Lethbridge Herald

Plenty worth streaming in March

- David Friend THE CANADIAN PRESS

Canadian comic Mae Martin slides onto Netflix with her strikingly personal TV series “Feels Good,” one of the standout new programs making its debut in March.

And the co-creators of “The Wire” return to HBO with “The Plot Against America,” a potent drama that reconsider­s American history under a fascist regime.

Beyond those picks, the mouth-watering plate of March options includes the new entries in David Chang’s deepdive food documentar­y series “Ugly Delicious” (Netflix, March 6), a third season of “Westworld” (Crave/HBO, March 15), and “Making the Cut,” a fashion competitio­n series hosted by Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn (Amazon Prime Video, March 27).

Here’s a look at what could get people talking on streaming platforms throughout the month: • “Feel Good” Mae Martin establishe­d herself as a writer on “Baroness Von Sketch Show” before hopping across the pond for this new semi-autobiogra­phical U.K. series about a Canadian stand-up comedian battling her own demons while living in London. Everything seems to be in Mae’s control until one night when she meets George, a straight, female audience member with an irresistib­le personalit­y. With hardly a moment to pause, the two hit it off, and it isn’t long before they’re shacked up together. That’s when Mae finds herself spiralling back into her past drug addiction while trying to keep both feet on the ground in a relationsh­ip that seems almost too perfect. Lisa Kudrow plays a supporting role as Mae’s well-intentione­d mother. Darkly humorous, and strikingly personal, “Feel Good” will introduce Martin to a whole new world of fans. (Netflix, March 19)

• “The Twentieth Century” Canadian history takes a comically bizarre turn in Winnipeg director Matthew Rankin’s unhinged reimaginin­g of the life of a young William Lyon Mackenzie King. Told using fabricated wartime news reels, German expression­ist film sets, and a pungent subplot about a boot fetish, Rankin gleefully dances his cast (including Daniel Beirne of “Workin’ Moms” as the future prime minister) through an affectiona­tely garish reflection on patriotism, propaganda and Canadian stereotype­s, that defies anyone who might suggest our country’s leaders aren’t rich in character. (Crave/HBO, March 26) • “The Plot Against America” Lately, filmmakers seem fascinated with how a single turn can alter the trajectory of history, whether it’s Russia winning the space race in “For All Mankind” (Apple TV Plus) or the alternate reality of “The Man in the High Castle” (Amazon Prime Video) where the outcome of Second World War split the United States into three parts. The latest addition to the emerging subgenre of faking history is “The Plot Against America,” a six-part series that considers how the U.S. might have taken shape if xenophobic populist Charles Lindbergh had defeated Franklin D. Roosevelt in the presidenti­al election. Using Philip Roth’s provocativ­e 2004 novel as their foundation, “The Wire” creators David Simon and Ed Burns centre the story on a working-class Jewish family who witness the rise of fascism in their New Jersey neighbourh­ood. The series cast includes Zoe Kazan, Winona Ryder, and John Turturro. (Crave/HBO, March 16) • “The Platform” Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia’s social hierarchy drama is set inside a futuristic prison where inmates on the top floor delight in a feast that descends on a platform from the mysterious floors above, before the food scraps are passed on to each level below, effectivel­y becoming lesser and lesser with each stop. But one prisoner isn’t satisfied with his status and devises a plan that could turn the entire structure on its head.

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