Prime Video and Amazon MX Player merge to create India’s biggest streaming platform with free and paid content

In a major development in India’s streaming landscape, Prime Video has announced the integration of Amazon MX Player into its platform, creating what the company calls India’s largest streaming service for exclusive originals across free and paid entertainment. The move will bring together Prime Video’s premium subscription-based content library with Amazon MX Player’s extensive ad-supported content offering, giving viewers access to a wider range of entertainment under one unified destination. The combined platform will span Subscription Video on Demand (SVOD), Advertising Video on Demand (AVOD), Transactional Video on Demand (TVOD), and add-on subscriptions. The integration comes after Amazon acquired certain MX Player assets in 2024 and merged them with Amazon miniTV to create Amazon MX Player. The service rapidly expanded its reach through local originals, reality programming, micro-dramas and dubbed international content. With the latest merger, Prime members will now have access...

Home Sweet Home: Where Evil Lives review – fresh take on pregnant-woman-in-peril horror

Unfolding in what looks like a single take, Thomas Sieben sends his protagonist into a house that’s haunted by historical trauma

When Maria (Nilam Farooq) shows up 37 weeks pregnant at the attractive but remote country home of her husband Viktor (David Kross), you sense immediately that no good can come of this. If a character is pregnant in a film, it’s about even odds that said pregnancy will function as a way to increase their vulnerability – though not all films take this as far as this nifty little low-budget horror movie from talented German director Thomas Sieben, which combines the haunted house subgenre with pregnant-woman-in-peril to nicely nerve-jangling effect.

Occult horror always needs a starting point, a first evil from which the later ghosties and bumps in the night derive. Some films take as their inciting incident a broader historical crime or atrocity and it’s into this category Home Sweet Home falls. The Herero and Nama genocide, conducted by imperial German forces against indigenous people in what is now Namibia, was the first genocide of the 20th century, and is the basis for subsequent terrors visited upon our heavily pregnant heroine. Paying a price for the actions of previous generations is a big theme in German horror, but by looking to an earlier period than the horrors of the Nazi regime, Sieben reminds us that genocidal white supremacism was not invented in the 1930s.

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