âFallout,â âGirls5evaâ and more streaming recommendations for your weekend
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone who needs some ideas to help freshen up their queue.
With weekend after weekend after weekend of rain hitting L.A. this winter, you may have burned through your backlog of movies and TV shows to catch up on â but fear not. From a buzzy new take on the end of the world and an absurd comedy about the music industry to the early work of an indie horror master and a meta take on the family sitcom, we have plenty of titles in this weekâs Screen Gab to check out. So get streaming.
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Turn on
Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
âFalloutâ (Amazon Prime Video)
Approaching Amazonâs new adaptation of the beloved âFalloutâ video game franchise might seem daunting for non-gaming newbies, especially given its roots stretch back to the 1990s. But fear not: as with HBOâs âThe Last of Us,â no prior knowledge is needed to fully enjoy the showâs post-apocalyptic pleasures. Set in a retro-futuristic alternate-universe Southern California, transformed into an irradiated wasteland by a nuclear holocaust, the series interlaces the stories of three survivors: Lucy (Ella Purnell), an innocent young woman raised in a relatively luxurious fallout shelter; Maximus (Aaron Moten), an awkward, sometimes cowardly aspirant knight from the militaristic Brotherhood of Steel; and the Ghoul (Walton Goggins), a gun-slinging wanderer who was once an all-American movie star. Executive produced by Jonathan Nolan of âWestworldâ fame, and anchored by compelling performances from its trio of leads, the series brilliantly blends witty, sardonic comedy and moments of gleeful gore with weighty â and timely â explorations of corporate greed, morality and inequality. The end of the world has rarely been this fun. âJosh Rottenberg
âGirls5evaâ (Netflix)
â30 Rock,â my all-time favorite comedy, went viral on social media late last year for rat-a-tat rhythms that have become increasingly rare on TV â but not absent entirely. The spirit of Tina Feyâs raucously funny media satire, and of her post-traumatic farce with Robert Carlock, âUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,â lives on in the form of a reconstituted turn-of-the-millennium girl group trying to capitalize on an additional 15 minutes of fame. Created by Meredith Scardino, âGirls5evaâ â ââcause 4evaâs too shortâ â applies the same funhouse mirror to the music industry, replete with creep-tastic managers (whoâve undergone sensitivity training), aggressive fans (who are influencers in their own right) and competing pop stars (who disguise themselves as truck drivers or prefer to perform in a Snuggie). But the series, which moved to Netflix for its recent third season after premiering on Peacock in 2021, is more than the sum of its cock-eyed pop culture references; singer-songwriter Sara Bareilles brings impressive comic chops to the level-headed Dawn, who strains to keep the quartet together, and RenĂŠe Elise Goldsberry delivers an Emmy-worthy performance as Wickie, the groupâs narcissistic Jenna Maroney. Along with Busy Philipps and Paula Pell, they even manage to turn musical numbers written for laughs into genuine bangers: Inspired by a knee replacement, Season 2 single âBend Not Breakâ is a catchy, remarkably poignant tribute to friendship in the face of lifeâs pressures. If you donât end up with at least the theme song stuck in your head after watching, you may hold the cure for earworms. âMatt Brennan
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
Mia Goth stans, assemble! Already, the cult indie actorâs fans are swooning over the recently sprung trailer for A24âs âMaXXXine,â hitting theaters July 5. The third part of a slasher trilogy launched by 2022âs double-shot of âXâ and âPearl,â the new film has Gothâs survivor living in a paranoid, De Palma-ish 1985 Los Angeles, working as a popular porn star but hoping to make it in respectable movies and put the violence of her past behind her. To judge from the trailer, she fails.
All three films are written and directed by the 43-year-old Ti West (Goth herself gets a co-credit on the script for âPearlâ), an inspired talent who combines his love of horror history with a streak of indie resourcefulness and meta-awareness. Itâs a good moment to return to a pair of Westâs earlier breakouts. Fresh to Shudder this week, 2009âs âThe House of the Devilâ â shot on 16mm and set during a keenly evoked 1983 â is a definitive âSatanic panicâ thriller, complete with a spooky old house, a babysitter listening to the Fixx on her Walkman and Greta Gerwig as a sidekick with feathered Farrah Fawcett hair.
