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Analysis: ‘The Patient’ has just the cure for your streaming woes

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Analysis: ‘The Patient’ has just the cure for your streaming woes

I am not fairly prepared to surrender my sandals simply but, however I’ll gladly spend extra time indoors — there’s a lot to look at and hearken to, in any case.

So depend me in for brand spanking new Hulu collection “The Affected person” through which Carell stars as a therapist whose affected person (performed by Domhnall Gleeson) takes him hostage, confesses to being a serial killer and calls for to be cured of his homicidal methods.

Sounds simple sufficient, proper?

It is streaming on Hulu now.

‘Star Trek: Decrease Decks’ Season 3

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I like how, in any case these years, there’s nonetheless extra of the “Star Trek” universe to discover.

On this animated collection, the assist crew of the starship USS Cerritos have their tales advised. Season 3 finds the ship impounded and the crew looking for justice for his or her captain, in addition to engaged in all kinds of different interplanetary hijinks.

Sci-fi, comedy and animation make for an entertaining trio.

The primary two episodes of the brand new season are streaming on Paramount+.

‘The Boleyns: A Scandalous Household’

From left: Elizabeth McCafferty and Rafaëlle Cohen as sisters Mary and Anne Boleyn in a scene from "The Boleyns: A Scandalous Family."

Lengthy-time Tudorphile over right here, so this new PBS collection is true up my alley.

A 3-part historic documentary, “The Boleyns: A Scandalous Household” charts the meteoric rise — and equally seismic fall — of the Boleyn household in Tudor England.

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After all, Anne Boleyn was one in every of Henry VIII’s wives — the second spouse, however first to lose her head, actually. However she was not the one Boleyn to have charmed the King; PBS describes the collection as “an exhilarating story of affection, intercourse, betrayal and obsession performed out in a Tudor courtroom rife with gossip, backstabbing rivalries and intrigue.”

Sure, please!

The primary episode is accessible to stream on 13.org, PBS.org and the PBS Video app.

Two issues to hearken to

The Sick, The Dying… And The Lifeless! by Megadeth

James LoMenzo, Dave Mustaine, and Kiko Loureiro of Megadeth perform on stage during a concert in Austin, Texas on August 20, 2021.

Thrash steel heavyweights Megadeth has a means with album titles and their newest isn’t any exception.

“The Sick, The Dying… And The Lifeless!” is their newest document and no, it is not in regards to the pandemic.

“This one was impressed by one other virus, the Plague,” the band’s frontman Dave Mustaine advised Louder, explaining that the document grew from, amongst different well timed inspirations, “the precise details … the way it was a illness that was communicable through the rats and the fleas, and the way that entire factor occurred.”

If anybody can rock to that, it is Megadeth.

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The album is out now.

‘Yungblud’ by Yungblud

Yungblud performs at Terminal 5 on February 11 in New York City.
Singer/songwriter Yungblud’s third album is self-titled as a result of, as he wrote on Instagram in Might, “Every little thing as much as this second has been a whole explosion of uncensored expression, the place I simply advised the reality and sang about what I felt in that precise second.” (Again in 2018, the artist’s first EP was additionally self-titled.)

“The distinction right here is that I’ve thought and felt this document so deeply,’ he wrote. “I went to part of myself that I did not know was there.”

The album can also be out now.

One factor to speak about

From left: Janelle Brown, Meri Brown, Kody Brown and Christine Brown from "Sister Wives" attend an event at the Tropicana Las Vegas on April 13, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

My mother is a giant fan of TLC’s actuality collection “Sister Wives,” so consequently I’ve been saved updated on its star Kody Brown and his household. (TLC can also be owned by CNN’s mother or father firm, Warner Bros. Discovery.)

His former spouse Christine Brown not too long ago spoke with Individuals about ending their relationship — and strolling away from plural marriage.

“I get to reside life for me,” the 50-year-old stated. “My entire world has modified, and each single cell in my physique is happier.”

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One of the crucial attention-grabbing issues to me about “Sister Wives” was the idea of a number of girls sharing the identical husband and mixing their households. Properly it seems that Brown, who shares six youngsters together with her now ex, misplaced curiosity in that form of life.

“I began pondering perhaps this is not working for me,” she stated. “After which I finished believing in polygamy. I noticed I did not actually need to reside it anymore. I did not like sharing a husband or feeling like I wasn’t vital.”

