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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Stream on Demand: ‘Stranger Things’ returns to the ’80s for season 2

By Sean Axmaker For The Spokesman-Review

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

Top streams for the week

The boys are back for Halloween in the second season of “Stranger Things,” the wonderfully weird Netflix original spooky series about a group of school friends who face strange doings in their rural town in 1984 Indiana. This one, fittingly, takes place over Halloween. Winona Ryder and David Harbour provide the adult supervision in a kid-centric cast featuring break-out actress Millie Bobby Brown as Eleven. Nine episodes.

The documentary “Too Funny To Fail: The Life and Death of the Dana Carvey Show” (2017, not rated) looks back at the short-lived 1996 show that brought Stephen Colbert and Steve Carell to TV and included Louis C.K., Robert Smigel, and Charlie Kaufman in the writer’s room. The absurdist sketch comedy series was out of step with prime time network TV but the anarchic humor stands the test of time… mostly. Hulu also has all eight episodes of the original “The Dana Carvey Show.”

Pay-Per-View / Video-On-Demand

War for the Planet of the Apes” (2017, PG-13) the third and ostensibly final entry in the franchise reboot, pits the peaceful ape civilization in a last-stand battle for survival against a fanatical renegade militia leader (Woody Harrelson). Andy Serkis once again delivers an expressive and nuanced motion-capture performance. Also on DVD and Blu-ray.

Al Gore takes stock of the state of climate change a decade after his Oscar-winning documentary in “An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power” (2017, PG). Also on DVD and Blu-ray and at Redbox.

Also new: horror film “Annabelle: Creation” (2017, R), animated comedy “The Emoji Movie” (2017, PG), comedy caper “Where’s the Money” (2017, R), and romantic comedy “The Truth About Lies” (2017, not rated).

Available same day as select theaters nationwide is action film “Acts of Vengeance” (2017, R) with Antonio Banderas.

Netflix

Quentin Tarantino’s “The Hateful Eight” (2015, R), an epic widescreen western in the intimate quarters of a stagecoach stopover during a blizzard, is filled with violence, cruelty, racism, and the storytelling verve and narrative twists that made Tarantino’s reputation. Samuel L. Jackson and Walton Goggins stand out is a terrific cast that also includes Kurt Russell, Jenifer Jason Leigh and Tim Roth.

Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts try to keep up with twentysomething couple Adam Driver and Amanda Seyfried in the comedy “While We’re Young” (2014, R), and Holly Hunter stars in the road movie drama “Strange Weather” (2016, R).

Foreign affairs: “The Final Master” (China, 2015, not rated, with subtitles) is a martial arts drama about the politics of rival schools.

Kid stuff: the animated Disney comedy “Meet the Robinsons” (2007, G) sends an orphan on a time travel adventure with flying cars and singing frogs.

True stories: at the center of “Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold” (2017, not rated) are intimate interviews with the author and journalist herself.

Streaming TV: “The Mist: Season 1” from Spike TV turns the Stephen King story into a series and “Wanted: Seasons 1 and 2” is a crime drama from Australia.

Stand-up: “Jack Whitehall: At Large.”

Amazon Prime Video

Helen McCrory is a human right lawyer out to save an unjustly convinced man in the British legal drama “Fearless,” which makes its American debut streaming on Amazon. Six episodes.

Brie Larson and Armie Hammer star in the action comedy “Free Fire” (2017, R), a feature-length gunfight co-starring Sharlto Copley and Cillian Murphy.

Also new: “Decoding Annie Parker” (2014, R) with Samantha Morton and Helen Hunt, “Nicholas Nickleby” (2002, PG) with Charlie Hunnam and Christopher Plummer, and “The Man in the Moon” (1991, PG-13) featuring the debut of Reese Witherspoon.

True stories: “The Liberators” (2016, not rated) traces a trove of looted Nazi art treasures to a small town in Texas.

Foreign affairs: “Les Diaboliques” (France, 1955, not rated, with subtitles) with Simone Signoret and Véra Clouzot is a thriller on par with Alfred Hitchcock.

Hulu

The Rocketeer” (1991, PG) is a charming comic book movie with the nostalgic charge of an old Hollywood adventure.

George Clooney leads an odyssey through the old South in “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” (2000, PG-13) from Joel and Ethan Coen.

Kid stuff: classic Disney animated films “Robin Hood” (1973, G), featuring the songs of Roger Miller, and “The Fox and the Hound” (1981, G), and live-action drama “Tuck Everlasting” (2002, PG), based on the award-winning children’s novel.

Foreign affairs: romantic drama meets magic realism in “Like Water for Chocolate” (Mexico, 1992, R), based on the beloved novel by Laura Esquivel.

Streaming TV: from Cartoon Network comes “Adventure Time: Season 9” for kids of all ages and “Neon Joe: Season 2” for older kids.

HBO Now

John Wick: Chapter 2” (2017, R) sends brings the retired hitman (Keanu Reeves) back for one more job—this time in Rome—in the stunt-filled sequel to the bullet-riddled action thriller. Ian McShane and Common co-star.

Arriving Saturday night is M. Night Shyamalan’s “Split“ (2017, PG-13) starring James McAvoy as a kidnapper with multiple personalities.

Showtime Anytime

Jay Pharoah stars as rising young comedian on the verge of cross-over success in the new comedy series “White Famous.” New episodes arrive Sunday nights.

FilmStruck / Criterion Collection

The baroque Italian horror films of Maria Bava are featured on FilmStruck for Halloween, including his Gothic debut “Black Sunday” (Italy, 1960), horror trilogy “Black Sabbath” (Italy, 1963), and dreamy ghost story “Kill, Baby, Kill” (Italy, 1966).

New to Criterion Channel is Michael Powell’s ruggedly beautiful breakthrough drama “The Edge of the World” (1937) and Henri-Georges Clouzot’s paranoid mystery “Le Corbeau” (France, 1943), a subversive thriller made during the Nazi Occupation of France.

At Redbox:

“An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power,” “Annabelle: Creation,” “The Emoji Movie,” “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice”