The Entertainment Forecast

Aug. 25 – Aug. 31

Cinderella gets a new shine, life in Ireland, way-out crimes & Elvis’ Army days

FRIDAY, Aug. 25
Cinderella
Disney returns to its roots with this newly restored high-def version of its 1950 animated film classic. And didja know: A young Mike Douglas, who’d later become famous as a TV talk-show host, provided the singing voice of Prince Charming!  (Disney+).

The Escape of Carlos Ghosn
New docuseries details the true story of a CEO turned fugitive, his relentless climb to the top the corporate ladder in Japan, his shocking arrest and unbelievable escape to Lebanon (Apple TV+).

SATURDAY, Aug. 26
Napa Ever After
Above: After inheriting her grandmother’s winery in Napa Valley, a high-powered attorney (Denise Boutté) decides to renovate the property, with the help of a handsome local handyman (Colin Lawrence) (9 p.m., Hallmark).

Attenborough: Behind the Lens
Find out how the revered documentary filmmaker, who recently celebrated his 97th birthday, kept pushing for new ways to tell natural history for viewers using the latest technologies around the world, in every kind of climate (8 p.m., BBC America).

SUNDAY, Aug. 27
The $100,000 Pyramid
In tonight’s season finale, Wendi McLendon-Covey (from The Goldbergs) pits wits with Matt Walsh (Veep), and Amanda Kloots (host of The Talk) vies with Marcus Lemonis (The Profit) for a spot in the winner’s circle (8 p.m., ABC). 

MONDAY, Aug. 28
Once Upon a Time in Northern Ireland
New series (above) takes you inside the country, and alongside the real people living in its ongoing conflict (check local listings, PBS).

Love Island
Above: Which of the beautiful couples/contestants will win the viewers’ votes will win the reality competition—set in a secluded villa where they are followed constantly (Big Brother style) with cameras and recorded by microphones—in its season 5 finale? Reality? Hardly! (Peacock).

TUESDAY, Aug. 29
A Murder at the End of the World
New murder mystery series stars Emma Corrin as an amateur sleuth trying to put the pieces of a horrific crime together inside the remote and isolated compound of a reclusive billionaire. With Clive Owen (Hulu).

Archer
The hip award-winning animated series returns tonight for its 14th and final season as Sterling Archer navigates the changing landscapes of the modern spy world (10 p.m., FXX)

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 30
Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zone
Travel the world with author Dan Buettner to discover five unique communities where residents live extraordinarily long and vibrant lives (Netflix).

My Strange Arrest
An in-depth looks at people who are arrested for (allegedly!) committing some really weird, way-out crimes (10 p.m., A&E).

BRING IT HOME

Far, far away from The Hunger Games, Jennifer Lawrence stars in the wildly raunchy comedy No Hard Feelings (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment) as a young woman hired to “make a man” of a wealthy couple’s son before he leaves for college. Yeah, that.

Learn all about the movies with The Complete Story of Film (MusicBox Films), the new box set of two acclaimed, immersive documentaries from director Mark Cousins with  definitive discourses on the development, innovations and themes of cinema around the world.

THURSDAY, Aug. 31
One Piece
A young man and his pirate crew explore a fantastical new world in search of treasure in this new adventure-filled live-action adaptation of a Japanese manga series (Netflix).

The Pact
It’s season two of the is edge-of-your-seat morality tale with lovable, complex characters under extreme pressure, navigating blood ties and divided loyalties while facing the ghosts of their past. Starring Rakie Ayola, Lloyd Everitt, Aaron Anthony and Mali Ann Rees (Sundance Now and AMC+).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

You’ve probably seen the G.I. days of Elvis referred to in documentaries and such, but usually as a passing chapter of his life before he came “home” to continue rockin’. Now in My Army Days with Elvis (Xulon Press), author Johnny Lang recalls his time as Presley’s Army buddy (in Germany, 1958-1960), where they trained, played football…and partied! It’s a rare, personal glimpse in the musical superstar during a period when he was serving his country, and from from the glare of the celebrity spotlight.

