âOnly Murdersâ may be over. But Selena Gomezâs summer is still coming to a boil
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone still sharpening their knife skills.
As TV critic Robert Lloyd points out in his recommendation for innovative cooking show âSelena + Chef,â âOnly Murdersâ star Selena Gomez picks up a knife again just as the team behind Huluâs mystery-comedy is laying their weapons away for the off-season â a boon for those of us who like to see Gomez somewhere on TV at all times.
Plus, youâll find shout-outs to âNever Have I Everâ and the âOrphanâ prequel âFirst Kill,â our questions for author and âEverything I Know About Loveâ creator Dolly Alderton, our reader mailbag and more. As always, we want to know what youâre watching, so 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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Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
Itâs not uncommon for once-buzzy TV series to fly under the radar as they settle in for the longer haul. And âNever Have I Everâ (Netflix), about an Indian American girl dealing with her fatherâs death, her motherâs expectations, her yearning to be popular and a chemistry labâs worth of hot guys, is no different: Season 3 didnât exactly set the internet on fire when it premiered this month. Instead, it introduced a dashing South Asian love interest (played by Anirudh Pisharody), deepened its examination of the adultsâ fraught relationships and explored the pressures of the college application process. Heck, even Trent (Benjamin Norris), formerly a one-note burnout, has emerged as a character with depth. This is the benefit of growing older and wiser, of course, even if it means a sparkly new class captures the lionâs share of the attention: In slowing down and spreading out, âNever Have I Everâ has become one of the mediumâs most fully realized high-school comedies. When the series graduates to the Netflix back catalog after its fourth and final season, itâs sure to be bittersweet. âMatt Brennan
With the end of this seasonâs âOnly Murders in the Building,â those who need more Selena Gomez in their life â and who does not? â still have a place to go. The lively, friendly and informative âSelena + Chef,â which began in 2020 as a quarantine show in which the actor would use her time at home to learn to cook under the tutelage of professional chefs, recently began its fourth season on HBO Max. (Now, as then, the chefs appear via video.) Early episodes, still available, find Gomez comically unsure of herself, ignorant of how even her own stove works; she has acquired some skills in the interim and is taking on more complicated recipes â she handles a knife better than #bloodymabel. (As if to underscore her progress, Trois Mecâs Ludo Lefebvre, the first seasonâs first guest, is also the new seasonâs first guest.) Beyond the sunny, unaffected presence of Gomez â a stand-in for the viewer as she follows a diverse array of tutors through a diverse array of recipes â there is the evergreen pleasure of watching talented people at work, explaining the nuts and bolts of what they do. This seasonâs guests are set to include Nick DiGiovanni, Rachael Ray, Gordon Ramsay (always at his best when actually cooking), Priya Krishna and Matty Matheson, whom you may recognize as the handyman in âThe Bear.â âRobert Lloyd
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Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
In 2009 nothing prepared audiences for the audacious reveal in Jaume Collet-Serraâs âOrphan,â in which the adoptive parents of 9-year-old orphan Esther discovered â spoiler! â that their new ward was actually a sociopathic adult woman with a rare hormone disorder, posing as a child.
Now 2022 brings good tidings for lovers of over-the-top genre cinema: a new era of bonkers horror is dawning. Cue up more Esther in the Paramount+ prequel âOrphan: First Kill,â which boasts even campier turns than the original and hinges on the return of lead actor Isabelle Fuhrman, who was just 12 when she starred in the first film.
The first âOrphanâ and its batty twist launched a preteen Fuhrman into the canon of great creepy kid movie villains. Now 25, with a Spirit Award nomination under her belt for last yearâs âThe Novice,â she reprises her role playing an even younger version of Esther.
Wait. What?!
You read that right. Using forced perspective, gauzy lensing, body doubles, stilted shoes on Fuhrmanâs co-stars and a delightfully wanton disregard for realism, director William Brent Bell guides this maniacal cinematic treat through a conventional setup as Esther cons her way into a wealthy family by posing as their missing daughter.
