What to stream: Bruce Springsteen doc, Halsey album, Billy Crystal on TV
and 'Trap' thrills
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[October 21, 2024]
By The Associated Press
The Boss shines in the documentary “Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and
the E Street Band” and Billy Crystal starring in a new series for Apple
TV+ called “Before” are some of the new television, films, music and
games headed to a device near you.
Also among the streaming offerings worth your time as selected by The
Associated Press’ entertainment journalists: Halsey's fifth studio
album, the return of “Special Ops: Lioness” and the video game Call of
Duty: Black Ops 6 takes us to the 1990s.
NEW MOVIES TO STREAM OCT. 21-27
— One of the documentary standouts of the Sundance Film Festival, “The
Remarkable Life of Ibelin” packs an emotional wallop. The film, which
won both the audience award and the directing award for documentary at
Sundance, is Mats Steen, a quadriplegic Norwegian who died from a
degenerative disorder at age 25. After his death, his parents discovered
their son’s life was far richer than they had imagined. To a wide “World
of Warcraft” community, Steen was Ibelin Redwood, a cherished virtual
friend. Much of the film, directed by Benjamin Ree ( “The Painter and
the Thief” ), is told through “War of Warcraft”-style animation.
Streaming Friday, Oct. 25, on Netflix.
– There hasn’t been a shortage of Bruce Springsteen documentaries in
recent years, but “Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band”
(streaming Friday, Oct. 25, on Disney+ and Hulu), is still a notable
addition to the ever-expanding cottage industry of all things Bruce. The
film is directed by Thom Zimny, who was also behind the docs “Western
Stars” and “Springsteen on Broadway." This one candidly captures the
band on their 2023-2024 tour, with archival footage mixed in.
— The M. Night Shyamalan -produced thriller “Caddo Lake” has been
popular on Max lately, and the filmmaker’s own film, “Trap,” joins it
Friday, Oct. 25. In “Trap,” Josh Hartnett stars as a serial killer
taking his teenage daughter to an arena popstar concert. The event,
though, has been fashioned as, well, a trap to catch him. In her review,
AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr called it “a solidly entertaining film
that’s mostly silly and sometimes unnerving.”
— AP Film Writer Jake Coyle
NEW MUSIC TO STREAM OCT. 21-27
— In June, Halsey revealed she’d been privately battling both systemic
lupus erythematosus (SLE, the most common form of lupus) and a rare
T-cell lymphoproliferative disorder since 2022. On Friday, she’ll
release her fifth studio album, “The Great Impersonator,” written and
recorded in that time, what she’s publicly referred to as “the space
between life and death.” Lyrically, the album touches on those themes —
and musically, it is a great return to form for Halsey, an exploration
of the music she deeply loves, done in her own fashion. There’s the
interpolation of Britney Spears on “Lucky,” the shoegaze-meets-nu-metal
“Lonely is the Muse,” the pop-punky “Ego” and the folky “The End.”
— Also on Friday, Oct. 25, Andrea Bocelli — arguably the world’s most
recognizable tenor — will release a new album of duets, simply titled
“Duets,” on the 30th anniversary of his debut album, 1994’s “Il Mare
Calmo della Sera.” Bocelli tackles his best known hits, now with new
singing partners: Sarah Brightman on “Time to Say Goodbye,” Jennifer
Lopez on “Quizás, Quizás, Quizás,” Céline Dion on “The Prayer,” and so
on. It’s all A-listers here: Ed Sheeran, Gwen Stefani, Chris Stapleton,
Marc Anthony, Karol G and more make an appearance.
— Country-pop star Kelsea Ballerini is in love. But her fifth studio
album, “Patterns,” is no “happy-go-lucky, mushy, gushy record,” as she
told The Associated Press earlier this summer. Instead, her album
examines a breadth of human experience, specifically what she’s
identified as “learning how to go from fighting with something or with
someone, to fighting for something or for someone.” It’s a lofty goal,
one she manages with ease across songs like “Sorry Mom,” a swaying,
guitar-pop confessional with intergenerational appeal. Banjos and beat
drops appear here, too, in equal measure.
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— ’N Sync’s J.C. Chasez first new
album in 20 years, “Playing With Fire” alongside collaborator Jimmy
Harry, is a musical theater concept album inspired by Mary Shelly’s
1818 novel, “Frankenstein.” It’s an unusual mad lib, but it appears
to center on grief and ambition – following a conversation between a
dying Frankenstein and his monster at his wife’s grave site.
Musically, it marries Chasez’s familiar falsetto, pop music and
classical compositions.
— AP Music Writer Maria Sherman
NEW SHOWS TO STREAM OCT. 21-27
— Another popular video game is getting the live-action treatment.
“Like a Dragon: Yakuza,” is based on a Sega game released in 2005.
It follows a powerful gangster named Kazuma Kiryu, (Ryoma Takeuchi),
who has a good heart and strong moral conviction — despite his ties
to the mob. Kiryu’s story unfolds in two timelines, 1995 when he
first gets drawn into the yakuza and in 2005 as a made man. The
series debuts on Prime Video on Thursday with both subtitles and
dubbed versions.
— Social media star Nadia Caterina Munno, a chef known as The Pasta
Queen, now has her own travel food show with the same name. Munno
takes viewers on a tour of Italy and then into the kitchen where she
demonstrates how to make authentic Italian dishes with fresh
ingredients. She knows her stuff. Munno comes from a family of pasta
makers that goes back generations and the series also features
members of her famiglia. “The Pasta Queen” drops Thursday on Prime
Video.
— Billy Crystal stars in a new series for Apple TV+ called “Before,”
about a man grieving the death of his wife. A child therapist,
Crystal’s character Eli, finds himself drawn to a young boy (played
by Jacobi Jupe) whom he realizes may carry past trauma that could
help his own. The show also stars Judith Light and Rosie Perez. It
premieres Oct. 25 on the streamer.
— The Peabody Award-winning “Somebody Somewhere” starring Bridget
Everett returns for its third and final season Sunday, Oct. 27 on
HBO and Max. Everett plays Sam, a single woman who has found her
people in a group of misfits in the Midwestern town of Manhattan,
Kansas.
— Taylor Sheridan’s CIA show called “Special Ops: Lioness” returns
for its second season Sunday, Oct. 27 on Paramount+. Zoe Saldaña
plays a CIA operative named Joe who recruits young females to
infiltrate terrorist organizations in a secret program called
Lioness. Nicole Kidman, Morgan Freeman, Michael Kelly, Dave Annable
and Laysla De Oliveira all are back for season two.
— Alicia Rancilio
NEW VIDEO GAMES TO PLAY
— Activision’s venerable Call of Duty franchise has, for the most
part, offered a rah-rah attitude about U.S. military might. Things
get weirder in the Black Ops spinoffs, which have presented a loopy,
paranoid history of geopolitical shenanigans from the Cold War to
2065. Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 takes us to the 1990s. The Gulf War
is breaking out, but Marine vet Frank Woods and his team have a
bigger problem: The CIA has been taken over by a shadowy cabal that
wants them dead. There are 16 new maps for multiplayer skirmishes,
and once again you can team up with friends to blast through hordes
of zombies. Answer the call Friday, Oct. 25, on Xbox X/S/One,
PlayStation 5/4 or PC.
— Lou Kesten
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