In September, Bell confirmed that its Crave service will stream the series in Canada on day one.
Based on the PlayStation video game series of the same name, The Last of Us follows a hardened survivor named Joel as he must escort a young girl, Ellie, across a post-apocalyptic America. Notably, the TV show was filmed in Calgary and is believed to be the largest television production in Canadian history.
Pedro Pascal (The Mandalorian) and Bella Ramsey (Game of Thrones) star as Joel and Ellie, respectively, while original stars Troy Baker and Ashley Johnson will play yet-to-be-revealed new characters. Neil Druckmann, the co-writer and director of Naughty Dog’s The Last of Us games, has also teamed up with Chernobyl‘s Craig Mazin to adapt the series.
Similar to Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon‘s season finale has leaked ahead of its release and can easily be found on the darker corners of the Internet.
In a statement sent to multiple publications, including Variety, HBO says it’s “disappointed that this unlawful action has disrupted the viewing experience for loyal fans of the show.” The network states that it’s “aggressively monitoring and pulling these copies from the internet” and that HBO and HBO Max subscribers will stream a “pristine version” of the finally available “exclusively in 4K’ on Sunday.
Of course, this means that fans of the show should be wary of spoilers appearing on social media, though George R. R. Martin’s Fire and Blood book follows House of the Dragon‘s first season pretty closely already. This means if you really wanted to see how the first season ends, that information is just a quick Google search away.
House of the Dragon‘s final episode is set to air this coming Sunday, October 23rd at 9pm ET/6pm PT on Crave. Crave subscriptions start at $9.99/month for a Mobile plan, which includes access to HBO content. A $19.99/month Crave Total subscription is required to stream content on other supported devices, like Android, iOS, Apple TV, PlayStation, etc.
Tweets from several Twitter users highlight experiencing various issues tied to the streaming service not launching or the episode not playing:
Hey @CraveCanada get it together!!! Everyone is tweeting you, and you’re too scared to say a damn word because you know you messed up on the most important night of the year. #Crave#CraveCanada#HouseoftheDragon
@CraveCanada is actually trash. Why do shows keep working with this streaming service??#HouseofthedragonHBO has been hyped up for months. The day finally comes, and Crave is entirely unusable. Unreal.#Crave#GameOfThrones#HBO
For what it’s worth, House of Dragon seems to be playing on Crave’s iOS and Apple TV app (I’m currently watching the episode while writing this story). House of Dragon is set two hundred years before Game of Thrones and follows the beginning of the end of House Targaryen.
Have you been able to get House of Dragon to stream through Crave? Let us know in the comments below.
More than three years after Game of Thrones ended, HBO is officially set to release its second series in the world of Westeros, House of the Dragon, on August 21st.
Set two hundred years before Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon follows the beginning of the end of House Targaryen and the events leading up to the deadly Dance of the Dragons. The series was co-created by George R. R. Martin, the writer of the A Song of Ice and Fire books upon which Game of Thrones (with Colony‘s Ryan J. Condal) is based and stars Paddy Considine, Matt Smith, Olivia Cooke, Emma D’Arcy, Steve Toussaint, Eve Best, Fabien Frankel, Sonoya Mizuno and Rhys Ifans.
Canadians looking to check out the prequel series can do so through Bell’s Crave streaming service, the Canadian home of Game of Thrones. The first episode will premiere on Crave on August 21st at 6pm PT/9pm ET, with new episodes dropping every Sunday at 9pm ET. The series’ first season will run for 10 episodes.
It’s worth noting that as part of its big marketing campaign for House of the Dragon, Bell is running a Crave promotion. From August 17th until September 6th, new, reactivating and upgrading Crave subscribers can get an annual Crave Total subscription for $149.90 CAD plus tax, $50 off the regular price. For context, a monthly Crave Total membership costs $19.99/month.
HBO introduced House of the Dragon its new series as the most dysfunctional family ever. Dysfunctional dragons!
