How âYellowjacketsâ became the buzziest show on TV
This is the Los Angeles Times newsletter about all things TV and streaming movies. This week, we recommend Netflixâs latest Korean sensation, catch up with the star of âNaomiâ and tell you all you need to know about âPeacemaker.â Scroll down!
Welcome the Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone who knows exactly which Yellowjacket they are.
When a Buzzfeed quiz promising to suss out just that ping-ponged around the internet this week, joining the legion of fan theories, dream casting choices, obsessive text threads and soundtrack-listening sessions, it reaffirmed that âYellowjacketsâ has captured the zeitgeist â and managed to do so the old-fashioned way. Without the streaming might of a Netflix or HBO Max behind it, and excluded from broadcast appeal by enough factors â see: incandescent bloodletting, haywire hormones â to field a high-school girlsâ soccer team, Showtimeâs survival epic clawed its way into the culture week by week through sheer force of will.
In this, itâs hard not to root for its season finale, which airs Sunday, to stick the landing, or least to earn the already green-lit Season 2. Amid the ongoing seesaw battle between the episodic and the binge, it has the air of a bona fide word-of-mouth hit, independent of algorithm; it took shape through friends telling friends that the series is pure gumption and demands to be watched. The quizzes are, after all, just an emblem of identification, as a group of cannibalistic teenage soccer players and their traumatized future selves, through the magic of television, become people like us.
The final hurdle is audience expectations: Will âYellowjacketsâ crash back to Earth as swiftly Laura Lee or continue soaring against the forces of gravity? Thereâs no telling. But in the meantime, break out the berry moonshine and the magic mushrooms and rejoice in a TV show you can recommended in the offseason.
Oh, and full disclosure: We took the quiz too. Letâs just say weâre a Jackie Sun, Natalie Rising.
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Turn on
Streaming recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
âThe Silent Seaâ (Netflix). This Korean-language sci-fi series dropped quietly on Christmas Eve, and it really is a gift. Its eight episodes span a 24-hour mission in which space explorers are tasked with retrieving samples from an abandoned research facility on the moon, without being informed of what the samples are or why the place was deserted in the first place. As more was revealed about the destination and the characters who find themselves there, I spent my holiday season gasping about its surprising twists and reveling in its poetic examination of what it means to be an imperfect human, living on an imperfect Earth. I hope Santa heard my plea for a second-season renewal. âAshley Lee
âThe PJsâ (Hulu). Itâs extraordinary that this turn-of-the-century stop-motion series, created by Eddie Murphy with Larry Wilmore and Steve Tompkins, spent three years on network television â two seasons on Fox and one the WB â so biting and yet casually delivered is its humor on the subjects of racism, urban decay, institutional fecklessness, drug addiction and poverty. Or maybe things were more direct then. Set in a housing project (ergo âThe PJsâ) in an unnamed big city, it stars Murphy (channeling Redd Foxx, with a hint of Sherman Hemsley) as irascible building superintendent Thurgood Stubbs, with the divine Loretta Devine as his wife Muriel, along with a host of oddball tenants. The characters, though instruments of social, cultural and political satire â itâs the only comedy I can think of that numbers a crack addict among its main characters or makes the Department of Housing and Urban Development a running gag â have depth and relationships. They wind each other up and rein each other in and create a community. Realized in three dimensions, the animation, from Will Vinton Studios (of California Raisins fame), puts you in a real place, while the hand-crafted sets draw your eye to detail. âRobert Lloyd
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
âPeacemaker,â which hit HBO Max on Thursday, is a spinoff of James Gunnâs 2021 movie âThe Suicide Squad,â and the first show set within the shared superhero film universe unofficially known as the DC Extended Universe. Created by Gunn, the series follows Peacemaker, who had been recruited by Amanda Waller into Task Force X â a secret team of criminals who take on deadly missions to shorten their prison sentences â after the events of the film. Hereâs a brief rundown of the main cast for those who need a âSuicide Squadâ refresher. âTracy Brown
Peacemaker/Christopher Smith (John Cena): A self-righteous, self-proclaimed superhero who believes peace is worth whatever cost it takes to achieve it. A deadly meathead and wearer of tighty-whities who has been trained to kill since he was a child by his father. In âThe Suicide Squad,â he was recruited into Task Force X for his blind patriotism â heâd rather follow his secret orders to make sure the U.S. government canât be implicated in any wrongdoings than do the right thing. Although presumed dead after coming to blows with his teammates, the movieâs post-credits scene reveals he (barely) survived.
Emilia Harcourt (Jennifer Holland): A government agent who works for Amanda Waller, the leader of a government organization that also oversees Task Force X. In âThe Suicide Squad,â sheâs among the agents who take the lead in helping Task Force X defy Wallerâs orders to save the world. Seen in the filmâs post-credits scene checking in on an unconscious Peacemaker in the hospital.
John Economos (Steve Agee): A tech-oriented government agent who works for Waller introduced in âThe Suicide Squad.â Bets on which members of Task Force X will die during their mission but is troubled when Waller threatens a criminalâs child to get him to follow orders. Mentions in the filmâs post-credits scene that he and Harcourt are assigned to work with Peacemaker as punishment for defying Waller.
Leota Adebayo (Danielle Brooks): A new recruit handpicked by Waller to be a part of the mission involving Peacemaker. First introduced in the series.
Vigilante/Adrian Chase (Freddie Stroma): A costumed crimefighter based on a character from DC comic books who makes his debut in the series.
