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Stream on Demand: Tales from galaxies near and far come home

In “Onward,” Tom Holland provides the voice of the teenage elf Ian Lightfoot, and Chris Pratt is Ian’s brother, Barley Lightfoot. (Pixar / Disney/Pixar)
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

Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019, PG-13) brings the final trilogy in the odyssey begun by George Lucas in the original 1977 “Star Wars” to its conclusion with a rollercoaster ride of a science-fiction adventure. J.J. Abrams directs the finale, which brings Skywalker apostle Rey (Daisy Ridley) and Vader acolyte Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) together to save … well, the universe. No, it’s not the best of the series, and Abrams relies on cliché over invention, but it sure does move as a breakneck pace. Cable On Demand and VOD, also on disc. 

Chris Pratt and Tom Holland voice the elf brothers on a quest to resurrect their dead father in the Pixar animated fantasy Onward (2020, PG). Disney+ makes it available just weeks after it was in theaters. 

The new Amazon Prime original series Tales From the Loop (2020, TV-Y), inspired by the work of Swedish artist Simon Stålenhag, is part science-fiction anthology and part family drama set in a town where a secret experimental facility makes impossible is regular occurrence. What makes this show, starring Rebecca Hall and Jonathan Pryce, different from other anthologies is the way it weaves standalone stories and continuing narratives and the sense of mystery surrounding it all. The explanation is less important than the reverberations of events through the lives of its characters. Eight episodes streaming on Amazon Prime Video. 

Portrait of a Lady on Fire (France, 2019, R, with subtitles), Céline Sciamma’s ravishing drama of a female painter (Noémie Merlant) and her relationship with the young woman (Adèle Haenel) whose portrait she is secretly painting, is touching, nuanced and at times looks like it has been painted on the screen. It won two awards at the Cannes Film Festival and makes its streaming debut on Hulu. 

If you’ve exhausted “The Office,” “30 Rock” or “The Good Place,” try the inventive ensemble comedy Community: Complete Series (2009-2015, TV-14) from creator Dan Harmon (“Rick and Morty”). Starring Joel McHale as a suspended lawyer leading a dysfunctional study group on a community college campus, the show is rife with absurdist humor, movie and TV parodies and social satire and it helped launch the screen careers of Gillian Jacobs, Alison Brie, Donald Glover, Danny Pudi and Yvette Nicole Brown. Streaming on Netflix. 

Classic pick: Mel Brooks’ wildly funny spoof Blazing Saddles (1974, R) spins movie parody, cartoon slapstick and bathroom humor into comic gold. Cleavon Little stars with Gene Wilder and Madeline Kahn. Streaming on Netflix. 

Free picks: A number of streaming services are offering extended 30-day free trials in this time of self-quarantine. To catch the next generation of “Star Trek” shows in CBS All Access, sign up before April 23 and use the code “GIFT.” British TV fans can explore the mysteries, comedies and dramas on Acorn TV with the special code “FREE30.” For Sundance Now, which presents independent cinema and international TV, use the code SUNDANCENOW30. Shudder, the streaming service devoted to horror movies and TV shows, offers a month of scares and chills with the code “SHUTIN.” And if you stream through a Roku device or have a Roku operating system on your TV, you have access to 30-day free trials from dozens of streaming services, including Showtime, EPIX, MHz Choice and BFI. Access them through the “Home Together” section. 

Pay-Per-View / Video on Demand

It’s Thomas Edison (Benedict Cumberbatch) vs. George Westinghouse (Michael Shannon) in the battle to determine the electrical future of America in “The Current War: Director’s Cut“ (2019, PG-13). It also stars Katherine Waterston, Tom Holland, Matthew MacFadyen and Nicholas Hoult as Nikola Tesla. 

Premium VOD: The award-winning indie drama Never Rarely Sometimes Always (2020, R), which debuted to great acclaim on March 13 before theaters were shuttered across the nation, is available for home rental at a premium rate.  

