âTed Lassoâ wrote a love letter to romantic comedies. We break down ârom-communismâ
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone whoâs been getting extra mileage out of that poop emoji since watching âThe White Lotusâ finale.
The timing of this inaugural edition is actually sort of perfect: The end of HBOâs wicked satire of privilege â though not without its shortcomings â means the âLotusâ-eaters are casting around for what to watch next, and our weekly love letter to home viewing is full of recommendations, information, conversation and much more.
Written by The Timesâ film and TV teams and delivered to your inbox every Friday, Screen Gab covers the TV and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about â or should be. And weâll have something for just about every taste from âMarvelâs M.O.D.O.K.â and âThe Real Housewives of Beverly Hillsâ to âTed Lassoâ and âAnnette.â (Seriously, thatâs all from the Week 1 lineup. Weâre a wild bunch.)
So settle into that you-shaped depression on the couch and fire up the smart TV: At Screen Gab, thereâs always something on.
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Turn On
What should you watch this weekend? Our experts recommend the stop-motion genre weirdness of âUltra City Smithsâ and âMarvelâs M.O.D.O.K.â and the surprise premiere of âGrace and Frankieâsâ final season.
The work of patient human hands â building models, creating action frame by slightly altered frame â puppet animation is a fundamentally marvelous, fundamentally creepy thing: Toys come to life. (You know how those stories end.) Two funny-strange, funny-ha-ha series add an extra layer of discomfort, and some graphic mayhem, to the inherent weirdness.
âUltra City Smithsâ (AMC+) comes from Steve Conrad, who created the brilliant 2017 (live-action) series âPatriot,â an unexpected intersection between spy movies and sadcore music. It proceeds from the idea that it would be interesting to take some baby dolls, fit them out with wigs and facial hair, dress them as adults and make them characters in a downbeat, hard-boiled, neo-noir detective story. (With heart: Itâs Conradâs hallmark.) Voices include Kristen Bell, Julian Barratt, Tim Heidecker, Bebe Neuwirth, DaâVine Joy Randolph, Luis Guzman, Jason Mantzoukas, Tim Meadows, Alia Shawkat, Melissa VillaseĂąor and Debra Winger, with Tom Waits â Tom Waits! â narrating: the kind of cast youâd ordinarily need Robert Altman to assemble. Itâs also a musical.
The hapless brainiac supervillain at the center of âMarvelâs M.O.D.O.K.â (Hulu), created by Patton Oswalt and Jordan Blum, is nearly all head, a big cylinder supported in a hovering exoskeleton. (MODOK stands for Mental Organism Designed Only for Killing.) Superheroes and villains go down best when their essential ridiculousness is brought into the light, and Oswalt is spectacularly peevish in the title role, warring with the tech bro whose company has absorbed his own bankrupt evil organization; trying to keep his family together; and getting his son (Ben Schwartz) through his bar mitzvah. Against all odds, thereâs pathos here. âRobert Lloyd
âGrace and Frankieâ (Netflix). Sure, a certain bowel movement in âThe White Lotusâ ignited the chatter over the weekend, but if youâre in the mood for a show that encourages toilet use â and revolves around the kind of friendship in which a BFF will come lift you off the commode when youâre 80 â the first four episodes of âGrace and Frankieâsâ seventh and final season dropped last Friday without warning. Itâs been a whole 19 months since we last saw our gals, played by Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin, and theyâre trying to figure out what to do with the hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash that Graceâs husband Nick (Peter Gallagher), who was arrested by the FBI for securities fraud and tax evasion, had stashed in a couch cushion. Letâs just say theyâre breaking bad with the help of everyoneâs other favorite golden girl, Joan Margaret (Millicent Martin). Grace and Frankie also find themselves rooming with their exes, Robert (Martin Sheen) and Sol (Sam Waterston), after the womenâs Rise Up toilet invention floods the menâs house. The final 12 episodes are slated for release in 2022. âYvonne Villarreal
Critics Picks: âReservation Dogsâ (FX on Hulu) | âCODAâ (Apple TV+) | âThe Green Knightâ (VOD rental)
Catch Up
3,991 words.
Thatâs how long âThe legal titan and the âReal Housewifeâ: The rise and fall of Tom Girardi and Erika Jayneâ was. The story, written by two of The Timesâ Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporters and published in December 2020, detailed how the famed L.A. lawyer had allegedly stolen millions from his orphaned and widowed clients. The piece also raised questions about how much his then-wife, Erika â who filed for divorce from Tom about a month before the article ran â knew about the origins of the money she so lavishly spent.
