Inside the new Netflix series about saving Europeâs artists from the Nazis
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone whoâs ready for a different kind of World War II story.
As âTransatlanticâ showrunner Anna Winger tells senior television writer Yvonne Villarreal, this one â inspired by the true story of American journalist Varian Fry and the Emergency Rescue Committee â draws on lesser-known tales of the era, from the margins of the French Resistance to the failures of the U.S. State Department.
Also in Screen Gab No. 80, a docuseries, a reality competition and an homage to episodic mysteries worth waiting for. And, as always, we want to know what youâre watching. Pretend weâre at the water cooler and give us your review of a TV show or streaming movie youâve loved; it may be included in a future edition of Screen Gab. (Submissions should be approximately 100 to 150 words and sent to [email protected] with your name and location.)
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.
ICYMI
Must-read stories you might have missed
For Patrick Stewart, Jean-Luc Picard is âthe biggest thing thatâs ever happened to meâ: The actor discusses his âStar Trekâ character at the beginning and end, from his first impressions of Gene Roddenberry to saying goodbye to âPicard.â
No, AI didnât write the songs on âLove Is Blind.â Why Netflixâs big hit sounds like that: From âLee Ann Wombatâ to Forest Blakk, Netflixâs reality sensation is full of love songs uncannily attuned to the onscreen drama. Hereâs how they do it.
20 years after âLove Actually,â a new rom-com blurs the line between sweet and âstalkerishâ: In âGhosted,â Chris Evans pursues Ana de Armas â and lands them both in hot water. The filmmakers explain how they made an old trope do new tricks.
We canât afford another writersâ strike. Not Hollywood, not L.A., not the country: The last strike cost $4.5 billion in todayâs dollars. Thatâs why the studios need to stop preparing for the next one and start trying to prevent it.
Turn on
Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
Chris Smithâs 2021 docuseries â100 Foot Waveâ (HBO Max) has birthed a second season, perhaps even more thrilling, moving and gorgeous than its excellent first. That season focused on the quixotic Garrett McNamara, the origins of big wave surfing and his part in making NazarĂŠ, Portugal, where huge waves break in the winter against a rocky headland, an international surfing spot; in the new season, thatâs all been settled for better, and sometimes worse, and Smith looks more widely and deeply at some of the other figures â men and women, younger and older, and among the best at this â who gather at NazarĂŠ when the surf is up, and chase swells wherever else theyâre good. The footage is insanely beautiful and, often, simply insane; this is a sport (a practice, a lifestyle) that incorporates rescue in its protocol. The McNamaras, including Garrettâs insightful wife, Nicole, her charming brother C.J. Macias, and various small children, happily are back, bringing issues of age, allegiance and acceptance. The surfing is impressive, but this is essentially a story about how to live, and not die, in the world. (âWe are not that strong, compared to the power, the strongness of the ocean,â says top surfer Justine Dupont, who learns that lesson firsthand.) Cooperation, more than competition, is its watchword. âRobert Lloyd
I have never enjoyed playing the party game Mafia, but while binging the Australian version of âThe Traitorsâ (Peacock) I realized that I absolutely love watching other people strategically lie to each other for weeks on end. In this competition series â hosted by the suave and smartly-dressed Rodger Corser â a group must work together to identify and vote out a handful of people whoâve secretly become âtraitorsâ â a task that gets trickier with each elimination. Itâs not all talk though: Each episode also includes some kind of physical challenge to build the gameâs prize money, which can only be won by the remaining âfaithfulâ players if theyâve kicked out every âtraitor.â (I am not exaggerating when I say that I rewatched a certain moment of the final episode 10 times in a row.) The recently debuted international franchise also has a British edition, and an American outing with semi-celebrities and hosted by Alan Cumming. Iâm currently debating which one to watch next. âAshley Lee
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
Since I devoured its first four episodes back in January, when Rian Johnson and Natasha Lyonneâs ode on the episodic mystery first premiered, Iâve spent much of my free time recommending âPoker Faceâ (Peacock) to friends â and oh-so-slowly making my way through the remaining episodes, as if I were afraid of going into withdrawal when I ran out. Now that Iâve finally finished the season, I thought it was time to make my affinity for the series newsletter-official. From an admittedly wonky premise â casino employee with infallible internal lie detector goes on the lam after her bestie turns up dead â Johnson, Lyonne and enough guest stars to fill the White Lotus three times over concoct an acridly funny, occasionally gruesome journey into the American heart of darkness. Here, traitorous pitmasters (Lil Rel Howery), washed-up metalheads (ChloĂŤ Sevigny) and aging radicals (Judith Light and S. Epatha Merkerson) chew the bitter cud of dreams deferred or dashed entirely, while Lyonneâs reluctant heroine, Charlie Cale, strikes back on behalf of moral goodness, or at least equilibrium, by making sure even the likable baddies get put away.