It was HBO ‘s Casey Bloys who confirmed that the Targaryens, the family of the upcoming new series, was probably the most dysfunctional on the network so far, downgrading the Roy family in “Succession.”
At the Los Angeles premiere, Bloys had this to say:
“We’ve had the Sopranos, we’ve had the Fishers (“Six Feet Under), we’ve got the Roys, and then now you’ll see tonight and over the next few weeks… The Targaryens, who may be the most dysfunctional family we’ve ever had on HBO, not to mention that they have 17 dragons at their disposal.”
Bottom line, House of the Dragon takes place approximately 200 years before the events of Game of Thrones and follows the succession wars of House Targaryen.
House of the Dragon will hit theaters on August 21.
A $19.99/month Crave Total subscription is required to stream this content on Crave’s supported devices, like Android, iOS, Apple TV, PlayStation, etc.
Below is all the content coming to Crave in June 2022:
Crave is celebrating Pride this month with collections including Coming of Age, Stand-Up Comedy, Drag, Reality TV and movies from the LGBTQ2S+ communities.
June 3rd
Mass — HBO + Movies
Sherlock Holmes and the Great Escape — HBO + Movies / Starz
P-Valley: Season 2, Episode 1 — Starz
Hail, Ceasar! — Starz
The Motorcycle Diaries — Starz
Boys On The Side — Starz
Empire Records — Starz
Copycat — Starz
Smoke Signals — Starz
June 6th
Irma Vep: Episode 1 @9pm ET — HBO + Movies
June 8th
The Janes *Documentary* — HBO + Movies
June 9th
Jane By Charlotte — HBO + Movies
June 10th
2 Fast 2 Furious — HBO + Movies
Candyman (2021) — HBO + Movies
Candyman (1992) — HBO + Movies
Curious George: Cape Ahoy — HBO + Movies
The Fast and the Furious — HBO + Movies
The Night House — HBO + Movies
Fast & Furious — HBO + Movies
Fast Five — HBO + Movies
Fast & Furious 6 — HBO + Movies
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift — HBO + Movies
Celebrity Ex on the Beach: Season 1 and 2
Temptation Island: Season 4 + Reunion Special
June 11th
Supernatural Academy: Season 1
Eloise: The Animated Series: Season 1
June 12th
Becoming Elizabeth: Season 1, Episode 1 — Starz
June 16th
Father of the Bride — HBO + Movies
June 17th
Brokeback Mountain — HBO + Movies
The Last Duel — HBO + Movies
Red Rocket — HBO + Movies
Wildhood *Canadian Title* — HBO + Movies
Ex on the Beach: Season 5
Fantastic Friends: Season 1
The Guild Garage: Seasons 3-6
June 19th
Flatbush Misdemeanors: Season 2, Episode 1
June 20th
Mind over Murder: Episode 1 @10pm ET
June 22
Endangered @9pm ET
June 24th
Vegheads: Season 1
Last of the Giants: Season 1
The Deanne Smith Experience *Crave Original
Sommersby — Starz
Tigerland — Starz
First Cow — Starz
Drive My Car — HBO + Movies
Sing 2 — HBO + Movies
The French Dispatch — HBO + Movies
The Chi: Season 5, Episode 1 — HBO + Movies
We Hunt Together — HBO + Movies
June 26th
Westworld: Season 4 — HBO + Movies
Last Chance Programing
Radioactive (June 11th)
Wish Upon A Unicorn (June 14th)
I Am Sam Kinison (June 18th)
Target Number One (June 25th)
50/50 (June 30th)
The Amazing Race Canada: Season 5 (June 30th)
American History X (June 30th)
Big Fat Liar (June 30th)
Carmine Street Guitars (June 30th)
Champs (June 30th)
The Cobbler (June 30th)
Cold Mountain (June 30th)
Conan The Barbarian (2011) (June 30th)
Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood (June 30th)
Tech-related dramas are a genre that doesn’t usually get a lot of attention, but over the past year, that’s changed. With Showtime’s Super Pumped, The Dropout on Netflix and WeWorked and Mythic Quest on Apple TV+, it’s never been a better time to be a nerd watching TV.