Balls ‘n’ Bibles

Dennis Quaid goes gonzo for God in heavy-handed baseball biopic

The Hill
Starring Dennis Quaid, Colin Ford, Jonelle Carter, Bonnie Bedelia & Randy Houser
Directed by Jeff Celentano
PG

In theaters Friday, Aug. 25

Baseball and the Bible round the bases in this sermonizing biopic based on the real-life story of a young Texan with a degenerative spine disorder who dreams of becoming a Major League baseball player.

If you happen to already know about Rickey Hill, this story won’t yield any big grand-slam surprises. But for most mainstream viewers, not steeped in the obscure stats and historic miscellany of America’s pastime, you’ll be learning about him for the first time—how he grew up with stiff braces on both legs, how his rural-preacher daddy forbade him to play ball, how little Rickey did anyway. And how the underdog Rickey, ultimately, lived his dream.

Rickey is played as a child by newcomer Jesse Berry, making his acting debut, and he’s good—one of the best things about the movie, in fact. He’s certainly much more of a “screen presence” than Rickey as a high schooler, played by Colin Ford, a Nashville native who appeared in TV’s Under the Dome and several other series (including as a victim of Jeffrey Dahmer in last year’s Dahmer: Monster). He’s kind of a victim in The Hill, too, confined in a movie that seems unable to give him more than one dimension to maneuver.

Dennis Quaid plays Rickey’s father, dishing out fire and brimstone from the pulpit while his young son blasts rocks with sticks in the backyard, sending them sailing into the sky and over the trees—and sometimes through windshields. More than once we hear other people marvel that his talent is “phenomenal,” his batting skills a “miracle” given his condition.

Director Jeff Celentano is a former actor (whose movies you’ve likely never heard of) turned B-movie filmmaker (whose films, well, ditto). He’s playing in the big leagues now, sort of, with a handful of brand-name actors (Quaid, Bonnie Bedelia, Scott Glenn, Joelle Carter from TV’s Justified and Chicago Hope) and a movie releasing nationwide. Rickey Hill’s story is, for sure, an inspirational one—how a kid never let go of his dream, despite the odds that he’d never make it. It’s a feel-good movie for people who want a movie that wants to make them feel good, scratch their “films about faith” itch and likes their sports with a great deal of Bible thumping. It means well, but its real-life drama of the diamond, under the halos of the ballpark lights, gets lost in tedious, telegraphed tent-revival messaging.

And The Hill is Hallmark Channel quality up on the big screen, with ooey-gooey sentimentality, cringey performances, and a heavy, holy-hokum dose of Sunday School threaded by stories of David and Goliath, the strength of Solomon, sermons about water and rocks, God’s “calling” and being “tested,” admonitions about respecting “the Lord’s house,” and so many quoted Bible verses, I lost count. The dialog is laughably clunky and scripted with such a heavy hand, prone to speech-ifying and often putting words into character’s mouths that, I’m certain, they wouldn’t say. (“Hardscrapple,” for instance, wasn’t a word you would hear a lot in the rural South of the early 1960s. I was there, and I know.) And it just seems odd to hear a little girl—Ricky’s childhood sweetie—chide him about his batting and limited “body rotation.”)

In some instances, you can tell that characters mouths move to salty words that we spoken in a scene but later overdubbed into substitutions—“darn” for “dam,” “stuff” for, well, another word that stars with an “s.” This is a movie that doesn’t have the conviction it’s so preachy about—to let people talk the way they would naturally talk.

Quaid has a deep acting resume that has swung wide, as they say, over the decades, with some bona fide classics (Breaking Away, The Rookie, The Right Stuff) and some real dogs (Jaws 3, A Dog’s Purpose, I Can Only Imagine). This one leans into foul territory, as he gets all grim and clammy—and hammy—digging deep into fever-pitch fervor, insisting that his son follow his zealous path into pastorhood. It’s over the top, even for an actor who played Jerry Lee Lewis, Ronald Reagan, and Lindsay Lohan’s dad in The Parent Trip.

Bonnie Bedelia, who plays his mouthy mother-in-law, is bedecked in a wad of ghostly white granny hair and makeup to make her appear even older than her 75 years. The former soap star who made a splash alongside Bruce Willis in Die Hard looks like she entered every scene from the set of a small-town community playhouse. Oh, and she gets a deathbed scene so full of corn, it’s a real bumper crop. There should be a trail of it following her into the cemetery.

