'Better Call Saul,' 'Russian Doll' and 'The Flight Attendant' Return (Finally) No images? [Click here](
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[- - -] [TheWrap - SPRING TV WATCH LIST] Week of April 16 â 22 Itâs another huge week for TV. This undoubtedly has to do with the deadline on Emmy nominations coming at the end of May, as the amount of heavily hyped prestige series (either returning or brand new) is increasing to the point of overload. Just this week alone, we have the long-overdue return of âBetter Call Saul,â âRussian Dollâ and âThe Flight Attendant,â plus a new show where huge stars get to play âThe First Lady.â And documentaries chronicling the life of polar bears, the career of Magic Johnson and the racist weirdness of Abercrombie & Fitch at its peak. Truly, this is a golden age. On with the television! [Premiere of the week]
âBetter Call SaulâMonday, April 18 at 9 p.m., AMC Photo: AMC
Itâs been almost two years since the previous season of âBetter Call Saul,â Vince Gilligan and Peter Gouldâs sharp-as-a-knife prequel series to their beloved âBreaking Bad.â Thatâs a long time to wait, especially given that the show left off with Kim (Rhea Seehorn) inching toward the dark side. (Considering she never appears in âBreaking Bad,â we should consider this a very bad thing.) Quite frankly, after Bob Odenkirkâs health scare last year, weâre lucky the show is back at all â and that he is feeling OK! A word of caution, though: You might want to re-watch Season 5 before jumping into this new season, just to refresh yourself on the intricacies of the ongoing drug trade and the relationship between franchise heavy Gus Fring (Giancarlo Esposito) and Lalo Salamanca (Tony Dalton, who stole every scene he had in âHawkeyeâ), amongst other things. AMC has already revealed that Walter White (Bryan Cranston) and Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) will be making an appearance this season, bringing the âBreaking Badâ continuum full circle. Keep in mind that AMC is slicing the season in half; the first batch of episodes premiere this week (and ending on May 23) and the next batch wonât debut until July 11. But after two years, a few weeks wonât matter much. [[TRAILER](]
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âBlack-ishâTuesday, April 19 at 9 p.m., ABC [Blackish]
Photo: ABC
It isnât just a season finale for âBlack-ishâ this week; this is the series finale too. The Kenya Barris-created show felt quietly revolutionary, particularly in its fearless tackling of pertinent, sometimes uncomfortable social issues. (This occasionally got it in hot water with Disney brass; one episode only ever aired online and Barris eventually decamped, first for Netflix and then for Paramount.) âBlack-ishâ also created its own interconnected TV universe, with âGrown-ishâ airing on ABC sister channel Freeform (it was just renewed for a fifth season) and âMixed-ishâ running for two seasons alongside the flagship series on ABC. (A third spinoff, âOld-ish,â starring Laurence Fishburne and Jenifer Lewis, was briefly developed but is no longer moving forward.) After 175 episodes, the show is coming to a close. Thatâs quite a run for any primetime sitcom, much less one that addressed as many issues and took as many chances as this one. It will be missed. [[TRAILER](]
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âThe BatmanâMonday, April 18, HBO Max [Robert Pattinson The Batman]
Photo: Warner Bros./DC
The Dark Knight Returns ⦠to streaming. After a sizable theatrical bow in March, co-writer/director Matt Reevesâ âThe Batman,â starring Robert Pattinson in the cape and cowl, is now making its streaming debut. His is a very different approach to the character; instead of large-scale superhero theatrics, itâs more of an intricate murder mystery, with the Riddler (Paul Dano) as the killer. (Donât worry, villains like the Penguin, played by an unrecognizable Colin Farrell, and Catwoman, played by Zoë Kravitz, still make appearances.) If you missed it when it played in theaters, now is the perfect time to catch up. Just make sure to crank up the sound system (both for the set pieces and for Michael Giacchinoâs ominous score) and turn out the lights. And if you really want to take it back to what it was like watching Tim Burtonâs âBatmanâ at home, âThe Batmanâ will also air on linear HBO on Saturday. [[TRAILER](]
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âPolar BearâFriday, April 22, Disney+ [Polar Bear]
Photo: Disney+