Also rushed to streaming from theaters and available as a premium price is the cartoonish video game adaptation Sonic the Hedgehog (2020, PG) with James Marsden and Jim Carrey, and arriving direct to VOD is the prank comedy Impractical Jokers: The Movie (2020, PG-13). 

Netflix

Ed Helms is a cop on the run from a drug lord with his girlfriend (Taraji P. Henson) and her young son in the action comedy Coffee & Kareem (2020, not rated). 

In the viciously funny The Death of Stalin (2018, R), savvy political satirist Armando Iannucci reimagines the scramble for power in the Soviet Union as a savage comedy of petty grudges, unstable alliances and literal backstabbing. Steve Buscemi is master survivor Nikita Khrushchev and Jeffrey Tambor and Michael Palin co-star. Streaming on Netflix. 

Jessica Chastain stars as Molly Bloom, the Olympic-class skier who ran the world’s most exclusive high-stakes poker game, in Molly’s Game (2017, R), the directorial debut of Oscar-winning screenwriter Aaron Sorkin. 

Gemma Arterton and Paddy Considine star in the science-fiction thriller The Girl With All the Gifts (2016, R), a clever twist on the zombie movie. 

Streaming TV: The Iliza Shlesinger Sketch Show” (2020, not rated) is all there in the title. Also new:

The fourth season of the Canadian sitcom Kim’s Convenience (2020, TV-MA);

Happy! Season 2 (2019, TV-MA), an unhinged mix of violent crime show, fantasy and extreme humor with Christopher Meloni and Patton Oswalt;

Competition cooking show Nailed It! Season 4 (TV-PG).

International TV: The hit crime thriller Money Heist: Part 4 (Spain, TV-MA, with subtitles) now streams along with the documentary “Money Heist: The Phenomenon” (Spain, 2020, with subtitles).  

True stories: The limited series How to Fix a Drug Scandal (2020, not rated) investigates the crimes of two drug lab chemists. 

Kid stuff: Spirit Riding Free: Riding Academy (TV-Y7) offers a new chapter in the animated series for adolescents. StarBeam (TV-Y) is an animated superhero adventure for young children. 

Catch up with a couple of classics as Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver (1976, R) with Robert De Niro and the iconic spaghetti Western The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966, R) with Clint Eastwood return to Netflix. 

Amazon Prime Video

Twenty-one James Bond films, from Sean Connery in Dr. No (1962, PG) to Pierce Brosnan in Die Another Day(2002, PG-13), are now streaming in 4K high definition format for the best viewing experience on your home theater system. That’s the entire official 007 series before Daniel Craig, plus Sean Connery’s unofficial return to the role in Never Say Never Again (1983, PG). Time for a Bond festival?

Ben Foster is cycling champion Lance Armstrong in The Program (2015, R), co-starring Chris O’Dowd as the Irish journalist who exposed the doping scandal behind his wins.  

Two devoted sisters in 1950s Rio de Janeiro are separated by their authoritarian father but never stop hoping to reconnect in Invisible Life (Brazil, 2019, R, with subtitles), which a top award at the Cannes Film Festival.

Streaming TV: Amazon Prime offers subscribers the first season of a dozen shows available through other Amazon streaming channels. Fans of British mysteries and period dramas should check out Foyle’s War (2002), set on the English homefront in World War II; for kids there’s the animated PBS series Molly of Denali (2019, TV-Y); and the riveting espionage drama The Bureau (France, 2015, TV-MA, with subtitles) has been called the greatest French TV series of all time. 

Hulu

The third and final season of Future Man (2020, TV-MA) puts the future of the human race in the hands of an underachieving janitor (Josh Hutcherson) who is transported into the future because of his video gaming skills.

Idris Elba is a driven London detective with a penchant for dispensing his own justice in the dark BBC crime drama Luther: Compete Series (2010-2019, TV-MA). 

