Man on the Run

STREAMING REVIEW:

Prime Video;
Documentary;
Rated ‘R’ for language.
Narrated by Paul McCartney.

Director Morgan Neville’s new documentary Man on the Run is not just another retrospective of a musical icon; it is an intimate study of a man navigating the wreckage of the biggest breakup in history. Neville, known for his keen ability to strip away the celebrity veneer to find the human ache beneath, approaches the 1970s not as a triumphant second act, but as a grueling period of survival for Paul McCartney.

The film skillfully clarifies the messy reality of the Beatles’ final days, moving beyond the public narrative that painted Paul as the villain. It was John Lennon who first walked away, famously mentioning in the film, “It’s kind of exciting. It’s like telling someone you want a divorce.” In the immediate wake of that collapse, Paul began to spiral, falling into a dark, heavy period of isolation and drinking as the foundation of his life disintegrated. It was his wife, photographer-turned-musician Linda Eastman, who became Linda McCartney, who became his inseparable partner in family, work and life — a grounding force who provided the steadying love he needed to save him from a total descent. Together, they sought a radical refuge from the industry pressures of London, retreating to the quiet, rugged hillside of a remote farm in Scotland to start over. There were even months of rumors regarding Paul’s death since he vanished from public view.

It was within this newfound domestic peace that the legal battles took center stage. With the help of the Eastman family’s legal prowess, Paul fought to liberate himself from the suffocating grip of manager Allen Klein — a man McCartney deeply mistrusted — while John remained an ardent supporter of Klein’s. Because Paul was the one forced to litigate to protect his creative future, the public backlash fell squarely on his shoulders, blaming him for killing the band he once thought would last forever.

The tension was exacerbated by the shift in their bond; what had begun as a pure teenage friendship had calcified into a fraught business partnership, and the strain of the Beatles’ dissolution threatened to cause a schism. They were divided by the influence of Klein, with each holding deeply entrenched views. Yet, as Sean Lennon deftly states in the film, their chemistry was so profound because “it was like they were two halves of the same person — a kind of mirrored genius that couldn’t exist without the other, even when they were trying to tear each other apart.” Man on the Run poignantly reveals the eventual thawing of that tension: John eventually acknowledged that Paul had been right about the business, and Paul shares how deeply meaningful it was to reclaim his friend before John’s life was tragically cut short.

What sets this film apart is that it never feels like a curated puff piece or a piece of manufactured truth; it feels startlingly real. Neville allows the edges to show, and even Paul is candid about the humble, experimental beginnings of his solo career. Reflecting on the transition from the world’s biggest band to his early solo efforts, Paul admits in the film, “Wings wasn’t exactly Sgt. Pepper, we were just playing around.” It’s this self-deprecation that gives the film some of its soul.

One of the most compelling takeaways is the psychological unraveling that followed. The film suggests that Paul’s legendary workaholism wasn’t just blind ambition; it was a form of running from the trauma of losing his mother at age 14. He sought refuge in the studio, in songs, because it was the only place he felt understood and secure. As Paul reflects on that period of transition and the public perception of his culpability, he admits, “My only plan is to grow up.”

The documentary gains significant emotional weight through Sean Lennon’s participation. His presence acts as a bridge across time, offering a perspective that feels both objective and deeply empathetic. Reflecting on the complex bond between his father and Paul, Sean adds, “They were like brothers who had been through a war together, and no one else could really understand that except for them.” Sean also provides the necessary grace regarding Paul’s famously awkward “it’s a drag” comment following John’s assassination, contextualizing it not as coldness, but as the reaction of a man in deep, paralyzing shock.

Watching this, one realizes that the Wings era was less about topping the Beatles and more about Paul simply learning to stand on his own two feet. The climax, framed by the raw power of “Live and Let Die,” captures that exact moment of letting go — a farewell to the ghost of the band and an acceptance of his own future. By the time the credits roll, Neville has successfully peeled back the layers of the myth to show the man behind it. It is a portrait of a class act, someone who lived through profound loss — enduring both the bitter collapse of his closest bonds and a cold displacement from his own life’s work — only to emerge on the other side by burying his grief in the only thing he knew how to do: create. Ultimately, this film is a reminder of why McCartney is likely the greatest songwriter of all time — not just for the hits, but for the resilience he wove into every measure.

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Merchandising: Amazon Makes ‘Now You See Me: Now You Don’t’ Steelbook Appear

The Feb. 17 release of Lionsgate’s Now You See Me: Now You Don’t included a 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Steelbook of the film available exclusively at Amazon.