There are several moments that mimic other, better movies—a “railroad tracks” scene set to a retro tune that recalls Stand By Me, slo-mo slugfest batting a la The Natural. Church-going folks may flock to The Hill, but more discriminating movie fans can find a (sand)lot of better baseball movies to love.

—Neil Pond

The Entertainment Forecast

Friday, Aug. 18 – Thursday Aug. 24

King Arthur consults with Merlin in the new series ‘The Winter King,’ Sunday on MGM+.

FRIDAY, Aug. 18
Snoopy Presents: One of a Kind Marcie
The introverted, studious, bespectacled little girl from Peanuts gets her own TV special, as Marcie becomes a golf caddy, gets nominated for class president and finds new ways to help her friends (Apple TV+).

Harlen Cobin’s Shelter
A YA cast headlines this thriller about a young man who discovers unimaginable secrets in his quiet little community after the disappearance of one of his schoolmates (Prime).

SATURDAY, Aug. 19
How She Caught a Killer
Sarah Drew (she was Dr. April Kepner on TV’s Grey’s Anatomy) produces and also stars in this “ripped from the headlines” movie (above) as an undercover cop trying to end a string of kidnapped and murdered sex workers (8 p.m., Lifetime).

Stand Up to Cancer
Multi-network fundraising special features a host of all-stars—including Elizabeth Banks, Jessica Biel, Tony Hale, Ken Jeong, Eric Stonestreet and Justin Timberlake—plus comedic skits and musical performances from years past (8 p.m., ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC and multiple streaming platforms).

Swamp Monsters
Slip on your wading boots and slither in to his day-long marathon about monsters from the murk, including Cryptid: The Swamp Beast and episodes of MonsterQuest (www.storytelevision.com/wheretowatch/)

SUNDAY, Aug. 20
The Winter King
New 10-episode series, based on novels by author Bernard Cornwell, offers revisionist takes on well-known Arthurian legends in a brutal land of warring factions and tribes as the outcast Arthur Pendragon evolves from legendary warrior to king (MGM+).

761st Tank Battalion: The Original Black Panthers
Morgan Freeman narrates this doc about the heroic first Black U.S. Army tank unit to serve in combat during World War II, where they became crucial in the Allied fight against Nazi Germany (8 p.m. History Channel).

MONDAY, Aug. 21
Secrets of Prince Andrew
British journalists and insiders give insights into this true story behind the now-disgraced royal after the infamous TV interview in which he disastrously tried to defend himself against allegations that he had sex with an underage girl (8 p.m., A&E).

Dark Marvels
Tonight’s episode, “Sinister Spy Weapons,” delves into the dark art of spycraft, from the “frankenkitty” to the umbrella gun, revealing the deadliest espionage weapons ever deployed to gather information and assassinate enemies (9 p.m., History).

TUESDAY, Aug. 22
Bobby’s Triple Threat
The kitchen is ready for a new season as more elite chefs compete for $25,000 under the watchful eyes of Food Network icon Bobby Flay (9 p.m., Food Network).

Celebrity Wheel of Fortune
It’s a rebroadcast, but tune in to see Melissa Joan Hart, Titus Burgess and Lacey Chabert spin the big wheel for charity (8 p.m., ABC).

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 23
Star Wars: Ahsoka
Star Wars fans, rejoice! This new live-action addition to the far-flung franchise stars Rosario Dawson (below) in the role of a former Jedi Knight as she investigates a threat to the galaxy. With Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Dana Tennant (Disney+).

BS High
Documentary explores the incident that developed after a football game between two prep schools, IGP and Bishop Sycamore High, which resulted in nearly 60 injuries on the field, a media circus about one of the school’s legitimacy and a probe into the cut-throat world of youth athletics (9 p.m., HBO).

THURSDAY, Aug. 24
Toya & Reginae
Curious about the lives of the ex-wife and daughter of rap star Lil Wayne? Me neither, but this new reality show will let you tag along for the ups and downs of the Atlanta-based rap duo (9 p.m., WE tv). 

Twisted Marriage Therapist
In this tense psychological drama, the latest in the streaming platform’s “Twisted” series, a couple seeks counseling to save their marriage, but the husband soon realizes that therapist is obsessed with his wife and will do anything to get her (Tubi).

