Our film criticâs guide to streaming the singular â and underrated â Claire Denis
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone whoâs a Claire Denis completist (or wants to be).
The French filmmakerâs latest, âBoth Sides of the Blade,â inspired film critic Justin Chang to work up a primer on her work for those interested in a deeper dive â or those who just want to dip a toe in the water. And with all of it available to watch from the comfort of your couch, itâs a masterclass you can complete at your own pace.
Also in this weekâs Screen Gab, two TV series to stream and a conversation with actor/writer/producer Dan Bucatinsky about what heâs watching. And as always, weâre looking for reader picks: Send your TV or streaming movie recommendations to [email protected] with your name and location. Submissions should be no longer than 200 words and are subject to editing for length and clarity.
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Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
Developed by Justin Adler and Maggie Mull (âLife in Piecesâ) from a short film by Tim Curcio, âMaggieâ (Hulu) is a charming sitcom about a professional psychic who really is psychic, but whose own fate is veiled to her, until she glimpses herself in a reflection in a vision of someone elseâs romantic future. A slow-paced romantic comedy in which the distant ends will keep present relationships in a kind of abeyance, the series, which was originally heading to ABC, has a frictionless network vibe that keeps things pleasant even when theyâre going awry. On a deeper level, you can divine the questions of how you shape present expectations around what you think tomorrow will bring and whether itâs best to just surrender to the moment. Rebecca Rittenhouse, just emotionally disheveled enough, makes a sweet lead, but itâs fundamentally an ensemble piece, likably populated with Nichole Sakura as the cockeyed best friend, David Del Rio as the man in Maggieâs vision, Adam Korson as the man at least temporarily in her life, and the bonus of Chris Elliott as Maggieâs father. (And the bonus bonus of co-creator Mullâs father, Martin Mull, guest starring in one episode.) âRobert Lloyd
My intermittent exploration of anime avoids apocalyptic scenarios and monsters and giant robots in favor of films or series more in tune with daily life. The title was enough to draw me to the mysterious manga-based âKotaro Lives Aloneâ (Netflix), about a solemn, smart, strangely formal, self-reliant and yet quite vulnerable 4-year-old boy who moves into an apartment building on his own. His neighbors â a manga artist struggling with deadlines, a nightclub hostess, a loud man in a leopard suit â accept this state of affairs even as they canât quite figure it out, and form a sort of protective circle around him. (Though they are more led than leading.) Scenes are set around a preschool, a convenience store, a bathhouse, various offices and living spaces, ordinary places made strange by the character and the premise. Itâs hard to say just who this was made for, adults or children. A vein of sadness runs through it, and an awareness of how children are made to suffer, and how one constructs a life and a view of life from whatever bits and pieces one can grasp â including in Kotaroâs case an anime swordsman called Tonosaman, whom he attempts to emulate â when the stuff of a whole life is not available. âRobert Lloyd
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Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
The revered 76-year-old French filmmaker Claire Denis is having a year. She recently unveiled two new movies â the Paris-set melodrama âBoth Sides of the Blade,â which opens in theaters this week, and the English-language thriller âStars at Noonâ â which won major festival prizes at Berlin and Cannes, respectively. The double whammy speaks to the range and volume of Denisâ output over her decades-spanning career, during which sheâs racked up criticsâ raves yet remained an under-appreciated figure, especially among audiences in the U.S.
Happily, many of her features are available for home viewing. Itâs admittedly not the ideal way to process Denisâ rapturously beautiful images or her sometimes enigmatic narratives; certainly an acknowledged masterpiece like âBeau Travailâ (Criterion Channel), her 1999 retelling of âBilly Buddâ set among French Foreign Legionnaires in Djibouti, needs the big screen to achieve the full measure of its power. Even still, no encounter with the work of this singular and uncompromising artist should ever be turned down.
Those looking to see âBoth Sides of the Bladeâ in theaters might also want to check out Denisâ two earlier collaborations with Juliette Binoche: 2017âs funny, loquacious romantic comedy âLet the Sunshine Inâ (multiple platforms), in which Binoche basically plays a French version of a Nancy Meyers heroine, and 2018âs mesmerizing outer-space odyssey âHigh Lifeâ (multiple platforms), in which she plays a reproduction-obsessed mad scientist who forcibly collects astronautsâ sperm.
If that sounds scary, Denisâ chilly cannibalism thriller, âTrouble Every Dayâ (multiple platforms), is scarier still, though this story of love and hunger is also incongruously tender to the touch; critically maligned on its release in 2001, itâs since been reclaimed as an important forerunner of what had not yet been dubbed the New French Extremity. Less gory but no less unsparing is Denisâ 2013 thriller, âBastardsâ (multiple platforms), a pitiless film noir about the evil that men do for profit and its devastating human toll.