As with any series that relies on self-contained episodic narratives, âPoker Faceâ has its clunkers â letâs just say Johnson doesnât have his finger on the pulse of the junior stock car circuit â and you might end up impatient for Charlieâs own storyline to develop faster than paint dries. (I didnât.) But when the series connects most heartily, as in its murderous history of an Industrial Light & Magic-esque visual effects studio or a lacerating parody of stuck-up sitcom actors desperate to be taken seriously, it suffuses its comforting homage to âColumboâ and âMurder She Wroteâ with a fury Hollywood entertainment could use far more of. And itâs that raw emotion under the formulaic surface that makes it my favorite TV show so far this year. âMatt Brennan
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
âTransatlantic,â Netflixâs recently released period drama, is not the tale of World War II heroism weâve come to expect onscreen. The miniseries traces the efforts of the founders of the Emergency Rescue Committee, including American journalist Varian Fry, as they successfully orchestrate the smuggling of 2,000 of Europeâs foremost artists and intellectuals out of Nazi-controlled France to safety in America in 1940. Series co-creator Anna Winger, who previously created âUnorthodoxâ for the streamer, stopped by Screen Gab to discuss the seriesâs origins in a present-day refugee crisis, her research for the show and what sheâs watching. âYvonne Villarreal
When did you first learn the story of Varian Fry and the Emergency Rescue Committee and when did the idea to make it into a TV series begin to take shape?
My father was visiting me here in Berlin when he noticed a street called Varian Fry Strasse. He once knew two people who worked with Fry in Marseilles, so he told me the story. Then in 2015, a million refugees from Syria moved to Germany. As we were all volunteering to help them get settled, I was struck by the cycle of history. Not so long ago, people like me were forced to leave Berlin as refugees and now others were coming to Berlin to seek refuge. I was reminded of what my father had told me and began thinking about making a drama series set in the story of the Emergency Rescue Committee.
Tell me about the research process. What were some of the source materials that became critical to your world building?
The amazing thing about this history is that so many of the people who lived through it were artists themselves and channeled the experience into their own work. There was a lot of material to dig into, much of it already fictionalized: novels, short stories, poems, paintings, in addition to memoirs by and biographies of almost everyone involved, Shoah Foundation interviews, and the Varian Fry archive at Columbia University. Because we were interested in providing a nuanced context, we also read a lot about American politics in 1940, the beginnings of the French Resistance and British intelligence.
When Hollywood dramatizes real events, thereâs sometimes an expectation that the real story is dramatic enough not to warrant too many liberties. What was important to you in capturing this moment in time?
We did the research, but we had to free ourselves to create a fictional story for screen. The history is real, but the inner lives of all the characters are imagined, as are romances and conversations. We narrowed down the number of real people involved in the ERC. We made up some new characters to bring stories from the edges of the conventional French Resistance narrative into the foreground. This was very important to us, as was highlighting the American State Departmentâs refusal to help more refugees in the early days of World War II.
As an artist, how was the experience of telling this story about artists transformative for you?
âTransatlanticâ explores the ways in which friendship, humor, creativity and romance remind us that we are alive, even in a crisis. As I was writing the series, I thought so much about filmmakers like myself who fled Berlin for Hollywood in the 1930s, where they channeled their anxiety about what was happening at home into the work, making popular screwball comedies and romantic melodramas. So many of the people working on movies like âTo Be or Not to Be,â âThe Last Dictatorâ and âCasablancaâ were recent German Jewish emigrĂŠs. Just imagine the conversations they were having over lunch.