The Entertainment Forecast

Aug. 11 – Aug. 17

A double dose of Elvis, a search for barbecue & telemarketer whistle blowers

FRIDAY, Aug. 11
Men In Kilts: A Road Trip with Sam and Graham
Sam Heughan and Graham McTavish hit the road again (above) for a second season of adventures, this time exploring the Down Under world of New Zealand (9:30 p.m., Starz).

Red, White and Royal Blue
In this new feature film, the son of the U.S. president and a British prince find themselves in the middle of a tabloid frenzy, out of which a deeper relationship develops. With Uma Thurman and Clifton Collins Jr. (Peacock).

NOW HEAR THIS

SATURDAY, Aug. 12
Hip Hop Treasures
Have you any hip hop treasures? You might, and LL Cool J and Ice T can let you know when they come to your door. They’re hosting this new series in which they track down down conic memorabilia from the musical era of hip hop, now celebrating the format’s 50th anniversary (10 p.m., A&E).

Kings of Barbecue
Black-ish star Anthony Anderson and comedian Cedric the Entertainer (above) travel across the country and fire up the grill in search of their one of their favorite foods, and the people who make it, in this new docuseries (9 p.m., A&E).

SUNDAY, Aug. 13
Telemarketers
Docuseries about two amateur sleuths in the early 2000s who set out to expose a crooked industry from within. It’s a madcap, sometimes witty odyssey stretching over 20 years into the dark side of American capitalism and the misuse of consumer trust (10 p.m., HBO).

Billions
The award-winning hit series (above), exploring a group of suit-and-tie money moguls embroiled in an escalating war driven by power, money and greed, returns for its seventh and final season, with Damian Lewis, Paul Giamatti, Corey Stoll and Maggie Siff (8 p.m., Showtime).

MONDAY, Aug. 14
Solar Opposites
Season four begins of the animated chaotic comedy series (below) about a group of space aliens who can’t decide if Earth is awesome, or awful. Voices by Dan Stevens, Thomas Middleditch, Mary Mack and Sean Giambrone (Hulu).

TUESDAY, Aug. 15
Re-Inventing Elvis: The ’68 Comeback
Documentary examines the dramatic creation of the groundbreaking hour-long TV event that triggered the comeback of Elvis Presley (Paramount+).

The Love Experiment
New dating-game twist features a relationship expert guiding three young women through a literal “hall” of eligible men, and coaching them on how to make the best choices (10 p.m., MTV).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 16
Grown-ish
Oh, more college drama! Dean Miller recruits Aaron (Trevor Jackson) to convince Andre (Marcus Shribner) and the rest of their fraternity to cultivate a relationship with a problematic alum (10 p.m., Freeform).

THURSDAY, Aug. 17
The Wonder Years
The family embarks on a road trip to Austin College, the makes a stop at Disneyworld, where Bill (Dulè Hill) meets up with some old bandmates and reflects on his life choices (9:30 p.m., ABC).

Tracy Morgan: Takin’ It Too Far
The former SNL star goes on stage for this stand-up comedy special from the Wilbur Theater in Boston, where he takes on a variety of topics, including the 2014 car crash that left him with several broken bones and a brain injury (Max).

Vampire Diaries

A chapter from ‘Dracula’ takes wing with a lean, mean monster out for blood on the high seas

The Last Voyage of the Demeter
Starring Corey Hawkins, Aisling Franciosi, Liam Cunningham & David Dastmalchain
Directed by André Øvredal
Rated R

In theaters Friday, Aug. 18

Everyone’s favorite vampire is back on the big screen, and this time the count is down for some real dirty work.

Dracula, the title character of British author Bram Stoker’s classic Gothic tale about the aristocratic Romanian blood sucker, has fed the voracious appetites of pop culture for more than a century, appearing in some 200 films. One of the first, director Max Schreck’s iconic German silent film Nosferatu, spooked audiences in 1922; one of the most recent, the campy Renfeld earlier this year, featured Nicholas Cage sporting the familiar fangs.

The Last Voyage of the Demeter is based on a single chapter from Stoker’s Dracula, about how Drac made the fateful hop from the European mainland to London in the late 1800s by hitching a ride on the schooner Demeter. Things didn’t end well for the Demeter, as we learn on a dark and stormy night (of course!) at the very beginning of the movie.

The recovery of the captain’s day-to-day log unspools the story; think of it as the original Vampire Diaries, detailing how Dracula got onto the ship (sneaky!), lurked in the shadows and then wrecked all kinds of hellish havoc every night after the sun went down. If you think of Dracula as a dapper, seductive, cape-draped gentleman aristrocrat—as embodied cinematically by Bela Lugosi or Christopher Lee—well, get ready for a reset. This Drac is a real monster, a lean, mean, gargoyle-like winged creature with a mouthful of spiked teeth and a thirst that can only be quenched with blood. No neck is safe when he’s around. He’s not an animal, exactly, but not human, either. He’s referred to as one point as a “thing that wears the skin of a man.” If you need some new fodder for your nightmares, here it is.

The captain and the crew, we find out, were slow to catch on when they on-boarded a shipment of big wooden (coffin-like) crates in Bulgaria. When things start to get messy on the Demeter, in the middle of the Mediterranean, terrible things begin to happen, they cast about for explanations. Maybe it’s God’s wrath for their sins; perhaps it’s the bad luck, or curse, of having a woman—a female “stowaway”—on board. It’s 45 minutes into the movie before anyone even brings up Dracula’s name; this is one of those movies where the audience knows long before the characters figure it out. Maybe the captain and crew should have paid more attention to all those ominous crates embossed with the crest of a snarling dragon—and, I swear, with what looks like a big, capital “D” smeared on the sides.

Norwegian director André Øvredal leans into the mood of the story—dark, dangerous and deadly—that makes the most of its soggy setting. The Demeter is damp, cramped and claustrophobic, with old wood, scampering rats and working conditions that would never pass an OSHA inspection. But to the sailors, it’s home, and now they have an uninvited guest threatening to turn their ship into a sarcophagus. It’s not the kind of place you’d want to be with a vampire on the loose, especially when Drac gets down to business. Even kids, dogs and other animals aren’t safe. This Dracula is a carnivore who doesn’t care where the next meaty meal comes from.

Captain (Liam Cunningham) and crew (Chris Walley and Corey Hawkins) size up the terrifying situation in ‘The Last Voyage of the Demeter.’

Corey Hawkins (from TV’s The Walking Dead and 24: Legacy) leads the cast as the ship’s Cambridge-educated man of reason. Irish actor Liam Cunningham (Game of Thrones) plays the seasoned, ready-to-retire captain; David Dastmalchian is his dependable first mate. Aisling Franciosi (also Game of Thrones) plays a Romanian girl already very familiar with the “thing” now threatening everyone onboard. Dracula is portrayed by Javier Botet, a Spanish actor who’s apparently found his niche playing creatures in horror films and creature features, including Slender Man, Crimson Peak, and Conjuring and Insidious flicks.   

If you’re not a Dracula buff, in general, you might not want to board this salty slog of a rampaging monster romp. But fans of the character, grown from seeds planted 120 years ago, might find it an interesting addition to the ever-expanding movie canon of the undead’s OG.

It’s a scarifying creature feature that gets grimmer, gorier, bloodier and more violent as it sails along, with the body count rising and the crew winnowed down, one by one, to a handful of desperate survivors who must make a fateful decision. (And you might have thought your Carnival Cruise went badly.) It’s basically a little B-movie about the big D, perhaps the most dependably deplorable monster in monster lore. Dracula keeps coming back, and you can never count out the count.

And as this ill-fated sea cruise reminds us, there’s still plenty of life left in this ol’ bat.

Neil Pond

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).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

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).

Another Disney Dud

Disney’s haunted-house redo is haunted by movie ghosts of another park attraction

Rosario Dawson, Tiffany Haddish, LaKeith Stanfield & Owen Wilson size up the spooks.

Haunted Mansion
Starring LaKeith Stanfield, Rosario Dawson, Owen Wilson & Tiffany Haddish
Directed by Justin Simien
PG-13

In theaters Friday, July 28

You’ve heard that old saying, “If at first you don’t succeed, try again.”

Disney’s initial attempt at turning its iconic haunted-house attraction into a movie, back in 2003, was a flop, especially with critics. Now the House of Mouse is trying, trying again, with a fresh take and a new cast.

But not new enough or fresh enough.

The new Haunted Mansion may delight some Disney fans, with its “ghostly” FX that dutifully replicates many of the giggly goosebumps of the actual Disney attraction. There are rooms that “stretch,” goofy-ghoul portraits, a ballroom of waltzing spirits, a cemetery a-swirl with specters, an ominous suit of armor, and the Hatbox Ghost, a fan-favorite cadaver from the ride. (Look him up Disney.fandom.com. He’s got quite a story.)

But this movie lives in kind of cinematic netherworld, too goofy to be truly scary and too ridiculously, rampantly cheesy to be truly funny, or fun. It’s good for a few chuckles (thanks mostly to the script, by Parks and Rec ace writer Katie Leopold, which gives Tiffany Haddish some nice nuggets). But most of the humor is forced, flat, rote and predictable, mired in a gooey, sentimental subplot that feels completely at odds with the sense of untethered, otherworldly escapism on which it’s so clearly, obviously based.

The cast is game and leans heavily into the hammy premise of how they all came to be together in a creaky old house awash in pesky paranormal activity on the outskirts of New Orleans. LaKeith Stanfield is a man of science grieving his late wife; Owen Wilson plays a priest; Tiffany Haddish is a local psychic with great Yelp reviews; Danny DeVito chews the scenery as an eccentric historian steeped in supernatural lore.  Rosario Dawson is a young-professional mom with a preteen son (newcomer Chase W. Dillon, who seems to be channeling the late child actor Gary Coleman from Diff’rent Strokes).

The characters find out that, if they try to leave the mansion, the pesky ghosts will follow them home, or wherever they go. Disney buffs will recall that’s just what visitors to the attraction are warned will happen as they exit the ride.  

The house is haunted by a pantheon of out-of-control spirits, including a ghost medium (Jamie Lee Curtis), and Jared Leto brings the Hatbox Ghost back from the crypt.

Jamie Lee Curtis as Madame Leota

Acclaimed movie maestro Guillermo del Toro (The Shape of Water, Pan’s Labyrinth, Nightmare Alley) initially wanted to make this movie, or at least write its screenplay. But shakeups at Disney shook him out of the project and ushered in Justin Simien, whose previous experience includes the TV series Dear White People and the satirical horror comedy Bad Hair. With del Toro at the helm, Haunted Mansion would have certainly been a different movie—and likely a much better one.

The overstuffed, hyper comedic mayhem gets even more overcrowded with familiar-face cameos from Dan Levy and Winona Rider (as tour guides), and Marilu Henner as a tourist. Time your movie bathroom break wrong and you’ll miss ‘em. Rider’s teeny role is likely a nod to another haunted-house movie, Beetlejuice, in which she starred in 2008, when she was 17.

But this Haunted Mansion is no Beetlejuice. Heck, it’s not even its predecessor, the previous Haunted Mansion (actually, The Haunted Mansion), which at least had the manic movie-star mojo of Eddie Murphy. And it’s no Pirates of the Caribbean, Disney’s 2003 live-action version of another of its popular park attractions, which went on to be a global box-office blockbuster of a franchise. This is another misfire, another Disney dud that feels like an under-performer, despite the work and intentions that went into it.  

A houseful of ghosts, once again, turns out to be no match for boatloads of buccaneers.

Neil Pond

The Entertainment Forecast

Friday, July 21 – Thursday, July 27

Nicole K roars like a lioness, hot dogs in Cali, dystopian drivers & a Zoey reunion!

Nicole Kidman stars in the new terrorism thriller ‘Special Ops: Lioness’

FRIDAY, July 21
Praise Petey
Animated series about a New York City “it” girl who attempts to modernize her father’s small-town cult. With voices by Annie Murphy, John Cho, Stephen Root, Amy Hill and Christine Baranski (10 p.m., Freeform).

Minx
Season two begins tonight of the L.A.-based workplace comedy, in which a young feminist (Ophelia Lovibond) aligns with a scrappy adult-magazine publisher (Jake Johnson) to create the first erotic magazine for women in the ’70s (9 p.m., Starz).

Jake Johnson and Ophelia Lovibond star in season two of ‘Minx,’ inspired by the rise in the 1970s of fem-centric magazines like ‘Playgirl’ and ‘Cosmopolitan.’

