Category Archives: Pop Culture

The Entertainment Forecast

Friday, Sept. 15 – Thursday, Sept. 21

Oliver Jackson-Cohen and Jenna Coleman in ‘Wilderness’

FRIDAY, Sept. 15
El Conde
Well, here’s something you don’t see every day: A dark comedy set in Chile about a fascist ruler who happens to be vampire and decides the undead life isn’t for him. Think What We Do in the Shadows with a South American twist (Netflix).

Wilderness
A cross-country dream trip turns into a domestic dilemma in this British TV-series thriller as a young wife (Jenna Coleman) stews over the infidelity of her unfaithful husband (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) as marital bliss turns into fury and revenge, with an opening song by Taylor Swift (Prime).

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Lovers of language (and how it sometimes gets mauled) will love Damp Squids and Card Sharks (Hardie Grant) by Robert Anwood. This lively little volume is a treat for anyone who appreciates mangled phrases, mixed metaphors, mispelling mishaps and other interesting mis-uses and outright abuses of English. 

SATURDAY, Sept. 16
WOW-Women of Wresting
Pull up your ringside seat for season two of this series about the fabulous female grapplers who it duke it out on the mat…if that’s your jam (syndicated).

Batman
Take wing with the Cape Crusader (above) and a full day of movies, include director Christopher Nolan’s acclaimed trilogy with Christian Bale (Batman Begins, The Dark Knight and The Dark Knight Rises), plus Justice League and Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice (begins 10 a.m., TNT).

SUNDAY, Sept. 17
Psycho: The Lost Tapes of Ed Gein
True-crime fans will flip over this new docuseries, about the serial killer and grave robber whose twisted mind and heinous acts of real-life horror inspired the movies Psycho, The Silence of the Lambs and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (MGM+).

The Gold
Hugh Bonneville and Dominic Cooper lead the cast of this new drama (below), based on a true 1983 story about how a group of men inadvertently stumbled across some $34 million in gold bullion during a London robbery (Paramount+).

MONDAY, Sept. 18
Neighbors
New season of the Australian drama series begins tonight, following the lives, loves and challenges of residents on the fictional Ramsay Street in a suburb of Melbourne (Freevee).

The Academy of Country Music Honors
This annual all-star fete, which was held in August at Nashville’s historic auditorium, will salute country hitmakers including Chris Stapleton, Clint Black, K.T. Oslin, Tim McGraw and Mary Chapin Carpenter (8 p.m., Fox).

Superpowers
Sean Penn directed this documentary about Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelensky and the country’s ongoing fight for its freedom against Russia (Paramount+).

NOW HEAR THIS

TUESDAY, Sept. 19
Celebrity Name That Tune
How well do the stars know music? Find out as more famous folks come aboard for season three and try to win big bugs for their charities. Randy Fox and Jane Krakowski return as hosts (8 p.m., Fox).

The Mask
See the 1994 superhero comedy which began Jim Carrey’s trajectory as a gonzo breakout star, established Cameron Diaz as a leading lady, and made swing music hip again. And oh, yeah, it made more moolah (at the time) than any other film ever based on a comic book (10 p.m., TruTV).

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 20

American Horror Story: Delicate
Kim Kardashian, Emma Roberts and Cara Delevingne are among the cast for the latest installment of the award-winning anthology horror series, which will feature episodes about witches, a traveling freak show, a haunted hotel and the apocalypse itself. It’s scary good! (10 p.m., FX).

The Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal
On March 2, 2023, Alex Murdaugh was found guilty of the murder of his wife, Maggie, and son Paul. The world watched with bated breath as a verdict was announced. The people of South Carolina’s Lowcountry had been waiting the better part of two years to understand what happened the night of June 7, 2021. Now you can find out more in season two of the documentary delving into that fateful night (Netflix).  

THURSDAY, Sept. 21
Bill Murray Moviefest
He’s done some semi-serious stuff, but Murray will always be known for making us laugh. Settle in tonight for a back-to-back mini-fest of his funniest films, including Caddyshack, Scrooged, Meatballs and Stripes (5 p.m., Pluto).

The Prank Panel In the season finale, the practical-joker pranksters (Johnny Knoxville, Eric Andre and Gabourey Sidibe) help pull off an elaborate practical joke involving a new bride and an allergic reaction (9 p.m., ABC).

The Entertainment Forecast

Sept. 8 – Sept. 14, 2023

FRIDAY, Sept. 8
Bella! This Woman’s Place is in the House
Saluting the life and work of firebrand lawyer, social activist, politician and leader of the ‘60s women’s movement Bella Abzug (9 p.m., PBS).

The Changeling
LaKeith Stanfield produces and stars in this new drama series, a grown-up fairytale with a horror-story twist, about a man searching for the love of his life, who has mysteriously vanished somewhere into a New York City he didn’t even know existed… (Apple TV+)

NOW HEAR THIS

Adam Sandler
Chill with some comedy gold from the movie funnyman with a triple-play slate of Little Nicky, Anger Management and The Longest Yard (below) (begins 8 p.m., Pluto).

Back to the Future Trilogy
Hmmm….what to do on a Saturday? Well, how about time-traveling to your couch and watching all three BTTF films in a row? (12 p.m., TBS).

