Connect with us

Entertainment

What’s on TV Wednesday: ‘A Million Little Things’ on ABC; the premiere of ‘The Ms. Pat Show’

Published

on

What’s on TV Wednesday: ‘A Million Little Things’ on ABC; the premiere of ‘The Ms. Pat Show’

The prime-time TV grid is on hiatus in print. You could find extra TV protection at: latimes.com/whats-on-tv.

SERIES

Survivor (N) 8 p.m. CBS

The Flash Barry (Grant Gustin) believes a suspect regardless of a mountain of proof in opposition to him. Additionally, Iris (Candice Patton) offers Allegra (Kayla Compton) a possibility to be a mentor. Danielle Panabaker, Danielle Nicolet and Brandon McKnight co-star on this new episode. 8 p.m. The CW

The Goldbergs (N) 8 p.m. ABC

Advertisement

The Masked Singer (N) 8 p.m. Fox

Man’s Grocery Video games Host Man Fieri invitations 4 cooks featured on sister present “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” to the Flavortown Market. Maneet Chauhan, Scott Conant and Simon Majumdar are the judges. 8 p.m. Meals Community

The Inexperienced Room With Nadia Brown (premiere) 8 p.m. Ovation

The Marvel Years (N) 8:30 p.m. ABC

Past the Edge (N) 9 p.m. CBS

Advertisement

Kung Fu After a mishap forces her to re-evaluate her plan in opposition to Russell Tan (visitor star Kee Chan), Nicky (Olivia Liang) desires to search out out what Kerwin (visitor star Ludi Lin) is as much as after listening to he’s again within the fold. Additionally, whereas on the Chinatown Arts collective, Jin (Tzi Ma) presents his assist to an outdated good friend. Shannon Dang and Gavin Stenhouse co-star. 9 p.m. The CW

The Conners (N) 9 p.m. ABC

Domino Masters (N) 9 p.m. Fox

Home of Payne Ella and Miranda (Cassi Davis, Keshia Knight Pulliam) welcome Lisa and Malik (Ahmarie Holmes, Larramie Doc Shaw) house with their new child, whereas the standing of Janine’s (Demetria McKinney) airplane remains to be unknown and tensions are excessive within the season premiere of the Tyler Perry collection. 9 p.m. BET

Ghost Adventures The crew visits the Hollywood Hills, then the Castañeda Lodge in Las Vegas, N.M. 9 p.m. Journey

Advertisement

Assisted Dwelling Lindor (Nicholas Duvernay) will get arrested, Jeremy (Na’im Lynn) tries to assist get him launched within the season premiere of the Tyler Perry collection. 9:30 p.m. BET

Residence Economics (N) 9:30 p.m. ABC

Good Sam (N) 10 p.m. CBS

A Million Little Issues Maggie’s (Allison Miller) radio present is a hit however her beliefs don’t align with these of the station proprietor. Additionally, Rome (Romany Malco) visits his outdated prep college, which reopens outdated wounds. Mario Van Peebles and Christina Moses co-star on this new episode. 10 p.m. ABC

Expedition With Steve Backshall: Unpacked (N) 10 p.m. KOCE

Advertisement

The Ms. Pat Present Patricia Williams stars on this new sitcom based mostly on her memoir and stand-up comedy act. The present revolves round a former convict who looks like a fish out of water in her new life as a a suburban mother, with a husband (J. Bernard Calloway), a difficult sister (Tami Roman) and two units of children. 10 p.m. BET

Good Hassle (N) 10 p.m. Freeform

Snowfall (N) 10 p.m. FX

Astrid & Lilly Save the World A doppelganger monster arrives the day of the varsity play on this new episode. Jana Morrison and Samantha Aucoin star. 10 p.m. Syfy

SPECIALS

Nick Information: Books, Basketball and Bullying This new episode encompasses a e-book membership created by children for teenagers, explores what it takes to be a sports activities reporter and meets a canine crusader on a mission to unfold kindness. 7 p.m. Nickelodeon