Whatâs your go-to âcomfort watch,â the movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
Hitchcockâs âNorth by Northwestâ is easily my No. 1. I have watched it over and over and always find new inspiration there. But nowadays I watch a lot of comedy with my daughters. Weâve seen all of âblack-ishâ at least twice. Iâm Kenya Barrisâ biggest fan.
Whatâs next
Listings coordinator Matt Cooper highlights the TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on
Fri., April 21
âBig Beastsâ (Apple TV+): Meet the megafauna in this new nature series narrated by âLokiâsâ Tom Hiddleston.
âDead Ringersâ (Prime Video): Rachel Weisz pulls double duty as twin gynecologists in this new series based on David Cronenbergâs disturbing 1988 thriller.
âDrops of Godâ (Apple TV+): A deceased wine expertâs estranged daughter and his young protĂŠgĂŠ vie for his storied wine collection in this new drama.
âGhostedâ (Apple TV+): Boy meets girl, girl turns out to be a badass CIA operative in this 2023 action comedy starring Chris Evans and Ana de Armas.
âJudy Blume Foreverâ (Prime Video): This new documentary celebrates the author of such classic YA novels as âAre You There God? Itâs Me, Margaret.â
âThe Last Drive-In With Joe-Bob Briggsâ (Shudder): Your humble host is back with another batch of bad B-movies and cult classics.
âLife Upside Downâ (AMC+): Quarantine breeds contempt for three L.A. couples in this pandemic-themed 2023 drama. Bob Odenkirk stars.
âSlipâ (Roku): A woman (Zoe Lister-Jones) finds herself bouncing back-and-forth between alternate realities in this new fantasy comedy.
âA Touristâs Guide to Loveâ (Netflix): A travel-company exec (Rachael Leigh Cook) gets her groove back on a visit to Vietnam in this 2023 rom-com.
âGreat Performances: Now Hear Thisâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Host Scott Yoo compares notes with Japanese American composer Andy Akiho in this new episode.
âSecrets of the Elephantsâ (Nat Geo, 9 and 10 p.m.; also Saturday): Pack your trunk for this new globetrotting nature series narrated by Natalie Portman.
âNext at the Kennedy Centerâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): Pianist Jason Moran and bassist Christian McBride lay down some top-flight jazz in this new episode.
âDear Mamaâ (FX, 10 and 11:30 p.m.): This new five-part docuseries illuminates the relationship between slain rapper Tupac Shakur and his mother, activist Afeni Shakur.
Sat., April 22
âChasing the Rainsâ (BBC America, 8 p.m.): Why do they bless the rains down in Africa? Find out this new four-part nature series.
âA Pinch of Portugalâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): An aspiring TV chef brushes up on her Portuguese in this new TV movie. With Heather Hemmens.
âHer FiancĂŠâs Double Lifeâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): A woman questions the intentions of her sisterâs intended in this new thriller. With Olivia Buckle.
âPath of the Pantherâ (Nat Geo, 10:50 p.m.): Here, kitty kitty! A nature photographer goes in search of the elusive Florida cougar in this new nature doc.
Sun., April 23
âHome Town Takeoverâ (HGTV, 8 p.m.): The bucolic burg of Wetumpka, Ala., gets spruced up in the renovation seriesâ second season.
âBreaking Girl Codeâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): Lonely in the big city? Thereâs an app for that in this new thriller. With Katelynn Bennett.
âSanditonâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): This period drama based on an unfinished Jane Austen novel presents its series finale. Rose Williams stars.
âFix My Frankenhouseâ (HGTV, 9 p.m.): These homes are in need of major reconstructive surgery in this new renovation series.
âFromâ (MGM+, 9 p.m.): This sci-fi horror drama about a small town none can escape returns for Season 2. With Harold Perrineau.
âAmityville: An Origin Storyâ (MGM+, 10 p.m.): This new docuseries revisits the shocking 1974 murders that inspired the horror franchise.
âSomebody Somewhereâ (HBO, 10:30 p.m.): Our 40-something heroine (Bridget Everett) is back for a second season of this Kansas-set comedy.
Mon., April 24
âThe Cult of Elonâ (Tubi): Mr. Musk of Tesla, Twitter and SpaceX fame/infamy is profiled in this new documentary.
âDalglieshâ (Acorn TV): P.D. Jamesâ intrepid chief inspector (Bertie Carvel) is back on the case for a second season.
âThe Real Hatfields & McCoys: Forever Feudingâ (Fox Nation): This new reality series follows descendants of those two historically antagonistic families.
âPerry Masonâ (HBO, 9 p.m.): This period drama starring Matthew Rhys as the dogged defense attorney wraps its sophomore season.
âIndependent Lensâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): The poignant 2022 documentary âFree Chol Soo Leeâ tells the story of a Korean immigrant wrongfully convicted for a 1973 murder in San Francisco.
âThe Daily Showâ (Comedy Central, 11 p.m.; also Tuesday-Thursday): Correspondent Desi Lydic moves over to the big desk as this weekâs guest host.
Tue., April 25
âFamily Legacyâ (Paramount+): The children of famous musicians share their stories in this new docuseries.
âThe Boulet Brothersâ Halfway to Halloween TV Specialâ (Shudder): The sinister drag duo will slay â figuratively, at least â in this new star-studded special.
âJohn Mulaney: Baby Jâ (Netflix): They tried to make him go to rehab and he did and now the comic is cracking wise about it in his latest stand-up special.
âThe Light We Carry: Michelle Obama & Oprah Winfreyâ (Netflix): The former first lady and the onetime Queen of Daytime TV have a tĂŞte-Ă -tĂŞte in this new special.
âNight Courtâ (NBC, 8 p.m.): âSNLâsâ Melissa VillaseĂąor guest stars on the rebooted sitcom.
âMy Grandparentsâ Warâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Toby Jones learns about his forebearsâ experiences during World War II in this new episode.
âSupermarket Stakeoutâ (Food Network, 9 p.m.): The culinary competition serves up a fifth season. Alex Guarnaschelli hosts.
Wed., April 26
âSaint Xâ (Hulu): A young woman disappears while vacationing in the Caribbean in this new mystery drama. With Alycia Debnam-Carey.
âCarol Burnett: 90 Years of Laughter + Loveâ (NBC, 8 p.m.): The stars come out to salute a comedy legend in this new special. With Vicki Lawrence, Steve Carell, et al.
âNatureâ (KOCE, 8 p.m.): The new episode âTreasure of the Caribbeanâ explores a massive coral reef off the coast of Central America.
âNovaâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Efforts to mitigate the effects of climate change are examined in the new episode âChasing Zero Carbon.â
âIconic America: Our Symbols and Stories With David Rubensteinâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): Bostonâs Fenway Park, home of the Red Sox, is first up in this new series.
âAwkwafina Is Nora From Queensâ (Comedy Central, 10:30 p.m.): And sheâs back in new episodes of her semi-autobiographical sitcom.
Thu., April 27
âFirefly Laneâ (Netflix): This drama starring Katherine Heigl and Sarah Chalke as lifelong BFFs returns with its final episodes.
âThe Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaningâ (Peacock): You canât take it with you in this new de-cluttering series narrated by Amy Poehler.
âGrand Knighthawk: Infiltrating the KKKâ (Hulu): George Stephanopoulos investigates the notorious hate group in this new documentary.
âLove & Deathâ (HBO Max): Infidelity leads to murder in a small Texas town in this new drama. Jesse Plemons and Elizabeth Olsen star.
âSweet Toothâ (Netflix): The fantasy drama about a young human-deer hybrid is back with new episodes.
â100 Days to Indyâ (The CW, 9 p.m.): IndyCarâs finest are all revved up in this new behind-the-scenes series.
â(Re)Solvedâ (Vice, 9 p.m.): This new series investigates the conspiracy theories that often arise following a celebrityâs untimely demise.
âBrat Loves Judyâ (WE, 9 p.m.): The reality series starring rapper Da Brat and wife Jesseca Harris-Dupart returns.
âThe Last Last Late Late Show With James Corden Carpool Karaoke Specialâ and âThe Late Late Showâ (CBS, 10 p.m. and 12:35 a.m.): Your humble host takes the wheel one last time before bidding his talk show adieu.
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.