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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Stream on Demand: Bring home music, magic, comedy and romance

By Sean Axmaker For The Spokesman-Review

Set and shot in Seattle, Megan Griffith’s “Lucky Them”

An ordinary girl get temporary magical powers in the animated fantasy “Mary and the Witch’s Flower”

“Robin Williams: Come Inside My Mind” (2018, TV-MA) is an affectionate portrait of the actor and groundbreaking comedian featuring rare performance footage and revealing outtakes. On all HBO streaming services

“Disobedience” (2018, R) stars Rachel Weisz and Rachel McAdams as women in love in London’s Orthodox Jewish community but this compassionate drama is less a romance than a drama of family and identity. On Cable On Demand and VOD as well as DVD and at Redbox.

Wes Anderson returns to stop-motion filmmaking for “Isle of Dogs”

Also new: comedy “I Feel Pretty” (2018, PG-13) with Amy Schumer; action thriller “Rampage” (2018, PG-13) with Dwayne Johnson; and crime thriller “You Were Never Really Here”

It’s David Spade versus Nat Faxon in the Netflix Original comedy “Father of the Year”

Streaming TV: “Dark Tourist”

The offbeat musical comedy “Wanderland”

The fourth and final season of “UnREAL,”

True stories: “Sharp Edges” (1986, TV-PG), a documentary on Tonya Harding and her troubled family life produced when she was 15, and Hulu Original dance documentary “Ballet Now”

Emma Stone and Steve Carell play Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs in “Battle of the Sexes”

Edgar Wright’s “Baby Driver”

“Hidden” (“Craith” in Welsh) is a gritty new crime drama from Wales making its stateside debut just weeks after showing in the UK.

Now available at Redbox: “I Feel Pretty,” “Rampage,” “Disobedience,” “You Were Never Really Here”

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

Top streams for the week

Set and shot in Seattle, Megan Griffith’s “Lucky Them” (2013, R) stars Toni Collette (“Hereditary”) as a music journalist revisiting the legacy of a Kurt Cobain-like rock legend and Thomas Haden Church as her partner in the road movie journey. The city of Seattle has never looked this good on film. Streaming on Hulu.

An ordinary girl get temporary magical powers in the animated fantasy “Mary and the Witch’s Flower” (Japan, 2017, PG). Kate Winslet and Jim Broadbent are featured in the English language version now on Netflix.

Robin Williams: Come Inside My Mind” (2018, TV-MA) is an affectionate portrait of the actor and groundbreaking comedian featuring rare performance footage and revealing outtakes along with testimony from family, friends and fellow professionals. On all HBO streaming services.

Disobedience” (2018, R) stars Rachel Weisz and Rachel McAdams as women in love in London’s Orthodox Jewish community, but this compassionate drama is less a romance than a drama of family and identity. The English language debut of ward-winning Chilean filmmaker Sebastián Lelio (“A Fantastic Woman”) co-stars Alessandro Nivola and Allan Corduner. On Cable On Demand and VOD as well as DVD and at Redbox.

Pay-Per-View / Video on Demand

Wes Anderson returns to stop-motion filmmaking for “Isle of Dogs“ (2018, PG-13), a playful fantasy adventure set in a near-future Japan. Also on DVD and at Redbox. Also new: comedies “I Feel Pretty” (2018, PG-13) with Amy Schumer and “Super Troopers 2” (2018, R) with Brian Cox and the Broken Lizard comedy troupe; action thriller “Rampage” (2018, PG-13) with Dwayne Johnson and a loyal giant ape buddy; Lynne Ramsay’s crime thriller “You Were Never Really Here” (2017, R) with Joaquin Phoenix.

Available same day as select theaters nationwide is science fiction thriller “Occupation” (2018, R) from Australia with Temuera Morrison and Jacqueline McKenzie.

Netflix

Emma Watson and Daniel Bruhl star in “Colonia” (2015, R) as a couple escaping a religious cult-turned-political prisoner camp in Chile during the Pinoche coup.

It’s David Spade versus Nat Faxon in the Netflix Original comedy “Father of the Year” (2018, not rated).

Streaming TV: “Dark Tourist” visits the weirdest vacation spots on earth. Also new: “The Joel McHale Show with Joel McHale: Part 2” brings new episodes of the weekly series to Netflix every Sunday; Strange-but-true home tours in “Amazing Interiors” from the UK; two new seasons of “Last Chance U,” the nonfiction sports series about junior college football; “Jimmy: The True Story of a True Idiot” (Japan, with subtitles), a comedy about a buffoon who becomes a comedy superstar in 1980s Japan; the second season the blended family dramedy “Bonus Family: Season 2” (Sweden, with subtitles).

Kid stuff: the Netflix Original animated film “Duck Duck Goose” (2018, not rated) features the voices of Jim Gaffigan and Zenadaya. Also new are “Home: Adventures with Tip & Oh: Season 4” and “Luna Petunia: Return to Amazia: Season 2.”

Amazon Prime Video

The offbeat musical comedy “Wanderland” (2018, not rated) follows one man’s odyssey through Hamptons in the offseason.

Classics: Robert De Niro won an Oscar as boxing legend Jake LaMotta in Martin Scorsese’s “Raging Bull” (1980, R), and Jack Nicholson and Marlon Brando star in the offbeat western “The Missouri Breaks” (1976, PG).

