You can now watch âPreacher,â âGangs of Londonâ and more great AMC shows on Netflix
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone whoâs ready for AMCâs return to Netflix.
The basic cable network helped shape the most recent golden age of television with the likes of âMad Menâ and âBreaking Bad,â in part thanks to streaming subscribers being able to discover and catch up on its shows in the off-season. Now, a new generation of acclaimed AMC series is newly available on the platform, including this weekâs recommendations, âPreacherâ and âGangs of London,â as well as âAnne Riceâs Interview With the Vampire,â âDark Winds,â several âWalking Deadâ spin-offs and more.
Plus, our TV critic celebrates the arrival on streaming of the classic cop drama âHomicide: Life on the Street,â and Minnie Driver stops by to discuss playing Elizabeth I in Starzâs âThe Serpent Queen.â
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Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
âGangs of Londonâ (AMC+, Netflix)
âGangs of Londonâ begins as many underworld dramas do, with a death that destabilizes the black marketâs delicate balance. In the case of AMCâs uncommonly stylish actioner, though, the allure is not what the series reveals about Finn Wallace (Colm Meaney), his hotheaded son Sean (Joe Cole), their shrewd allies Ed and Alex Dumani (Lucian Msamati and Paapa Essiedu) or the undercover cop (Sope Dirisu) in their midst. Itâs how: Even before the title card appears, over the image of blood seeping from the late kingpinâs head, creators Gareth Evans and Matt Flannery signal the showâs ambition through unexpected compositions, kinetic camera movements and delicious pops of color. (âOzark,â this is not.) The result is a stirring gangland epic about the âillegitimate bastard children of the great British Empire,â one in which youâre made to feel less like an observer of the fisticuffs than a party to them. Experience the full-body wince of a crystal ashtray to the mouth or a barroom dart to the palm in the sequence that concludes the pilot and youâll be hooked. Just in time for the hotly anticipated third season. â Matt Brennan
âPreacherâ (AMC+, Netflix)
Go ahead, pigeonhole âPreacher.â I dare you. Just a bit ahead of its time, this AMC comic adaptation is a fangirlâs fever dream: A person named Arseface who looks like what heâs been through? A reluctant man with a shady past, present and presence, spreading the word of God while simultaneously side-eyeing it? Angels and vampires?! Dominic Cooper, who I believe is part chameleon, plays âPreacherâ as a man whoâs just letting life have its way with him until forces beyond his control, heh, force him on a journey to do some hard things â finding himself, an old girlfriend (a spectacular Ruth Negga) and perhaps his God at the same time. The show almost defies genre, providing juicy storytelling with the acting to match, as many laughs as gore and just plain surprises. Letâs just call it a tragidramacomic and watch it right now. â Dawn M. Burkes
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
One of the canards of our critical age is that television became great only once premium cable got into the game â that before âThe Sopranos,â all was dark upon the waters. Just one case to the contrary: the brilliant âHomicide: Life on the Street,â which premiered on NBC in 1993, a police procedural that offered psychologically complex characters, morally murky storylines and superior writing in a series whose overarching concern was that it be true to life.
Created by Paul Attanasio (or, depending on your source, showrunner Tom Fontana and James Yoshimura), it was based on Baltimore Sun reporter David Simonâs 1991 work of nonfiction, âHomicide: A Year on the Killing Streets.â (Simon famously went on to create or co-create âThe Wire,â Tremeâ and âThe Deuce.â) Shot, on the titular streets of Baltimore with handheld 16mm cameras and filled with Godardian jump cuts, it was a neo-New Wave take on the genre that also called back to such early â60s, on-location procedurals as âEast Side West Sideâ and âNaked City,â with more emphasis on the lives of its detectives. It won three Peabody Awards and four Emmys.