The significance of discovering what makes you content cannot be overstated. Better of luck to her.

One thing to sip on

Solange Knowles attends the inaugural Lena Horne Prize gala at Town Hall on February 28, 2020 in New York City.

I like this time for Solange Knowles.

The multi-talented, multi-hyphenate inventive is getting her artwork on the market greater than ever earlier than.

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Not solely has she change into the primary Black lady to compose a rating for the New York Metropolis Ballet, however she additionally not too long ago launched “In Previous Pupils and Smiles,” a 188-page monograph based mostly on a efficiency piece she debuted on the Venice Bienniale in 2019.
In keeping with Vogue, the guide “consists of behind-the-scenes and live-performance images and conversations with and writings by collaborators like co-curator Aaron Cezar, musician Greg Bryant, costume designer Kyle Luu, and hairstylist Virginie ‘Gin’ Moreira, amongst others.”

“Documentation with nonetheless images has at all times been actually vital,” she advised the publication. “For this work to have the ability to reside on, to be archived, and shared all through historical past, I really had us redo this efficiency with out an viewers to seize how the power drive of the efficiency shifted.”

Being the youthful sister of Beyoncé cannot be simple, so I’m thrilled to see Knowles carving her personal legacy within the arts.

What did you want about at the moment’s publication? What did we miss? Pop in to poplife@cnn.com and say good day!

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Movie Reviews

'Wicked Part One' is a movie you should go see right now

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'Wicked Part One' is a movie you should go see right now

I saw the stage play several years ago in Chicago and was lukewarm about the show. So, I was not excited about going to the screening. Wow, was I pleasantly surprised. The movie is very different from the stage play. If you are not a fan of the stage play, you owe it to yourself to try the movie.

“Wicked” is the story of Glinda, the good witch of the North, telling the troubled story of Elphaba’s life to the people of Munchkin land. Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West, is rejected most of her life because of her green skin. At Shiz University, she forms an unlikely friendship with a beautiful young woman named Galinda, another student who is filled with an undaunted desire to be popular. Following an encounter with the Wizard of Oz, their relationship soon reaches a crossroad as their lives begin to take different paths.

Academy Award nominee Cynthia Erivo stars as Elphaba. Ariana Grande costars as Glinda/Galinda. Academy Award nominee Jeff Goldblum is the Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Academy Award winner Michelle Yeoh is Madame Morrible. Jonathan Bailey is Fiyero, the love interest. Ethan Slater is Boq. Marissa Bode is Elphaba’s sister Nessa. Idina Menzel and Kristen Chenoweth, the original Elphaba and Glinda in the 2003 stage play hit have cameo roles in “Wicked” the movie as Wiz-O-Mania super stars.

The performances of Erivo, Grande and Bailey are outstanding. Both have gorgeous voices that is a joy to listen to even though I thought the music was beautiful but there wasn’t an outstanding song.

Jon M. Chu directed.  He also directed one of my favorite movies, “Crazy Rich Asians.” Winnie Holzman and Dana Fox wrote the screenplay based on the book “Wicked” by Gregory Maguire that was based on the L. Frank Baum classic book, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.” The movie was so much more detailed than the stage play and the story made more sense.

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The Choreography by Christopher Scott was reminiscent of the Busby Berkeley movies of the 1930s.

Cinematographer Alice Brooks does a phenomenal job of emphasizing the beauty of the choreography, the sets and the costumes.

Paul Tazewell’s costumes are colorful, beautiful and add so much to the beauty of the movie.

I expect that “Wicked, Part One” will be nominated for all sorts of Academy Awards, Critics Choice Awards, and Golden Globes. It is a beautiful entertaining film for the whole family.

“Wicked Part One” rated PG is now showing in Edwardsville, Alton, Granite City, Jerseyville and Carlinville. I give it 5 stars. The sequel, “Wicked Part Two,” is scheduled for release on November 21, 2025. 

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Review: In 'Moana 2,' a groundbreaking Disney hero dreams bigger, venturing into new territory

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Review: In 'Moana 2,' a groundbreaking Disney hero dreams bigger, venturing into new territory

Parents of young children should let loose a hearty “chee hoo” upon the Thanksgiving-timed release of “Moana 2.” That’s the long weekend’s entertainment sorted, with a sequel that comes close to the soaring storytelling and exhilarating anthems of the first film, which delighted young audiences eight years ago, resulting in countless Halloween costumes and babies belting about how far they’ll go.