A new Disneynature movie (either in the theater or on Disney+) has become an Earth Day tradition. And this year is no exception. âPolar Bear,â from filmmakers Alastair Fothergill and Jeff Wilson, follows a polar bear cub as she grows up and has cubs of her own. The narration is always super important in these films and this time Catherine Keener provides a unique, first-person account that manages to be specific and more philosophical. Of course, there is a tinge of sadness to this beautiful documentary, considering how fraught the situation is in the Arctic circle due to the advanced stages of climate change. Maybe this film will be a rallying cry this Earth Day. [[TRAILER](]
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âBetter Call Saulâ / âBreaking Badâ / âEl CaminoâNetflix [Breaking Bad ]
Source: AMC/Sony
If the above hasnât made this abundantly clear, the new season of âBetter Call Saulâ jumps into the deep end, it doesnât hold your hand or guide you through the kiddie pool. In order to get properly prepared, why not go back through the entire franchise, starting with the flagship series âBreaking Bad,â about a high school teacher (Cranston), recently diagnosed with cancer, who starts cooking meth as a way to save his family from financial ruin and winds up being the American Southwestâs answer to Scarface. In âBreaking Bad,â weâre introduced to a slippery, morally nebulous lawyer named Saul Goodman (Odenkirk). His evolution from a good-hearted nobody named Jimmy McGill to the man we know well is expertly charted in âBetter Call Saul.â And just for fun, why not watch the feature film that followed âBreaking Bad,â âEl Camino,â which is written and directed by franchise mastermind Vince Gilligan and takes place immediately after the events of the âBreaking Badâ finale. Like everything associated with this franchise, youâll be on the edge of your seat the whole time. [[WATCH](]
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âThe First LadyâSunday, April 17 at 9 p.m., ShowtimeThis new limited series, created by Aaron Cooley, imagines the personal lives of the first ladies of the United States. Thatâs about all you need to know. Just listen to this casting. Viola Davis is Michelle Obama, Michelle Pfeiffer is Betty Ford and Gillian Anderson is Eleanor Roosevelt (is there anything that woman canât do?). As for the presidents, weâve got O. T. Fagbenle as Barack Obama, Aaron Eckhart as Gerald Ford and Kiefer Sutherland as Franklin D. Roosevelt. [[TRAILER](] âWhite Hot: The Rise & Fall of Abercrombie & FitchâTuesday, April 19, NetflixâWhite Hot: The Rise & Fall of Abercrombie & Fitchâ charts the suburban-mall staple as it hit the height of popularity (at least for high school kids who wanted to master that âpreppy but disheveledâ look) and its meteoric fall from grace following accusations of discriminatory hiring and increased scrutiny of the brandâs âAll Americanâ (white) image. Produced and directed by Alison Klayman, this will be the perfect documentary for anybody who has ever walked by the store and found it incredibly weird that a young shirtless hunk was just standing outside. [[TRAILER](] âRussian DollâWednesday, April 20, NetflixHowâs this for a lengthy wait? âRussian Dollâ Season 1 dropped back on February 1, 2019. The show, which combines elements of drama, comedy and trippy science fiction, stars Natasha Lyonne (who also co-created the show with Amy Poehler and Leslye Headland) as a screwed-up New Yorker (is there any other kind?) who finds herself in an âEdge of Tomorrowâ-ish time loop that starts over every time she dies. What other weirdness will befall her in Season 2? Time to find out. Weâve waited long enough, after all. [[TRAILER](] âThe Flight AttendantâThursday, April 21, HBO MaxOne of the biggest surprises of the newly launched HBO Max was how fun âThe Flight Attendantâ was. It was so much fun that what was initially conceived as a limited series was hastily brought back for another season. And here we are! The wonderful Kaley Cuoco returns, unintentionally stumbling into more international mysteries and struggling with her sobriety, weâre sure. If you never saw the first one, watch it quickly before the new one debuts. Itâs addictive enough to binge in a weekend. [[TRAILER](] âThey Call Me MagicâFriday, April 22, Apple TV+Think of it as a counterpart to HBOâs splashy (and supremely controversial) âWinning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty.â Or maybe a response to ESPN and Netflixâs âThe Last Dance.â But this four-part documentary goes deep into Magic Johnsonâs life, from his early days as a college basketball phenom to his time with the Lakers to his truly life-changing admission that he had contracted the HIV virus and beyond â to his philanthropic and entrepreneurial work. [[TRAILER](]
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