So what does the length of the article have to do with anything? Well, as it turns out, cameras were rolling on âThe Real Housewives of Beverly Hillsâ when The Times ran the investigation into Tom and Erika last winter. And Erika has been one of the stars of âRHOBHâ since 2015, showing off her $40,000-a-month glam squad, $189,000 panther Cartier ring and $200,000+ Lamborghini HuracĂĄn.
The ladies of Beverly Hills were vacationing at Kyle Richardsâ home in La Quinta when the article came out. And while they were shocked by the headline, they seemed equally horrified by the prospect of actually having to read the entire story themselves.
âItâs bad. Itâs not good,â Lisa Rinna told Kyle, scrolling through the story on her phone.
âHow bad?â asked Kyle, who still had under-eye patches affixed to her face.
âItâs just too long,â Lisa replied. âI canât, like â itâs gonna take a minute.â
Fortunately, Sutton Stracke soon emerged from her bedroom to tell her friends that she had, in fact, read the entire story. Kyle instantly begged her friend to TL;DR the âin-depth exposĂŠ,â which she deemed âso frigginâ long.â She later went on to consult her friend Faye Resnickâs husband â lawyer Everett Jack Jr. â to âbreak downâ the story, noting she âdid not actually read the whole L.A. Times articleâ because, again, âit was too long.â
How much time would it have taken Kyle to get through the piece? Well, the average reader can digest 200 to 250 words a minute. Letâs go with the under in this case. That means Kyle would have needed to devote just under 20 minutes of her time to reading the article. Which you think she might have found a worthy effort, considering it so monumentally shifted the Housewivesâ beliefs about Girardi that they have already been discussing the story for two episodes.
At least there was Sutton, who said she not only read the story in La Quinta but numerous times afterward âad nauseum.â She even took notes on the piece so that she could grill Erika about its most salacious details at Kyleâs Christmas dinner a few nights after publication. Among her inquiries: Was Erika really âblindsidedâ by the story? âI donât have access to the lawsuits before they hit press,â Erika replied, which is technically untrue, since the lawsuits mentioned in the piece were public record. Sutton continued: Why did the paper say that Tom put $20 million into Erikaâs LLC? âI was kept away from the books,â Erika insisted. âI found out we had $50 to $80 million that was gone. We did? That was in the L.A. Times article that you so thoroughly read,â Erika snapped back. âWell,â Sutton replied, âIâm sorry I read that.â
Oh, but we viewers â and L.A. Times journalists â are not, Sutton. And neither is Kyle. âAmy Kaufman
Guest Spot
Streaming now on Amazon Prime Video, âAnnetteâ features what may be the yearâs most unexpected collaboration. Directed by Leos Carax, a longtime arthouse fave known for rhapsodic films such as âThe Lovers on the Bridgeâ and âHoly Motors,â the film is a musical starring Adam Driver, Marion Cotillard and Simon Helberg in a story involving love, betrayal, opera, death, experimental stand-up comedy and an emotionally convincing puppet of a little girl. The original story and music is by Ron and Russell Mael, better known as the band Sparks and subject of the recent documentary âThe Sparks Brothers,â with lyrics by the Maels and Carax.
The three of them recently sat for an interview together in Los Angeles, the first time they had seen each other since the Maels accepted Caraxâs best director award at the Cannes Film Festival on his behalf. âMark Olsen
What have you all been watching during COVID times? Leos, do you watch many movies or much television?
Leos Carax: I donât watch television and I donât watch movies. I saw many, many, many movies from 16 years old to 26. And then slowly less and less and now I hardly see any at all.
Ron, Russell, do the two of you still watch a lot of movies? What have you been watching while stuck at home during COVID?
Russell Mael: I started getting into Korean dramas. Thereâs something appealing about those. I wasnât a fan before and then just had a lot of time on my hands. So I just started watching them and theyâve got kind of a form that most of them fit. The problem is theyâre all a minimum 16 episodes and theyâre all like a feature-length film. Itâs like an hour and a half. So youâve got to have a lot of time on your hands to do it.
Have you been watching anything, Ron?
Ron Mael: Well, Iâm a fan of the â70s Japanese pink films, where theyâre not pornographic, where they kind of figure out where to put a bottle to hide everything. And so theyâre really skillfully done. That whole style of film where they were actually really good directors making films that maybe were a little beneath them, but doing them in really clever ways. They were sensual, but always have like a glass held up in the proper places and hiding the naughty bits.