Advertisement

SPORTS

CBI Basketball Match Last, 2 p.m. ESPN2

Ladies’s Faculty Basketball Pac-12 Match: USC versus UCLA, 3 p.m. PAC-12LA. NCAA Division II event semifinals: 4 and 6:30 p.m. CBSSN

2022 NIT Basketball Match Quarterfinals: Wake Forest go to Texas A&M, 4 p.m. ESPN2; Washington State visits BYU, 6 p.m. ESPN2

NBA Basketball The Brooklyn Nets go to the Memphis Grizzlies, 4:30 p.m. ESPN; the Philadelphia 76ers go to the Lakers, 7 p.m. SportsNet and ESPN

NHL Hockey The Pittsburgh Penguins go to the Buffalo Sabres, 4:30 p.m. TNT; the Chicago Blackhawks go to the Geese, 7 p.m. TNT

Advertisement

TALK SHOWS

CBS Mornings Simmone Taitt, Poppy Seed Well being; Raquel Willis. (N) 7 a.m. KCBS

In the present day Dr. John Torres; Jill Martin; Savannah Guthrie. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC

KTLA Morning Information (N) 7 a.m. KTLA

Good Morning America Elle Fanning; Pamela Anderson. (N) 7 a.m. KABC

Good Day L.A. (N) 7 a.m. KTTV

Advertisement

Reside With Kelly and Ryan Lily Collins (“Windfall”); Emmanuel Acho (“Illogical”). (N) 9 a.m. KABC

The View Lindsey Granger co-hosts; Matt Damon; Gary White. (N) 10 a.m. KABC

Rachael Ray Camila Alves McConaughey. (N) 10 a.m. KTTV

The Wendy Williams Present Cassandra Freeman (“Bel-Air”). (N) 11 a.m. KTTV

The Speak Rosario Dawson; Pablo Schreiber; Russell Peters. (N) 1 p.m. KCBS

Advertisement

Tamron Corridor Tyler Henry; Wendell Pierce. (N) 1 p.m. KABC

The Drew Barrymore Present Gabrielle Union; podcast host Molly Sims; Deborah Norville. (N) 2 p.m. KCBS

The Kelly Clarkson Present Jeff Foxworthy; Tinashe; Tinx; Olivia Edward. (N) 2 p.m. KNBC

The Ellen DeGeneres Present Mario López. (N) 3 p.m. KNBC

The Actual (N) 3 p.m. KCOP

Advertisement

Amanpour & Firm (N) 11 p.m. KCET; midnight KVCR; 1 a.m. KLCS

The Tonight Present Starring Jimmy Fallon Joe Jonas; Gabriel Iglesias; Wolf Alice performs. (N) 11:34 p.m. KNBC

The Late Present With Stephen Colbert Anne Hathaway; Da’Vine Pleasure Randolph. 11:35 p.m. KCBS

Jimmy Kimmel Reside! Lisa Kudrow; Michael Chiklis; Allison Russell performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KABC

The Late Late Present With James Corden Sandra Bullock; Channing Tatum; Chris Laker. (N) 12:37 a.m. KCBS

Advertisement

Late Evening With Seth Meyers Sandra Oh; Thomas Middleditch; Todd Sucherman. 12:37 a.m. KNBC

Nightline (N) 12:37 a.m. KABC

MOVIES

Megan Leavey (2017) 8:07 a.m. Starz

Smokin’ Aces 2: Assassins’ Ball (2010) 8:21 a.m. Encore

Designing Girl (1957) 9:30 a.m. TCM

Advertisement

The King’s Speech (2010) 9:50 a.m. and 9 p.m. Encore

Flight (2012) 10:05 a.m. Epix

The Queen (2006) 11:10 a.m. HBO

Cop Land (1997) 11:30 a.m. Cinemax

Sing (2016) 11:30 a.m. FX

Advertisement

Tom Thumb (1958) 11:30 a.m. TCM

The Legend of Bagger Vance (2000) 11:47 a.m. Starz

The American President (1995) 11:51 a.m. and seven:03 p.m. Encore

Mates With Advantages (2011) midday E!