That first film, which celebrates the strength and power of young girls — as well as Polynesian culture with reverence and specificity — was a balm in the uncertain November of 2016. It was a massive box office hit and was nominated for two Academy Awards — for animated film and for original song for a tune by Lin-Manuel Miranda.

“Moana” felt revolutionary within the Disney canon because our spunky protagonist is decidedly not a princess (she’ll be the first to tell you that). She felt radical, especially for older generations that grew up on passive heroes whose lives were dictated by weddings or resistance to them. That Moana was a girl of action, an explorer — strong, capable, brave, family-oriented and empathetic — made her a remarkable role model, and the character has lost none of her moxie in the sequel.

Although the impressive voice cast of Pacific Islanders, including original Moana voicer Auliʻi Cravalho and Dwayne Johnson, has returned (with a few additions), a new creative team has been assembled for the sequel, which was originally developed as a series and then reworked into a feature-length film. The good news is that the seams don’t show on the finished movie, which is as visually dazzling and culturally rich as the first and an apt continuation of Moana’s story. She is now a revered “wayfinder” in her community on a tiny Pacific island.

Moana has a desire to explore even farther into the ocean, to go beyond where she’s ever gone before — specifically to connect with other people. During a ritual ceremony, she receives a vision of an island, Motufetu, that once connected all the people of the ocean but that has since been cursed by a god named Nalo. Moana puts together a crew that includes her friend and historian Moni (Hualalai Chung), boatmaker Loto (Rose Matafeo) and farmer Kele (David Fane), in order to find Motofetu.

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Along the way, they’ll have to scoop up the demigod Maui (Johnson), who has been waylaid inside a giant clam by Nalo, with only the company of a mysterious and nefarious bat-woman, Matangi (Awhimai Fraser). The entire team will have to collaborate — even with the feisty bunch of coconut warriors known as the Kakamora — in order to break Nalo’s curse, achieve their goal and assemble the community of Moana’s dream.

David G. Derrick Jr., Jason Hand and Dana Ledoux Miller are the trio of directors on the film, with Miller and Jared Bush writing the screenplay. But the biggest creative difference that audiences will notice is the songs. With Miranda moving on, the songwriters known as Barlow & Bear (Abigail Barlow and Emily Bear) have written all the numbers for the sequel, collaborating with returning composers Mark Mancina and Opetaia Foa’i. Barlow & Bear went viral in 2021 with their “Unofficial Bridgerton Musical” album, which eventually won a musical theater Grammy.

The songs in “Moana 2” are good, to be sure. They’re just not as addictive as Miranda’s ear worms — the man has an uncanny skill for sprinkling seriously habit-forming syncopations into his songwriting — and while the big ballad “Beyond” and the jazzy rock number “Get Lost” are certainly stirring, they don’t quite stick in the brain like “You’re Welcome” or tug on the heartstrings like “How Far I’ll Go.”

But “Moana 2” is a worthy sequel, with gorgeous animation, a thoughtful representation of Polynesian culture and another exciting adventure for our inspiring Moana. Does it go beyond the first film? No, but that would have been a tall order. That it stands up as a sturdy and satisfying follow-up is more than enough.

Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.

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‘Moana 2’

Rated: PG, for action/peril
Running time: 1 hour, 40 minutes
Playing: In wide release Nov. 27

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Maria movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert

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Maria movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert

Even if he doesn’t exactly go there in his cinema, Pablo Larraín often obliquely flirts with horror. The hints were there in the fanatical nature of the titular “Tony Manero” character, a dancer unnervingly obsessed with John Travolta in “Saturday Night Fever.” And they were all the more obvious in his gorgeous political satire “El Conde”—one of 2023’s boldest cinematic outings that imagined Pinochet as a 250-year-old vampire. To the careful eye, the director’s genre exploits elevated much of his ingenious, gradually heartbreaking psychodramas “Jackie” and “Spencer,” too, his pair of otherworldly films on the troubled lives of legendary 20th century women.

Now with “Maria,” about the final days of the iconic American-Greek soprano Maria Callas, Larraín turns his “historic women” movies into a near-perfect trilogy, giving us a stunning conclusion to his series. Upon seeing “Maria” for the first time months ago at the Telluride Film Festival (and revisiting it several times thereafter), this critic pondered what made “Maria” not only the gentlest, but the best of the three. And the answer was perhaps always obvious—as an opera connoisseur, Larraín is proudly (and often, sentimentally) protective of one of the artform’s most groundbreaking singers throughout “Maria,” a feature that was prominent neither in “Jackie,” nor “Spencer.”