SATURDAY, July 22
Shakespeare & Hathaway: Private Investigators
Jo Joyner (who plays Lu Shakespeare) and Mark Benton (as Frank Hathaway) wrap up season one tonight with double episodes of this lively BBC crime-solving drama about a hard-boiled detective and his rookie sidekick poking around crimes and misdemeanors in Stratford-Upon-Avon (Ovation).

SUNDAY, July 23
Special Ops: Lioness
Espionage thriller stars Zoe Saldana as a CIA operative trying to prevent the next terrorist attack on America. With Nicole Kidman and Morgan Freeman (Paramount+).

Carnival Eats
In tonight’s episode, “Some Like It Hot Dog,” host Noah Cappe travels the country to sample more fair food, including the Devil Dog at the OC Winterfest in Costa Mesa, Calif., and other goodies in Tucson and West Palm Beach (9 p.m., Cooking Channel).

Shark Week!
Who better to host than the guy who lives under the sea? Jason Momoa (he plays Aquaman in DC movies) hosts this week-long dive into all stuff shark-y (Discovery).

MONDAY, July 24
Futurama
After a decade-long hiatus, the satirical animated sci-fi series (created by The SimpsonsMatt Groening) returns, with voices by Katey Sagal, John DiMaggio and Billy West (Hulu).

The Golden Boy
Put ‘em up! Boxing fans will feel like they’re in the ring with this two-part doc on a gloved legend, Oscar De La Hoya, the “Golden Boy” who won an Olympic gold medal at age 19 and went on to become a pro boxing legend—and a role model to the Mexican-American community (HBO).

TUESDAY, July 25
Under G-D
Kicking off a new season of the acclaimed PBS shorts, this 24-minute documentary looks at the abortion controversy through a group of Jewish women fighting to protect rights, uphold the separation of church and state, and oppose rabbis and other clergy who want to overturn the landmark Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade (available on streaming via PBS.org and the PBSApp).

BRING IT HOME

Another new release for movie buffs, Soundies: The Ultimate Collection (Kino Lorber) spotlights some 200 musical “jukebox” short films that kept Americans entertained during the World War II era. These early music videos included performances by Doris Day, Cab Calloway, Liberace, Duke Ellington, Spike Jones, Merle Travis and many more, and they played on coin-operated machines in neighborhood bars and taverns all over the country.

The madcap comedy thriller So I Married an Axe Murderer, starring Nancy Travers and a pre-Austin Powers Mike Myers, is 30 years old! Can you believe it? The new 4K anniversary release contains half an hour of unused and deleted scenes (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment).

WEDNESDAY, July 26
On the Case with Paula Zahn
In tonight’s episode, chilling evidence found inside a quaint Utah bookstore leads to the murderer of its beloved owner—or does it? (10 p.m., ID).

Abbott Elementary
It’s not quite back-to-school time, but classroom is in full session of TV’s award-winning comedy series. Tonight, the AE teachers must decide which two of them deserves a plum district award—a pair of courtside tickets to a 76ers game (9:30 p.m., ABC).

LISTEN UP!

Unleash your white winged dove and fly high with Stevie Nicks: Complete Studio Albums and Rarities (Rhino). Available digitally, as a 10-CD box 16 LPs, it’s all of her solo albums, newly unearthed tracks (of course) her hits, including “Stop Dragging My Heart Around” (with Tom Petty), “Leather and Lace” (with Don Henley) and more. Get your Stevie on! 

THURSDAY, July 27
The Slumber Party
Coming of age comedy fiim, based on a YA novel about a hypnotism stunt gone wrong, stars Darby Camp, Emmy Liu-Wang, Valentina Herrera and Dallas Liu (8 p.m., Disney).

Twisted Metal
Anthony Mackie (above) Wil Arnett and Thomas Hayden Church star in this new series, a rock-‘em, sock-‘em adaption of a 2001 video game about drivers and their cars in a Mad Max-ian dystopia (Peacock).

Zoey 102
Jamie Lynn Spears, Erin Sanders and other castmates from the Nickelodeon series Zoey 101 return for this new film about an over-the-top wedding and a wild high school reunion (Paramount+).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

What’s Fido thinking? Canine behaviorist Louise Glazebrook’s Teach Yourself Dog (Lawrence King) is a fun matching “memory game” of cards leading you to learn how to “speak dog” by recognizing their gestures and looks as signposts to what your fur babies are feeling.