Kong: Cranium Island (2017) midday TNT

Advertisement

Glory (1989) 12:25 p.m. Epix

The Visitor (2014) 12:35 p.m. Showtime

Lili (1953) 1:30 p.m. TCM

G.I. Jane (1997) 2 p.m. AMC

The Harm Locker (2008) 2:53 p.m. Starz

Advertisement

The Suicide Squad (2021) 3 p.m. HBO

Cyrano de Bergerac (1950) 3 p.m. TCM

Scary Film (2000) 3 p.m. VH1

The Aviator (2004) 3:08 p.m. Cinemax

Trainwreck (2015) 4:30 p.m. E!

Advertisement

Salt (2010) 4:45 p.m. Syfy

Harvey (1950) 5 p.m. TCM

The Starvation Video games (2012) 5:35 p.m. Epix

Collateral (2004) 6 p.m. Cinemax

Captain America: Civil Warfare (2016) 6:45 p.m. Syfy

Advertisement

Superbad (2007) 7 p.m. E!

Independence Day (1996) 7 p.m. Paramount

Lust for Life (1956) 7 p.m. TCM

His Woman Friday (1940) 8 p.m. KVCR

Die Arduous (1988) 8 p.m. AMC

Advertisement

The Starvation Video games: Catching Hearth (2013) 8 p.m. Epix

Minari (2020) 8 p.m. Showtime

Distress (1990) 8 p.m. TMC

On the Waterfront (1954) 9:15 p.m. TCM

Prime Gun (1986) 10 p.m. Paramount

Advertisement

The Farewell (2019) 10 p.m. Showtime

Home of Sand and Fog (2003) 10 p.m. TMC

Battle Membership (1999) 10 p.m. TNT

The Starvation Video games: Mockingjay, Half 1 (2014) 10:30 p.m. Epix

Die Arduous 2 (1990) 11 p.m. AMC

Advertisement

A Streetcar Named Need (1951) 11:15 p.m. TCM

Midsommar (2019) 11:45 p.m. Showtime

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Movie Reviews

Minmini Movie Review: A soothing and understated film with characters to root for

Published

on

Minmini Movie Review: A soothing and understated film with characters to root for
Minmini Movie Synopsis: Praveena and Sabari used to be classmates. Cut to the present: both are riding to the Himalayas in a Royal Enfield. What happens when they again cross paths?

Minmini Movie Review: How much guilt is too much guilt, asks Halitha Shameem in her newest film, Minmini. How one deals with guilt and remorse varies from person to person; Minmini takes us through the lives of Praveena (Esther Anil) and Sabari (Pravin Kishore), who have a contrasting approach to dealing with sorrow.

Praveena and Sabari meet as adults while riding to the Himalayas in their Royal Enfield. While Praveena soaks in each moment of the trip and pauses to marvel at what she sees, Sabari keeps riding and focuses on reaching the destination. In contrast to Praveena, he values the destination more than the journey.

Quite early in the film, while Sabari is in school, a teacher asks the class what they want to be. The answers range from fashion designer to singer but the only two answers that cannot be limited to just naming one profession were Sabari’s and Pari’s. Pari is the popular boy at school, whereas Sabari is the studious one. Both of them do not instantly get along due to them being so different from one another and their interests being different. But, along the way, Halitha takes us through the mind frame of two teenagers.

Minmini is one of those films that has a first and second half that are so tonally different from each other. It is already well known that the schooltime portions of the film were taken in 2015, while the portions where the characters have grown up have been shot more recently. So, it benefits the flow of the film that the story is told in a linear format rather than cutting between the past and the present.

Advertisement

Will the film have the same impact if the same actors hadn’t played their grownup versions? Maybe yes. But the tonal change in the second half would have been more evident if other actors had been cast for those parts. But Halitha doesn’t rub it in our faces that she has shot with the same actors over a period of years. Rather, the story naturally unfolds along the way in an understated way.

While the school portions are more out there and animated, the grownup portions are soothing. Also soothing is Khatija Rahman’s understated music, which goes well with the tranquil nature of the film. All in all, Minmini is a refreshing film in the current Tamil cinema setup. It’s both emotional and humane and except for a few forced humour scenes consisting of the character of a Malayali teacher, Minmini has a novelty that we hardly see in films nowadays.

