Stream on Demand: John Krasinski steps into Jack Ryan’s shoes for Amazon
What’s new for home viewing on Video on Demand and Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, and other streaming services.
Top streams for the week
John Krasinski is the fifth actor to play “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan,” the CIA analyst turned reluctant field agent, and Wendell Pierce his mentor in the debut season of the Prime Original series based on Clancy’s bestselling novels. Set in the post-9/11 world, it presents a single mission over the eight-episode season. Carlton Cuse and Graham Roland (both veterans of “Lost”) developed the series and Morten Tyldum (“The Imitation Game”) directs the pilot. The entire season will be streaming on Amazon Prime Video on Friday, with a second season confirmed for next year.
(Alec Baldwin, Harrison Ford, Ben Affleck and Chris Pine are the others, in case you wondered.)
Also on Prime Video is “Disobedience” (2018, R) stars Rachel Weisz and Rachel McAdams as women in love in London’s Orthodox Jewish community. The English language debut of award-winning Chilean filmmaker Sebastián Lelio (“A Fantastic Woman”) is less a romance than a compassionate story of family and identity.
The Netflix crime thriller “Ozark: Season 2” sends its urban couple (Jason Bateman and Laura Linney) deeper into the Missouri crime world as they launder money for the mob. Ten episodes streaming on Netflix.
Pay-Per-View/Video on Demand
Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen, and Mary Steenburgen are best friends whose new “Book Club” (2018, PG-13) choice recharges their sex lives in the romantic comedy for the retirement set. Also on DVD and at Redbox.
Meanwhile, “Tag,” the R-rated comedy starring Ed Helms and Jon Hamm and based on the real-life game played by a group of Spokane friends, comes to VOD and DVD.
Also new: based-on-a-true-story caper comedy “American Animals” (2018, R) with Evan Peters, and violent tech-noir thriller “Upgrade” (2018, R).
“The Padre” (2018, R), starring Tim Roth as an American con man posing as a priest in a small Colombian town, comes to VOD a month before theaters.
Available same day as select theaters nationwide is horror film “Boarding School” (2018, R) with Will Patton and Samantha Mathis and documentary “Pick of the Litter” (2018, not rated) on training guide dogs for the blind.
Netflix
A nerdy astrophysicist (Vito Sanz) literally collides with a gorgeous model (Berta Vazquez) in filmmaker Mateo Gil’s bubbly love story “The Laws of Thermodynamics” (Spain, 2018, not rated, with subtitles), which combines romantic comedy conventions with scientific theory. It comes direct to Netflix from Spanish theaters.
Also new: hip-hop comedy “The After Party” (2018, TV-MA) and psychological thriller “Prodigy” (2017, not rated) about a nine-year-old genius under maximum security.
Streaming TV: the second season of “The Good Place” with Kristen Bell and Ted Danson, the smartest, funniest comedy on network TV, streams a month before the new season debuts on NBC. Also new:
the animated “Paradise PD: Season 1” is an adult-oriented comedy about inept cops in a backwater southern town;
“The Comedy Lineup: Part 2,” presenting short stand-up sets from eight up-and-coming comedians;
“Ultimate Beastmaster: Survival of the Fittest,” the third season of the obstacle course competition show;
“Inside the Criminal Mind: Season 1,” a non-fiction series about criminal psychology.
Foreign TV: for fans of Nordic noir there is “
“Undercover Law: Season 1” (Colombia, with subtitles), featuring a female intelligence agent infiltrating a drug cartel;
“Take My Brother Away: Season 1” (China, with subtitles), a wacky high school comedy based on a popular manga.
True stories: “Inequality for All” (2013, PG) looks at growing economic gap with former US Labor Secretary Robert Reich.
Amazon Prime Video
Two new takes on the American western are now streaming: Jessica Chastain is a 19th century portrait painter who befriends Sitting Bull in “Woman Walks Ahead” (2018, R) and Ron Perlman and Martin Starr are lawmen in the comic modern western “The Escape of Prisoner 614” (2018, R).
The second season of “Victoria,” starring Jenna Coleman as young Queen Victoria, takes on real-life historical touchpoints while continuing the upstairs-downstairs royal drama.
Steve McQueen became Hollywood’s coolest superstar in the grand western “The Magnificent Seven” (1960) and World War II prison break classic “The Great Escape” (1963), both with Charles Bronson and James Coburn and directed by John Sturges.
More classics: also newly arrived are the big Oscar winners “In the Heat of the Night” with Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger (1967) and “Fiddler on the Roof” (1971, G) with Topol, both multiple Oscar winners;
blended family comedy “Yours, Mine and Ours” (1968) with Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball;
Douglas Sirk’s suburban melodrama “All that Heaven Allows” (1955) with Rock Hudson and Jane Wyman;
casino heist noir “5 Against the House” (1955) with Kim Novak and Brian Keith;
melodrama “Beyond the Forest” (1949) with scheming Bette Davis;
offbeat crime drama “Crime Without Passion” (1934) with Claude Rains as a lawyer covering up a murder.