Denis was born in France and grew up in West Africa, and some of her finest films â including her 1988 debut, âChocolatâ (Criterion Channel), and her 2010 Isabelle Huppert drama, âWhite Materialâ (multiple platforms) â methodically lay bare the horrors of European colonialism without registering as specifically autobiographical. My own favorite Denis movie, 2009âs luminous and moving â35 Shots of Rumâ (multiple platforms), revisits Yasujiro Ozuâs âLate Springâ from the standpoint of a Black father and daughter living on the outskirts of Paris; itâs one great filmmakerâs tribute to another. âJustin Chang
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
Ancestry and genealogy have inspired enough TV series at this point to qualify as a subgenre, and âWho Do You Think You Are?â just might be the granddaddy of them all. Executive produced by âThe Comebackâ collaborators Lisa Kudrow and Dan Bucatinsky, the documentary series, which traces the family history of celebrity guests like Allison Janney, Nick Offerman and Billy Porter, launched on NBC in 2010, moved to TLC for seven seasons, and returns to NBC this Sunday for a new run. With sharper investigative tools than ever and armchair genealogy all the rage, Bucatinsky swung by Screen Gab to discuss what heâs discovered about his own family history, prospects for a âComebackâ comeback and his abiding love of Meryl Streep. âMatt Brennan
What have you watched recently that you are recommending to everyone you know?
âGaslitâ on Starz, created by and executive produced by Robbie Pickering and Sam Esmail (known for âMr. Robot,â which I have to admit I never watched) and directed by Matt Ross, who did âCaptain Fantastic.â This period limited series â a historical account of Watergate through the lens of a heartbreaking and hilarious Martha Mitchell â is genre-bending in the best way. It takes an often irreverent and humorous approach to a dramatic story weâve all seen adapted so many times. But Julia Roberts is a revelation, as are performances by Dan Stevens and Chris Bauer and Chris Messina and of course a brilliantly made-up Sean Penn. I know this show divides many viewers, but all the best stuff does. I loved it.
Whatâs your go-to âcomfort watch,â the movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
Iâm a massive Meryl Streep fan. Maybe because Iâm living and breathing, and my brain stem is attached! So, any time âPostcards From the Edgeâ comes up on my feed or is on TV I canât help but watch it. Itâs funny, touching and honest because Carrie Fisher was so unflinchingly brave in telling her story, and beautifully realized by Mike Nichols. But the performances by Meryl and Shirley MacLaine are what keep me coming back.
What kind of ancestral/genealogical research have you done about yourself? What has been the most surprising detail youâve discovered?
Over the 10-plus years weâve been making âWho Do You Think You Are?â Iâve held back on doing my own research. Just in case. But of course, I never wanted to do the show over some of the amazing talent we are able to research each year. So... maybe Iâll do a deep dive one of these days. I did once download a ship manifest Ancestry helped me find of my Argentinian ancestors heading to London! I have to do some further research to find out why these Eastern European Jews escaped Russia, landed in Buenos Aires and then took a ship to England! The plot thickens!
When we last spoke, you told me that âeverybody wants to doâ a third season of âThe Comeback.â As the ultimate Valerie Cherish stan, I am duty bound to ask: Any updates you can share?
There is no end to the number of stories we would want to tell about Valerie Cherish. In a perfect world, weâd never stop making âThe Comeback.â Itâs a show near and dear to our hearts. Always and forever. But each season, to us, told the perfect story for its time. I think if the perfect story emerged in the minds of Lisa Kudrow and Michael Patrick King â something that would top the amazing second season we put out in 2014 â then I think everyone would want to jump in. Itâs just a matter of finding that perfect story!
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Recommendations from Screen Gab readers
âJune Againâ on Prime Video. This Australian film about a womanâs brief reprieve from dementia starts out sad but goes on to be a warm and funny story of a quirky familyâs love.
Mary Katherine Reeber
San Diego
Whatâs next
Listings coordinator Matt Cooper highlights the TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on
Friday, July 8
âBlack Birdâ (Apple TV+): A convict (âRocketmanâsâ Taron Egerton) tries to coax a confession out of a serial killer in this new drama. The late Ray Liotta also stars.
âBoo, Bitchâ (Netflix): âTo All the Boysââ Lana Condor is living her best afterlife in this new supernatural comedy.
âConjuring Keshaâ (Discovery+): The paranormal doesnât start until she walks in in the pop starâs new unscripted series.
âHow to Build a Sex Roomâ (Netflix): Couples seek assistance from one very open-minded interior designer in this risquĂŠ renovation series.
âThe Sea Beastâ (Netflix): A scrappy young stowaway has herself a nautical adventure in this animated 2022 tale from the director of âMoana.â
âTrigger Pointâ (Peacock): An elite police unit scrambles to stop a series of terrorist bombings in London in this imported drama.
Saturday, July 9
âMy Grown-up Christmas Listâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): A reporter hooks up with a hunky soldier in this new holiday romance.
âFlowers in the Attic: The Originâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): V.C. Andrewsâ tale of one seriously dysfunctional family gets a prequel in this star-studded limited series. With Kelsey Grammer.
