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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Stream on demand: ‘Logan Lucky’ drives into homes

By Sean Axmaker For The Spokesman-Review

What’s new for home viewing on video-on-demand and Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu and other streaming services.

Top streams for the week

Channing Tatum and Adam Driver play brothers who defy the “Logan Lucky” (2017, PG-13) family curse when they rob a North Carolina NASCAR track in Steven Soderbergh’s playful and clever heist comedy. Think of it as the red state answer to his jazzy, glitzy “Oceans” movies. Streaming on Amazon Prime Video.

Also on Prime Video is “Human Flow” (2017, PG-13), compassionate documentary on forced migration around the world made with an eye for beauty by visual artist Ai Weiwei.

Gal Gadot is the original comic book super heroine in “Wonder Woman” (2017, PG-13), a refreshingly dynamic, rousing and inspirational addition to the big screen universe of D.C comics. Now on HBO.

The new Netflix teen comedy “Everything Sucks!: Season 1” pits the A/V club against the drama club in tale of social outcasts and unexpected romance in a 1990s high school in Boring, Oregon (a real town). 10 episodes now streaming.

Pay-Per-View / Video-On-Demand

Julia Roberts and Owen Wilson are protective parents of a child (Jacob Tremblay) with facial deformities in “Wonder” (2017, PG), the family drama based on the bestselling children’s novel by R.J. Palacio. Also on DVD and Blu-ray and at Redbox.

Denzel Washington earned an Oscar nomination playing “Roman J. Israel, Esq.” (2017, PG-13) in the legal drama co-starring Colin Farrell. Also on DVD and Blu-ray and at Redbox.

Available same day as select theaters nationwide is drama “Golden Exits” (2017, R) with Emily Browning and Mary-Louise Parker and thriller “Looking Glass” (2018, R) Nicolas Cage and Robin Tunney.

Netflix

The romantic drama “Irreplaceable You” (2018, not rated) stars Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Michiel Huisman as lifelong sweethearts whose future is in doubt after a grim diagnosis. Christopher Walken, Kate McKinnon and Steve Coogan co-star in the Netflix original film.

Foreign affairs: “Love Per Square Foot” (India, 2018, with subtitles), a romantic comedy about a marriage of convenience in Mumbai, premieres in the U.S. the same week it opens in India.

True stories: “Trophy” (2017, not rated) takes on the big business of big game hunting, and extreme mountaineering documentary “Meru” (2015, R) won a Sundance award.

Streaming TV: the comedic docuseries “The Mortified Guide” brings the live stage show featuring adults reading their teenage diaries and love letters to the small screen. Three additional international shows debut this week: nonfiction sports series “First Team: Juventus: Season 1,” which goes behind the scenes with an Italian soccer club for a season; mystery drama “Re:Mind: Season 1” (Japan, with subtitles); crime thriller “Day and Night: Season 1” (China, with subtitles).

Kid stuff: new episodes of teen boarding school drama “Greenhouse Academy: Season 2” and animated “DreamWorks Dragons: Race to the Edge: Season 6.”

Amazon Prime Video

Good Time” (2017, R) gives Robert Pattinson a deliciously mercenary role as a scuzzy small-time thief trying to score bail money to get his mentally disabled brother out of jail.

Clint Eastwood earned his second round of Oscars for best director and best picture for “Million Dollar Baby” (2004, PG-13), which also scored Oscars for star Hillary Swank and co-star Morgan Freeman. Also new: lean western remake “3:10 to Yuma” (2007, R) with Christian Bale and Russell Crowe; offbeat indie road movie comedy “The Color Wheel” (2012, not rated): high-concept thriller “Deep Blue Sea” (1999, R) with Thomas Jane, Saffron Burrows and Samuel L. Jackson versus a new breed of smart shark.

Best bad movies: “Miami Connection (1988, not rated) mixes martial arts, rock and roll, vengeful drug dealers and a brotherhood of orphans together with a level of incompetence that results in surreal entertainment.