SUNDAY, Sept. 10
The Masked Singer
The landmark 10th season of the popular “disguised vocalist” completion kicks off tonight with a bang, and “unmasked” performance pair-ups by Michelle Williams and Rumer Willis, Joey Fatone and Bow Wow, and Victor Oladipo and Barry Zito (8 p.m., Fox).

The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon
Latest spinoff of the fan-favorite franchise centers around the character of Reedus (Dixon) as he washes ashore in France and starts to find—and fight—his way back home (9 p.m., AMC).

MONDAY, Sept. 11
The Busing Battleground
Documentary (above) explores the turbulent legacy of efforts to integrate public schools—and the wave of “white flight” that followed—in the 1970s (9 p.m., PBS).

48 Hours
The popular true-crime and justice series goes wide tonight in a new weekday best-of syndication on stations nationwide (CBS and other affiliate networks).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

TUESDAY, Sept. 12
The Swarm
New dystopian drama series taking place several years of unrestrained pollution and relentless climate change, as a mysterious force of the deep starts using the creatures of the ocean as hostile hosts and declares war on humanity (9 p.m., The CW).

Welcome to Wrexham
The reality series—about actors Ryan Gosling and Rob McElhenney’s soccer team in North Wales, the third oldest football team in the world—returns tonight (10 p.m, FX). 

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 13
America Outdoors with Baratunde Thurston
The best-selling author and avid outdoor enthusiast continues his trek across the country to further discover how nature shapes the way we work, play and interact with each other (10 p.m., PBS).

The Morning Show
Time to wake up and tune in for the third season with more juicy drama about the New York City TV show still roiling in the aftermath of a sex scandal. With Jennifer Aniston, Reece Witherspoon, Billy Crudup, Juliana Marguiles and Jon Hamm (Apple TV+). 

The Other Black Girl
New original series about Nella (Sinclair Daniel), the only Black employee at a New York publishing firm, who comes to suspect that something sinister is going on—and it is! (Hulu)

THURSDAY, Sept. 14
Southern Charm
Pack up and get ready to go south with a new season of this reality series (below) about good-lookin’ young’uns down in Charlotte, S.C., pursuing romance, friendship and careers (9 p.m., Bravo).

Remembering William Friedkin
The iconic director, who died last month, is celebrated with a section of his classic 1970s and ’80s films—The French Connection, To Live and Die in L.A. and The Boys in the Band (8 p.m., TCM).

The Entertainment Forecast

Friday, Sept. 1 – Thursday, Sept. 7

‘The Little Mermaid,’ love in the Smoky Mountains & a sordid scouting scandal

Disney’s live-action ‘Little Mermaid’ comes ashore for streaming this week.

FRIDAY, Sept. 1
The Wheel of Time
Season two begins tonight, about a farm boy who may destroy the world and a group of sorceresses fighting his power and madness (below). With Rosamund Pike (Prime Video).

Power Book IV: Force
The hit franchise returns tonight, as Tommy Egan (Joseph Sikora) charts new territory, capitalizes on his competitors’ weaknesses and makes a play at becoming Chicago’s top drug dealer (8 p.m., Starz).

SATURDAY, Sept. 2
Unforgotten
No, it’s not the Clint Eastwood Western, which was Unforgiven—but rather season five of the British crime series in which London detectives solve a new variety of cold-case disappearances and murder (9 p.m., PBS)

SUNDAY, Sept. 3
Love in the Great Smoky Mountains
Arielle Kebbell and Zach Roerig (above) star as a pair of former sweethearts who rediscover romance while working together on a project in the nation’s most-visited national park (8 p.m., Hallmark).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

MONDAY, Sept. 4
Secrets of Penthouse
Four-episode series tells the true story of the rise and fall of Bob Guccione, who made millions as the founder of Penthouse magazine, which challenged Playboy for the girlie-mag market—and pushed the envelope of adult publishing further than it had ever been before (9 p.m., A&E)

Ancient Empires
Three-night event explores the legacies of Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar and Cleopatra (8 p.m., History).

While We Watched
Strong-stuff documentary offers an unfiltered looks at NDTV, once the bastion of information within India’s TV networks, now spiraling downward in waves of fake news, financial setbacks, creeping nationalism and extremist attacks on truth. It’s a snapshot of a world in crisis, told through the microcosm of one television network that stands as a representative of modern journalism (10 p.m., PBS). 

TUESDAY, Sept. 5

BRING IT HOME

The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City
The reality series returns for a new season (below) with frigid family dynamics, red hot international travel and a shocking betrayal that none of the women saw coming (9 p.m., Bravo).

One Shot: Overtime Elite
Six-part sports documentary series follows the new generation of NBA top draft-pick rookies, led by Amen and Ausar Thompson, Jakhi Howard, Rob Dillingham and Eli Ellis (Prime).

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 6
Scouts Honor: The Secret Files of the Boy Scouts of America
How did the Scouts try to cover up one of history’s most horrific sexual abuse scandals? Find out in this documentary, which talks to whistleblowers, survivors and former BSA employees (Netflix).

The Little Mermaid
Disney’s recent live-action re-imagining of its “under the sea” music-filled classic comes today to streaming, with Halle Bailey as Ariel, Javier Bardem as King Triton and Melissa McCarthy as the evil Ursula (Disney+).

THURSDAY, Sept. 7
The Dead Files
Season three of the spooky reality series finds psychic medium Cindy Kaza and homicide detective Steve DiSchiavia teaming up again for more investigations of the paranormal (10 p.m., Travel).