You could argue that Silicon Valley‘s run coinciding with Halt and Catch Fire and Mr. Robot in 2015-2018 was a better era, but those TV shows are complete fiction, and I’m currently living for workplace tech shows based on the real world that have dropped recently.
Obviously, as a MobileSyrup reporter/creator, I’m contractually obligated to watch Silicon Valley every two years, so that’s what kicked off my recent tech TV binge, but after delving into The Dropout and Super Pumped, I’m really excited for more.
The Dropout
The Dropout is a Hulu original series in the U.S, but in Canada, it’s available on Disney+ through its Star section. The show is eight episodes long and seems to have had a high-enough budget that I’d go so far as to describe it as prestige television. It’s based on the life of Elizabeth Holmes (Amanda Seyfried) as she drops out of Stanford to start Theranos, a blood-testing tech startup that turned out to be a complete fraud. I won’t spoil too much of the show, but in real-life, Holmes rose to prominence with the promise of upending the blood-testing industry with modern tech but failed to deliver in spectacular fashion.
The show illustrates a lot of what happened behind the scenes, including Holmes’s love life, family and the turmoils the whistleblowers at Theranos went through. MobileSryup‘s favourite actor William H. Macy even appears in a recurring role.
Super Pumped
After The Dropout, I moved over to Bell’s Crave streaming service to watch Super Pumped. This was partly to continue my tech TV binge, but also because my girlfriend and I adore Joseph Gordon-Levitt. This show is focused on the early days of Uber and its co-founder and then-CEO, Travis Kalanick.
The TV show jumps through time to outline Uber’s beginnings, its battle with Lyft and the Apple App Store, the infamous “Boober” comments, and the culture of toxic masculinity at the company. I found this TV show to be better than The Dropout because it’s slightly more dynamic and creative. Plus, Gordon-Levitt’s star power is magnetic.
That’s also where my only issue with the show stems from. I find Gordon-Levitt’s portrayal of Kalanick to be more likable than it should be, given everything we know about Uber’s former CEO. In my mind, Kalanick is more of a frat bro, but Gordon-Levitt’s take on the CEO is balanced and at times, oddly lovable, especially when you see the pain in his eyes as even his mom starts to turn on him.
With all of this in mind, Super Pumped is still highly entertaining, and Kyle Chandler’s performance as Bill Gurley is great. The TV show has been renewed for a second season.
WeCrashed
Next on my list is WeCrashed on Apple TV+ starring Anne Hathaway and Jared Leto. The last thing I saw Leto in was the House of Gucci where I’d argue he played a high-fashion Super Mario, so I can’t say I’m really looking forward to his performance. But I need to subscribe to Apple TV+ to catch Severance, anyway, so I guess I might as well check out WeCrashed while I’m at it.
On a personal level, the drama at WeWork is something I know very little about, so I’ll be going into this show blind. This is refreshing compared to the other tech-focused TV shows I mentioned in this story since I followed the real-world news they’re based on as it unfolded in real life.
With that in mind, the trailer looks very hype, and Anne Hathaway is an on-screen force.
Beyond that, HBO is working on a show called Doomsday Machine that focuses on Facebook and its COO Sheryl Sandberg during the rise of online disinformation ahead of the 2016 U.S. election.
HBO Max and Discovery+ are combining into one streaming service due to Discovery’s merger with AT&T’s WarnerMedia.
Gunnar Wiedenfels, the CFO at Discovery, will continue to be the CFO once the merger is completed and believes that the merger of platforms will happen in the following “several months.”
Until the combination, Wiedenfels says that the company is looking for “technological harmonization,” such as a sign-on for both services and publishing content across both apps.
Now, the critical question is how this applies to us in Canada.
We don’t have HBO Max in the North, and all of our HBO content is on Bell Media’s Crave. However, Discovery+ is also available in Canada. So, it’s unclear if the HBO content will get pulled off Crave or if Discovery+ will start getting tons of HBO content. Additionally, we’re not sure if some version of the combined service will be available in Canada.
We’ve reached out to Discovery+ and Crave to see if they can provide any insight.
Discovery+ in Canada costs $4.99, and Crave Total with HBO costs $19.99.
It’d be too easy to introduce this with some reflection on how 2021 was a COVID-ridden mess, but really, we all know that. What more needs to be said on the matter? Instead, I’d rather look back on some of my “favourite things” of the year.
Of course, with much of the year still spent at home, many of my fondest 2021 memories come from the art I consumed, as well as the rare times I got to properly get out of the house. With that in mind, and in keeping with MobileSyrup tradition, here are my five favourite things, broken down by medium. As I’ve done in previous years, I’ll list four honourable mentions per category to round out my top five for each.
*Warning: Full spoilers for Spider-Man: No Way Home in the second category*
Favourite game: The Forgotten City
Image credit: Modern Storyteller/Dear Villagers
I made a point of playing as many new games as I could this year, and my final count puts me at just under 50. And yet, the one that I can’t stop thinking about is developer Modern Storyteller’s debut title, The Forgotten City. Impressively, the story of how the game got made — an Australian lawyer quitting his job to spend five years turning his Skyrim mod into a full-length experience — is worthy of significant praise in and of itself.
Of course, it also helps that The Forgotten City is just immaculately made. After creating your character, Modern Storyteller soon has you travelling 2,000 years into the past to discover what happened to a ruined Roman city. As it so happens, the city is being protected by the gods through something called The Golden Rule, which states that “the many shall suffer for the sins of the one.” The idea, as it were, is that this creates a blissful “utopia” for all of the city’s inhabitants. This also means that you have to be careful to not anger the gods through sinful action — either of your own doing or by provoking the mysterious people you speak to — as you carry out your investigation.
Image credit: Modern Storyteller/Dear Villagers
It’s a brilliant premise that works on multiple levels. Firstly, The Forgotten City is perhaps the best use of the “time loop” gimmick in a game to date. Should The Golden Rule be broken, you can zip back to a portal that resets the day while allowing you to retain any knowledge or items that you’ve gained on that loop. What’s more, you’ll be able to send the good-hearted Galerius off to complete quests you’ve already learned the solution to in previous loops, thus avoiding any tiresome repetition. Through these mechanics, The Forgotten City weaves a deeply engrossing and well-written yarn filled with all sorts of compelling characters.
But beyond that, the narrative offers a fascinating exploration of morality. That’s because The Forgotten City smartly acknowledges that what constitutes a “sin” is never fully defined by the city’s flimsy government. While murder, assault and theft are all clearly prohibited, there are so many loopholes that malicious people can exploit, like a merchant charging way too much for a deathly ill woman’s life-saving medicine, or a wealthy man blackmailing lower-class lovers to be his de facto slaves. The “system” — in this case, The Golden Rule — clearly favours the rich, who are all too keen to keep it that way. Through this, you begin to see Modern Storyteller’s smart commentary about, as its name suggests, our own society. All around, The Forgotten City is an outstanding achievement, and a must-play experience.
The Forgotten City is now available on Xbox consoles (including Game Pass), PlayStation 4/5, Nintendo Switch (via the cloud) and PC.
Favourite movie: Spider-Man: No Way Home (and the Appreciation of One Andrew Garfield)
Image credit: Marvel Studios/Sony Pictures
In 2019, a few people hilariously got mad because I listed Avengers: Endgame as my favourite movie of the year. Never mind that I watched 80-plus other movies (including all nine Best Picture nominees), how I stressed that it was by no means the best that I saw, or, hell, why should anyone care one way or the other? Well, with the same caveats and justifications (plus some good ol’ fashioned spite), I’m now saying that Spider-Man: No Way Home is my favourite movie of 2021.