The two-disc exclusive Amazon edition is a two-disc combo pack with the film on 4K and regular Blu-ray discs plus digital copy in a Steelbook case adorned with images of the Heart Diamond, the object at the center of the plot. The interior features a photo spread of the rotating hallway from the magical chateau that serves as the centerpiece of a key action sequence. The Steelbook is offered at $34.99, priced $5 more than the wide-release standard edition of the film’s 4K Blu-ray combo pack.

In the film, the Horsemen magician troupe reunites to take down a diamond heiress for leading an international money laundering scheme, starting with a heist to steal the valuable Heart Diamond from her.

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Merchandising: Amazon Presents ‘Wicked: For Good’ Gift Set

A limited-edition gift set for Universal’s Wicked: For Good became available Feb. 10 exclusively from Amazon.

Amazon’s ‘Wicked: For Good’ boxed set

Offered at $229.99, the collectible set offers the 4K Ultra HD and Blu-ray Disc combo pack of the film with box art unique to this edition, plus a gold tone keepsake box shaped like the Emerald city, and a numbered certificate of authenticity.

The items are housed in a big pink box with a golden cover emblazoned with the slogan “You Will Be Changed,” paraphrasing the film’s signature song, “For Good.”

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Amazon Spent $22.4 Billion on Content Last Year, 25% More Than Netflix

Amazon reported that it spent $22.4 billion on video and music content in 2025, up 10% from $20.4 billion spent in 2024 — and almost 25% more than Netflix’s $18 billion spent on movies, TV shows, video games and podcasts last year.

Amazon disclosed the spending in its fiscal year 10K regulatory filing.

Prime Video’s primary content spending includes $1 billion a year on NFL “Thursday Night Football,” and a percentage of the NBA’s new 11-year, $76 billion media rights deal.

Original Prime Video series include “Fallout,” “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan,” “Reacher,” “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power,” “Upload” and “Bosch,” while movies include Red One, Road House, Cross and The Idea of You, among others.

Amazon last year said Prime Video reached more than 315 million monthly viewers worldwide. Netflix ended 2025 with 325 million paid subscribers.

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Amazon Posts 14% Increase in Quarterly Subscription Services Revenue to $13.1 Billion

Amazon Feb. 5 posted a 14% increase in subscription services revenue to $13.1 billion in the fourth quarter (ended Dec. 31, 2025). That compared with services revenue of $11.3 billion in the previous-year period.

Subscription services revenue includes annual and monthly fees associated with Prime memberships, as well as digital video, audiobook, digital music, e-book, and other non-AWS subscription services.

Physical and digital content, including books, movies, video games, music and software, are tracked in general online sales, which increased 10% to almost $83 billion, from $61.4 billion.

Overall, Amazon posted fiscal-year 2025 profit of almost $78 billion on revenue of $717 billion, compared with net income of $59.2 billion on revenue of $639 billion in 2024.

In the quarter, Amazon posted several records with the fourth season of “NFL Thursday Night Football” on Prime Video, the most-watched season ever, averaging 15 million+ viewers — a 16% increase year-over-year and a third consecutive year of double-digit growth.

Prime had the most-streamed NFL game in history with 31 million-plus viewers watching the Green Bay Packers vs. Chicago Bears Wild Card Playoff game, clearing the prior record by 4 million.

Prime also debuted NBA live-stream coverage in more than 200 countries, including streaming exclusive coverage of the Emirates NBA Cup, culminating with the San Antonio Spurs vs. New York Knicks Championship, which averaged 3 million viewers and attracted the youngest-ever audience for a Cup Championship, according to Nielsen.

The company also extended broadcast rights for soccer’s UEFA Champions League in Germany, Ireland, Italy and the U.K. through the 2031 season. This follows continued strong viewership, including a record-breaking 10 million viewers streaming League Phase matches on Prime Video in Germany, Ireland, and the U.K. in a single evening.

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Albert Cheng, Jon Erwin Talk AI Use at Amazon MGM Studios: Faster, Cheaper, Better

MIAMI — Amazon MGM Studios, which produces original movies and shows for the Prime Video streaming service, is continually looking at new ways to harness AI in the production cycle.

The reason is twofold: to enhance the filmmaking process, and to save money — in the hopes of being able to greenlight more movies and films, and produce them faster and at lower costs.

Amazon’s AI initiative was explored in depth Feb. 4 at a NATPE Global panel on which Albert Cheng, who heads AI Studios for Amazon, was joined by Jon Erwin, co-founder of The Wonder Project, the faith-based production company behind the big Prime Video hit series “House of David.”