You Dropped a Bomb on Me

The brainy blockbuster ‘Oppenheimer’ is a big, beautiful must-see about the man who made the device that ended World War II—and created the grim specter of global destruction

Oppenheimer
Starring Cillian Murphy, Emily Blunt, Matt Damon & Robert Downey Jr.
Directed by Christopher Nolan
Rated R

In theaters Friday, July 21

It opens with a screen that tells us about Prometheus, the Greek god who “stole fire from the gods and gave it to men.” His fellow Olympians weren’t too happy with him, and they sentenced Prometheus to spend eternity in torment, shackled to a volcano.

Oppenheimer is based on the book American Prometheus, about Robert J. Oppenheimer, the New York-born theoretical physicist who led America’s Manhattan Project, the top-secret “think tank” that created the atomic bombs dropped in on Nagasaki and Hiroshima in Japan in August 1945. The bombs effectively ended World War II, but also created the grim specter of nuclear war as a reality, one that could—theoretically—lead to the destruction and doom of the entire planet.

Director Christopher Nolan’s grandiose, magnum opus of a historical biopic depicts Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy) as a tortured, sometimes arrogant genius, wrestling with the wide-reaching global implications of what he’s doing, and later, with what he’s done. Like Prometheus, he harnessed the fire of the cosmos—splitting subatomic particles and unleashing the deadly “fire” power of a thermonuclear device—and was then pilloried for it, with accusations that he was a traitor, a spy, a Commie.

It’s a dense drama, powerful and potent, about a loaded moment in time at the intersection of politics, science, discovery, history, human emotion, psychodrama, creation and destruction, chain reactions and ethics, all swirling like protons and neutrons around something no one had ever done, or witnessed, before. It’s a cinch for year-end awards nominations, likely even some Oscars. Yes, it’s that good.

Cillian Murphy and Matt Damon

The all-star cast is outstanding, with everyone playing someone from real life, from Matt Damon as the hawkish Leslie Groves, the U.S. Air Force general who built the Pentagon and was chosen to oversee Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project, to Emily Blunt as Oppenheimer’s wife—whose former ties to the Communist Party become a major, troublesome part of her husband’s trajectory from the classroom to the world stage.  Robert Downey Jr. is a major part of the story as Lewis Strauss, head of the Atomic Energy Commission. There’s Florence Pugh, Oppy’s Communist lover, and Casey Affleck as the military intelligence officer who commands the Allied forces during the war.  Matthew Modine plays a scientist doing high-ranking R&D for America’s war machine. Kenneth Branagh is the Danish physicist Niels Bhor, and Tom Conti plays Albert Einstein.

But everything hinges on Oppenheimer, the central character in almost every scene. Murphy, an Irish actor who’s also appeared in Batman Begins and Inception, plus the British hit TV series Peaky Blinders, gives a stunning, career-high performance, conveying the inner turmoil, passionate convictions and strong opinions of the man tasked with making a device that would weaponize the science on which he had dedicated his life. Oppenheimer’s bombs ended the fighting and brought peace to a war that had been raging across the globe for six years. But what would be the cost to him, and to the world?

Director Nolan (who also wrote the screenplay and produced) is perhaps Hollywood’s leading movie maestro, known for his densely layered, often complex dramas and intense character studies across multiple genres, including a trio of acclaimed Batman blockbusters starring Christian Bale, the mind-bending Inception, Tenet and Memento, the gripping, innovative war drama Dunkirk, and the far-out space-travel drama Interstellar. He knows better than almost anyone how to make blockbusters with brains, and Oppenheimer is queued up to be one of the most intensely brainy, monumentally majestic, stylistically soaring blockbusters of the year.

And the “test” of Oppenheimer’s nuclear device, at Los Alamos in the American desert, is as gripping, jaw-droppingly dramatic and visually stunning as almost anything you’ve ever experienced at any movie, ever.

With booming, atmospheric sound design, lavish visuals, probing questions about the role of science in the world, and a dive into the mysteries of the universe and our place in it, Oppenheimer enters the race as one of the year’s most impressive, important films. I won’t even take away any points for its nearly three-hour running time. It takes a big movie to tell about history’s biggest bang. And Oppenheimer is big, beautiful and absolutely a must-see.  

—Neil Pond