Tobey Maguire is a high school science nerd who becomes the amazing Spider-Man (2002, PG-13) in the first big screen outing of the popular superhero directed by Sam Raimi with energy and imagination. 

Streaming TV: The animated spy show spoof Archer: Season 10” (2019, TV-MA) reboots the series as a science-fiction adventure. Also new:

The live-action Adult Swim comedyYour Pretty Face Is Going to Hell: Season 4 (2019, TV-MA);

The third season of the fantasy Siren begins with new episodes each Friday.

Horror fans can enjoy Let Me In (2010, R), a superb American reworking of the Swedish adolescent vampire thriller, and Misery (1990, R), one of the best Stephen King big screen adaptations. 

HBO Now

Melissa McCarthy, Tiffany Haddish and Elisabeth Moss are Mob wives who take over their husbands’ rackets while they serve time in prison in The Kitchen (2019, R). Also new is the violent crime thriller Dragged Across Concrete (2018, R) with Mel Gibson and Vince Vaughn. 

Other streams

The new Apple TV+ series Home Before Dark (2019, not rated) dramatizes the real-life story of 9-year-old investigative journalist Hilde Lysiak (played Brooklynn Prince) who dug into an unsolved murder case that her small town would prefer stay buried. Jim Sturgess stars as her father, and Jon M. Chu (“Crazy Rich Asians”) produces and directs most of the episodes. New episodes each Friday. 

BritBox presents the U.S. debut of The Mallorca Files (2019), a lighthearted British crime drama about a by-the-book British detective (Elen Rhys) and her from-the-gut German partner (Julian Looman) clashing as they solve crimes in the international community of the Spanish island. 

Disney+ adds a collection of natural history programs to its collection just in time for parents scrambling to find educational outlets for kids at home. The selections range from Disneynature documentaries like Chimpanzee (2012, G), Bears (2014, G) and Born in China (2017, G) to the Emmy-winning National Geographic documentary Jane (2017, PG) about pioneering primatology scientist Jane Goodall and climate change documentary Before the Flood (2016, TV-14) from producer/narrator Leonardo DiCaprio. Also new:

The offbeat but gentle and sweet The Straight Story (1999, G) with Richard Farnsworth and Sissy Spacek, a family-friendly odyssey from director David Lynch inspired by a true story;

“Frankenweekie” (2012, PG), Tim Burton’s animated, feature-length remake of his live-action debut;

Sweet high school romantic comedy Prom (2011, PG).

Criterion Channel presents 16 films “Starring Catherine Deneuve,” including new-to-Criterion titles Repulsion (1965), which marked the English-language debut of Deneuve and director Roman Polanski; vampire horror-chic The Hunger (1983, R) with Susan Sarandon and David Bowie; and André Téchiné’s The Girl on the Train (France, 2009, not rated, with subtitles) with Émilie Dequenne. Also new:

“Toshiro Mifune Turns 100” and Criterion spotlights two dozen films from its permanent collection, plus the documentary “Mifune: The Last Samurai” (2015);

“Three by Yorgos Lanthimos” features the early films by the Greek director, including the streaming debut of his first solo feature “Kinetta” (Greece, 2005, not rated, with subtitles);

Oscar-winning classic On the Waterfront (1954) with Marlon Brando and Oscar-nominated wartime drama Europa Europa (Germany, 1990, R, with subtitles) are presented with bonus interviews and documentaries from the respective special-edition disc releases;

Martin Scorsese’s Raging Bull(1980, R) is presented with the archival commentary track with Scorsese and editor Thelma Schoonmaker from the original laserdisc release from 1990. It is the very first audio commentary track ever recorded and released.

New on disc

“Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” “The Current War,” “Show Boat (Criterion Collection)”

Now available at Redbox: “The Current War,” “The Wave”

Visit spokesman.com for more options and recommendations. Sean Axmaker is a Seattle film critic and writer. His reviews of streaming movies and TV can be found at streamondemandathome.com.