Cheng talked a little about his 10-year career at Amazon, in which he also headed the studio and oversaw Prime Video in the United States.

“Ten years ago my job was to scale Amazon Studios to be able to produce,” he said. “At the time, we were only doing 16 shows, and we wanted to get to the point where we could do 250 shows released every year and up to about 400 productions at any point in time during the year. And I had to do it in nine months. That’s the thing about Amazon — how do you scale it pretty quickly.

“Now, the weird thing is that I’m asked to figure out how to we do it for less, and faster — which is a very different mindset, because you have to think about what is the impact of technology in that model. And the hard part about it is that in order to get to the transformation, there is a change management challenge. There’s a lot of tech that has to be built before you can even ask any one at our creator partners to adopt AI.

“So part of what I’m tasked to do is to define the new workflows, prove it, and use it as proof of concept to show that we can achieve a high level quality of production at much faster speeds and kind of more cost effective. So it’s very different — I have to be very entrepreneurial again. And we as a studio need to think about how do we scale this across all of our creators that really impact our business.”

Cheng noted that “sitting in the job of Prime Video, you still have a budget constraint on how much content you can invest in. And when it comes to all the film and TV series that we have in development, I’ll be sitting in these seats and going, I wish we could green light all of these. How in the world can we do this? And the only way to do this is to figure out how do we lower the costs to make these — because the more we can reduce these costs, the more titles we can get on the service.

“And the other thing is we are in the television business, and one of the challenges when you’re doing big epic scale television shows like ‘Fallout’ is those shows take 24 months to release one season after another,” Cheng said. “And we all know that over that long a period, you get pretty severe audience attrition, season to season. So you’re looking at your audience go down, season to season, pretty rapidly, because of the time [between seasons], while the costs keep going up. So it’s not economically viable to have a long-running series of that scope. And without AI, it’ll continue down that path.

“AI can help us make these large-scale shows much more economically viable, and we can also get them to release much sooner so that we don’t lose the audience engagement.”

And yet despite advances in generative AI, Cheng said, “what hasn’t changed is the human side. So what we can’t forget is that AI is not a replacement. It is an enhancement. And that’s one of the North Stars that we at Amazon, from an AI perspective, have held us to our principles because as much good as AI is, it still lacks the ability to translate or create things that are authentically human.

“So everything that we do, whether it be writer, director, actor, production designer, costume designer — we believe all these things are very important and critical to the process of making television shows and films. And so we’ll continue to do that. What AI will do is augment it and make things faster.”

Erwin agrees: “Is it a faster way to work? Absolutely. Are there a lot of efficiencies? Is it cheaper? Absolutely. But beyond those two, it’s a more creative way to work. It’s a more collaborative way to work. It’s a new set of tools that are very powerful, and it’s a set of tools and a certain kind of intelligence that pairs incredibly well with human creativity and just amplifies and accelerates everything you do.”

Big theatrical productions such as the “Dune,” “Mission: Impossible” and “Star Wars” movies are becoming increasingly rare in a world where streaming dominates.

“I love these big experiences, but they’ve gotten unsustainable,” Erwin said. “My argument and what I would say is my somewhat contrary point of view is that the primary reason for job loss and lack of green lights is the escalating cost of production, combined with the time of creation. So it takes a long time to create and things have gotten very expensive and if you combine those two things, there’s no green lights, there’s no jobs.

“So I actually see the integration of an AI tool set as an antidote to job loss.”

Partnering with Amazon on “House of David” required making two seasons in 20 months. “So not only did we have to make it cheaper, but we also had to make it faster,” Erwin said. “I had some very, very smart and wise television executives tell me, ‘Jon, we like you, but you’re crazy — not on Amazon. This is impossible what you’re setting out to do.’ And if I had listened to that status quo, there would be no show on Amazon.”

Erwin and his team used generative AI tools to produce many of the show’s visuals, particularly scenes that would have been difficult, and costly, to produce with traditional VFX workflows. In season one, he said, 73 AI-generated shots were used. By season two, the number had grown to upwards of 350.

“By innovating instead of compromising, we made the first season of the show for less than a single episode of some of the larger shows on streaming. So the ROI was great for everyone and we made it way faster. And we also employed 600 people making the show. And those are real jobs.”

Erwin said generative AI is just the latest in a long line of technological tools filmmakers have relied on over the years. He gave a nod to Steven Spielberg, who made film history in the early 1990s when he combined CGI with practical effects on the original Jurassic Park movie.

