Worth Watching

Man does not live by bad news alone, or shouldn’t have to. As the Bille Holiday song suggests one should try “getting some fun out of life.” What with a pandemic and Trumpism the last several years have made many of us anxious to flee a world full of quarantine and chaos in favor of something entertaining, whether comedy, tragedy, melodrama or farce. Here are a few things I’ve enjoyed watching more than the latest depressing bad news report on the decline of the west.

From the people who brought us “Band of Brothers,” we now have “Masters of the Air” on Apple TV. It takes us aloft with World War II bomber crews stationed in England for attacks across the channel on Nazi German. While not quite as unforgettable as “Brothers” it’s still worth a look. I may be a sucker for it since my Dad before I was born spent World War II as a ground crew chief keeping B-29s aloft.

“Ripley,” on Netflix, is yet another reboot of Patricia Highsmith’s series of novels about the talented serial killer Mr. Ripley. In this version the lead is played by the Irish actor Andrew Scott whose ability to inhabit various characters is impressive. You may remember him as the taunting Moriarty to Benedict Cumberbatch’s Sherlock Holmes and as “Fleabag’s” hot priest.

“Sugar” is the name another Apple series and of the protagonist played by Colin Farrell. It is too early to say whether Sugar will hold up alongside such L.A. noir private eye peers as Sam Spade, Lew Archer, Phillip Marlowe, and Jake Gittes, but it appears promising so far. Especially fro those who are hooked on the genre. Also among crime stoppers is Jodie Foster, whose been busy lately. This time she’s an Alaska law enforcement officer chasing a murderer in a fourth season of “True Detective” on HBO.

The alien invasion series “3 Body Problem” from Netflix is adapted from a Hugo Award winning sci-fi novel by the Chinese author Lin Civin. The show begins when a group of young radio astronomers are recruited to undertake a project to detect and identify unexpected noises in the vicinity of earth. They eventually suggest the possibility of alien creatures with malign intent nearby. This turns out to be a cruel cliffhanger that leaves viewers waiting for the arrival of chapter two.

In HBO’s “The Regime,” Kate Winslet stars as the heiress to the throne of minor Mitteleuropan country when her father dies. One might expect the glamorous Winslet to be a princess charming but she is in fact a spoiled twit who is completely out of her depth, ignores the advice of her father’s loyal advisors, alienates her subjects, crashes the economy, and falls under the spell of a thuggish colonel who she soon puts in control of her body and state which leads to an armed insurrection. Once again, viewers will have to wait for season two to learn whether the ship of state will be righted or the mess gets even messier.

I’ve managed to miss a number of movies that made news this year but have finally caught up with several. Emma Stone stars as a sex-crazed Frankenstein’s monster in “Poor Things” which despite a cast that includes fine actors is deeply peculiar from beginning to end. The plight of Nick Cage in “Dream Scenario” is also weird but at least it intends to be funny. He’s a frumpy college professor who suddenly finds himself appearing in the dreams of his students, then strangers, then people all over the world. As a result every time he shows his face people recognize him, and not in a good way. It is possible to regard this as a kind of parody of the dangers of over-sharing on social media.

“Anatomy of a Fall” is one of a pair of films that made German actress Sandra Huller much better known in America. In it she is a wife and mother whose pleasant life is suddenly turned upside down when her husband falls to his death from their alpine chalet. She is put on trial for his murder and separated from her child.  For her performance she was nominated for an academy award. I’m still waiting to catch up with a second performance in “Zone of Interest”

that won an Oscar for best foreign film. In it she plays Hedwig the wife of Rudolf Hoess the Nazi commandant of the Auschwitz death camp. They live with their children, gardening and picnicking, on the other side of the wall from the ovens and pits where a million jews were murdered. 

I’m also anxious to see Andrew Scott again in “All of Us Strangers” and the always-worth- watching Jeffery Wright in the comedy “American Fiction” in which his college professor character, who feels he gets no respect for his serious novels, writes a satire of inferior works by black authors who traffic in racial tropes he scorns. What could go wrong? I can’t wait to see.

About Hayden Keith Monroe

I was born and raised in northern Ohio and have spent most of the rest of my days in North Carolina. I have studied literature, written advertising copy and spent almost twenty years writing editorials and columns for daily newspapers.

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