This post is like the Jeopardy! category “Potpourri,” covering recent programs on various streaming channels, starting with AMC+ on a trial subscription. [Updated through September.]
This Is Going to Hurt (MC-91, AMC+) is the best new show of 2022 so far, if
you were to believe Metacritic. I’m not
quite that high on it, but found it highly watchable, despite my general
indifference to medical dramas. With the
notable exceptions of St. Elsewhere and Nurse Jackie (and of
course, Doc Martin), I haven’t been a follower of hospital-based shows
(don’t remember ever watching an episode of E.R. or Grey’s Anatomy),
but here’s one that caught and kept my interest. Adapted by Adam Kay from his memoir of the
same name, into seven 45-minute episodes, this
While I really enjoyed the first season of State of the Union (MC-79,
I gave Ten Percent (MC-63, AMC+) three episodes to distinguish itself as anything but a pale British imitation of the far superior French series Call My Agent! – which I raved about repeatedly through its four seasons – but that was a test this show did not pass, so it seems strictly for English speakers who couldn’t read subtitles fast enough to keep up with the antic dialogue of the original.
In reading my comments, you
ought to know that in my view “whodunit?” is about the least interesting
question that fiction or film can ask.
Mysteries are a mystery to me – who cares? More so the older I get, since I used to read
a number of Tony Hillerman novels, so I tuned into several episodes of a
belated adaptation, Dark Winds (MC-80, AMC+), mainly for its
Native American flavor and atmosphere. Zahn McClarnon is solid as Navajo Tribal
Police lieutenant Joe Leaphorn, but not as good as he is in Reservation Dogs
(the highly-anticipated second season now underway on Hulu). The rest of the cast is variable, and the
direction merely serviceable. In striking
contrast to Better Call Saul, which is so immaculately done on all
levels. So with new episodes of
I’ve long been a Paul Newman fanboy, and more recently a consistent follower of Ethan Hawke, and the latter offers an unabashed appreciation of the former, along with Joanne Woodward, Newman’s longtime partner in love and work, in The Last Movie Stars (MC-91, HBO), a well-made six-part documentary series. Initially that seemed like a lot of time to devote to a celebration of the pair, but it turned out to have many more levels than celluloid hagiography. With the impetus from the couple’s children, there was a lot of material to work with. Crucially, transcripts of interviews done for Paul when he was contemplating an autobiography; he eventually decided against doing so, and burned the tapes. The transcripts came down to the children however, and in a Covid-lockdown project, Hawke got many of his acting pals to read them aloud (e.g. George Clooney as Paul, Laura Linney as Joanne). The story encompasses both movie life and domestic life over a half-century together, and beautifully matches scenes from their movies with narration from their personal lives. And the beauty of the doc’s duration is that it includes full scenes from the films, rather than clips or snippets. If you want to drown in those blue eyes, or the green pair, then this immersion is for you.
I follow the career of Olivier Assayas, but wasn’t eager to see his 8-hour series remake of his earlier film, derived in turn from a famous French silent serial. Nonetheless, the new Irma Vep (MC-84, HBO) captured my interest when given a chance. First off, Alicia Vikander -- nuff said, easy on the eyes, could just watch her for hours. The Day for Night meets Call My Agent! vibe shines brightly for me, always receptive to films about filmmaking. In such a self-referential work, it certainly helps to have the key to the roman-à-clef elements. The director of the film-within-the-film is clearly a satiric Assayas self-portrait, played by Vincent Macaigne from CMA!. Alica V. is pretty plainly playing a character based on Kristen S. (who cameos). And so on. At first glance, the whole thing may seem rather self-involved, but it turns out to be an intimate lens on the madness of movies, with much to say about the culture of the moment. Its historical perspective is exemplified in the way the series glides seamlessly among backstage realities, the update under production, and the Louis Feuillade silent classic. Most of all, the series is a meditation on cinema, what it has been, what it is today, what it can be – a secular ritual, a magical rite, a calling forth of the light. Not for everyone, but a treat for specialized tastes.
Toby Jones’s mug on the
series promo was enough to draw me to Capital (Wiki, PBS),
though he is only one character of many on a gentrifying street of
In the realm of nature
documentaries, David Attenborough and his team are pathbreakers, and their
latest is Green Planet (PBS).
I’ve never seen such an adept combination of time-lapse photography and
tracking shots, which animate the plants that are the stars of this series,
with animals and humans as bit players.
Music also contributes to the experience, though sometimes laid on a
little heavy to goose the drama.
Nonetheless, I’m beginning to accept my brother’s argument, made while
he was selling off
After equivocating about the first season of Undone (MC-86, AMZ) and looking in on the second only in due diligence, I ultimately found myself absorbed and admiring. This series is both deep and far out, highly visual and psychologically penetrating. Before I likened it to “Waking Life meets Russian Doll” in somewhat belittling comparison. Now I’d put it in the same class, and with their simultaneous second seasons, I’d say Undone exceeds Russian Doll in telling a peculiarly-similar time travel tale, the animation offering a free hand to make the temporal transitions, and the quest more uplifting (family harmony the goal, rather than krugerrands).
Speaking of due diligence, I took in the similarly-rated series Chloe (MC-86, AMZ). I was not drawn in immediately, and put it aside, but then I was looking for something to watch as I was riding my new stationary bike, and picked this as something to which I didn’t have to devote full attention. More a psychological thriller than a whodunit, the series follows a young woman, played by Erin Doherty, who had a best friend as a teen, but was rejected for a new group of friends. Left out, she followed that glamorous coterie on social media. When the friend calls her out of the blue, just before her apparent suicide, Becky assumes a new identity to insert herself into the clique, either to understand Chloe’s death or to inhabit her life. Can’t say this story warranted six hour-long episodes, but it did make the virtual miles go by.
I checked out the first two episodes of the new series adaptation of A League of Their Own (MC-70, AMZ), which weren’t exactly bad, but lackluster. I took a look at some of the original film again, and wondered why any remake was thought advisable. Then tried another series episode as bike material, and it just made the cycling more arduous.
The second season of Reservation Dogs (MC-93, Hulu) lives up to the promise of the first, and then some. It’s really a showcase for Native American talent on both sides of the camera. (Is “Native American” still okay for a white man to say? Or should it be “Indigenous Peoples”? Canadians seem to have the right idea with “First Nations.”) Where the first season followed a group of four teens mourning the loss of their leader by suicide, and scheming to get off the rez, the second widens its lens to take in more of the community, with each character getting their moment in the spotlight. (Right there is the one advantage of “their” becoming a singular pronoun.) Anyway, I really enjoy and recommend this show. Give it some time to establish its world, and you will be drawn in. This series is a convincing argument for diversity, and letting unheard voices be heard. Show creator Starlin Harjo invites many collaborators in telling a variety of stories about various characters, increasing to ten episodes this season. A big thumbs up for this one.
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