“So this is simply a new set of tools,” Erwin said. “The interesting thing is the speed in which they’re emerging in the world and how many industries it’s disrupting at once. I still remember the digital camera revolution. I had to learn a different camera every 18, 24 months. But this, if you’re two weeks behind, you’re out. The fascinating thing about ‘House of David’ is that it will actually be this time capsule to show the implementation of the technology, season to season.

“I think the barrier of entry is education and process and fear. So the most important thing for us to do is to engage with it. The worst thing we can do is hide our heads in the sand and hope it goes away, because it’s not going away.”

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Prime Video Returns to Weekly Nationwide Television Prominence Live-Streaming NBA Games

The NFL “Thursday Night Football” and postseason might be over for Prime Video, but the basketball season is filling the massive football void.

Amazon’s inaugural partnership live-streaming select NBA games as part of the league’s 11-year agreement worth $77 billion with ESPN (ESPN Unlimited) and NBCUniversal (Peacock) saw the streamer’s Jan. 25 live-stream between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Los Angeles Clippers generate 1.15 million viewers across 862,000 households, according to new data from Nielsen.

The tally was good enough to rank as the 16th most-viewed sports event on television for the week ended Jan. 25.

Prime Video’s exclusive live-stream on Jan. 15 between the New York Knicks and the Golden State Warriors generated 1.9 million viewers across 922,000 households to rank as the 12th most-viewed televised sports event through Jan. 18.

By comparison, “Thursday Night Football” averaged 15.33 million viewers per game during the 2025 regular season.

This marked the highest average in the 20-year history of the NFL’s Thursday night package, surpassing prior highs, including 13.65 million in 2019 (across Fox, NFL Network, and Prime Video). It represented a 16% increase from the 2024 season’s average of 13.2 million, continuing a trend of double-digit year-over-year growth.

Peacock and the new ESPN Unlimited streaming platforms concurrently live-stream NBA and select college basketball games with their sister networks NBC Sports and ESPN, respectively.

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Merchandising: ‘1408’ 4K Steelbook Available at Amazon

Lionsgate Jan. 13 released the 2007 horror film 1408 on 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Disc exclusively through Amazon.

The new edition is a combo pack with the film on 4K and Blu-ray disc in Steelbook packaging and is offered at Amazon for $39.99.

The three-disc set includes a 4K disc of the ‘PG-13’-rated theatrical edition with bonus materials, a 4K disc of the unrated cut with bonus materials, and a regular Blu-ray of the unrated cut with bonus materials.

Based on a 1999 Stephen King short story, the film stars John Cusack as an author who specializes in investigating allegedly haunted places. He is warned not to visit room 1408 at a New York City hotel where the manager (Samuel L. Jackson) says no one lasts more than an hour inside the room. Nonetheless, he finds himself trapped inside the room, where he begins to experience strange events.

Extras include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, alternate endings, legacy featurettes, and the new featurette “Don’t Enter 1408.”

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CES 2026 Recap: AI, Robots and Streamers

LAS VEGAS — CES 2026 concluded its annual four-day run Jan. 9 with the biggest buzz around practical uses of AI, the emergence of life-like robots, and streaming.

Streaming, in fact, was on everyone’s tongue, particularly in the branded “C-Space” consisting of the Aria, Vdara and Cosmopolitan hotels.

There, representatives from virtually every major streamer crowded the halls, bars, restaurants and suites, resulting in long lines at the elevators (particularly at Aria) and several takeovers, including Netflix’s occupation of the Easy’s Cocktail Lounge speakeasy at the Aria and Xumo’s immersive, branded event space called “The Xumo Experience” on the ground floor of the Vdara. There, Xumo and Lionsgate announced a new multiyear content deal that makes Xumo Play, Google TV Freeplay and Xumo-branded FAST channels the exclusive streaming home for select Lionsgate films during their Pay-1 windows.

Also holed up at C-Space were executives with Amazon Prime Video, Disney Advertising Sales, Xperi, and NBCUniversal Media (parent of Peacock), along with Meta, Reddit, Roku and X.

Xperi’s TiVo division announced new features for its home screen user interface that enable advertisers to better reach consumers across the TV screen. The new feature aims to provide advertisers with easier monetization opportunities on smart-TV screens, including full-screen video advertisements and shoppable QR codes.

