Revisit the 1990s website Pseudo.com, which rode the dot-com wave as the first Internet television network, with people living in a bunker (cameras on them, of course) for 30 days. The site's founder Josh Harris is called "the greatest Internet pioneer you’ve never heard of" by director Ondi Timoner in the documentary We Live in Public, which also catches up with Harris when he's bankrupt. The AV Club's Noel Murray writes, "At the time, Harris’ exploits were the subject of magazine profiles and network-news stories, and yet he’s barely remembered today. On that count, Timoner is correct: Harris is unduly obscure. But was what he accomplished really all that great?... We Live In Public doesn’t show that Harris was a genius so much as that he was a mentally and emotionally unstable egotist, trying to force a revolution in self-broadcasting and connectivity that later happened more naturally."
Click through the gallery for movies playing this weekend, including new releases Taking Woodstock, The Final Destination, The September Issue, Big Fan, Halloween II, Still Walking, and more.






In the context that all Boomer roads lead to Woodstock, now and forever, if you think about it both movies are basically the same.