It’s not that the psycho-dramatic dreads we feel in those former two films aren’t a part of “Maria.” For everyone who’s ever feared losing a big part of what defines them, and for everyone who’s opened their hearts to something they love so widely and unrestrictedly, only to see various forms of cruelty sneak in, this generous and beautiful picture ought to be a gut-punch. But you can often sense that Larraín, among the most intuitive filmmakers working today, almost wants to shield Callas from the harmful grip of those cruelties. While her end is inevitable in the film—Callas died in 1977 at the young age of 53—you will be disarmed, even moved to tears, experiencing Larraín’s care for her in “Maria,” which is essentially a compassionate ghost story on the beloved things we lose, as they continue to deteriorate and slip through our fingers against our will.

In a queenly performance of poise and mystique, Angelina Jolie plays Callas with an ethereal presence, grasping the intense grief of the once-in-a-generation singer who’s been losing her voice. In the beginning, Jolie—through Ed Lachman’s glorious, high-contrast black-and-white lensing—looks straight at the camera, as her defiant Callas sings “Ave Maria” from Verdi’s Otello, perhaps both as a little prayer to her past, and as a reckoning with her present. The voice we hear (both in this scene, and in the several arias we’d get to hear later on) belongs to Callas for sure. (At least for the most past, as Larraín reportedly has mixed in drips of Jolie’s voice in there, too.) But that doesn’t mean Jolie isn’t doing her own singing—she is, as evidenced in the way that she stretches her facial muscles and engages her entire body in the process. But she is subtle in those signifiers, as one has to be while embodying Callas. The famed soprano was effortless in navigating her range and hitting some impossibly high notes—music simply and silkily poured out of her, an artistic flair stylishly internalized and portrayed by Jolie. 

A perceptive performer who can sometimes be a tad cold-to-the-touch, Jolie gives her career-best performance as she steers Callas’s ups and downs during the singer’s final days, almost all of it empathetically imagined by Larraín and screenwriter Steven Knight. She floats around her grand Paris apartment, an elegant and expansive space of gothic hues that envelopes Callas in a cocoon of claustrophobia. (Production Designer Guy Hendrix Dyas miraculously marries realism with wistfulness in his work.) She seeks the acceptance of her devoted staff, particularly Bruna (Alba Rohrwacher) and Ferruccio (Pierfrancesco Favino), who bring much warmth and humor into the movie. She turns inward and has conversations with her own self when on a cocktail of medications—chiefly, Mandrax, inventively personified by Kodi Smit-McPhee. Elsewhere, she fends off nosy press and entitled fans. Meanwhile, she remembers both the glamor and the pain that she felt through a thunderous, rewarding, and sometimes heartbreaking past, one that eventually launched her into a rocky romance with the Greek-Argentine tycoon Aristotle Onassis (the terrific Turkish actor Haluk Bilginer). And she does all that sporting Massimo Cantini Parrini’s breathtaking costumes, both exact replicas of her known pieces, and custom designs made for the movie.

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In honoring her journey, Larraín contrasts the film’s Paris scenes of gorgeous colors and locales with Maria’s black-and-white remembrances—not only trying to get to know La Callas but also hoping to infuse anyone who might be watching with the kind of affection he clearly feels for the diva. Dare to open your heart to his quest, and you might just feel that tenderness in a deep sense, even if you aren’t an opera connoisseur. And that’s perhaps the grandest miracle of this film—like Callas herself aimed to do, “Maria” brings opera to the masses, not as a gimmick or high-minded endeavor, but as an act of generosity and understanding that art belongs to everyone who wants to appreciate it. In that, as Larraín purposely and studiously braids in arias into his narrative—full songs for the most part, and not frustratingly chopped up snippets—and gives you a taste of everything from Bellini to Puccini to Donizetti, you’ll feel like you’ve had a full musical meal, with a hunger for a second helping.

Will you get to know Callas by the end of “Maria”? Or will she remain as a complete mystery? Rest assured that’s hardly the point of Larraín’s cinematic ode. The reward is the beautiful and heart-swelling two hours you’ll have the privilege of spending with La Callas, alongside a director who wants nothing more than to share his immense love for her. 

In theaters now, on Netflix December 11th.

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