

Per the company's announcement: "For only $4.99 per month you get access to the entire Kino Cult catalog completely ad-free!" The service has been reliably adding titles of interest each month, so if their combination of new and retro cult action, horror, comedy and sci-fi appeals - but you don't like any ads at all - the option to dig into your budget a bit more is available. Now Kino Cult offers the option to remove ads from its service. It could be an especially good option for those of us with refined tastes but limited budgets." "I haven't been able to dig too deep into the catalog yet, but I love that film descriptions pop up when clicking over the title/cover art, and I like the selection that is available.
#Midnight pulp movie#
Speaking of temptations, I wrote about Kino Cult, a newly-launched streaming service, back in October, where I noted: "Though watching a movie with metronomic ad breaks can be an irritation at best - unless you happen to need the products advertised, he wrote with a glance at his own site's ads - it's necessary to pay for the service. I hate demons, inner or otherwise! Still, the teaser looks mighty good, and I might just be feeding my addiction more fuel today. This streak of quality appears to continue in Crime, created by Irvine Welsh ( Trainspotting), which follows a troubled police inspector (Dougray Scott) who is tasked with investigating the disappearance of a local girl "while he battles inner demons."
#Midnight pulp tv#
To be frank, I've avoided British mysteries for years out of a personal fear that I will become addicted and want to watch nothing else - just like I feel about anime and Netflix - and now it's happening!Įarlier this year, I became addicted to Line of Duty, a superb crime series, thus compelling myself to become a subscriber to BritBox, where I discovered many other British TV shows I'd always wanted to watch but never found the time or the access, and now - lo and behold - I've realized that the service has been debuting a bunch of new series, including (recently) the piercing The Long Call, the haunting Reyka, the enthralling Shetland, and the gripping The Tower.
