As is likely the case for many of you, I'm walking that line between trying to stay informed and not wanting to become uselessly depressed. To that end I scrapped my original opening paragraph early Friday morning, just before sending this to publish. Not wanting to overly distract by references to the nearly daily revelations and underlinings from and surrounding the January 6th commission hearings, emphasizing and re-emphasizing how it came down to the actions of a few, principled people that ended up standing between us and Trump's coup. Nor wanting to dwell, here, on the various woundings handed down this week by the Conservative-packed U.S. Supreme Court. Now that they've dropped the bomb with the overturn of Roe v. Wade, I decided to at least add some version of my original opening back. Not as to drag the debates into a blog post on entertainment, but even just simply to time-stamp this piece. To give it the context of this historical backdrop.
That said, for now, we'll dive into the potential entertainment.
(As ever, each link here pops open as a new screen, so you can take a look, close it, and you should end up back here.)
There's
plenty to watch and be entertained by. At the moment it's almost an
embarrassment of riches even just with shows I've already written about
on recent Fridays.
To
quickly hit some of the current/recent highlights, grouping them by
where they're streaming. If you have the service in question, check them
out. If you don't then make a note that they're there for you to check
out if you decide to take a free or reduced-cost trial period with that
streamer.
The most recent bit of fun and puzzlement with the series, though, have been various reports of right-leaning fans flipping out upon realizing what pretty much any rational person knew from the get-go: Homelander's the central villain of the piece. Extremely dangerous, powerful narcissist who realized he gets even more popular with a given demographic the more he self-aggrandizes, talks about violent resolutions to conflicts, and runs un-apologetically roughshod over anyone in his path -- it all seems oddly familiar, doesn't it?
FX/Hulu: The Old Man (Thursday nights on FX, on Hulu the following day). I enjoyed the heck out of the first two episodes last week, and am looking forward to this week's. Jeff Bridges and John Lithgow head a solid cast. This includes flashback scene performances by Bill Heck and Christopher Redman as Bridges and Lithgow's characters, respectively, 30 years ago; Heck's gotten Bridges' mannerisms down, and Redman does a superb job of Lithgow's cadence. While at the time I didn't have much more to go on than the trailer, I first mentioned it back on the 10th. This first season will be seven episodes, so after this week we'll still have four to go.
Disney+: Ms. Marvel (Wednesdays) Certainly there will be some limited appeal, especially if one's uninterested in or just feeling glutted by comics-derived, costumed content, but so far they've done a nice job of bringing a modern, teen- and family-centered show with a culturally-diverse cast in a way that helps expand representation but still manages to feel oddly relatable to a 61 year-old, white dude. We're all looking for friends and a place in the world.
Paramount+: The star attraction there for me this week was the recently-wrapped, 10-part dramatization of what went in to getting a screen adaptation of Mario Puzo's The Godfather made. Centered on Al Ruddy, a former computer programmer for The Rand Corporation who wanted to make something happen with his life, he angled his way into the entertainment biz. A deserving brand of chutzpah that's a combination of balls and brains. It's The Offer.
I'd held off on watching it until all parts were available, and having binged through it in about three sessions I'm very happy I waited to have it all handy. It's a stirring tale, well-told, and full of characters nearly all of whom are or were very much real people, and every bit as colorful. (Among the main cast there's only one character who turns out to be an amalgam of various people.) Outside of the actors, several of the behind-the-scenes people I knew about before, but others were mostly new to me, and I enjoyed researching some of them -- mostly after the fact. It's worth it even just to start to dig into producer Robert Evans (played with mesmerizing intensity by Matthew Goode) and his deservedly deeply-storied career. If you watch, let it run through the credits at the end of each episode and watch the few minutes they take deconstructing some elements of the episode you just watched. Paramount + also has The Godfather movies, too, so you can roll into them -- well, at least the first two -- sometime after having lived through the fight to make that first one.
AMC/AMC+: A crime thriller centered on a Navajo reservation, set in 1971. It's Dark Winds. That was one of the shows I mentioned last week. New episodes land Sunday nights on AMC, and if you have AMC the cable provider likely has an On Demand access to past episodes. You'll need that, because AMC is clearly pushing this as part of their AMC+ content, so - unlike, say, the Walking Dead shows, where they'll frequently rerun earlier episodes during the week, giving ample opportunities to catch up, they pretty much run and rerun that week's episode only, then move on to the next. This is combined with them always letting you know that you could be watching the next episode now, rather than having to wait a week, if only you were an AMC+ subscriber.