Cult movies: drag queen road movie comedy “The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert” (1994, R) with Guy Pearce and Terence Stamp;
original “Mad Max” (1980, R) with Mel Gibson;
subway heist thriller “The Taking of Pelham One Two Three” (1974, R) with Walter Matthau and Robert Shaw (reviewed on Stream On Demand here).
Prime Video and Hulu
Jennifer Lawrence and Javier Bardem star in “Mother!” (2017, R), Darren Aronofsky’s passionate but polarizing allegory that mixes the Bible and creation myths with themes of artistic creation, feminism, and environmentalism. On Prime Video and Hulu.
Hulu
The documentary “Active Measures” (2018, not rated) investigates the Russian interference of the 2016 American presidential election.
Martin Scorsese’s 19th century crime epic “Gangs of New York” (2002, R), starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Daniel Day-Lewis, earned 10 Oscar nominations.
Eighties flashback: the original “The Terminator” (1984, R) with Arnold Schwarzenegger and teen comedy “Sixteen Candles” (1984, PG) with Molly Ringwald.
HBO Now
“Father Figures” (2017, R) stars Owen Wilson and Ed Helms as brothers on a road trip to track down their mother’s old boyfriends and find their biological father. Glenn Close plays their mother, who they discover has a wild side in her youth, and Terry Bradshaw, Ving Rhames, J.K. Simmons, and Harry Shearer co-star.
Stand-up: “Drew Michael” (2018, TV-MA)
Available Saturday night is the animated adventure “Ferdinand” (2017, PG) and on Sunday “Miss Sherlock,” a new mystery series from Japan, will be available on HBO streaming channels.
Showtime Anytime
Viggo Mortensen is a devoted father home-schooling his kids off the grid in “Captain Fantastic” (2016, R), a drama of an alternative family coming to grips with loss, rebellion, and the world outside their little Walden. It was partially shot in Washington and Oregon.
FilmStruck
Alfred Hitchcock never made a more purely entertaining film than “North by Northwest” (1959), a classic “wrong man” thriller with a romantic cast and a breathless series of adventures on a cross-country romp. Cary Grant, long past his days as a matinee idol, is effortlessly suave and charming and completely convincing as a glib, sheltered New York businessman who, in a purely random twist of fate, is mistaken for a master spy. Suddenly his safe routine is turned upside down by armed thugs, foreign agents and a beautiful femme fatale (Eva Marie Saint, utterly seductive). Everything clicks and sly fox Hitch slides more sexual innuendo and erotic flirtation into the film than most R-rated films accomplish, while the breezy smoothness hides an undercurrent of tension and a complete mistrust of authority. It features some of Hitchcock’s greatest set pieces (from fleeing a malevolent crop duster in a remote cornfield to scrambling across the faces of Mount Rushmore) plus sparkling dialogue and a magnificent score by Bernard Herrmann.
It’s the TCM Select Pick of the Week and one of 13 features in the “Star of the Week: Cary Grant” spotlight, which also includes screwball classic “Bringing Up Baby” (1938) with Katharine Hepburn, brawny adventure “
Also new: “Soviet Perspectives on WWII,” which includes Cannes Film Festival winner “The Cranes are Flying” (Soviet Union, 1957, with subtitles) and Oscar nominee “Ballad of a Soldier” (Soviet Union, 1959, with subtitles), and “Double Takes,” nine films featuring identical twins and lookalikes, including “The Prisoner of Zenda” (1937) with Ronald Colman, Charlie Chaplin’s “The Great Dictator” (1940), and “Dead Ringers” (1988, R) with Jeremy Irons.
Acorn TV
“A Place to Call Home: The Final Chapter” is the sixth and final season of the Australian drama starring Marta Dusseldorp as a nurse working for a wealthy family in post-World War II Australia. The first two episodes are now available, new episodes roll out each Monday starting Sept. 10.
Also new is the Italian crime drama “Tangled Lies” (Italy, with subtitles). All six episodes now streaming.
Other streams
Douglas Henshill stars in the miniseries “In Plain Sight” (2016), based on the true story of the hunt for Scotland’s first serial killer in the 1950s. Now streaming on BritBox.
Broadway HD presents the Olivier Award-winning musical “Jerry Springer: The Opera” featuring the original London cast in a performance recorded at the Cambridge Theatre in 2005.
New on disc: “Book Club,” “Tag,” “American Animals,” “Upgrade,” “RBG”
At Redbox: “Deadpool 2,” “Book Club,” “Tag,” “American Animals,” “Upgrade”
Sean Axmaker is a Seattle film critic and writer. His reviews of streaming movies and TV can be found at http://streamondemandathome.com.
Copyright © 2018 by Sean Axmaker