The film explores an otherwise unexplored topic like survivor guilt and calls for pursuing our passion and being ourselves. But it does so without seeming preachy or draining. The film comes into its own in the second half when the seeds planted in the first half are delved into. Just like Praveena and Sabari, we, the audience, also feel like we have been through a journey by the end of the film, as we travel from a secluded boarding school to the soaring heights of the Himalayas.

Esther Anil, Pravin Kishore and Gaurav Kalai make us care for their characters. The former two actors’ fun banter is amplified by the natural chemistry that they share with each other.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Entertainment

As suburban vampire Laszlo, Matt Berry stretches his improv (bat) wings

Published

on

As suburban vampire Laszlo, Matt Berry stretches his improv (bat) wings

English comic actor Matt Berry describes the level of improvisation afforded to him and the cast of FX’s hit comedy “What We Do in the Shadows,” in which four vampires and a human familiar share a house on suburban Staten Island, as “very generous.” That freedom to “go for the most outrageous thing,” he says, is one reason why his justly admired performance as vaingloriously pervy 300-year-old bloodsucker Laszlo Cravensworth earned him an Emmy nomination for lead actor in a comedy. It’s a first for Berry, who also has won U.S. fans with such imported Britcoms as “The IT Crowd” and “Toast of London,” a show he co-created about an arrogant actor.

But before he filmed one episode of “Shadows,” one of Berry’s ideas was met with serious resistance by creator Jemaine Clement and executive producer Taika Waititi. “I offered at the beginning to do a sort of Eastern European accent, what you always associate with vampires,” he recalls, then imitates the pair’s reaction — “no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no” — with a deadpan calm that slyly conveys exactly how horrified Clement and Waititi would have been to lose one of the more priceless gifts in present-day comedy: Berry’s epically plummy, theatrically swaggering English baritone. “And so I have my own accent,” he says, adding, “on the keen enthusiasm from the creators.”

I should first clarify for readers that in real life you don’t speak like the ghost of every British stage ham converged into one larynx. But it’s not that far away, either.

To me, it doesn’t sound anything exceptional, because I’ve had it all my life. When I was younger, it made me laugh if I heard someone with a clipped accent be pompous. I’d instantly mimic it. It’s rare to hear now. Maybe some members of the royal family, but not your average citizen.

When you’re revving it up, is there anyone in particular you’re thinking of?

Advertisement

An actor called Jon Finch [who] had an incredible delivery. Even when doing everyday things, he sounds like he’s doing Shakespeare. And Tom Baker.

… Who is most well known for playing Doctor Who in the 70s.

When I was a kid watching [Baker], I thought he was terrifying, the way he sounded. As I’ve become an actor, I’ve realized a lot of it was down to the fact that he was trying to remember his lines. He would start every sentence with [affects a deeply throaty sound] “We-e-e-lll …” and then he’d launch into whatever he was doing. That I find really funny. And I find anyone who is not particularly self-aware very amusing.

The sets for the series, says Matt Berry, are “so good, you forget you’re in a warehouse in Canada. You really are in this turn-of-the-century mansion full of furniture from the last 700 years.”

Advertisement

Laszlo certainly qualifies. Do those showy Victorian threads help put you into his ancient-and-randy mindset?

It’s also the sets. They’re so good, you forget you’re in a warehouse in Canada. You really are in this turn-of-the-century mansion full of furniture from the last 700 years. Because they’re vampires, they don’t get rid of anything. It’s so kind of warm and inviting, you want to stay there. Because outside is a warehouse and, you know, three feet of snow.

Is there a vampire power you’d take?

It wouldn’t be immortality. As you can see from them, it doesn’t look fun. And if you suffer from a mental health issue, you’ve got that forever. But they have no real interest in material things. That’s what I like. They couldn’t give a f— about things around them, or technology. That’s what I envy about them.

A very human power you have is musical ability. You’ve released many albums, and you’ve been a musician longer than you’ve been acting. Didn’t it play a part in how you were discovered?

Advertisement

I was playing singer-songwriter-type songs, and for a comedy club above a pub, I turned it into a character who was actually a serial killer confessing in his songs what he’d done. I thought it was hilarious. Matt Holness and Richard Ayoade saw me, and they were looking for someone to play a doctor in the TV version of their Edinburgh show, which became “Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace.”

That spoof of 80s-era horror television, which first ran in the U.K. in 2004, became a cult comedy classic.

I’m so thankful for it every day. I’ve worked ever since, which is a complete and utter mystery.

What can we expect from the final season of “Shadows,” coming this October?

There are some clever things with the finale that I hope people will be really into. I’d be into it if I had nothing to do with it. Don’t get me wrong — nothing to do with me. The concepts, I think, are interesting, as opposed to watching myself. I must make that clear.

Advertisement

It’s funny how, being so expert at playing grand narcissists, you retreat from the merest hint of self-promotion.

That’s a British thing, I suppose, isn’t it? We largely don’t like to blast our own horns outwardly.

Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

'Deadpool and Wolverine' movie review with Casey T. Allen

Published

on

'Deadpool and Wolverine' movie review with Casey T. Allen

I don’t know if it’s just me, but it seems the variety of movie options in theaters this summer is as barren as my love life. So the superhero comedy Deadpool & Wolverine has appeared like an oasis in a bland, monotonous desert this season for a lot of people (including me). Now that I’ve reached this oasis, it didn’t totally quench my thirst.

After the excitement of the first two Deadpool films from 2016 and 2018, Ryan Reynolds (Free Guy, 2021) is back in the red & black costume playing the wisecracking mischievous mercenary. This second sequel starts with our swearing, sarcastic anti-hero working at a used car dealership and wearing a toupee. But his ordinary civilian boredom stops when he’s recruited by a government office called the Time Variance Authority to travel through the multiverse and save another universe from destruction. But instead of following orders, Deadpool decides to save his own universe from approaching oblivion and goes to a few other universes to recruit a Wolverine (Hugh Jackman, Logan, 2017), who’s still alive, for some reinforcements.

So let me be honest, that explanation might not be totally accurate. I’m still hazy on some of the details in this film, because the exposition at the beginning is so long and so convoluted. There’s special technology for Deadpool to travel through the multiverse. There’s a naturally dying timeline that can’t be reversed. And one of the bad guys has built a machine called a “time ripper” capable of destroying entire universes! It felt like the team of five screenwriters (which includes Mr. Reynolds) was desperately grasping for an interesting story to even allow this film to exist. So with the horribly shoddy premise to work from, Deadpool & Wolverine is almost dead on arrival.

But Ryan Reynolds’ spirited performance keeps this film somewhat fun. Like the two previous films, he gives perfectly timed jokes filled with raunchy bluntness, sexual innuendo, and real-life jabs at the 20th Century Fox and Disney movie studios. But, of course, this style of humor is not new for this film. All Deadpool fans have seen these sorts of jokes before. This film’s biggest boast, or biggest draw for viewers, is its long list of surprise appearances by famous actors playing mostly forgotten comic book characters. That part is entertaining, and the dirty adult humor had me laughing, or silently in shock, multiple times in the movie theater.

Hugh Jackman, sadly, is given nothing to do but repeatedly grumble unhappily, kill lots of people, and look tiredly in every direction. Maybe because Ryan Reynolds has worked with this director before on the action films The Adam Project (2022) and Free Guy (2021), they had too strong a rapport with each other to let Hugh Jackman in on more fun. (This director I’m referring to is the Canadian, Shawn Levy.)

Advertisement

By the time the fourth, large scale, extended, bloody fight scene started near the film’s climax, I thought, “Okay, boys. I’m ready for my lobotomy now.” With a runtime of two hours and eight minutes, this one could easily have been a minimum of 20 minutes shorter. As the 34th entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), I walked away from this one thinking it was just okay. Not a disaster….but merely satisfactory. And aren’t we done with the MCU now? Is anyone else ready to move onto new frontiers?

And earning $211 million in its opening weekend has reminded us there’s apparently still an audience for these flashy, bro-centered, R-rated, superhero adventures. But not for viewers under 17 of course. (Wink wink!)

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending