âThe Lost Cityâ and 8 more films and TV shows to stream this weekend
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone who skipped âThe Lost Cityâ the first time around.
With the Sandra Bullock/Channing Tatum vehicle moving to streaming, film critic Justin Chang explains why itâs worth your time this weekend. Plus, Screen Gab editor Matt Brennan gets ready for the premiere of TVâs newest Sally Rooney adaptation, âConversations with Friends,â by surveying five highlights from the vibrant Irish TV landscape.
All that and much more in Screen Gab no. 35. And, as always, weâre looking for reader recommendations: Send your TV or streaming movie recommendations to [email protected] with your name and location. Submissions should be no longer than 200 words and are subject to editing for length and clarity.
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Turn on
Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
In the Peacock comedy âKilling It,â now streaming, Craig Robinson plays a sweet, straight-arrow and somewhat hapless Miamian who dreams of financial success and putting his family together. His latest scheme to make this happen is a saw palmetto farm (to service the growing prostate-shrinking industry); failing to secure a loan, he finds himself competing for prize money in a government-backed snake hunt (pythons are overrunning the Everglades), which brings him into contact with series co-star Claudia OâDoherty (Mary Bonnet on âOur Flag Means Deathâ), a cockeyed if happily undiagnosable character exploiting every aspect of the gig economy and living inside an A-frame billboard she tows around on the back of her car. Rell Battle plays Craigâs larcenous brother, whose interlocking exploits are by turns helpful and disastrous to Craig. Look for Tim Heidecker and DâArcy Carden as (unconnected) horrible rich people. The series casts a satirical eye on social media, capitalism, class and the political scene (the series is set in 2016, the year That happened). But though its tone can be bleak, even gruesome, its outlook is optimistic. Robinson is no less funny for playing a fully developed character, and everything funny out of OâDohertyâs mouth feels twice as funny as it would from any other actor. âRobert Lloyd
Ten years ago, I unfortunately was nowhere near New York to see Sutton Foster as Reno Sweeney in the Cole Porter classic âAnything Goes,â a role for which the Broadway mainstay won her second Tony Award. And last year, I regrettably was not in London to see her reprise that role for the first time in a decade. Thankfully, that West End production was filmed and is airing on PBS as part of its beloved âGreat Performancesâ series. Foster â who has spent the past 10 years starring in multiple stage shows and the TV Land comedy âYoungerâ â returns to the golden age musical of love triangles, singing sailors and transatlantic tap dances without missing a beat. The show was directed by Kathleen Marshall and also stars Robert Lindsay, Felicity Kendal and Gary Wilmot. Alongside its premiere Friday at 9 p.m. on KOCE, it will be available on pbs.org/broadwayonpbs and the PBS Video app. âAshley Lee
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
Midway through the tomb-raiding, car-crashing, butt-baring shenanigans of âThe Lost Cityâ (Paramount+) Channing Tatum pauses to remind Sandra Bullock not to judge a book by its cover. Itâs an apt clichĂŠ: She plays Loretta Sage, the author of a series of popular romance novels; heâs Alan, the stud whose ripped chest and Fabio wig have helped sell her paperbacks to millions of happy readers. To Loretta, Alan is an incompetent himbo with delusions of grandeur and certainly the last fool sheâd want to be stuck with on a wild and crazy jungle adventure. But like a lot of Tatum characters, he turns out to be smarter, deeper and more genuinely heroic than she expects.
So sure, donât judge a book by its cover. I should note, however, that I may have committed an equivalent offense when I opted to check out âThe Lost Cityâ: The poster made it look kind of fun, and lo and behold, it is. It helps that the pairing of Bullock and Tatum is as delightful as youâd expect from two actors of such goofy charm and combustible energy. It also helps that the directors, Aaron and Adam Nee, have tailored this unapologetically derivative riff on âRomancing the Stoneâ to their starsâ easygoing chemistry, taking what might have been a strained, clanging excuse for a mainstream action-comedy and investing it with, if not big belly laughs, then at least a refreshing sweetness of spirit. âJustin Chang
Break down
Times staffers chew on the pop culture of the moment â love it, hate it or somewhere in between
âConversations with Friends,â premiering Sunday on Hulu, sounds many notes: swoon-worthy romance, delicate slice of life, coming-of-age drama, millennial nostalgia piece. But the adaptation of Sally Rooneyâs first novel, directed by Lenny Abrahamson, is also a reminder of the vivacity of Irish television. Starring newcomer Alison Oliver and Sasha Lane as Frances and Bobbi, a pair of university students in Dublin who become entangled with married creatives Melissa (Jemima Kirke) and Nick (Joe Alwyn), the series may not be as profoundly place-specific as certain titles highlighted below, but it speaks to the ever-growing footprint of the isleâs TV industry at a time when U.S. audiences are increasingly looking beyond London for English-language stories from around the globe. Here are five from the past decade to queue up, though classics like âFather Tedâ (multiple platforms) and âBallykissangelâ (BritBox) will never steer you wrong.