While West was shooting âHouseâ in suburban Connecticut, he and his crew were staying at a smallish hotel that, besides being cheap, had a local reputation for being haunted: swinging doors, TVs on the fritz. Like most horror directors, the experience didnât scare him (West calls himself a skeptic) so much as lodge in his head for future reference, becoming 2011âs âThe Innkeepers,â (multiple platforms). A breezy setup gives way to a brooding ghost story and, taken together with âHouse,â it represents both a fun night on the couch and a study in the building blocks of a career marked by invention. âJoshua Rothkopf
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
You donât need to be a fan of unscripted TV to enjoy âLopez v. Lopezâ (NBC, Peacock). Then again, it couldnât hurt. With âReal Housewives of Miamiâ in her queue and a number of reality stars in her guest cast, the sitcomâs showrunner, Debby Wolfe, understands that the power of an outsize personality transcends genre: âWhen you stand out to a large audience, no matter what field youâre in (politics, sports, reality, social media), you are a born performer.â Wolfe stopped by Screen Gab recently to discuss how reality and reality TV inform her collaboration with stars George and Mayan Lopez on the series, the classic sitcom that picks her up when sheâs feeling down, and more. âMatt Brennan
What have you watched recently that you are recommending to everyone you know?
My recent favorite is âReal Housewives of Miamiâ [Bravo, Peacock]. Because I work in scripted, I turn to unscripted shows to unwind and relax. What I love about the Miami ladies specifically is that I was raised there and they all remind me of the strong, outspoken Latinas I grew up with. I canât get enough of the Spanglish fights where everyone is talking over one another. It feels like home.
What is your go-to âcomfort watch,â a movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
When Iâm feeling down, the thing that always brings a smile to my face is âThe Golden Girlsâ [Hulu]. I think itâs one of the greatest sitcoms of all time and every episode hits with humor and heart. The joke writing and delivery are unmatched.
In a recent interview with The Times you describe grabbing your notebook when George and Mayan âget into itâ on set â inspiration for the seriesâ very meta concept. Please talk more about an occasion when you channeled an on-set exchange into something that ended up on the show.
Itâs funny you ask because I mentioned above that I love unscripted TV, meanwhile thereâs an unscripted series happening behind the scenes of âLopez vs. Lopez,â between a real father and daughter. The evolution of Mayan and George working together in Season 2 was definitely inspired by their working relationship in Season 1. Theyâve had to learn to treat one another as professional colleagues rather than as overbearing dad and triggered daughter. Itâs super challenging. I canât imagine working with my parents. But I commend the two of them for trying while still giving us plenty of material to mine for stories.
I love the surprising mix of guest stars youâve cast for the show, including former NFL player Marshawn Lynch and âVanderpump Rulesâ cast members Scheana Shay and Brock Davies. Whatâs the rationale, for you, behind the unorthodox casting? And who is on your wish list that you havenât gotten yet?
I have this controversial theory that the same thing that makes unscripted reality stars famous is what makes sitcom stars famous: They are hilarious. We tune in because they make us laugh. And as they gain more attention and fame, they fall into a broader version of who they are onscreen. Thatâs how we build sitcom characters â they are the best and worst parts of ourselves. And I think reality stars are already very aware of what those things are and how to highlight them in front of a camera. This season I tested out my theory and I was right!
Lisa Rinna, Scheana and Brock came on our show and crushed it. Marshawn Lynch had already proven his comedy acting chops in âBottomsâ [Prime Video, Fubo TV, MGM+], but regardless I think my theory applies to larger-than-life icons as well. When you stand out to a large audience, no matter what field youâre in (politics, sports, reality, social media), you are a born performer. Our show was inspired by Mayanâs TikTok, so it also feels very natural for us to do unorthodox casting. And casting them gives us an opportunity to bring in new audiences that may not yet know about our show. This is by no means to say they are better at acting than trained performers, but the potential to be great is there if they wish to hone the craft. On my dream list are many seasoned Latine actors weâd love to work with, such as Salma Hayek, Michael PeĂąa and Rosie Perez, just to name a few. And a dream for both Mayan and I is to work with RuPaul. Mayan had the opportunity to work with Ru as a guest judge on âDrag Raceâ and our entire cast and crew are huge fans of âmother.â
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