365 days

  1. 7 Movies Like '365 Days'
  2. 365 Days (2020)
  3. 365 Days: This Day review: Netflix’s Eurotrash sex series goes soft
  4. 365 Days
  5. Easy for NCAA to stand behind LGBTQ athletes when everyone else is


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7 Movies Like '365 Days'

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365 Days (2020)

Massimo is a member of the Sicilian Mafia family and Laura is a sales director. She does not expect that on a trip to Sicily trying to save her relationship, Massimo will kidnap her and give... Massimo is a member of the Sicilian Mafia family and Laura is a sales director. She does not expect that on a trip to Sicily trying to save her relationship, Massimo will kidnap her and give her 365 days to fall in love with him. Massimo is a member of the Sicilian Mafia family and Laura is a sales director. She does not expect that on a trip to Sicily trying to save her relationship, Massimo will kidnap her and give her 365 days to fall in love with him.

365 Days: This Day review: Netflix’s Eurotrash sex series goes soft

In June 2020, as a hot-and-bothered world fretted through a lockdown summer, Netflix slipped a Polish-Italian erotic drama called 365 Days into its algorithm. A softcore fantasy of yacht sex, thick accents, and troubling consent issues, it came across as a low-rent Fifty Shades of Grey: flashier, trashier, simultaneously tamer and more offensive, and much more inept and cheesy. An unequivocally terrible film, it was also an enormous hit. It went straight to No. 1 in Netflix’s top 10 chart and stayed there for 10 days, still one of the longest runs the service has seen. Now we have a sequel, 365 Days: This Day, which features more sex (or at least more participants), more brooding, more expensive cars and clothes, more unintentional comedy, even less plot, and the Based on the first of a trilogy of erotic novels by Polish author Blanka Lipińska, 365 Days follows a young woman, Laura (Anna-Maria Sieklucka), from Warsaw to Sicily, where she’s spotted and promptly kidnapped by Massimo (Michele Morrone), a glowering, chiseled, obscenely rich Mafia scion. It turns out Massimo has been obsessed with Laura since he observed her on a beach, through binoculars, the day his father was assassinated and he himself almost died. (The film doesn’t take time to explore why a bullet passing through his father’s body and into his own would carry such a lingering erotic charge for Massimo, but wow.) Image: Netflix Massimo says he will keep Laura captive for 365 days, enough time for her to fa...

365 Days

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Easy for NCAA to stand behind LGBTQ athletes when everyone else is

Just the FAQs, USA TODAY One tweet celebrating the beginning of The NCAA didn’t display any great moral courage last week when it chimed in alongside pretty much every other corporate entity in support of the LGBTQ community. If anything, There has been a And what has the NCAA done in response? Other than post that tweet on June 1? Nothing. Not one thing to protect its athletes who are affected by these laws. It hasn’t publicly opposed any of the legislation or threatened to pull its high-profile events from states targeting the LGBTQ community. It’s gone along as if it’s business as usual, as if some of its athletes aren’t under the very real threat of harm because politicians view them as an easy way to score political points. “This seems to be a trend with the NCAA. They tend to make statements – and I think they are aiming to be inclusive – but they are not addressing the very real harms being done to the LGBTQ community and, particularly, NCAA athletes,” Anna Baeth, the director of research for Athlete Ally, told USA TODAY Sports. “I don’t think I would go as far as to call it performative allyship,” Baeth said, “but it’s not far off.” Making this all the more disappointing is that it wasn’t long ago the And when Indiana passed a law in 2015 that sanctioned discrimination against LGBTQ people under the guise of “religious freedom,” then-NCAA president Mark Emmert wasted no time condemning it and suggesting the organization could move its headquarters and its champions...