Twenty-five years after it left the air, the seriesâ seven seasons and 122 episodes, along with the 2000 reunion, âHomicide: The Movie,â have finally begun streaming, via Peacock. (Music rights seem to have had something to do with the delay.) Among other things, this is the series that established Andre Braugher, in the role of ace interrogator Frank Pembleton, as a star, and gave birth to Richard Belzerâs sardonic Det. John Munch, who would later transfer to âLaw & Order: Special Victims Unit.â
Critically lauded if never highly rated, its presciently diverse cast â hired not for their color but their character â included at various times Kyle Secor, Melissa Leo, Ned Beatty, Jon Polito, Michelle Forbes, Clark Johnson, Isabella Hoffman, Jon Seda, Daniel Baldwin and, above them all, Yaphet Kotto as the homicide unitâs imposing commander, Al Giardello. The roster of guest stars attests to the showâs quality and reputation. To name just a few: James Earl Jones, Paul Giamatti, Edie Falco, Chris Rock, Steve Buscemi, Lily Tomlin, Alfre Woodard, Eric Stoltz, Isaiah Washington, Baltimoreâs own John Waters, Joan Chen, Robin Williams and, in one of the seriesâ most remarkable episodes, Vincent DâOnofrio as a man trapped between a subway train and the platform. These people donât show up for just anything. â Robert Lloyd
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
Glenda Jackson. Judi Dench. Helen Mirren. Cate Blanchett. The actors whoâve played Elizabeth I represent a wide range of approaches to the Virgin Queen, but weâve never seen her as we do in âThe Serpent Queenâ: through the eyes of an adversary. Season 2 of Starzâs drama, which concludes next week, finds French monarch Catherine deâ Medici (Samantha Morton) courting her English counterpart, played by Minnie Driver, to secure a strategic marriage for her son â and discover a mischievous frenemy who wonât be so easily played. Driver stopped by Screen Gab recently to discuss following in the footsteps of legends, voicing the Penguin in a new animated series and what sheâs watching. â Matt Brennan
What have you watched recently that youâre recommending to everyone you know?
I recently watched all three seasons of âSlow Horsesâ [Apple TV+]. It is that rare confluence of genius story, character and direction with sublime performances from every actor involved. There is nothing slick or manufactured about it â itâs messy and human and really funny â and yet the action sequences are sharp and compelling.
Whatâs your go-to âcomfort watch,â the film or TV show you return to again and again?
If anything in my life is amiss, you will know because I will either be watching âThe Sound of Musicâ [Disney+] or â30 Rockâ [Peacock, Hulu], most probably Seasons 1 to 3. If I need to be reminded of why I do what I do, I watch âBarryâ [HBO, Max]. I think itâs a perfect show.
Elizabeth I is either the subject of, or a supporting character in, countless films and TV series. What was your definitive Elizabeth going into this experience and why? What is most distinctive about âThe Serpent Queenâsâ take on her?
I remember watching Glenda Jackson play Elizabeth I on TV when I was a little kid. She was terrifying and seductive, and I immediately understood the power innately present in this person, both as a queen and a woman. Justin Haythe, who created and wrote âThe Serpent Queen,â was really interested in exploring the woman behind the Crown. I think you see glimpses of her throughout this season â she is witty and playful, dead sure of her power, a woman of appetites. For me, it was brilliant to see her sharpen her claws on Catherine deâ Medici when she feels that Catherine does not have her house or power under control. I was left wanting to explore more, which is an interesting place to leave playing a character in anything.
Youâve appeared in a number of projects over the years that have amassed a passionate following â such as âGrosse Pointe Blank,â âGood Will Hunting,â âThe Richesâ and a personal favorite of mine, âSpeechless.â Whatâs the one that people stop you to talk about most often these days, and what do they say?
Well, recently, people have been asking about Elizabeth I and also the Penguin, who I voice in the new animated series âBatman: Caped Crusader.â Thereâs been quite a reaction to a woman voicing the Penguin, and as it is such a brilliant re-imagining from Bruce Timm. Iâm always interested to chat about it. Lorraine Finnster, who I played on âWill & Graceâ [Hulu], also still seems to bring a lot of comment and joy.
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