But twists upon twists, and a juicy performance by Julia Stiles as the familyâs matriarch, place âOrphan: First Killâ in league with the 2021 cult hit âMalignantâ and the upcoming âBarbarianâ â welcome evidence that studio horror is ready to make a turn for the deliciously outrageous. âJen Yamato
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A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
Dolly Alderton worked in TV long before her first book, 2018âs âEverything I Know About Loveâ (Peacock) became a series. Sheâs served as story producer on the U.K. reality soap âMade in Chelsea,â created behind-the-scenes videos for âPeep Show,â even struck a path in development. But if the very millennial romantic comedy based on her memoir is a homecoming of sorts, itâs one in which Alderton, now the creator, writer and executive producer, has a lot more authority. The successful columnist, author and podcast host stopped by Screen Gab to discuss what sheâs watching â and the very millennial romantic comedy that inspires her. âMatt Brennan
What have you watched recently that you are recommending to everyone you know?
âHacksâ (HBO Max). Itâs so funny and clever. And the first show or movie thatâs ever made me want to go to Vegas.
Whatâs your go-to âcomfort watch,â the movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
Old musicals. Particularly Shirley Temple ones. âRebecca of Sunnybrook Farmâ (VOD, multiple platforms) is my hangover cure.
âEverything I Know About Loveâ is billed, among other things, as âa raucous girl gang showâ â which conjures images of everything from âGolden Girlsâ to âSex and the City.â What films or TV shows in that vein are most important to you and why?
âFrances Haâ (Prime Video) is so important to me because it was the first depiction I had ever seen of friendship as an epic, central story in a womanâs life.
Mailbag
Recommendations from Screen Gab readers
The newsletter is so informative and so enjoyable. There are so many amazing series on Netflix and Prime Video and others that itâs impossible to know or to follow all of them without lots of research.
The articles of the actors and behind-the-scenes also help us decide what to watch among the countless shows.
We especially love series and we are now watching a Spanish production on Netflix, âĂlite,â that is beautifully acted and very exciting.
Thank you for an excellent publication.
Shelley Butler
Chatsworth
Whatâs next
Listings coordinator Matt Cooper highlights the TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on
Fri., Aug. 26
âDiary of an Old Homeâ (Discovery+): Owners of historic homes give you the guided tour in this new renovation series.
âDrive Hard: The Maloof Wayâ (Netflix): Buckle up for this new reality series about one very car-crazy SoCal family.
âMe Timeâ (Netflix): When the wife and kids are away, stay-at-home dad Kevin Hart will play in this 2022 comedy. With Mark Wahlberg.
âPartner Trackâ (Netflix): A young Asian American lawyer (âTeen Wolfâsâ Arden Cho) tries to have it all in this 2022 comedy-drama set in NYC.
âRental Redoâ (Discovery+): Rental properties get the renovations they so sorely need in this new series.
âSamaritanâ (Prime Video): A washed-up superhero (Sylvester Stallone) gets a shot at redemption in this 2022 action drama.
âSeeâ (Apple TV+): This futuristic drama starring âAquamanâsâ Jason Momoa is back for a third and final season.
âUntrapped: The Story of Lil Babyâ (Prime Video): The Atlanta rap phenom is profiled in this new documentary.
âWatcherâ (Shudder): An American ex-pat (Maika Monroe) in Bucharest draws unwelcome attention in this chilling 2022 thriller.
Sat., Aug. 27
âSummer Under the Starsâ (TCM, various times): The monthlong series continues with an all-day salute to screen icon Marilyn Monroe.
âGame, Set, Loveâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): A former professional tennis player meets her match in this new TV movie.
âBodyguard Seductionâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): She ⌠will always ⌠love him â unless heâs actually the one whoâs been trying to kill her in this new thriller.
Sun., Aug. 28
âLittle League Baseball World Seriesâ (ABC, noon): Theyâll be swinging for the fences in the championship game from Williamsport, Pa.
âThe Boleyns: A Scandalous Familyâ (KOCE, 8 p.m.): This new three-part docuseries recalls the Tudor-era clan whose daughter Anne famously lost her head.
