âChuckyâ takes on one of the scariest places in America: Washington, D.C.
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone who knows the only thing more frightening than inside-the-Beltway chaos is inside-the-Beltway chaos with a killer doll on the loose.
Just as a cadre of insurgent, right-wing Republicans moved to oust (now-former) House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) from his post â with a vote to replace him planned for next week â âChuckyâ premiered Wednesday with a novel new backdrop: Washington, D.C. Executive producer Alex Hedlund joins us for this weekâs Guest Spot.
Also in Screen Gab No. 102, we mark the long-awaited arrival of âMoonlightingâ on streaming and staffers recommend the return of a Marvel favorite and a fresh take on the epic quest.
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
ICYMI
Must-read stories you might have missed
With writers, 250 cue cards and an extended âCloser Look,â Seth Meyers returns to âLate Nightâ: With the writersâ strike lifted, The Times went behind the scenes with Seth Meyers and his team preparing for their first âLate Nightâ in five months.
How âOnly Murdersâ put Meryl Streep in âthe most unexpected romance of the yearâ: Series co-creator and showrunner John Hoffman breaks down Season 3, including Meryl Streepâs guest arc, a panic-inducing finale and that Season 4 cliffhanger.
Looking back, Sarah Cooper âwasnât readyâ for viral fame: âI suffered a lot of humiliationâ: In a new memoir about her sudden rise, Cooper, who came to prominence lip-syncing Donald Trump, faces the personal and professional costs of going viral.
How âThe Morning Showâ re-created the Jan. 6 insurrection, leading to Bradleyâs big lie: âThe Morning Showâ depicts the attack on the U.S. Capitol and Bradley Jacksonâs coverage. The showâs leaders discuss how it came together.
Turn on
Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
âLokiâ (Disney+)
This week the Marvel Television Universe brought forth the second season of âLoki,â a sometimes dark, sometimes moving, generally delightful comedy of branching timelines, the militarized bureaucracy that corrects them for good and/or evil and heroic antiheroes trying, as you might find yourself doing, to make sense of it all. The first season did a fine job of transforming Tom Hiddlestonâs Norse God of Mischief from a bad guy to something of a good guy, taking him out of his black Asgardian leathers and plopping him in a shirt and tie and giving him a complement of ordinary feelings â including a romantic interest in Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino), a female version of himself from another timeline. (Seems appropriate.) This season begins where the last left off, with Loki, back from the End of Time, unrecognized by Mobius (Owen Wilson), his partner rogue-cop buddy. New to the team: Ke Huy Quan as Ouroboros, a cheerful Time Variant Authority repairman, who brings added light. Itâs as close as weâll ever come to a Marvel movie directed by Terry Gilliam. (And props to production designer Kasra Farahani, the showâs secret superhero.) â Robert Lloyd
âFrieren: Beyond Journeyâs Endâ (Crunchyroll)
What happens to a group of heroes after they defeat the big villain and complete their quest? How do long-term friendships work between people of different races such as humans, elves and dwarves, who experience the flow of time so differently? If those are among the questions you have entertained during a Dungeons & Dragons campaign or while watching âThe Lord of the Rings,â âFrieren: Beyond Journeyâs Endâ is the show for you. The series follows Frieren, an elven mage who was a member of the heroâs party that took down the Demon King after a 10-year journey. Itâs only after the groupâs members go their separate ways that Frieren comes to really understand just how fleeting human life is compared to hers, and a certain regret comes to guide her next steps. Itâs a fantasy series about friendship and connection, engaging with themes around humanity, mortality and legacy. But donât worry, itâs more a travelogue with magic and monsters than a show weighed down by its existential themes. â Tracy Brown
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