The AMC marketing schemes aside, I've been enjoying it so far and was pleased to see this week that the response had been strong enough they've already renewed it for season two. Given all of the novels they have to draw on, this could have serious legs.
Netflix: Also part of what was mentioned last week, is the much-anticipated return of The Umbrella Academy, back with its third season. Between bring busy and so fully drawn-in to The Offer (see above) -- and having semi-trapped my OCD self by having started a rewatch of show from the start (about 70% through season one) I've surprised myself by not having dived in to the new material yet. Still, the weekend's here, and I'll likely fold soon.
Newly-arrived on Disney+ is the Marvel's most recent big screen addition, Doctor Strange In the Multiverse of Madness (2022 PG-13 2h 6m), which had hit U.S. screens back on May 6th, so pretty close to the rumored 45 day span between theatrical release and arrival on Disney+. As someone who's not only steeped in most of the source material (severe gaps with much of the newer print material, though), but closer to home is up on the movies and Disney+ series, it's obvious that with each new item in the past year or so it's gotten a little less accessible to casual and first-time viewers. I'm not sure what someone who hadn't seen Spider-man: No Way Home and Disney+'s WandaVision series would make of some of the details and references, for instance. That's the trick of continuity, as while it invests the long-term fan ever more deeply in a series -- or, in this case, a universe of characters -- it potentially dissuades others from jumping on board because they're wrestling with the desire to know it from the ground up, but to do so presents them with an every-growing stack of homework. This movie is formally the 28th feature film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, stretching back to 2008's Iron Man. That alone would be daunting to anyone approaching it, and in the past two years Disney+ has been pumping out series that are woven directly into the same tapestry has a growing number of series to take in if they want to be up to date on it.
The marketing aim is not only to get fans to line up for each new theatrical release, but to see the Disney+ subscription as essential. It would be all nearly perfect - well-curated in various ways - if not for the messy legacy of the long-lasting effects of some rather old business deals made by Marvel years before the House of Mouse gobbled them up. For now, at least, this means that Disney+ gives someone access to most of it, but (for now) that doesn't include the MCU-connected Incredible Hulk (2008) nor the three most recent Spider-Man films starring Tom Holland. They're working on that, though.
Anyway, since the outbreak of COVID-19 I've only gotten out to see a couple films in theaters, and those weeks after they premiered, hitting particularly ill-attended weekday showings. I'm still not anywhere near the comfort level of looking to get back into a theater with more than a well-scattered handful of strangers. This Dr. Strange sequel was one of those, though.
While undeniably a Marvel film, it's also very much a Sam Raimi one, with a restrained form of his brand of horror imagery. I enjoyed it well enough, though the past two years have seen me get very accustomed to watching things at home, where I have the captions on, can pause the film, and generally be much more comfortable. I was getting a little antsy in the old-style stadium seats at the Regal where I watched it. I'm looking forward to giving it a rewatch at home, where I'm expecting I'll be more focused on it.
The next MCU film will be Taika Waititi's Thor: Love & Thunder, set to formally land less than two weeks from now, on July 8th. I suspect that'll be another weekday matinee affair for me after it's been out for a little. I continue to play that by ear. I doubt I'll just wait until (presumably) late September for it to arrive on Disney+. These days I think the thing I miss most about going out to the movies is going to see something new with someone. At home I think that for the most part it's a mercy for all potential parties that I'm taking in most of what I am solo - the past dozen years in particular have spoiled me such that joint tv viewing decisions and sleep schedules alone be issues to kill the domestic arrangement (or one of the participants) - but going out the movies, it's considerably less than half the fun doing that alone.
This weekend (Sunday) HBO sees the return of the sci-fi series Westworld, back for its fourth season. This reminds me that I eventually have much catching up to do. When the series began early October 2016 I was largely bowled over by the overall quality - everything from the performances and explorations of what we identify as human behavior and recognize as intelligence, to the musical score - and continued to watch through that first season, even as our own, so-called real world took dark and surreal turns. That season ended on interesting notes, but for whatever reasons, when it returned in late April two years later, repeated attempts to climb aboard that second season failed for me. It was a weird thing, as if the content refused to load in my head despite, technically, watching it. So, I set it aside for some other time, and am yet to get back to it. For those of you who're caught up, here's the trailer for the new season:
I know I neglected to do it last week, too, but I haven't lined up suitable free film to recommend either because it's simply good or it's bad enough for the excesses or deficiencies to be an entertainment on its own.
When next we get together it'll be July 1st! How did that happen?! - Mike
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