Nearby, at the Dolby Live theater at the Park MGM, Dolby Laboratories and NBCUniversal announced Peacock will be the first streaming platform to embrace Dolby’s full suite of advanced picture and sound innovations. The partnership will see a gradual rollout of both Dolby Atmos and Dolby Vision — an advanced high dynamic range (HDR) video technology that enhances picture quality by optimizing brightness, contrast, and color on a scene-by-scene or even frame-by-frame basis using dynamic metadata — to Peacock’s portfolio of movies, original productions, and live sports and events.

At the Tech Trends to Watch presentation on the Sunday before the show opened, Melissa Harrison, VP of marketing and communications for CES producer the Consumer Technology Association (CTA), called out “the rise of ad-supported streaming” as a primary driver in a projected 4.2% uptick for 2026 in consumer spending on software and services.

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And on opening day, Jan. 6, the OTT.X breakfast at the Stirling Club, across the street from the Las Vegas Convention Center, featured a presentation of Parks Associates’ annual State of Streaming report as well as several presentations focused on the burgeoning advertising market in ad-supported streaming. Speakers included Pieter de Zwart, director of advertising engineering for Amazon Ads, and Paul Claussen, director of strategic partnerships and business development at Comcast Technology Solutions.

Television technology, as it does every year, commanded the spotlight in the central hall of the Las Vegas Convention Center. Very evident this year across the show floor was the rise of Micro RGB display technology: an evolution of LED backlighting that uses individually controlled red, green and blue LEDs as the light source instead of standard white or blue LEDs filtered into colors. The result: significantly deeper color accuracy and brightness than traditional LED models.

What the CTA maintains is the “largest post-pandemic CES” welcomed more than 148,000 attendees from around the world, 55,000 of them from outside the United States. More than 55% of CES attendees were senior-level executives. The show also had more than 4,100 exhibitors across upwards of 2.6 million square feet of exhibit space, including some 1,200 startups.

“CES is the world’s most powerful proving ground for innovation,” said Gary Shapiro, executive chair and CEO of the CTA. “CES is more than a showcase; it’s where technology meets community, business, and policy. Global leaders, startups, and policymakers came together to highlight technologies that will define the next decade of economic growth and competitiveness.”

“The energy at CES 2026 was extraordinary,” said Kinsey Fabrizio, president of the CTA. “CES brings the global tech ecosystem together for an unmatched volume of deal-making, partnerships, and idea-sharing. The innovation unveiled this week spanning AI, quantum, mobility, robotics, health, and so much more, underscores CES as the global stage where bold ideas move from vision to reality.”

 

Merchandising: ‘Good Fortune’ 4K Steelbook Available at Amazon

Dec. 9 saw the arriving of a couple of Lionsgate titles on 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray in Amazon-exclusive Steelbook editions, including Good Fortune.

The film marks Aziz Ansari’s directorial debut and stars Keanu Reeves as a well-meaning but rather inept angel named Gabriel who observes a struggling gig worker, Arj (Ansari), who is barely making ends meet in Los Angeles, and intervenes to show him that money can’t solve all his problems. Gabriel swaps Arj’s life with a wealthy venture capitalist, Jeff (Seth Rogen), but the plan backfires when Arj is convinced his newfound wealth has, in fact, solved all his problems. As Arj refuses to switch back, Jeff is left without his fortune, Gabriel loses his wings, and all three are forced to confront what it truly means to be human.

Good Fortune was widely released on Blu-ray Disc and DVD Dec. 9, but the 4K edition is the Amaz0n-exclusive Steelbook, which is offered at $34.99.

The other Lionsgate title now available as an Amazon-exclusive 4K Steelbook, also for $34.99, is the 2015 sports drama Southpaw starring Jake Gyllenhaal.

From director Antoine Fuqua and screenwriter Kurt Sutter tells the story of a boxer (Gyllenhaal) who fights to get his life back on track after the death of his wife (Rachel McAdams).

Amazon’s ‘Southpaw’ 4K Steelbook

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In addition, the 2000 Japanese dystopian actioner Battle Royale became available on 4K for the first time Dec. 9 in a new 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Steelbook edition from Lionsgate. Released exclusively through the studio’s proprietary Lionsgate Limited online store, the new 25th anniversary 4K Steelbook offers the cult classic film on both 4K and regular Blu-ray discs, plus a digital copy, and is available for $39.99 (marked down from $49.99) or as part of a bundle with a T-shirt for $59.99 (discounted from $74.99).

In addition to legacy bonus materials, the set includes two new featurettes: “Battle Royale: The Ripples of Violence” and “Kenta Fukasaku on Battle Royale,” the latter featuring reflections from the film’s writer.

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