In many ways, it’s a story about second chances — not only for the villains and heroes of previous Spider-Man films, but for Charlie Cox’s Matt Murdock (of Netflix’s masterful cancelled Daredevil series) and, especially, Tom Holland’s own Web-Head. Admittedly, I was way too high on the MCU’s decidedly Iron Man-heavy version of the character in previous movies, so I appreciate that NWH finally delivers real, emotional stakes while bringing the character to a less Avengers-dependent, more comics accurate status quo. Truthfully, I could be here all day writing about how much it’s a love letter to the character who’s meant the most to me since I was five.
But my absolute favourite part of NWH is how it handles Andrew Garfield’s Spider-Man, who’s been my favourite actor to play the character since he debuted in 2012’s The Amazing Spider-Man. At the time, I had just finished high school but was doing a gap year to figure things out. Seeing nearly everyone I know drift apart as they went off to university while I struggled with my post-secondary path and extreme introversion made me feel more alone than ever. Around the same time, I stopped talking to my father and most of his side of the family, which certainly didn’t help, while an international exchange program completely fell through.
That’s where Garfield’s Peter came in. Sure, Spidey’s always been the most relatable superhero, but the way Garfield’s Peter was specifically portrayed as this awkward loner yearning for his lost father gave me a web-slinger who I could connect to more profoundly than ever before. I certainly have many issues with the TASM duology, especially how Peter was “genetically destined” to be Spider-Man, but Garfield’s soulful performance nonetheless just hits me. I was in a darker place than I was used to, which made Garfield’s Peter — so earnest, passionate, resilient and wonderful despite his suffering — really inspirational. Imagine, then, how disappointed I was that the deeply flawed The Amazing Spider-Man 2 would be his swan song. Seeing this broke my heart — not to mention Garfield’s, given his lifelong passion for the character.
All of that is important context for why I absolutely ugly cried seeing Garfield’s Peter first appear in the movie — after all of his amusing lies, bless his heart. Sure, I also loved seeing Maguire’s Spidey again, but my personal bond to the second cinematic wallcrawler gave his appearance a real gut punch. And it wasn’t just that I was seeing an old friend on screen again — I was seeing him, in some ways, better than ever. Removed from the clunky universe building, frequently awkward writing and corporate meddling, the strengths of Garfield’s Peter — that somewhat quirky and self-deprecating personality mixed with deep emotional sincerity and animated physicality — really got to shine.
I love that Emma Stone’s Gwen was still a meaningful part of his story; while her death has made him both rageful and neglectful of his civilian life, that pain is also something he desperately doesn’t want Holland’s Peter to have to go through following the murder of his Aunt May. I love that he’s clearly been so lonely and full of self-loathing that just a little bit of love and encouragement from his fellow Spider-Men, particularly Maguire’s, proves genuinely therapeutic for him. And I love how the moment Zendaya’s MJ begins to fall, Garfield’s Peter immediately springs to action and saves her, preventing another Gwen-like tragedy — the kind he’s undoubtedly tortured himself by playing it out incessantly ever since — and becoming relieved to the point of tears. In what’s really just a third-act supporting role, Garfield artfully manages to stealthe entire damn show. There’s a reason people are now clamouring for Garfield to get another solo movie. While I, too, would kill to see that happen, I’m overjoyed to have at least gotten this little bit of closure.
At first glance, Brad Inglesby’s Mare of Easttown might seem like another police drama, but it’s so much more than that. In fact, it’s a near-perfect mixture of so many things that I adore: a powerhouse lead performance, an engaging twisty-turny murder mystery and a poignant family drama.