Break Down
Has âTed Lassoâ gone too soft in its second season? Lorraine Ali, whoâs written about the seriesâ shortcomings, and Ashley Lee, who took readers behind the scenes of last weekâs super-sweet Christmas episode, take up the debate, using Fridayâs romantic comedy-inspired âRainbowâ as a jumping-off point.
Ali: âTed Lasso,â Appleâs comedy about an optimistic American football coach running a British soccer team, is nearing the halfway mark of its second season, and we both just watched Fridayâs ârom-communismâ episode. I swear they tailored the theme for you, Ashley. But before you launch, Iâd like to suggest that the show be renamed âRoy Kent,â because at this point, heâs about the only interesting character to me. Call me Trent Crimm, but all the aw-shucks kindness has made for little tension and conflict in Season 2. Except for Roy. Heâs still caustic and cynical. Goodwill is nothing without darkness as contrast!
Lee: This episode, written by Bill Wrubel, really did feel like it was for me. The Jennifer Lopez/Renee Zellweger/âthree Katesâ roll call in the locker room; Ted reciting lines from my favorite movies; Roy running from the studio to the field the way rom-com heroes always do. I did not expect such a tribute from a show about a bunch of male athletes, but itâs just the latest way âTed Lassoâ has made me feel silly for putting it in any kind of box.
Ali: Funny, because I feel boxed in by this season. The humor works half the time, but relies so much on his goofy banter and Ted-isms that it already feels stale. And whereâs the conflict? In Season 1, even the scheming Rebecca contended with her own bad guy, ex-husband Rupert.
Lee: Youâre right â thereâs no ongoing âvillainâ this time around the way Rebecca, Higgins and co. once were Instead, everyoneâs on the same team. I have a feeling that we may soon see a âbaddieâ-like force from outside their circle, possibly tied to Samâs protest of the clubâs top sponsor. In the meantime, Iâm enjoying the dependable niceness of this show; itâs at least a break from our real-life horrors!
Ali: True. I think thatâs what really made folks love season one. People were desperate for something â anything â that was comforting, and âLovecraft Country,â which came out around the same time, was not fitting that bill. What else are you liking about this season?
Lee: Iâm enjoying how much this season isnât about Ted at all. Isaac! Sam! Nate! If the show ends up doing a Trojan Horse as âOrange Is the New Blackâ did with Taylor Schilling, Iâm on board. Are you?
Ali: Totally. In fact, Iâd welcome it. Perhaps I mentioned this earlier ... bring on âThe Roy Kent Showâ!
Lee: Looking ahead, Iâm going to try to adopt Tedâs ârom-communismâ approach: âBelieve me, it will all work out exactly as itâs supposed to,â he says. âOur job is to have zero expectations and just let go.â
Whatâs Next
Here are some other movies and TV shows coming to a sofa near you before another Screen Gab lands in your inbox, with links to Times coverage.
Fri., August 20
âThe Chairâ (Netflix). Sandra Oh attempts to manage a college English department, family and Jay Duplass in an academia-set comedy of issues.
âTruth Be Toldâ (Apple TV+). Octavia Spencer as reporter-turned-podcaster, looking into crime. Kate Hudson is around for this, its second season.
âReminiscenceâ (HBO Max). Near-ish-future VR neo-noir, written and directed by TVâs âWestworldâ co-creator Lisa Joy. Hugh Jackman in need of a shave.
Sun., Aug. 22
âChapelwaiteâ (Epix). Stephen King in a period mode. Dark doings in 19th century Maine. Adrien Brody, Emily Hampshire.
âWork in Progressâ (Showtime). Creator-star Abby McEnany survives Season 1 thoughts of suicide only to find the pandemic waiting in Season 2.
Wed., Aug. 25
âAmerican Horror Story: Double Featureâ (FX). The Horror Story gang returns with another bag of recycled tropes and two separate stories to tell. Make your own intermission.
âArcherâ (FX). The mercurial spy cartoon reaches Season 12. Jessica Walterâs final work.
Thurs., Aug. 26
âThe Other Twoâ (HBO Max). Adult siblings with pop star younger brother. Moving from Comedy Central.
Mail Bag
Want to know more about one of the filmmakers weâve interviewed? Need a new show to binge now that your fave is done for the season? If you have a question about TV or streaming movies for the pop culture obsessives at The Times, send it to us at [email protected] and you may find the answer in next weekâs edition.
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