Virgin River
Alexandra Breckinridge (above) returns as midwife “Mel” Monroe for season five of the romantic drama series as the characters face a shocking breakup, a wrenching court trial and a wildfire that threatens their northern California town (Netflix). 

The Entertainment Forecast

Friday, Aug. 4 – Thursday, Aug. 10

Sigourney’s ‘Lost Flowers,’ a Boy in the Walls, Lovers Who Kill and Musical Stars Find their Superfans

FRIDAY, Aug. 4
The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
Sigourney Weaver (above) stars in this film adaptation of Holly Ringland’s internationally best-selling book, about a woman who learns troubling, decades-deep secrets about her family after a wrenching tragedy (Prime).

Women on Death Row
They are the rarest of criminals—women who have been found guilty of murder and sentenced to die. Each episode of this new series follows a harrowing trial and its proceedings that ultimately set the wheels turning for capital punishment—and shows how some of these women are facing their fates (9 p.m., A&E).

SATURDAY, Aug. 5
A Boy in the Walls
A family in rural Connecticut discover there’s someone secretly living in their home in this thriller (above) starring Ryan Michelle Bathe, Luke Camilleri and Cassandra Sawtell (8 p.m., Lifetime).

Great Chocolate Showdown
Ten top bakers complete tonight by building chocolate Tic-Tac-Toe boards and a diorama. And mom always told you not to play with your food! (8 p.m., The CW).

Debbie Reynolds and Frank Sinatra in ‘The Tender Trap.’

SUNDAY, Aug. 6
Celebrating Debbie Reynolds
Celebrate the singer, dancer and actress whose career spanned nearly 70 years—and who was the mom of Star Wars’ Carrie Fisher—in this daylong collection of some of her top movies, including The Affairs of Dobie Gillis, Bundle of Joy, The Unsinkable Molly Brown, Singing in the Rain, The Tender Trap and The Gazebo (Turner Classic Movies).

MONDAY, Aug. 7
Meet Marry Murder
Actress Helen Hunt returns as narrator for season two of this true-crime series about spouses who kill their partners. Yikes! (10 p.m., Lifetime).

BRING IT HOME

More fast cars, more spectacular crashes, more revenge, more crowd-pleasing, turbo-charged destruction. That’s Fast X (Universal Pictures Home Entertainment), the latest full-throttle epic in the successful franchise, with a sprawling ensemble cast that includes Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez, John Cena, Brie Larson and Helen Mirren. Vrooom, y’all!

TUESDAY, Aug. 8
Hard Knocks: Training Camp with the New York Jets
What’s it like to knock heads with a pro team on the football field. This documentary takes you inside the Jets’ training camp in Florida, where coach Robert Saleh puts newcomers and returning superstars (Aaron Rogers! C.J. Mosley) through their grueling paces (10 p.m., Max).

Only Murders in the Building
New season of the comedy whodunnit (above) starring Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez as three residents of an apartment complex where the mysteries—and murders—just keep piling up (Hulu).

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Experts on all things Oz-ian can dig up the bricks in the Yellow Brick Road in The Characters of Oz (McFarland), a fascinating collection of academic essays on the characters and themes of L. Frank Baum classic that became a landmark movie. Two of my favorite parts of the book were a deeps analysis of the Winged Monkeys, and a new way of looking at the Cowardly Lion!

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 9
High School Musical: The Musical: The Series
How many colons can I used in this blurb: Maybe two or three: Maybe more. Tune in tonight to kick off the final season of the Emmy-nominated series based on the High School Musical movie franchise, about a group of high schoolers puttin’ on one last, blowout show (Disney+).

Superfan
Unscripted series—call it reality TV if you’d like—about six music-superstar acts (Kelsea Ballerini, Gloria Estefan, Little Big Town (above) , LL Cool J, Pitbull and Shania Twain—and their biggest fans (8 p.m., CBS).

THURSDAY, Aug. 10
Painkiller
Matthew Broderick (above), Taylor Kitsch and Uzo Aduba lead the cast in this new fictionalized series about America’s opioid crisis, its perpetrators and its victims, and a system of accountability that repeated failed the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans. Hello, Emmy nominations (Netflix).

Rap Sh!t
Season two begins tonight of the Issa Rae-produced drama about a pair of high school friends (Aida Osman and KaMillion, above) who form a rap group but are challenged to conform to the demands of the music industry (Max).

The Entertainment Forecast

Friday, July 28 – Thursday, Aug. 3

Beanie Babies, Naked & Afraid Castaways, Streaming ‘Guardians’ & a ‘Jersey Shore’ Vacay

Find out how the Beanie Baby craze became a thing in ‘The Beanie Bubble.’

FRIDAY, July 28
The Beanie Bubble
Zach Galifianakis, Elizabeth Banks and Sarah Snook star in this original film about a not-so-distant time in the 1990s past when the world started treating little stuffed animals as adorable pets—and then highly valued collectible investments (Apple TV+).

Heels
Season two begins tonight for the series about a Georgia family of small-town wrestlers. With Stephen Arnell and Alexander Ludwig (10 p.m., Starz). 

This Fool
Half-hour comedy series set in South Central Los Angeles returns for season two tonight, with roommates Julio (Chris Estrada) and Luis (Frankie Quinones) embarking on new careers and new love lives (Hulu).

SUNDAY, July 30
Dark Winds
Season two begins tonight, with a largely Native American cast in a new tale of cops stalking a killer in the high desert of Navajo Country (9 p.m., AMC)

Naked and Afraid Castaways
And now yet another way to shed your clothes, shed a few pounds, and scrounge and scrape for survival. This new spinoff of the N&A franchise puts contestants on a tropical island strewn with wreckage and debris, including a shipwreck, abandoned military vehicles and a crashed plane. Can they find what they need, and fashion the rest, to endure 21 days? (8 p.m., Discovery Channel). 

MONDAY, July 31
Breeders
Emmy winner Martin Freeman and Daisy Haggard return to kick off the fourth and final season of the dramady about parents and their growing kids—a concept based loosely on Freeman’s own experiences (10 p.m., FX). 

American Nightmare: Becoming Cody Rhodes
Documentary series follows the comeback of pro wrestler Cody Rhodes as he chases the WWE championship title his superstar father, Dusty Rhodes, never attained (Peacock).

Here’s Lucy!
Before the was a TV comedy queen and a television groundbreaker, Lucille Ball was a rising starlet in a slew of Hollywood movies. Watch an all-day marathon of some of her best, including Room Service (1938), Too Many Girls (1940), Without Love (1945), Easy to Wed (1946) and more, including the feature-length “road” comedy The Long, Long Trailer (1954), co-starring her real-life husband Desi Arnez (6 a.m., TBS). 

Lucy and Desi star in the 1954 movie comedy ‘The Long, Long Trailer.’

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 2
Celebrity Wheel of Fortune
Tonight, Pat Sajak and Vanna White host as Paul Scheer, Luenell and Mary Lynn Raskub spin the wheel in hopes of winning a cool $1 million for their charities of choice (8 p.m., ABC).  

Big Brother
Ever get the feeling that someone is watching you? Well, maybe you’re a contestant on tonight’s kickoff for the 25th season of the voyeuristic competition, in which a new group of “houseguests” are observed, and eavesdropped on, to see who can hang in the longest (9 p.m., CBS).

Physical
Tonight begins season three of the critically hailed streaming dramady series, starring Rose Byrne as a 1980s aerobics instructor now fighting to outrun her competitors—and keep her personal life on a smooth pace (Apple TV+).

The ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ blast off for the latest adventure, coming to streaming.

Guardians of the Galaxy Volume 3
The hit movie (released theatrically in May) comes to streaming, starring Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista and others in the cosmic band of misfits off on new adventures—this time with a heartrending backstory about Rocket the Racoon (voiced by Bradley Cooper). (Disney+).

THURSDAY, Aug. 3
Jersey Shore Family Vacation
Who isn’t ready for a little vacay? Original Jersey Shores cast member Sammi “Sweetheart” reunites with her former housemates in Philadelphia, where—among other “Shore” shenanigans—Deena makes a trip to the local Margaretville one for the record books! (8 p.m., MTV).

The Entertainment Forecast

Friday, July 14 – Thursday, July 20

YA drama, DC backstories, a new ‘Bird Box’ & Clint Eastwood’s apes*%t movie classic

FRIDAY, July 14
The Summer I Turned Pretty
Season three of the series based on author Jenny Han’s angsty beach-tales novel trilogy launches tonight (above), with more YA coming-of-age drama and romance in the fictional seaside town of Cousin’s Beach (Prime Video).

Goliath
Three-part sports doc examines the life and career and long-lasting impact of basketball great Wilt Chamberlain, using artificial intelligence to recreate the late NBA superstar’s narrating voice. Creepy? Maybe, but you make the call! (On Paramount+ and Showtime’s streaming subscriber platforms)

Bird Box Barcelona
The frightening world of Bird Box—the 2018 Sandra Bullock sci-fi drama about a world in which some malevolent force drives people to mass suicide if they get a glimpse of it—returns (above) with a new cast and a Spanish spin (Netflix).

SATURDAY, July 15
Every Which Way But Loose
Get up early—or set your DVR—to see this light-footed 1978 apes*#t romcom romp, the highest-grossing movie of Clint Eastwood’s acting career, in which he plays a trucker turned boxer traveling in California with an orangutan named Clyde. With Sandra Locke, who made six films with Eastwood (and had a longterm relationship with him as well). Bill McKinney, who played the notorious “mountain man” in Deliverance, also appears. Worth checking out for some retro kicks! (7:45 a.m., TCM).

SUNDAY, July 16
The Prank Panel
“Pranxsperts” Johnny Knoxville, Eric Andre and Gabourey Sidibe help facilitate a granny’s participation in a sexy video. Va-va-voom! (8 p.m., ABC)

Zoe Bakes
Pastry chef and author Zoe Francois (above) makes her favorite recipes from easy main dishes to deserts (1 p.m., Magnolia).

MONDAY, July 17
A House Made of Splinters
This Sundance Award-winning documentary examines the consequences of the war in Ukraine on its youngest citizens, the children caught in the crossfire (check local listings, PBS).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

Rock fans will relish Backstage & Beyond Vol. 1, the new decades-spanning collection of writing and reporting by award-winning musical journalist Jim Sullivan on his lively encounters with Jerry Lee Lewis, Tina Turner, Neil Young, David Bowie, John Fogerty, the J. Geils Band, Aerosmith, Alice Cooper and many other legendary music-makers.

TUESDAY, July 18
Southern Storytellers
New three-episode series follows storytellers and “creators” whose books, songs, poems, plays and films all reflect on their regional roots. Included are country singer-songwriters Lyle Lovett and Jason Isbell and actor Billy Bob Thornton (9 p.m., PBS).

Justified: City Primeval
A U.S. Marshal (Timothy Oliphant) crosses paths with a sociopathic desperado called the Oklahoma Wildman (Boyd Holbrook) in this new spinoff series from the FX hit crime drama (10 p.m., FX).

WEDNESDAY, July 19
I Wanna Rock
Hey, all you metalheads! This totally rad three-part docuseries looks at the head-banging ‘80s, providing the untold stories of success (and failure) in the ere of leather pants, Spandex and massive hair through interviews with bands and artists who lived it (Paramount+).

CMA Fest
If you didn’t make it to Nashville for the real deal in June, here’s the next-best thing: A TV special hosted by country stars Dierks Bentley, Elle King and Lainey Wilson, featuring performance highlights from the music-festival event by dozens of artists (8 p.m., ABC).

The Deepest Breath
Take a big gulp of air and head under the waves in this jaw-dropping documentary (above) about divers who plunge into the one of the most dangerous sports in the world: freediving, holding their breath for extended underwater excursions (Netflix). 

THURSDAY, July 20
Superpowered: The DC Story
Rosario Dawson hosts this limited series examining the durable comic-book company, its origins, superheroes and many TV and movie spinoffs (Max).

Don’t Kill the Babysitter
Nail-biter about a Venezuelan woman (Valentia Andrade, above) hired as an au pair for an American couple, whose “overprotection” their young daughter makes the new nanny suspect—quite correctly—that something more sinister is going on (8 p.m., LMH)

Impossible Odds

Tom Cruise returns to his leading role in the action-packed, stunt-tacular seventh installment of his blockbuster big-screen franchise

Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning—Part One
Starring Tom Cruise, Simon Pegg, Hayley Atwell & Esai Morales
Directed by Christopher McQuarrie
PG-13

In theaters Wednesday, July 12, 2023

What does a runaway train, renegade AI, a four-sided, two-piece doodad and a doomed Russian sub have in common? They’re all part of Tom Cruise’s latest “impossible” mission.

The seventh installment of the blockbuster franchise that began more than 25 years ago finds Cruise’s iconic character, Impossible Missions Force (IMF) agent Ethan Hunt, scrambling all over the place in a race for a four-sided key that could trigger a digital geopolitical doomsday in the wrong hands.

Everybody’s trying to get their paws on that mysterious gizmo, which can unlock access to an all-knowing, all-seeing, super-processing artificial intelligence known as The Entity, “a truth-eating digital parasite” with the dark power of total domination. And everyone, it seems, is also trying to stop Ethan, which certainly adds an additional level of difficultly to his job.

“The world is gonna be coming after you,” Ethan is warned, and it sure does.

It’s a big mission for a big movie on a grand scale—golly-whopping spectacle, breathless action and a threat that’s even bigger, and so much badder, than Big Brother.

The gang’s all here, for Mission: Impossible movie fans who’ve grown up watching the IMF continue the globetrotting spy shenanigans first introduced in the 1960s TV series. Cruise, the consummate movie star, is as dapper and unflappably cool as ever, rallying his loyal team (Ving Rhames and Simon Pegg), confronting a couple of formidable old foes (Esai Morales and Vanessa Kirby) and reuniting with a former ally (Rebecca Ferguson).

New characters include Hayley Atwell (well-known to Marvel movie fans) as a cagey thief with a criminal past, and Pom Klementieff (from Guardians of the Galaxy) plays a French assassin and lets her lethal skills do the talking. We’ll likely see them again in Mission: Impossible—Dead Reckoning Part 2, which is already in the can and due for release next summer.  

Rebecca Ferguson reprises her role from previous Mission: Impossible flicks.

Director Christopher McQuarrie also returns to the franchise; he’s directed Cruise in several projects, include two previous Mission movies. He certainly knows how to move things along, make it an exciting, exhilarating ride and pepper the menu with some levity and laughs.  

The movie hinges on issues of privacy, deception, manipulation and misinformation in this modern era of digital overload. And it’s also about empathy; Ethan Hunt cares about those closest to him, and even about people he doesn’t know. The Entity, like all tech by design, is amoral and cares about nothing and no one, only about whatever its objective is programmed to be. (You think your laptop or smartphone, or Siri and social media, really care about you? Uh, no. So just imagine if they became your master and overlord.) Ethan and the Entity represent a battle between good and evil on a global stage, with the fate of the planet hanging in the balance.

But the plot is just so much blather and blah-blah, after all, when it comes to Tom Cruise and his Impossible missions—everyone wants to see the stunts, and Dead Reckoning certainly delivers. There’s a wild multi-vehicle chase through the narrow streets of Rome, with Cruise and Atwell handcuffed together (!) in a tiny Fiat, pursued by a monstrous Humvee, Italian cops and America CIA agents. Cruise zooms cross-country on a motorcycle, then shoots himself off a high cliff, out-Bonding James Bond in a jaw-dropping aerial sequence. And an extended bit through the Swiss Alps on that runaway train, well, it’s a nail-biting, death-defying, cliff-hanging choo-choo blast, a topsy-turvy, over-the-top obstacle course of everything but the kitchen sink, including pots, pans, parachutes, a flaming oven and a grand piano.

Vanessa Kirby plays a woman with a complicated past that intersected with Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) previously.

Everything is made even more exciting by knowing that Cruise performs almost all his own stunts. Wowza—it’s hard to imagine any other star ever even considering the elaborate, bonkers things that he’s made the lifeblood of his movies.

And, of course, there’s high-tech face-swapping, a bit of bruising street-fight physicality, plus a dash of sword fighting, knife slashing and even some sleight of hand magic.

Last year, Cruise’s Top Gun: Maverick became the must-see movie of the summer, signaling that Hollywood was ready to welcome COVID-weary audiences back into theaters. Will he re-do that summer blockbuster magic with Dead Reckoning? Can his movie once again revive a sagging box office, rejuvenate franchise fatigue (sorry, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, Little Mermaid and Fast X) and remind viewers—who’ve gotten just a little bit too comfortable with at-home streaming—why they should love the big screen?

It’s a bit early to know for sure, but I’m ready to predict: Mission: Accomplished!

—Neil Pond

The Entertainment Forecast

Fri., July 7 – Thurs., July 13

In-law outlaws, burly barnbuilders, ghosts on camera & Miss America’s scandalous secrets!

“The Outlaws” are really in-laws, and they’re coming to Netflix!

FRIDAY, JULY 7
The Out-laws
Andy Divine, Nina Dubrev, Ellen Barkin and Pierce Brosnan star in this comedy about a to-be-married bank executive who suspects his in-laws are criminals (Netflix).

Salute to Summer
Nick Jonas headlines this live performance special from the Universal Citywalk, produced in partnership with the U.S. Army. Saaaaa-lute, indeed! (Peacock).

SATURDAY, July 8
Barnwood Builders
In the new season of this home-build reality series, host Mark Bowie and his team of West Virginia crafters (above) salvage more antique barns and cabins, repurposing the wood to create awesome new homes (9 p.m., Magnolia).

SUNDAY, July 9
Paranormal: Caught on Camera
Have you ever seen a ghost? Well, this series offers the next best scary thing as it begins a new season of videos purporting to capture unexplainable paranormal phenomena—apparitions, bedroom monsters, shape-shifting extraterrestrials, Bigfoot sightings, weird lights in the sky, and more things that go bump in the night (9 p.m., Travel Channel)

Running Wild with Bear Grylls
New season of the outdoor adventure series finds celebs (including Russell Brand, Bradley Cooper, Benedict Cumberbatch, Rita Ora and Troy Kotsur) push past their comfort zones to find out if they’ve got the right stuff to hang in the elements with the resourceful survivalist (9 p.m., National Geographic).

BRING IT HOME

Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen and Mary Steenburgen reunite in Book Club: The Next Chapter (Universal Pictures Home Entertainment) for a frisky “girls’ trip” to Italy. With Andy Garcia, Craig T. Nelson and Don Johnson. Bonus features includes interviews with the cast.  

MONDAY, July 10
BBQ Brawl
Ten-episode competition features pitmasters from across America vying for the title of “Master of ‘Cue” with the help of coaches Bobby Flay, Anne Burrell and Sunny Anderson (9 p.m., Food Network).

Secrets of Miss America
Here she is—and she’s swimming in scandal! Find out all about America’s oldest “beauty pageant,” the shocks and controversies at its core, and the organization’s struggle to remain relevant in today’s more-enlightened world (10 p.m., A&E).

Miracle Workers: End Times
It’s a miracle. Well, maybe not exactly. But it is the newest installment of the caustically witty series in which the same actors (Daniel Radcliffe, Steve Buscemi, Geraldine Viswanathan and Karan Soni) return each season, but as all-new characters in brand-new scenarios. This time it’s a dystopian future overrun with radioactive mutants, killer robots and a tyrannical homeowner’s association with outrageous fees (10 p.m., TBS).

NOW HEAR THIS

The Grateful Dead perform in Des Moines, Iowa at the State Fairgrounds in May 1973.

Heads up, Deadheads! The newly released Here Comes Sunshine: 1973 (Rhino) is a whopping 17-disc set includes five complete concerts recorded live during the Grateful Dead’s heyday, including one marathon that clocks in at five hours and features Butch Trucks and Dickey Betts of the Allman Brothers band sitting in. Jam on!  

TUESDAY, July 11
The Ashley Madison Party
Unscripted docuseries follows the rise, fall and resurgence of the dating website targeted to marriage cheats and adultery (Hulu).

Iconic America: Our Symbols and Stories
In eight episodes beginning tonight, host David Rubinstein explores America’s history through an examination of iconic symbols, including the American Bald Eagle, the Statue of Liberty, the Hollywood sign, Fenway Park, cowboys and the Golden Gate Bridge (10 p.m., PBS). 

READ ALL ABOUT IT

Impress your friends with all the “movie meals” in Scrounging: A Cookbook (A24 Books), a collection of late-night, last-ditch, throw-together recipes inspired by more than 50 films, including The Breakfast Club, Home Alone, The Martian, Kramer vs. Kramer, Napoleon Dynamite and many more.

