Frankly, we could have easily chosen 50 more. ’30s musicals and screwball comedies, ’40s noirs, ’50s costume dramas, ’60s and ’70s auteur showcases and international arthouse groundbreakers - they’re all a click away. There’s a ton to choose from, but we’ve singled out 50 classic films for subscribers to start with. The opportunity to have access to all of this in one place, for one price, however? You have our attention, HBO Max. Viewers who regularly peruse TCM schedules and have a Criterion Channel account and set their DVRs whenever a ’70s New Hollywood nugget shows up, you already know where to find stuff. ![]() Having culled titles from the TCM library, the Criterion Collection, the vast Warners Archive and a few other third parties, subscribers will have access to a treasure trove of old films to feast on. ![]() It’s a lot of bang for your buck, and a major push from WarnerMedia to enter the streaming space, if not try to dominate it.īut for those folks who may not feel the need to drop cash in order to binge-watch all of The Big Bang Theory on a whim, there’s an extra incentive to signing up for this corporate behemoth of a service. ![]() Universe movies, the James Bond films, etc.). Should you be one of the many who’ve signed up for HBO Max, you’ll have access to a deep bench of popular TV dramas and sitcoms, plenty of HBO’s greatest hits ( Game of Thrones, The Sopranos), some oonly-available-here original programming, the bulk of Studio Ghibli’s animated work, and a good deal of blockbusters (the D.C.
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