Foreign affairs: “The Connection” (France, 2015, R, with subtitles) tackles the same real-life drug smuggling case that inspired “The French Connection” from the French perspective. Also new: wrestling comedy “Foul King” (South Korea, 2000, not rated, with subtitles) from director Kim Jee-woon and actor Song Kang-ho (of “The Good the Bad the Weird”); sly political satire “Property is No Longer Theft” (Italy, 1973, not rated, with subtitles) from filmmaker Elio Petri; stylish giallo double-shot “Death Walks on High Heels” (Italy, 1971, not rated, with subtitles) and “Death Walks at Midnight” (Italy, 1972, not rated, with subtitles).

Streaming TV: enter the beautiful and grotesque world of “Hannibal: Complete Series” (2013-2015) with Mads Mikkelsen as Dr. Hannibal Lecter or, in much lighter vein, get a sixties comedy flashback with “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In: Complete Series” (1967-1972). Sock it to me!

Also new: the fourth season of Amazon’s original drama “Mozart in the Jungle,” set in the classical music culture of New York City, and Ken Burns’ World War II documentary mini-series “The War” (2007).

Amazon Prime and Hulu

Chris Pine is young James T. Kirk and Zachary Quinto is Spock in “Star Trek” (2009, PG-13), the big screen reboot/prequel from J.J. Abrams set in the Starfleet Academy years.

Hulu

Viggo Mortensen and Oscar Isaac are American hustlers in Greece in “The Two Faces of January” (2014, PG-13), a scenic thriller based on the Patricia Highsmith novel.

A 12-year-old inner city drug courier nicknamed “Fresh” (1994, R) uses his chess skills to outmaneuver a brutal druglord in this sharp urban thriller co-starring Samuel L. Jackson.

Foreign affairs: Gael García Bernal stars in “Rudo y Cursi” (Mexico, 2008, R, with subtitles) with Diego Luna playing brothers trying to escape poverty through soccer, and in the Oscar-nominated “The Crime of Father Amaro” (Mexico, 2002, R, with subtitles) a newly-ordained priest attracted to a beautiful young parishioner.

Streaming TV: the complete six-season run of the NBC family dramedy “Parenthood” (2010-2015) with Lauren Graham and Peter Krause, and the hilarious ABC workplace sitcom “Better Off Ted: Complete Series” (2009-2010) join Hulu’s growing TV library. Also new: crime drama “Cardinal: Season 2” from Canada.

HBO Now

Holly Hunter and Tim Robbins are parents of a multi-ethnic family in Portland, Oregon, in “Here and Now” from “Six Feet Under” creator Alan Ball. New episodes arrive Sunday nights.

True stories: “Atomic Homefront” (2018, not rated) examines the impact of radioactive waste illegally dumped near St. Louis, and “Traffic Stop” (2017) is an Oscar-nominated documentary short subject.

Arriving Saturday night is “The House” (2017, R), a comedy with Will Ferrell and Amy Poehler as parents who turn their home into a secret suburban casino.

Showtime Anytime

True musical stories: “Eric Clapton: Life in 12 Bars” (2018, TV-MA) profiles the life and legacy of legendary rock guitarist, and “Word is Bond” (2018, TV-MA) examines the reach and power of lyrics in hip-hop.

FilmStruck / Criterion Channel

Jacques Demy is FilmStruck’s director of the week and the collection includes his breakthrough romantic drama “Lola” (France, 1961, with subtitles) with Anouk Aimée and the musical “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg” (France, 1964, with subtitles) and “The Young Girls of Rochefort” (France, 1967, with subtitles) with Catherine Deneuve.

Also new are Oscar nominated foreign classics “The Battle of Algiers” (France, 1966, with subtitles) and Akira Kurosawa’s “Rashomon” (Japan, 1950, with subtitles), and a “Brit Noir” collection of dark British crime films including “They Made Me a Criminal“ (1947) with Trevor Howard and the rare “It Always Rains on Sunday“ (1947), which has never been released to home video in the U.S.

The Criterion Channel presents the newly restored presentation of George Romero’s “Night of the Living Dead” (1968, not rated) and includes many of the supplements from the newly released special edition DVD and Blu-ray release. Also new: John Huston’s “The Misfits” (1961) with Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe and Montgomery Clift, and boxing drama “The Harder They Fall” (1956) with Humphrey Bogart in his final performance.

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