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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Stream On Demand: Stars line up in this week’s streaming options

By Sean Axmaker For The Spokesman-Review

What’s new for home viewing on Video on Demand and Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, HBO Max, Amazon Prime and other streaming services.

Top streams for the week

Anthony and Joe Russo leave the MCU to write and direct “The Gray Man” (2022, PG-13), a globe-trotting action thriller starring Ryan Gosling as a CIA agent in possession of dangerous secrets and Chris Evans as the sociopathic assassin sent to kill him. Ana de Armas, Jessica Henwick, Regé-Jean Page, Alfre Woodward and Billy Bob Thornton costar. Streams a week after a limited theatrical release. (Netflix)

”Anything’s Possible” (2022, PG-13) is a modern coming-of-age story about a confident high school girl (Eva Reign) embarking on her senior year after transitioning from male to female and a classmate (Abubakr Ali) who develops a crush on her. The teenage characters of this romantic drama navigate issues of gender and identity while struggling with young love in the directorial feature debut of Tony and Emmy-winning actor Billy Porter. (Prime Video)

”Happening” (France, 2021, not rated, with subtitles), based on the novel by Annie Ernaux, follows a student (Anamaria Vartolomei) who becomes pregnant and confronts the realities of securing an abortion in 1960s France when it was still illegal. It won the top prize at the Venice Film Festival. (AMC+)

Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward are “The Last Movie Stars” (TV-MA) in the limited series documentary from filmmaker Ethan Hawke. It profiles the actors’ personal lives and 50-year marriage and chronicles their screen careers and their long partnership as artists and in their philanthropic endeavors over six hour-long episodes. Features interviews with friends and colleagues, intimate footage and transcripts of long-unavailable interviews with the couple (voiced by George Clooney and Laura Linney) from an unfinished memoir. All episodes available. (HBO Max)

Pay-Per-View / Video on Demand

Jessica Chastain and Ralph Fiennes are wealthy Americans in Morocco who cover up the accidental killing of a young boy in “The Forgiven” (2022, R), an adaptation of the Lawrence Osborne novel by filmmaker John Michael McDonagh. Also on DVD and at Redbox.

Netflix

The fourth season of the romantic drama “Virgin River” (TV-14) continues the story of a Los Angeles nurse (Alexandra Breckenridge) finding love and a home in a small Northern California town.

True crime: The limited series documentary “Indian Predator: The Butcher of Delhi” (India, TV-MA, with subtitles) revisits the case of a seasoned serial killer.

International passport: A competitive video gamer rethinks his priorities after his mother’s illness in “Too Old for Fairy Tales” (Poland, 2022, TV-PG, with subtitles).

International horror TV: The limited series anthology “The House of Dark Secrets” (Argentina, 2015, TV-MA, with subtitles) and seasons one and two of the animated comedy “Bad Exorcist” (Poland, TV-MA).

Stand-up: “The Best of Netflix is a Joke” (TV-14) features clips of Bill Burr, Snoop Dogg, Carly Aquilno, John Mulaney, David Letterman, Lily Tomlin and dozens more.

Hulu

True stories: “Aftershock” (2022, not rated) looks at the crisis in maternity mortality and the disproportionate number of American Black women that die in childbirth.

In the political satire “The Hater” (2022, not rated), a liberal Democrat (Joey Ally, also the filmmaker) sets out to defeat her childhood nemesis, a Republican candidate, in a conservative Texas town.

An aimless 20-something (Molly Bernard) becomes a surrogate for an older gay man in the LGBTQ+ comedy “Milkwater” (2020, TV-MA).

Boyd Holbrook and Kelly Reilly star in “The Cursed” (2021, R), a werewolf movie set in late 19th century France. Two additional horror films also debut:

Kate Dolan’s “You Are Not My Mother” (2021, not rated) from Ireland;

horror comedy “All My Friends Hate Me” (2021, R) from England.

Streaming TV: Weekly anthology series “American Horror Stories” (TV-MA) returns for a second season with new episodes on Thursday and season five of “Grown-ish” (TV-14) begins with new episodes on Thursdays.

HBO Max

”Godzilla” (2014, PG-13) reimagines Japan’s king of the monsters as an American spectacle featuring the thunder lizard as an elemental creature defending the Earth from other monsters.

Two estranged friends in Miami form a female rap group in the comedy series “Rap Sh!t” (TV-MA).

Stand-up: “Nikki Glaser: Good Clean Filth” (TV-MA)

Disney+

Two young adult shows originally created for Disney’s South American service arrive stateside: “It Was Always Me” (Colombia, not rated, with subtitles), a mystery set against the culture of popular music originally titled “Siempre Fui Yo,” and high school comedy “All the Same … or Not” (Brazil, not rated, with subtitles), originally titled “Tudo Igual… Só Que Não.”

Amazon Prime Video

The British boxing drama “Prizefighter” (2022, not rated) stars Matt Hookings as a working class fighter who battles class barriers as he competes for the championship at the turn of the 19th century England. Ray Winstone and Russell Crowe costar.

Paramount+

”The Day the Music Died: The Story of Don McLean’s American Pie” (2022, TV-PG) looks at the story behind the iconic pop song and its legacy over the decades.

New on disc and available at Redbox

“The Forgiven”

Sean Axmaker is a Seattle film critic and writer. His reviews of streaming movies and TV can be found at https://streamondemandathome.com.