âMoone Boyâ (Hulu, Amazon Prime): Irish actor Chris OâDowd has been a semi-familiar face on American screens since he turned up in âBridesmaidsâ in 2011, but this idiosyncratic comedy, in which he plays the imaginary friend to an Irish lad (David Rawle) in west central Ireland in 1989, flew under the radar. Thatâs easily rectified now, of course, thanks to the magic of streaming, six-episode seasons and a series that goes down mighty easy.
âThe Fallâ (multiple platforms): Before he was Christian Grey, before he was the lovelorn beefcake of âBarb and Star Go to Vista del Mar,â Jamie Dornan played Paul Spector, an unconscionably attractive Belfast serial killer in the sights of Gillian Andersonâs tautly controlled Det. Supt. Stella Gibson. Itâs a cat-and-mouse tale painted in the same grayscale as the North Atlantic â and itâs just as chilling.
âCatastropheâ (Amazon Prime): Iâm cheating, I know â Sharon Horgan and Rob Delanyâs raucously funny comedy of modern marriage and childbirth is mostly set in London. But with Horgan sharing the helm, Irish actor Jonathan Forbes playing her brother, Fergal, and an extraordinary Ireland-set episode in which the siblings deal with the hilarious/devastating fallout from their fatherâs stroke, Iâve decided it counts. You wonât quibble after youâve burned through its four note-perfect seasons. Irish fatalism knows no borders!
âDerry Girlsâ (Netflix): Inspired by creator Lisa McGeeâs experience growing up in Northern Ireland in the 1990s, this irreverent comedy of teens and Troubles follows a group of friends at a Catholic girlsâ school in the titular border town. (If youâre new to the series, keep an eye out for âBridgertonâsâ Lady Whistledown, Nicola Coughlan, as Clare.) In addition to finding laughs in the regionâs religious and political conflict, and delightfully lampooning the British at every turn, âDerry Girlsâ is also a remarkably deft example of the Irish Catholic sense of humor, with at least one joke â about a meet-cute at the stations of the cross â leaving me muttering, âJesus, Mary and Joseph, is this show funny!â
âNormal Peopleâ (Hulu): Though the novel itâs based on came after âConversations with Friends,â âNormal People,â which made instant stars of young actors Daisy Edgar-Jones and Paul Mescal, set the template for a Sally Rooney adaptation: 30-minute episodes; a restrained, impressionistic aesthetic; and exceptionally steamy, though never exploitative, sex scenes. Add to that Rooneyâs most pressing thematic concerns â communication in the digital age, the stumbling blocks of emergent adulthood â and you have the outlines of what one hopes will be a long and fruitful creative marriage. Iâve been ready for the âBeautiful World, Where Are You?â limited series basically since I closed the book. âMatt Brennan
Whatâs next
Listings coordinator Matt Cooper highlights the TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on
Fri., May 13
âBling Empireâ (Netflix): Your friendly neighborhood crazy rich Asians are back in Season 2 of the L.A.-set reality series.
âChildren Ruin Everythingâ (Roku Originals): This Canadian comedy stars Meaghan Rath and Aaron Abrams as young parents trying, and often failing, to keep it together.
âThe Essex Serpentâ (Apple TV+) Is it a mythical sea monster ⌠or a case of mass hysteria? Claire Danes and Tom Hiddleston investigate in the new Victorian-era mystery drama.
âFirestarterâ (Peacock): A young girl with pyrokinetic powers heats things up in the new 2022 adaptation of the Stephen King terror tale. With Zac Efron.
âGreatness Codeâ (Apple TV+): Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn and NASCARâs Bubba Wallace are among the top-tier athletes profiled in new episodes.
âThe Kids in the Hallâ (Prime Video): Our favorite Canadian comedy troupe returns to crush your head in a reboot of the sketch series.
âThe Lincoln Lawyerâ (Netflix): Have you been injured in an accident? Call Manuel Garcia-Rulfoâs Mickey Haller in this new drama based on novelist Michael Connellyâs L.A.-set crime thrillers.
âSenior Yearâ (Netflix): Not even 20 years in a coma can stop Rebel Wilson from finishing high school in the 2022 comedy. With Alicia Silverstone.
âSneakerellaâ (Disney+): Gets your kicks in this new musical comedy based on the classic fairy tale.
âRespectâ (Epix, 8 p.m.) Do we need to spell it out? Jennifer Hudson portrays the Queen of Soul in the 2021 Aretha Franklin biopic. With Forest Whitaker.