Readers of a certain age will certainly remember the late 1960s TV series Laugh In, revolutionary at the time by putting a spicy hippie-counterculture spin on the old-fashioned television variety format. Read all about the man who started it all, producer George Schlatter, in his autobiography Still Laughing: The George Schlatter Story (Rare Bird Books). The behind-the-scenes tale traces his coming-of-age in Hollywood and his idea for a brand new comedy that would ride the ‘60s crest of political upheaval, the Vietnam War, the drug culture and other timely—often controversial—topical events.

WEDNESDAY, July 12
The Afterparty
Tonight begins season two of the whodunnit mystery comedy series, with Tiffany Haddish (below), Sam Richardson and Zoe Chao reprising their roles alongside newcomers including Ken Jeong, Elizabeth Perkins, Zach Woods and Paul Walther Hauser (Apple TV+).

Celebrating Harry Belafonte
Several evenings of special programming begins tonight honoring the late singer, who died in April. Belafonte was the first Black actor to become a Hollywood leading man, a pop hitmaker and social-activist crusader. It all begins with two of his films from the 1950s, Carmen Jones and The World, The Flesh and the Devil (8 p.m., TCM).

Quarterback
Peyton Manning produced this series, which gives unprecedented access to NFL QBs Patrick Mahomes, Kirk Cousins and Marcus Mariota during games and off (Netflix).

THURSDAY, July 13
Full Circle
An investigation into a botched kidnapping uncovers long-held secrets in present-day New York City in this new streaming series starring Zazie Beetz, Claire Danes, Jim Gaffigan, Timothy Oliphant and Dennis Quaid (Max).

Project Greenlight
Issa Rae and Kumail Nanjiani are producers of this new docuseries, a reinvention of the HBO series of the same name that pulls back the curtain on the filmmaking process as it follows female director Meko Winbush making her first feature film, Gray Matter (Max). 

The Jewel Thief
Watch this unbelievable true-story account of a criminal mastermind, Gerald Blanchard, who leads detectives on a cat-and-mouse game across the globe while he commits increasingly elaborate heists in a quest for fame and notoriety (Hulu).

The Entertainment Forecast

June 30 – July 6, 2023

‘Tough as Nails’ goes north, 4th of July TV specials & where serial killers hide their murderous misdeeds

Meet the competitors for this season’s ‘Tough as Nails.’

FRIDAY, June 30
Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan
John Krasinski returns to the role of the scrappy super sleuth in the fourth and final season of the action-packed drama series (Prime Video).

Nimona
A knight in a futuristic medieval world is framed for a crime he didn’t commit, and a mischievous shape-shifting teen helps him in this animated fantasy series with voices of Riz Ahmed and Chloë Grace Martinez (Netflix).

SATURDAY, July 1
Buried in the Backyard
Where do serial killers hide their victims? Many times, it’s where they never anticipate their misdeeds will be discovered…or uncovered. Season two of the true-crime docuseries returns tonight. Bring your shovel! (8 p.m., Oxygen).

Brandi Carlile: In the Canyon Haze—Live From Laurel Canyon
Well, the title just about says it all. Not all you have to do is watch and listen as the former lead singer of the Go-Gos performs songs that shaped her life in this homage to the vibrant Hollywood Hills music scene (8 p.m., HBO).

SUNDAY, July 2
Tough as Nails
Who’s got what it takes to tough it out on this hit primetime competition that also a salute to the working class? Phil Keoghan returns as host for the new season, this time staged in Canada (8 p.m., CBS).

MONDAY, July 3
A Story of Bones
Documentary (above) about the discovery in Africa of an unmarked mass burial ground of an estimated 9,000 formerly enslaved people (check local listings, PBS).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

Revisit a “golden age” of TV in this flashback to the year color came to television in a major way—the watershed moment in which all three major networks broadcast every show on primetime “in living color.” Primetime 1966-1967 (McFarland) is an affectionate, wide-ranging look at the wide spectrum of shows that aired that momentous year, including classic programs about superheroes, sci-fi, spies, World War II, sitcoms and cops.

TUESDAY, July 4
A Capitol Fourth
For the 43rd year, the grounds of the U.S. Capitol will ring with the patriotic sounds of the 4th of July in this primetime special (8 p.m., PBS).

The Fourth in America
Fireworks and music are on tap in this Independence Day celebration, featuring performances by Alanis Morrisette, Darius Rucker, Demi Lovato, Duran Duran, Flo Rida, Sheryl Crow, the Zac Brown Band and more (7 p.m., CNN).

WEDNESDAY, July 5
Human Footprint
No, we’re not talking tracking mud into your house. But in another way, well, yeah. This new docuseries explores the many ways humans have left our “marks” on our planet, including putting into motion the global mechanics of climate change (9 p.m., PBS).

CMA Fest: 50 Years of Fan Fair
New original documentary tells the story of Nashville’s long-running country music festival, with archival performances and commentary from Vince Gill, Luke Bryan, Dolly Parton, Lainey Wilson, Carrie Underwood and dozens of other stars who’ve performed at the event originally known as Fan Fair, so named because of its former “home” at the state fairgrounds (Hulu).

THURSDAY, July 6
Call Her King
A judge (Naturi Naughton from Power Book II: Ghost) who has just sentenced a man (Jason Mitchell) to death suddenly finds herself a hostage when his brother hijacks her courtroom in this gripping original movie drama. Think Die Hard in a courthouse (BET+).

