(Left to right) Jesse Plemons, Jessie Buckley, Toni Collette and David Thewlis in the movie I Just Want To End This.

-

Mary Cybulski / NETFLIX

There is not only the direct in life, there is also the replay.

From YouTube to Netflix, including replays of television channels and podcasts of radio stations,

20 Minutes

 concocts for you every Sunday a list of things to see, or review, listen or listen to again.

Feedback on the contents of the week from August 30 to September 6, 2020

The Weird, Cerebral "I Just Want To End This" on Netflix

A couple goes, one winter evening, to the parents of the young man to formalize the relationship.

So begins

I Just Wanna End This

, uploaded to Netflix on Friday.

The plot, at the starting point a priori banal, quickly takes the direction of strangeness.

It is not really a surprise if one is familiar with the work of screenwriter (

In the skin of John Malkovitch

,

Eternal Sunshine of The Spotless Mind

…) and director (

Synecdoche New York

,

Anomalisa

) by Charlie Kaufman who is directing his third feature film here.

The result, far from being consensual, will challenge those who swear by action, but the others, who have accepted to be led astray in this sensitive and cerebral film, will no doubt give in to the emotion that procures.



The “Dispatches From Elsewhere” treasure hunt on Amazon


Discreetly posted on Amazon this summer,

Dispatches From Elsewhere

deserves to be talked about more.

Created by Jason Segel - Marshall in

How I Met Your Mother

- who also plays one of the main roles alongside Sally Field, this series is at the crossroads of the

Fabulous destiny of Amélie Poulain

and

The OA

.

Or the story of a sort of treasure hunt in the streets of Philadelphia, sprinkled with mystery and metaphysics.

Then again, the ten episodes have it all, but it's definitely one of the most original series you'll see this year.

Mike Horn's Big Scare

“It's safer to see ice cubes in your gin and tonic, than it is to see ice cubes falling on your face in the Arctic.

This philosophical remark is signed by Mike Horn who posted the video of a climbing session that went wrong on YouTube on Friday.

The explorer had undertaken, with his sidekick Fred Roux, to climb on an iceberg, but the latter turned and made them fall.

More fear than harm, when things could have ended much more tragically.

“Fortunately, when the iceberg turned, it formed a wave,” which took the two adventurers and saved them, explains Mike Horn.

If he posted the footage, he thought to himself, to warn those who might be tempted to imitate him: “This video is a lesson in what not to do in the Arctic rather than an incentive to do the same: it's bullshit.

When you want to live long, you don't have to be bullshit.

»Message received, we stay on our sofa.

The complete "The Killing" on Arte.tv

This summer, Arte rebroadcast all three seasons of

The Killing

.

This Danish series launched in 2007 is unmissable for anyone who is a fan of thrillers: it is a classic of the genre, moreover, it was entitled to an American remake.

If you don't know her, run over to watch Sarah Lund investigate the icy streets of Copenhagen.

All the episodes are available on arte.tv.

October

, the first detective novel by Søren Sveistrup, the creator of

The Killing

, has just been released.

The characters are different from those of the series, but, over the pages, you will find the special atmosphere of fiction.

Series

Why "Hartley's Heart to the Heart" has nothing to envy today's teen dramas

Series

"Grand Hôtel", the recipe for a 2020 saga

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