âCouples Therapyâ (Showtime, 8 and 8:30 p.m.): Dr. Guralnik will see you now, in all-new episodes.
âGreat Performancesâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Even a glimpse of stocking? Yes, âAnything Goesâ in this classic Cole Porter musical. Sutton Foster stars.
âThe Great Soul Food Cook-Off.â (OWN, 10 p.m.; Discovery+): Host Kardea Brown puts Black chefs through their paces in the new series.
âNew York Ninjaâ (TCM, 11 p.m.): A 2021 reconstruction of the unfinished martial arts flick from 1984.
Sat., May 14
âRoad Trip Romanceâ (Hallmark Channel, 8 p.m.): Love means never having to say, âAre we there yet?â in this new TV movie.
âFit to Killâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): A fashion designerâs new assistant begins to wonder what became of her predecessors in the new TV movie.
âLove & Marriage: DCâ (OWN, 9 p.m.): Meet three Black power couples who do their moving and shaking inside the Beltway in the new reality-TV spinoff.
Sun., May 15
â2022 Billboard Music Awardsâ (NBC, Peacock, 5 p.m.): Sean âDiddyâ Combs hosts and Mary J. Blige collects a career achievement award at the annual shindig.
âLucy Worsley Investigatesâ (KOCE, 8 p.m.): What fate befell âThe Princes in the Towerâ? That is the question in the premiere of the British historianâs new series.
âThe Time Travelerâs Wifeâ (HBO, 9 p.m.): She canât tell if heâs coming or going in this new fantasy drama based on Audrey Niffeneggerâs bestseller. âGame of Thronesââ Rose Leslie stars.
Mon., May 16
âCelebrity IOUâ (HGTV, 9 p.m.): Lisa Kudrow does a good turn for a â ahem â friend in this new episode.
âIndependent Lensâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): Teens on a Navajo reservation share their hopes and dreams in the 2021 documentary âScenes From the Glittering World.â
âUnfaithful: Caught in the Actâ (VH1, 10 p.m.): Cheaters never prosper in this new reality series. 10 p.m. VH1
Tue., May 17
âLionel Richie: The Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Songâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Theyâre partying all night long in honor of the Grammy winner in this special.
âSupermarket Stakeoutâ (Food Network, 10 p.m.): The culinary competition returns for Season 2.
Wed., May 18
âLove on the Spectrum U.S.â (Netflix): Young adults with autism seek love, American-style, in this new spinoff of the Australian reality series.
âLovestruck Highâ (Prime Video): Sexy British singles also seek love, American-style, in this new dating show. Lindsay Lohan narrates.
âThe Masked Singerâ (Fox, 8 p.m.): The winning celeb is revealed in the seriesâ season finale.
âSo You Think You Can Danceâ (Fox, 9 p.m.): JoJo Siwa and âGleeâsâ Matthew Morrison join the judgesâ table in the season premiere.
âNovaâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): A new episode investigates the maritime mishap that shut down the Suez Canal for six days in March 2021.
âBuy It or Build Itâ (HGTV, 9 p.m.): Those are the two options presented to prospective homeowners in this new series.
âColombia â Wild and Freeâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): The countryâs flora and fauna are on full display in this two-part series.
âThe Deep Endâ (Freeform, 10 p.m.): Spiritual seekers find themselves in over their heads in this new docuseries.
Thurs., May 19
âAngelyneâ (Peacock): Emmy Rossum portrays the pink Corvette-driving L.A. icon famous for her shameless pursuit of fame in this new limited series.
âThe G Word With Adam Conoverâ (Netflix): The host of âAdam Ruins Everythingâ sets his sights on the inner workings of the U.S. government in this new series.
âThe Ipcress Fileâ (AMC+, Sundance Now): Len Deightonâs intrepid British spy Harry Palmer returns in this 1960s-set espionage drama. Joe Cole (âPeaky Blindersâ) stars.
âKingdom Businessâ (BET+): Gospel musicâs Yolanda Adams plays a legendary singer and megachurch matriarch in this new limited series.
âLegendaryâ (HBO Max): Ballroom culture is back in vogue in a new cycle of the reality competition. Judges include Jameela Jamil and Keke Palmer.
âA Perfect Pairingâ (Netflix): A wine company exec (Victoria Justice) hooks up with a hunky Aussie ranch hand in this 2022 rom-com.
âDaughter of Shanghaiâ (TCM, 5 p.m.): A salute to Anna May Wong continues and includes this 1937 revenge thriller.
âLaw & Orderâ (NBC, 8 p.m.): The reboot of the franchise mothership ends its season.
âInterrogation Rawâ (A&E, 10 p.m.): See cops putting the screws to criminal suspects in this new docuseries.
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