The Lincoln Lawyer
Season two begins of the streaming spinoff about a lawyer (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) who runs his Los Angeles practice from the back seat of his Lincoln (Netflix).

Shawn White: The Last Run
Four-part documentary spotlights the life and career of the three-time Olympic gold medalist and an icon of snowboarding and skateboarding (Max).

Forever Young

Harrison Ford returns for one final ‘Raiders’ romp, with an extra dose of movie magic

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
Starring Harrison Ford, Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Mads Mikkelsen
Directed by James Mangold
PG-13

In theaters Friday, June 30, 2023

More than 40 years ago, we sat on the edge of our seats watching Indiana Jones outrun a big rolling boulder, the bravura opening of Raiders of the Lost Ark that became an iconic representation for a new, blockbuster action-adventure movie template.

There aren’t any giant, bowling-ball booby traps in Dial of Destiny, the fifth film in the Indiana Jones canon, but Indy is still running—all over the globe, still hunting for historical treasure, still afraid of snakes, still dodging bullets and still fighting Nazis.

This time, it’s the late 1960s, some 20 years after the events of Raiders. Neil Armstrong has just walked on the moon, America has won the space race, and there’s a scramble to locate the missing half of a doodad called the Antikythera, a dial-like “computing” device found in wreckage of an ancient sunken ship off the coast of Greece. What’s so special about it? Well, during World War II, Nazisbelieved it could forecast rips in the fabric of time, openings that would allow someone to change the way history unfolds. A dial of destiny, indeed, if only they can find the missing part…

And changing the course of history probably isn’t a good idea, especially when Nazis are involved.

Harrison Ford, just about to turn 81, makes what is intended to be his final appearance as the college professor turned rip-roaring archeologist swashbuckler. He’s helped along in the rip-roar department by some high-tech movie magic that convincingly de-ages his character with “deep-fake” cinematic wizardry, for flashback scenes in which he looks, well, like he looked in Raiders of the Lost Ark. Forget Botox—movie magic is the way to go.

Phoebe Walker-Bridge, of Fleabag TV fame, adds some new spice and sass as Helena Shaw, the now-grown daughter of Indy’s late friend and colleague (Toby Jones).  Mads Mikkelsen proves once again he can be a dandy bad guy; I’m still smarting from remembering what a ballbuster he was with Daniel Craig in Casino Royale more than 15 years ago. Antonio Banderas has a brief role as a Greek undersea diver, one of Indy’s old friends, about as crusty as the barnacles on his boat. There are a couple of other returning characters—major and minor, and one is a real doozie—and a lot of movie callbacks to things that happened in previous adventures.

Phoebe Waller-Bridge plays Helena Shaw.

It’s a full-fledged new Indy adventure, for sure, but also a look-back tribute—a closing-chapter monument to Indiana Jones, and Harrison Ford, as one of moviedom’s most recognizable screen heroes, taking on bad guys in a dusty fedora, with a trusty bullwhip.

This is the first Indy flick not directed by Steven Spielberg or produced by George Lucas. Instead, the reins have been handed over to James Mangold, who has certainly proven he knows he’s doing, with a directorial resume that includes 3:10 to Yuma, Identity, Ford v. Ferrari, Walk the Line and a pair of Wolverine X-Men films. It’s hard to follow Spielberg (duh!), but Mangold keeps the pace moving briskly and with stylish confidence, though often at a frantic pace with nearly nonstop, all-over-the-place action that becomes a chaotic wash of blurry, noisy CGI.

Indy fights on top of a train speeding through the Swiss Alps, gallops at full speed on a hijacked police horse into a New York City subway tunnel, tangles with a nest of icky eels at the bottom of the Aegean Sea, jumps out of airplane, and races through the narrow streets of Morocco on a ramshackle tuk-tuk. Things rarely sit still, and as soon as they do, they’re off and running again.

The movie picks up even more momentum toward the end, when it almost jumps the shark in a loopy battlefield sequence that veers into the realm of nearly comedic impossibility. (At one point, I wondered if Bill and Ted’s time-traveling pay-phone booth might have landed just offscreen, with Abe Lincoln, Billy the Kid and Socrates aboard.) But no matter what the movie throws at him, and at its audience, Ford is gung-ho and all-in, even if Indy admits the years, and the mileage, have taken their toll.

As the Indiana Jones films do, the Dial of Destiny gives “real history” a rowdy, rollicking, what-if spin. Here, it’s a former Nazi scientist who’s been helping America launch its space program (yes, that really happened) and an artifact that truly does exist (and is on display today in museum in Athens). But what if that Nazi wasn’t so former, and what if his intention was to use that hunk of antiquity to go back and have another crack at Dur Fuhrer’s plans to conquer the world?

And what if…well, what if we didn’t have Indiana Jones movies around anymore?

At one point, Indy tells some noisy hippie neighbors to turn down their loud music. The song they’re blaring is The Beatles’ “Magical Mystery Tour,” and it feels like a musical nod to the movie magic that brings Harrison Ford back for one final, blowout romp, letting us relive his younger years, recall his Indiana Jones exploits, reconnect him with a rush of his past adventures, and ultimately bid him a fond, sentimental farewell with a warmly nostalgic salute.

—Neil Pond