âSay Yes to the Dressâ (TLC, 8 p.m.): The unscripted series is back, just in time for the summer wedding season.
Sunday, July 10
âPatagonia: Life on the Edge of the Worldâ (CNN, 6 and 9 p.m.): One of South Americaâs most remote wilderness regions is surveyed in this new nature series.
âUnited Shades of America With W. Kamau Bellâ (CNN, 7 p.m.): âWoke cultureâ is examined in the season premiere.
âWho Do You Think You Are?â (NBC, 7 p.m.): The celebrity genealogy series returns. First up, âPoseâsâ Billy Porter.
âBiography: WWE Legendsâ (A&E): The Undertaker is saluted in the season premiere.
âNightmare PTA Momsâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): They forgot to bring the cupcakes again in this thriller.
âThe Final Strawâ (ABC, 9 p.m.): Contestants face supersized Jenga-style challenges in this new game show.
âGrantchesterâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): A vicar and a detective walk into a seventh season of this British mystery drama.
âWomen Who Rockâ (Epix, 9 p.m.): Janis Joplin, Stevie Nicks, et al. are celebrated in this four-part docuseries.
âCamo Sharksâ (National Geographic, 10 p.m.): An all-new âSharkFestâ gets underway with this special.
âWWE Rivalsâ (A&E, 10 p.m.): The premiere episode revisits the storied rivalry between Bret âThe Hitmanâ Hart and Shawn Michaels.
âBridge & Tunnelâ (Epix, 10 p.m.): The coming-of-age drama set in 1980s New York City is back for a second season.
âThe Anarchistsâ (HBO, 10 p.m.): They would rather the rules not apply to them, as detailed in this new docuseries.
âSupreme Teamâ (10 p.m., Showtime): This true crime series recalls a notorious Black crime syndicate in 1980s New York City.
Monday, July 11
âDays of Our Lives: Beyond Salemâ (Peacock; also Tuesday-Friday): The soap-opera spinoff returns for another five-episode run.
âThe Bacheloretteâ (ABC, 8 p.m.): They should really add an âsâ to the end of the title, because this time, there are two of âem!
âBetter Call Saulâ (AMC, 9 p.m.; also AMC+): The gritty drama starring Bob Odenkirk returns for its final episodes.
âBBQ USAâ (Food Network, 9 p.m.): Host Michael Symon visits barbecue competitions around the country in this new series.
âClaim to Fameâ (ABC, 10 p.m.): The relatively unknown relatives of assorted celebrities cohabitate in this new series.
âPOVâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): The 2022 documentary âWuhan Wuhanâ looks at life in that Chinese city during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Tuesday, July 12
âBill Burr: Live at Red Rocksâ (Netflix): The comic weighs in on cancel culture and other hot topics in this stand-up special.
âThe Bobâs Burgers Movieâ (Hulu, HBO Max): The Belchers hit the big screen in this hilarious 2022 comedy based on the animated series.
âHow to Change Your Mindâ (Netflix): Tune in, turn on and drop out with this new series about the therapeutic benefits of LSD, MDMA and other psychedelic drugs.
âThe Onlyâ (Paramount+): Trailblazing soccer star Briana Scurry is profiled in this new sports documentary.
âEdge of the Earthâ (HBO, 9 p.m.): Elite athletes go off the beaten path in this four-part adventure series.
Wednesday, July 13
âD.B. Cooper: Where Are You?!â (Netflix): The decades-long search for the mysterious skyjacker continues in this documentary.
âNever Stop Dreaming: The Life and Legacy of Shimon Peresâ (Netflix): The former Israeli prime minister and Nobel Peace Prize winner is profiled.
âSouth Park: The Streaming Wars Part 2â (Paramount+): Our favorite foul-mouthed fifth-graders wrap up their latest misadventure.
âNovaâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): The new episode âUltimate Space Telescopeâ explores NASAâs latest effort to unlock the mysteries of the cosmos.
âEverythingâs Trashâ (Freeform, 10 and 10:30 p.m.): â2 Dope Queensââ Phoebe Robinson literally just canât even in this new sitcom.
âFive Guys a Weekâ (Lifetime, 10 p.m.): Two is company, threeâs a crowd ⌠and then thereâs this new dating competition.
Thursday, July 14
âFBoy Islandâ (HBO Max): Whoâs thirsty? They all are in the return of this dating competition hosted by Nikki Glaser.
âKung Fu Panda: The Dragon Knightâ (Netflix): Po (Jack Black) is back in action in this animated series based on the movie franchise.
âResident Evilâ (Netflix): Those virus-infected zombies are back in action in this series based on the movie franchise.
âVictoriaâs Secret: Angels and Demonsâ (Hulu): Behind the baby dolls and camisoles lies a twisted tale in this docuseries.
â101 Places to Party Before You Dieâ (truTV, 10:30 p.m.): Comics Adam Pally and Jon Gabrus take you there in this new travelogue.
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.