âDanger in the Houseâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): A home healthcare worker makes herself a little too at home in this new thriller.
â2022 MTV Video Music Awardsâ (MTV, other channels, 8 p.m.): Rap superstar Nicki Minaj is singled out for special honors at the annual ceremony.
â90 Day FiancĂŠ: Happily Ever After?â (TLC, 8 p.m.): The reality franchise entry is back with new episodes.
âGuiltâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): See who, if anyone, gets their comeuppance this time âround as this British mystery drama returns.
âMy Life As a Rolling Stoneâ (Epix, 9 p.m.): The bandâs late drummer, Charlie Watts, is remembered in the series finale.
âAnimal Kingdomâ (TNT, 9 p.m.): Itâs the end of the line for the Cody clan as the crime drama wraps its run.
Mon., Aug. 29
âPOVâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): The 2021 documentary âFaya Dayiâ explores the impact of a cocaine-like plant on the daily lives of Ethiopians.
âKeep This Between Usâ (Freeform, 9 and 10 p.m.; also Tuesday): A young woman recounts her experiences with a teacher who crossed the line in this new four-part special.
âAmericaâs National Parksâ (Nat Geo, 9 p.m.): Country musicâs Garth Brooks is your guide in this new five-night event series. First stop: the Grand Canyon.
âMy True Crime Storyâ (VH1, 10 p.m.): This docuseries about everyday people who found themselves on the wrong side of the law returns.
Tue., Aug. 30
âThe Patientâ (FX on Hulu): A therapist (Steve Carell) is held captive by a serial killer in this new drama. How does that make you feel?
âUntold: Operation Flagrant Foulâ (Netflix): Wanna bet? An NBA referee who wagered on games he was officiating pays the price in this new documentary.
âRise of the Bolsonarosâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Controversial Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaroâs ascent to power is charted in this new docu-special.
Wed., Aug. 31
âI Came Byâ (Netflix): âDownton Abbeyâsâ Hugh Bonneville plays a respected jurist with a secret heâd really rather keep if you donât mind in this 2022 thriller.
âDCâs Stargirlâ (The CW, 8 p.m.): Our young heroine (Brec Bassinger) is back in action for a third season.
âTales From the Explorers Clubâ (Discovery, 9 p.m.): The exploits of Shackleton, Hillary, et al are celebrated in this new series hosted by Josh Gates.
âGuyâs Ultimate Game Nightâ (Food Network, 9 p.m.): It all goes down in the so-called âFlavortown Loungeâ in this new competition series.
âCMT Storytellersâ (CMT, 10 p.m.): Darius âDonât call me Hootieâ Rucker performs on the concert series.
âNo-Recipe Road Trip With The Try Guysâ (Food Network, 10 p.m.): Theyâll have to fake it while they make it in this new culinary competition.
Thu., Sept. 1
âThe Shell Collectorâ (Fox Nation): A widowed mother of two gets a second chance at romance in this new TV movie.
âLove in the Villaâ (Netflix): An American tourist (âVampire Diariesââ Kat Graham) finds romance in fair Verona, where we lay our scene, in this new TV movie.
âPantheonâ (AMC+): A teen discovers her deceased dad was uploaded to âthe cloudâ in this new animated sci-fi drama.
âThe Secrets She Keepsâ (Sundance Now): The imported mystery drama starring âDownton Abbeyâsâ Laura Carmichael returns for Season 2.
âWho Invited Themâ (Shudder): They donât need no stinking invitations to your housewarming party in this 2022 thriller.
âThe Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Powerâ (Prime Video, 6 p.m.): Everybodyâs Tolkien at me in this new fantasy series set in an age long before the events of âThe Hobbit.â
âIt Couldnât Happen Hereâ (SundanceTV, 10 p.m.): The small-town true crime series hosted by Hilarie Burton Morgan returns.
âRace for the Championshipâ (USA, 10 p.m.): Get up close and personal with NASCARâs finest in this new reality series.
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.