Clemson Murn (Chukwudi Iwuji): Tasked by Waller to lead the team of Adebayo, Harcourt, Economos and Peacemaker on a certain mission. Introduced in the series.
Auggie Smith (Robert Patrick): Peacemakerâs father. First seen in the series.
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
âNaomiâ star Kaci Walfall opened her email and found a dream of an audition. There it was, easy as 1-2-3: Ava DuVernay, the CW and DC. Then she read the character description. âI really felt connected,â she said. After sending in her âsoft tape,â she says she didnât hear anything for two weeks. Then a flurry of activity â another email, a flight to L.A. and a meal (vegan) with executive producer DuVernay â and finally, a call. âIt was Miss Ava,â Walfall said, âand she says, âI want to invite you to the Array family to play Naomi.ââ The Times spoke to Walfall about her origin story before the show premiered Tuesday on The CW. âDawn M. Burkes
There was quite the information dump in the early episodes for people who havenât read the comics and donât know much about the character.
The foundation was laid so beautifully. I was so nervous. I think Iâve read the pilot like 100 times so I could really dig deep within that. I did watch the pilot with the cast. And I thought that it was so great because you get all of these different sets and settings but it feels like this [world] has existed before.
Are you reading more comics now that youâve entered that world?
I read a lot of books, not necessarily comic books. Iâve read the âJustice Leagueâ that [Naomi] is in, which I love. And DC sent me a package of some âWonder Womanâ comics and some âFlashâ comics. But when I get a chance I need to sit down and read some that arenât Naomi-based.
Who would you like âNaomiâ to cross over with?
As Kaci, I would probably say âBatwomanâ or âThe Flash.â As Naomi, of course, I would say Superman.
Whoâs your favorite superhero, besides yourself?
My favorite DC superhero is probably Wonder Woman. I really love Gal Gadotâs portrayal. And my favorite CW DC superhero â I have too many â I probably would say Supergirl; the Flash; Lightning â Jennifer Pierce, thatâs China Anne McClainâs character [in âBlack Lightningâ].
Whatâs your favorite CW show?
My favorite DC ones are âThe Flash,â âBlack Lightningâ and âSupergirl.â Iâve watched a little bit of âStar Girlâ â that show is great too â and a little bit of âBatwoman.â My favorite non-DC superhero CW show is definitely âAll American.â My brother and I watch âAll Americanâ all the time. Iâm really excited for the âAll American: Homecomingâ thatâs coming out soon.
Do you have any plans for binge-watching now that Omicron has made it so we probably shouldnât leave the house?
Iâm really excited for the new season of âEuphoria.â I recently binged âLovecraft [Country].â I thought that that was great. Oh! The new season of âEmily in Paris.â That show is so fun.
Break down
Times staffers chew on the pop culture of the moment â love it, hate it or somewhere in between
Since its debut last month, âStation Elevenâ (HBO Max) has drawn both acclaim (from critics including our own Robert Lloyd) and criticism (from fans of the novel on which itâs based, which it changes in key ways) for its tale of a pre-, post- and post-post-apocalyptic society much like our own.
Normally weâd break down the finale, which premiered Thursday, right here â but senior editor Matt Brennan and columnist and culture critic Mary McNamara felt so passionately about the series that they ended up expanding their answers to feature length. Is âStation Elevenâ a form of ââWalking Deadâ-meets-Terrence Malick self-indulgence,â or âan antidote to every other post-apocalyptic taleâ on screen? Youâll want to read their full debate no matter where you come down on the matter. And be sure to check out Lloydâs interview with Christian Sprenger, a cinematographer on âStation Elevenâ and other noteworthy series.
Whatâs next
The TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on in the coming week
Fri., Jan. 14
âArchive 81â (Netflix): The found-footage horror podcast makes the leap to the screen, with âMalignantâsâ James Wan on board as a producer.
âThe Houseâ (Netflix): An animated anthology series with the added selling point of some top-notch British vocal talent, including Miranda Richardson, Helena Bonham Carter and Matthew Goode.
âThe Tragedy of Macbethâ (Apple TV+): Joel Coenâs solo venture, starring Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand as Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, is a particularly intense adaptation of the Scottish Play, writes film critic Justin Chang, one that âdistills each sequence to its furious essence.â
Sun., Jan. 16
âSomebody Somewhereâ (HBO): Bridget Everett plays a Kansan singer who feels like a fish out of water on her home turf in this series, which counts the Duplass brothers and âHigh Maintenanceâ as part of its pedigree.
Tues., Jan. 18
âHow I Met Your Fatherâ (Hulu): More laughs! More love! More voiceover! A gender-swapped remake of the popular CBS sitcom, with Hillary Duff in for Josh Radnor and Kim Cattrall in for the late Bob Saget.
Thurs., Jan. 20
âLa Fortunaâ (AMC+): âThe Othersâ director Alejandro AmenĂĄbar is behind this Spanish production about the attempt to recover a shipwreck, with Clarke Peters (âThe Wireâ) and Stanley Tucci (of pasta-making, forearm-bearing fame) aboard.
âSingle Drunk Femaleâ (Freeform): Creator Simone Finch offers up an alcoholism comedy, with Sofia Black DâElia as a young woman in recovery and Ally Sheedy as her mother. With Jenni Konner (âGirlsâ) and Leslye Headland (âRussian Dollâ) attached, which is never a bad idea.
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