon. Disney+ Nat Geo.


kavindave26
31.05.2021 21:37:00

Nestled into the widest of the Copper Canyon ravines are two spectacular waterfalls only a few miles apart. Cascada Piedra Bolada (round stone waterfall) is the tallest of the two, with water plunging 1,500 ft (457 m) down the rocky cliff and into a rounded out rock formation, for which it has been given its name. Piedra Bolada is best viewed from a distance, as it doesn’t offer much hiking around the actual falls. It also dries up shortly after the rainy season so it’s best to see these falls between June and October. here


hanalin
23.04.2021 13:24:25

The Copper Canyon is actually a series of 6 canyons, which cut through the Sierra Madre Occidental in northwestern Mexico. The impressive gorges were carved out of the volcanic mountains by rivers. Today, these rivers join together to form the Río Fuerte and eventually empty into the Gulf of California.


The Eternal Coin
10.05.2021 9:58:14

In the mid-1800s, a man named Albert K. Owen envisioned a railway that would connect the American Midwest to the Pacific coast in North Western Mexico. He had hoped to speed up transit time and ultimately have better access to the Asian Pacific markets.


nina08
23.06.2021 2:29:04

Although autumn and spring are great times to visit, the winter months can be very picturesque as well. In December, January and February, towns such as Divisadero sometimes get snow. Travel only a few hours further along the tracks and it can be 85°F (30°C) in El Fuerte.


jumolock1976
07.06.2021 3:09:14

The highest point in the Copper Canyon is 8,300 ft (2,540 m), while the lowest point is 1,800 ft (550 m). The drastic variation in altitude means drastic changes in climate. In the town of Divisadero, one of the highest points in the Copper Canyon, winters can be 32°F (0°C) overnight and it will sometimes even snow. Meanwhile, at the bottom of the Urique Canyon, the deepest of the canyons, the daytime winter temperatures hover around 75°F (25°C). [links]


williams9gross
21.05.2021 6:22:08

To Dylan and writer-director Andrew Slater, it was also where some of the ’60s greatest musicians crossed paths and pushed each other to ever greater creative heights. David Crosby – who called the area home during tenures with The Byrds and Crosy, Stills & Nash – explains how unlike New York, where musicians hung out at clubs, people in Laurel Canyon arrived at each other’s houses with an acoustic guitar in one hand, a bag of pot in the other, and passed the time playing music for the birds and bees and various hangers on in assorted states of undress. more


Stickboy
19.05.2021 15:24:10

Not exactly a music documentary, not really a concert film, but with elements of both and a soundtrack album tie-in to boot, Echo In The Canyon most closely resembles Dave Grohl’s Sound City, by focusing on a particular time and place and the music that it produced. Nestled up in the Hollywood Hills north of Los Angeles, the winding country roads of Laurel Canyon have been home to generations of artists attracted to its bucolic lifestyle and easy access to the city below. more


judy10perez
10.06.2021 22:17:22

While Echo In The Canyon was probably made with the best of intentions, it ultimately fails to satisfy or do justice to its source material. It’s at once too scattered, unable to decide if its a documentary or a tribute special, and too focused on too short a period in an area with a rich musical history which spans decades. My lasting takeaway from the film, however, was how much I miss Tom Petty, who tragically died in 2017. Petty explains better than anyone else the importance of the music and how he was drawn to California by its “big dreamers” who believed “it might be possible to do something that’s not ordinary.” [links]


davidsoul434
02.05.2021 5:02:56

In this post-modern musical landscape, casual listeners can access the combined knowledge of several basements full of foul-smelling, socially awkward record nerds with but a single blog post or Apple Music playlist. In this milieu, the term “Laurel Canyon” conjures any number of “California Sounds,” from breezy yet adventurous ’60s pop to corduroy-wearing post-hippie singer songwriters. The former is the subject of Echo In The Canyon, the all-star album-concert-film project helmed by Jakob Dylan of ’90s MOR rockers the Wallflowers. The film version is currently streaming on Netflix and features a collection of Gen X musicians paying homage to the music of their Baby Boomer forefathers with mixed results.