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The dog days of summer are traditionally TVâs silly season, but thereâs no shortage of series tackling more challenging subject matter at the moment. In addition to Netflixâs harrowing peek inside the machinery of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, âImmigration Nation,â and the discussions of abortion, gender violence and other topics in Diego Lunaâs âPan y Circoâ (Amazon Prime) â both streaming now â Misha Green and Jordan Peeleâs upcoming âLovecraft Countryâ (HBO) situates the Black experience of postwar America within the realm of horror. Even the frothy reality show âSelling Sunsetâ (Netflix) handles one subjectâs surprise divorce with uncommon care.
And if you need a chaser for the above, you have options: Netflixâs âUmbrella Academyâ turns family strife (and superpowers) into a whole lot of apocalypse-averting fun. âSaturday Night Liveâ alumna Paula Pell tried her hand at a short-form âMurder, She Wrote.â And there are more than enough good vibes to go around in this interview with âWynonna Earpâ star Melanie Scrofano about directing her first full episode of the sci-fi western.
Still not enough? As always, here are five more titles that the Times TV team is watching this week â and that you should be watching too.
âMoesha,â newly streaming on Netflix, leads this weekâs TV recommendations from the Los Angeles Times.
Huluâs dystopian drama âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ is a dark journey into where the nation could end up if democracy went totally sideways due to a medical crisis, authoritarian leadership and deep political divisions. Imagine! Though close to the bone, this beautifully crafted series, based on Margaret Atwoodâs 1985 novel and starring Elisabeth Moss as an enslaved breeder, paints a picture so bleak that itâs a poignant reminder of how good we have it. 2020 America is swelltastic compared to the future where the country is split into two states, and the bad one, Gilead â yes, just like the pharmaceutical company â is dismal. The oppression, however, is met with a rebellion that, like everything is this series, speaks to the times. âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ is gripping, fast-paced, deep and yes, even humorous. The future revolution is being televised, and youâll find it on Hulu. â Lorraine Ali
âStar Trekâ has always had a streak of comedy running through its star-cruising drama, and this animated series â the third in the current CBS All Access franchise revival, fourth if you count the featurette anthology âShort Treksâ â reverses the ratio. Set among the support crew on a starship that specializes in âsecond contactâ â it less boldly goes where some have gone before â the series focuses not on the usual top brass but on the lower-rank dorks and geeks and troublesome slackers who actually make things run: the extras who populate the corridors and cafeterias of the live-action shows. But this is a âStar Trekâ series at heart, not a spoof, in which the day is always saved and every comical humiliation leads to a reconciliation or redemption, and it honors the franchise with studiously canonical callbacks and name-drops. (âCircled by spears â this is classic. What am I, Kirk? Is this the 2260s?â) Like âFuturama,â itâs real science-fiction rooted in the absurdities and self-seriousness of the genre. The animation is not especially elegant, but the acting (drawn and voiced) is effective, so that much of the time youâre conscious only of the characters, not the cartoon. For some excellent animation (and tense silent comedy), check out âEphraim and Dot,â a beautifully designed episode in the âShort Treksâ anthology, in which an adorable tardigrade â âStar Trek: Discoveryâ viewers will recognize the species â looks for a place to lay its eggs as a starship droid gets in the way. â Robert Lloyd
One glaring snub of the recently announced Emmy nominations was the lack of recognition for Showtimeâs espionage drama âHomeland.â The series scored only one nomination â directing â in its eighth and final season when it would not have been out of place in the drama series and acting categories. The showâs concluding season ranked as one of its best, and the excellent performances of Claire Danes as emotionally troubled CIA agent Carrie Mathison and Mandy Patinkin as her conflicted but devoted mentor Saul Berenson reached new levels of rawness and poignancy. Though it had a few awkward seasons after its triumphant debut, âHomelandâ deftly nailed the landing as a gripping international thriller and as a pointed examination of the ramifications of mental illness. The show definitely deserved a more celebratory curtain call in its farewell. â Greg Braxton
I am the first to admit that I am terrible at keeping up with TV shows as they are running weekly, but âThe Owl Houseâ is one of the few exceptions. Created by Dana Terrace, this Disney animated series follows Luz Noceda, a human teenager who accidentally stumbles through a portal to the demon realm where she meets an older witch named Eda and the tiny demon King. This new world is a dream come true for the fantasy-loving Luz, who decides to stay and train to become a witch herself. Some episodes include fun nods to familiar books and games, and overall, the show embraces that feeling of being a fan regardless of what other people might think. For me, âThe Owl Houseâ has found its stride as Luz has started exploring magic school and meeting other teen witches. The latest episode was prom-themed and featured a memorable dance/fight sequence; its revelation that one of the showâs main characters is bisexual was a bonus, and a significant milestone for LGBTQ representation on a Disney show. â Tracy Brown
This British sitcom, available to stream starting today, follows a pair of half sisters who learn of one anotherâs existence after their father keels over and dies at his surprise birthday party. Both named Catherine Wolcott and born just five days apart, the women grew up 13 miles apart as their father maintained a double life for decades. Cathy (Ellie White), daughter of the Wife, is a tightly wound re-insurance agent engaged to a doctor, while Cat (Lauren Socha), daughter of the Mistress, is a free-spirited food truck worker.
While they couldnât be more different, the sisters form an unexpected bond amid their shared grief. Like the similarly named âThe Other Twoâ â which you should most definitely catch up on â âThe Other Oneâ is an acerbic but heartfelt comedy about mismatched siblings and embarrassing parents. The cast is full of Actors Youâve Seen in Other British Shows, including Socha (the surly babysitter from âCatastropheâ) and the always excellent Siobhan Finneran (OâBrien from âDownton Abbeyâ) hamming it up as Catâs lusty mother. â Meredith Blake
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.