Kid stuff: the animated comedy “Igor” (2008, PG) features the voice of John Cusack as the hunchbacked assistant aspiring to be a mad scientist in his own right.

Foreign affairs: Michel Gondry’s whimsical comedy “Mood Indigo” (France, 2013, not rated, with subtitles) with Audrey Tautou as a woman with a flower growing in her lungs and crime comedy “Mad Love” (France, 2015, not rated, with subtitles) about a priest driven to murder.

Hulu

The fourth and final season of “UnREAL,” the savage satire of reality TV starring Shiri Appleby and Constance Zimmer as the manipulative producers of a “Bachelor”-style show, debuts on Hulu ahead of its expected run on Lifetime.

Sharp Edges” (1986/2018, TV-PG), a documentary on Tonya Harding (and her dysfunctional family) produced when she was 15, comes to Hulu after a brief theatrical revival. It shows that Allison Janney’s Oscar-winning performance as Harding’s mother Lavona in “I, Tonya” was no caricature.

Hulu Original documentary “Ballet Now” (2018, not rated) goes behind the scenes as New York City Ballet dancer Tiler Peck curates a dance program that combines ballet, tap, hip-hop and mime.

Also new: rural crime thriller “Cold in July” (2014, R) with Michael C. Hall and Sam Shepard and indie drama “Coastlines” (2002, R) with Timothy Olyphant and Josh Brolin.

Foreign affairs: Kim Jee-won’s action-packed adventure “The Good, the Bad, the Weird” (South Korea, 2008, R, with subtitles) is a self-proclaimed “Oriental Western.” The trippy “Embrace of the Serpent” (Colombia, 2015, not rated, with subtitles) charts the meeting of cultures through the story of an Amazon shaman and two western scientists.

More streaming TV: Emmy-nominated FX comedy “Better Things: Season 2,” created by and starring Pamela Adlon; post-apocalypse survival drama “The Last Ship: Season 4” from TNT; BBC America comedy “This Country: Seasons 1 & 2” set in rural England.

HBO Now

Emma Stone and Steve Carell play Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs in “Battle of the Sexes” (2017, PG-13), the story behind the legendary tennis match of the 1970s and a look at a defining public moment in the equal rights movement.

Arriving Saturday night is the Scandinavian murder mystery “The Snowman” (2017, R), based on the Jo Nesbo novel and starring Michael Fassbender and Rebecca Ferguson.

Showtime Anytime

Edgar Wright’s “Baby Driver” (2017, R) brings fresh stylistic energy and musical flair to the speed-demon crime picture. Young lead Ansel Elgort is outmatched by costars Kevin Spacey, Jon Hamm, Jamie Foxx and Lily James, but the car chases and stunts are a blast.

Reese Witherspoon stars in the romantic comedy “Home Again” (2017, PG-13) as a single mother who invites a handsome twentysomething (Nat Wolff) and his two brothers to share her vast Los Angeles home.

Also new: espionage thriller “The Debt” (2011, R) with Helen Mirren, Tom Wilkinson and Jessica Chastain, and Clint Eastwood’s true crime conspiracy drama “Changeling” (2008, R) with Angelina Jolie.

FilmStruck

TCM Select Pick of the Week is “The Philadelphia Story” (1940), starring Katherine Hepburn in her Hollywood comeback as society maven Tracey Lord just a couple of years after she was branded “box-office poison.” She marched back to the big screen with the screen rights to “The Philadelphia Story,” the hit play written for her by Philip Barry, and Cary Grant and James Stewart, two of Hollywood’s greatest leading men, on her arms. This is MGM gloss at its most unassuming, with sparkling direction by Hepburn’s good friend George Cukor. The classy hit comedy earned six Oscar nominations and won two, for actor James Stewart and Donald Ogden Stewarts’ screenplay. Co-stars Ruth Hussey, John Howard and Roland Young. Streaming through Dec. 27.

It’s one of the best films from “Director of the Week: George Cukor,” celebrated in a collection of 19 films including the proto-“Star is Born” comic melodrama “What Price Hollywood?” (1932) with Constance Bennett, “David Copperfield” (1935) with Freddie Bartholomew and W.C. Fields, Oscar-winning thriller “Gaslight” (1944) with Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer, and Oscar-nominated musical drama “A Star is Born” (1954) with Judy Garland and James Mason, the grandest of all versions of the evergreen story.

Star of the Week: Sophia Loren” is celebrated with 12 features, including “Two Women” (Italy, 1960, with subtitles), which earned Loren an Oscar for best actress, and the classic sex comedies “Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow” (Italy, 1963, with subtitles) and “Marriage - Italian Style” (Italy, 1964, with subtitles) co-starring Marcello Mastroianni, plus a short film and an interview.

Acorn TV

Hidden” (“Craith” in Welsh), from the creators of “Hinterland,” is a gritty new crime drama from Wales making its stateside debut just weeks after showing in the UK. All eight episodes now streaming.

Older shows debuting on Acorn TV include the mystery anthology “Agatha Christie Hour” (1982) and BAFTA-winning miniseries “Anglo Saxon Attitudes” (1992).

New on disc

“I Feel Pretty,” “Isle of Dogs,” “Rampage,” “Super Troopers 2,” “Disobedience,” “You Were Never Really Here”

Now available at Redbox: “I Feel Pretty,” “Rampage,” “Disobedience,” “You Were Never Really Here”

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