What to stream: The Weeknd album, Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell, 'SNL'
music and 'Babygirl'
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[January 27, 2025]
Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell starring in the wedding comedy
“You’re Cordially Invited” and The Weeknd's album “Hurry Up Tomorrow”
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: Director Robert Zemeckis’
“Here” with Tom Hanks, Sterling K. Brown returns to TV as a Secret
Service agent and there’s a sequel to “Citizen Sleeper,” the surprise
gaming hit of 2022.
NEW MOVIES TO STREAM JAN. 27-FEB. 2
– Rival weddings collide in “You’re Cordially Invited,” a comedy about
double-booked destination nuptials starring Reese Witherspoon and Will
Ferrell. The film, streaming Jan. 30 on Prime Video, unites a pair of
stars from different realms of comedy in Witherspoon, who's planning a
wedding for her sister (Meredith Hagner), and Ferrell, whose daughter
(Geraldine Viswanathan) is getting married. In the Nicholas Stoller-directed
movie, the two families share a Georgia island wedding venue.
— Nicole Kidman and Harris Dickinson star in Halina Reijn’s “Babygirl”
(on premium video-on-demand beginning Tuesday), a kinky and darkly comic
erotic thriller from A24. Kidman stars as a married Manhattan chief
executive who falls under the intense sway of a new intern (Dickinson),
leading to some memorable sex games of manipulation and control. In my
review, I praised “Babygirl” as “a sometimes campy, frequently
entertaining modern update to the erotically charged movies of the
1990s, like ‘Basic Instinct’ and ‘9 ½ Weeks.’”
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— Robert Zemeckis’ “Here” has already lived many lives since opening in
theaters last October. It was roundly dismissed by critics at release,
only to continue to pick up defenders as the year came to a close.
“Here” gets a second chance Thursday on Netflix. The film, starring Tom
Hanks and Robin Wright, fixes the camera, for seemingly one long take,
on one plot of land, from the time of dinosaurs up until modern day. In
his review, AP’s Mark Kennedy wrote, “It’s not so strange after a while
— so bursting with life is each shot and vignette — but there’s a
gnawing feeling that we’re in some sort of film experiment, like testing
an audience on how long they’ll watch old security camera footage.”
— AP Film Writer Jake Coyle
NEW MUSIC TO STREAM JAN. 27-FEB. 2
— Live from your Peacock subscription, it’s Saturday night! On Tuesday —
and premiering the day before at 8 p.m. ET on NBC — is the release of a
new “Saturday Night Live” special, “Ladies & Gentlemen… 50 Years of SNL
Music.” The three-hour program, directed by Grammy and Academy
Award-winner Questlove and Emmy Award winner Oz Rodriguez, will
spotlight memorable “SNL” music performances across the the show's
incredible run. It will feature sketches, performances and over 50
interview subjects, including Bad Bunny, Miley Cyrus, Billie Eilish,
Mick Jagger, Dua Lipa, Darryl DMC McDaniels, Tom Morello, Kacey
Musgraves, Olivia Rodrigo, Paul Simon, Chris Stapleton and Justin
Timberlake.
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This image released by A24 shows Nicole Kidman, left, and Harris
Dickinson in a scene from "Babygirl." (Niko Tavernise/A24 via AP)
 — It is the end of an era, and no
doubt, one heck of a closer. On Friday, Jan. 31, The Weeknd will
release the final album in his record-breaking trilogy that began
with 2020’s “After Hours” and 2022’s “Dawn FM.” It reaches its coda
with “Hurry Up Tomorrow.” So, what can listeners expect from one of
the biggest names in pop — and the only artist to have 25 songs with
1 billion streams on Spotify? The Weeknd, whose real name is Abel
Tesfaye, is keeping the details close to his chest. But if this
collection of songs comes close to something like “Blinding Lights,”
well, expect them to stick around for a while.
— AP Music Writer Maria Sherman
NEW SHOWS TO STREAM JAN. 27-FEB. 2
— Since “This Is Us” aired its series finale in 2022, Sterling K.
Brown has had voice roles in animated shows and has concentrated on
film work. He is back on TV with a new series called “Paradise” also
created by Dan Fogelman. Brown, also an executive producer, plays a
Secret Service agent for the U.S. President (James Marsden) and
discovers a murder that leads to shocking revelations. The first
three episodes will debut on Hulu on Tuesday (with a linear rollout
of the premiere on Hulu and FX). It will then drop weekly on the
streaming service.
— Noah Centineo’s “The Recruit” returns to Netflix with a second
season after a long delay due in part to the Hollywood strikes. The
actor plays a lawyer with a new job at the CIA who quickly finds
himself embroiled in international politics. The show is
suspenseful, compelling and funny. Centineo still has the charisma
that charmed viewers of the “To All the Boys” movies and it carries
over for an older demo with this series. “The Recruit” season two
premieres Thursday on Netflix.
— The true crime docuseries “Scamanda” unravels the web of lies of
Amanda Riley, a woman who faked having cancer and collected
sympathy, money and gifts while she did it. Journalist Charlie
Webster first told Riley’s story in a podcast of the same name and
has teamed up with ABC News to bring it to TV. The series begins
airing Thursday on ABC and also streams on Hulu next day.
— Alicia Rancilio
NEW VIDEO GAMES TO PLAY
— Citizen Sleeper, a haunting survival adventure set aboard a
decrepit space station, became a surprise hit in 2022 by mixing
clever gameplay with a caustic take on very-late-stage capitalism.
Designer Gareth Damian Martin is now expanding on that world with
Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector. Once again, you’re an android on
the run from the corporation that built you, but now you have a
rickety spaceship at your command. That gives you the freedom to
bounce around the asteroids of the Starward Belt, where you can
search for replacement parts, recruit crew members and take on
high-risk contracts — as long as you can keep your own mechanical
body from glitching out. Liftoff begins Friday, Jan. 31, on
PlayStation 5, Xbox X/S, Nintendo Switch and PC.
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