Home » Dave Bautista Is the Best Leading Man in Hollywood Right Now
News

Dave Bautista Is the Best Leading Man in Hollywood Right Now

Not sure what to watch next? more than you already did.

Here’s Kevin Fallon’s take:

“There’s exhausting talk amongst people in a certain age range about what qualifies as millennial vs. Gen X and, in some cases, Gen Z: what years; what kind of upbringing; what pop-culture memories. But there’s a realization I had this week, while reading through the gossip around Anderson’s just-released memoir, Love, Pamela; taking in her major interviews in support of it; and, now, having just watched the new Netflix documentary Pamela: A Love Story. We’re all the Pam Anderson Generation. And it’s time for our reckoning.

There are certainly insightful observations about the invasion of privacy she suffered when the sex tape was released and the cruel humiliation she endured. And Anderson exhibits nothing but candor throughout, especially when discussing her “sick” feeling when Pam and Tommy was released and the past she’d worked so hard to move on from was in the news again. But, overwhelmingly, she talks through her feelings about love, trust, taking risks, and figuring out who she really is, after years of being told to be a certain way.”

Read more.

Pamela Anderson in Pamela, a Love Story.

Netflix

Skip: The Ark

The Ark is a sci-fi series more disastrous than the catastrophe at its narrative core, with more caricatures than characters. The last thing you’d want is to spend 40 days and 40 nights with this—let alone four episodes.

Here’s Nick Schager’s take:

“Dean Devlin has made a career out of larger-than-life sci-fi spectacles, producing frequent partner Roland Emmerich’s Stargate, Independence Day, and Godzilla, and helming the more recent Geostorm. Thus, even though it’s debuting on Syfy rather than in theaters, The Ark fits comfortably into his body of work, insofar as it’s another tale of apocalyptic planetary threats and humanity’s desperate mission to stave off extinction. Unfortunately, it’s also a calamity-oriented show that itself is a disaster.

There’s much racing through corridors in The Ark, as well as crew-member discontent, intimations of sabotage-centric conspiracies, and leaden dialogue. What’s missing is compelling action, serviceable CGI, and a sense of this all taking place within a grander context.

Worse, the show is infinitely more fixated on pressing sci-fi setbacks and obstacles (The doodad is on the fritz! The whatchamacallit is leaking!) than on intriguing human relationships or thorny socio-political ideas. There’s nothing under the hood of The Ark except a lot of ho-hum parts borrowed from better voyage-into-the-beyond sagas.

Read more.

Reece Ritchie as Lt. Spencer Lane in The Ark.

Aleksandar Letic/Ark TV Holdings, Inc./SYFY

See: Freeridge

Freeridge is a gender-swapped spinoff of Netflix’s On My Block, depicting a group of four teenage girls in South Central Los Angeles with plenty of wit and wisdom, and without all that saccharine, cornball nonsense we’re used to from teen comedies.

Here’s Laura Bradley’s take:

“It’s time to come back to Freeridge. Young audiences who flocked to Netflix’s On My Block for its compelling performances, its zeal for mysteries, and its refreshing take on Black and brown masculinity will likely love its spin-off—named after the fictional South Central Los Angeles neighborhood in which it takes place.

(L to R) Bryana Salaz as Ines, Keyla Monterroso Mejia as Gloria in Freeridge.

Netflix

The show’s grounded portrayal of life in the notorious Los Angeles area earned the show praise, as did its use of mysteries to drive its plot—a welcome touch of levity. Freeridge also maintains the same look and feel as On My Block, with inviting color palettes and costume design that walks just the right line between keeping things modern and going full fashion victim in an attempt to capture how Teens These Days dress.

Viewers will fall in love with Freeridge for the same reason they loved On My Block: It brings the same trademark combination of humor and heart. Its setting is grounded but inviting—realistic but with just enough pockets of magic. Its characters are specific, carefully sketched, and a joy to watch. And most importantly of all, it’s never corny or stereotypical—a genuine rarity in teen television these days, and any day. Even as a newbie in town, I’d come back to Freeridge any time.”

Read more.

Sign up for our See Skip newsletter here to find out which new shows and movies are worth watching, and which aren’t.

Newsletter

February 2023
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728