Many moons ago, when I was in high school and humans still gathered around things called water coolers to chat about the latest episode of their favorite television show, âMoonlightingâ was a true water-cooler phenomenon. Over its five-season run, from 1985 to 1989, the ABC series launched a previously unknown Bruce Willis to mega-stardom, reignited the career of Cybill Shepard and shook up stale TV formulas with its groundbreaking blend of fourth-wall-breaking screwball comedy, mystery, fantasy and will-they-or-wonât-they romance. Yet for years, âMoonlightingâ has been maddeningly unavailable on streaming, held up by the high cost of clearing the rights to the music used in the show. âIâve been campaigning since about 2005, saying, âWhat can we do to get it back in circulation?ââ the showâs creator, Glenn Gordon Caron, told The Times earlier this year. âItâs been frustrating.â
At last, all 67 episodes of the series are coming to Hulu on Tuesday, giving fans the chance to revisit the razor-sharp banter and simmering sexual tension between Shepherdâs Maddie, a former fashion model who finds herself running a detective agency, and Willisâ crass, wise-cracking David. If youâre new to the show, get ready for one of the wittiest, most wildly unpredictable series in network history. A black-and-white episode, introduced by Orson Welles and featuring dueling film-noir dream sequences? Check. An episode written entirely in iambic pentameter delivering a twist on Shakespeareâs âThe Taming of the Shrew? Check again. A nine-minute musical dream sequence set to Billy Joel? Sure, why not? (Be prepared for a lot of dream sequences.)
Beset by behind-the-scenes drama and eventually overshadowed by Willisâ exploding film career, âMoonlightingâ saw its ratings decline in its last two seasons before it was finally canceled by the network (an event that, in its usual meta-fictional fashion, the series incorporated into its finale). With Willis now retired from acting after being diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia, Caron is just happy to see the show finally get a new shot at life. âFor a lot of people, Bruce begins with the first âDie Hardâ movie, so they donât realize what an amazing comic actor he is,â Caron said. âBoth he and Cybill were capable of incredible verbal virtuosity. Iâm excited about people seeing their great work again.â â Josh Rottenberg
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
If the marketing minds behind âChuckyâ (USA, Syfy, Peacock) planned the seriesâ return for the start of spooky season, theyâve awoken this week to something of a bonus: What better time for the killer doll of the âChildâs Playâ franchise to move into the White House than a moment of political bloodletting in D.C.? (Plus, Devon Sawa plunges a knife into every millennialâs heart by being old enough to play the president.) To mark the premiere of Season 3, Part I â the remaining episodes are due in 2024 â executive producer Alex Hedlund stopped by Screen Gab to share his October viewing traditions, tell us what heâs watching and more. âMatt Brennan
What have you watched recently that you are recommending to everyone you know?
âSleepâ! Itâs a Korean film that played at Cannes. The tone is so unique, itâs fantastic. On the TV side, the new ones that I was most inspired by (and jealous that I wasnât a part of) so far this year are âSwarmâ [Prime Video], âBeefâ [Netflix] and âDrops of Godâ [Apple TV+]. Oh, and âLessons in Chemistryâ [Apple TV+] because itâs amazing and my wife worked on it!
What is your go-to âcomfort watch,â the movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
The first 10 seasons of âThe Simpsonsâ [Disney+] are evergreen to me. Iâve seen some of those episodes hundreds of times, and they never get old. Endlessly quotable too!
Even casual horror buffs tend to prepare for Halloween by rewatching old favorites in the genre or catching up with newer releases they might have missed. Whatâs on your October calendar this year?
There are a ton of films playing at the New Beverly that Iâve never seen on the big screen, like âThey Liveâ [Peacock, Starz, Tubi], âChristineâ [AMC+] and âThe Flyâ [Max], that I am dying to see with an audience. Iâm also really looking forward to âThe Millâ on Hulu, âThe Fall of the House of Usherâ on Netflix and â30 Coinsâ Season 2 on Max. And of course thereâs the perennial viewing of âThe Nightmare Before Christmasâ [Disney+] with my kids â followed by kidsâ perennial nightmares!
Season 3 finds Chucky inside the White House. Whatâs the scariest thing about Washington, D.C. right now, in your view?
More like whatâs NOT scary about D.C. right now!
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.