Even if some late plot developments can feel a little hokey, Kate Winslet’s magnificent turn as the gruff detective Mare Sheehan completely sells them. That would have been enough to keep me intrigued, but it helps that the character is layered — a mother who has largely shut out her friends and family in a futile attempt to avoid processing her grief over her son’s suicide. The supporting cast proves just as strong, be it Mare’s funny-yet-tragic mother Helen (Jean Smart), her sweetly supportive friend Lori (a particularly excellent Julianne Nicholson) and charming detective partner Colin (Evan Peters). Practically everyone in the series’ remarkably well-realized Philadelphia town harbours their own secrets, and it’s through them that we get weighty explorations of themes of grief, addiction, infidelity, abuse and motherhood. It’s a consistently gloomy show, but it sure makes for some affecting drama.
I’ve always found screenwriting to be so intriguing, but it’s taken me until the pandemic to actually seek out some podcasts about the process of actually penning a screenplay. My favourite so far is Al Horner’s Script Apart, in which the British journalist interviews the screenwriters of many prominent movies, like Moonlight (Barry Jenkins), Steven E. de Souza (Die Hard) and Aaron Sorkin (The Trial of the Chicago 7). No doubt owing to his prolific journalistic career, Horner has an eminently likable interviewing style that feels both laidback and insightful.
Some standout Script Apart episodes for me this year include James Gunn (The Suicide Squad), Edgar Wright and Krysty Wilson-Cairns (Last Night in Soho), Bob Gale (Back to the Future) and, as a special treat for gamers like me, Neil Druckmann and Halley Gross (The Last of Us Part II). But my favourite was easily Meg LeFauve on Inside Out — not only one of my top Pixar movies, but most beloved movies in general. Hearing from LeFauve about how collaborative the other Pixar creators were and the way the story evolved from a simple “young girl tries to choose potato chip flavours” premise to “young girl processes her sadness over moving and growing up” was especially impactful. Whether you’re a cinephile or a casual moviegoer, this is definitely worth a listen.
There isn’t really a strict category to lump this all into, so I’ll just use this space to briefly reflect on some of the miscellaneous things I’m thankful for this year.
In February, I got LASIK eye surgery done, and it’s been wild to not have to wear glasses for the first time since I was six.
And during the summer, some friends and I went to Vancouver and Victoria, which was my first prolonged time in B.C., not counting a brief (but wickedly cool) Gears 5-related work trip in 2019. I’ve never been outdoorsy, but being able to hike through parks, ascend mountains or even just relaxing on the ferry was so refreshing after everything.
Throughout all of this, I also just took the time to appreciate how fortunate I am. From the opportunities I’ve had, both personally and professionally, to the real friends and family who’ve stayed close during everything, I try not to take anything for granted.
Honourable mentions: Not really applicable here, so I’ll just shout out to anyone who’s read my work this year. Thanks to everyone for your support! It really means a lot.
Lena Dunham and network HBO have reportedly agreed an end date for the program – which will see its fifth season premiere next month – insiders have confirmed to E! News.
However, the news shouldn’t come as too much of a shock as the 29-year-old writer-and-actress has repeatedly stated she doesn’t want the program to go on for longer than six series.
Speaking last September, she explained: ”Never say never, but that is the way we’re thinking about it right now and we’re starting to think about sort of how to wrap up the storylines of these particular young women.
”It’s really exciting. I started working on this show when I was 23, and I’m going to be 30 so it kind of feels right that this show kind of sandwiched my 20s and then I go off into the world.”
And co-creator Jenni Konner previously admitted they are readying to ”build towards an end” as they don’t want to run the show ”into the ground”.
She said: ”I would say season five — I’m hoping, will really inform how much further we want to go.
”Once we figure out what season five is, we’ll know whether it’s another year. Maybe it’s just one more year, maybe we wrap it up in six. It all depends.
”But also we’re not in the business of running it into the ground. We would like to end in a graceful place. And we’d like to tell a complete story. What that means is that we really have to start building towards an end soon, creatively.”
Season five of the series – which also stars Allison Williams, Zosia Mamet and Jemima Kirke alongside Lena – picks up following the six-month time jump in the season four finale and returns to screens in the US on February 21.