Albany Times Union

NEW FOR VIEWING

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“Space Jam: A New Legacy”:

The Tune Squad is back in action, this time led by a new No. 23 as Lebron James, the Los Angeles Lakers star, takes center stage as a father whose teenage son would rather design video games than follow in his father’s footsteps on the hardcourt.

The sequel, which finds James and his son sucked into the Warner Bros. Serververs­e and features nods to much of the company’s intellectu­al property, “is just as manic as the first,” Tribune News Service critic Katie Walsh writes in her review, “leaving one feeling as if they’ve been hit by a truck driven by Bugs Bunny, synapses fried by one of Wile E. Coyote’s sticks of dynamite.”

In updating the film after 25 years, Walsh asks “what is the lens through which we should view ‘Space Jam: A New Legacy’? A nostalgic one? An ironic one? The filmmakers try to do both, while also trying to amuse new audiences, and the result is a strange brew, a frenetic piece of filmmaking that is incredibly meta, but deeply lacking in self-awareness.”

Also new

A “Escape Room: Tournament of Champions”: Taylor Russell returns as Zoey, who again finds herself an unwilling participan­t in a deadly escape room contest, this time a tournament of champions.

A “Six Minutes to Midnight”: Eddie Izzard and Judi Dench star in this espionage drama set at an

English boarding school just before the outbreak of World War II.

A “Broken Diamonds”: Ben Platt, star of “Dear Evan Hansen,” is a young writer getting ready to move to Paris when his father’s death means he becomes the caretaker of his mentally ill sister.

A “Clarice: Season One”: CBS drama that debuted earlier this year follows FBI agent Clarice Starling as she returns to the field a year after the events of “Silence of the Lambs.”

A “Fried Barry”: Horror comedy about Barry, a drug addict abducted by aliens who then assume control of his body and take it on a debauched journey through Cape Town, South Africa.

A “The Nevers: Season 1 Part 1”: The first six episodes of HBO’S steampunk sci-fi drama set in Victorian England in which a group of people, mostly women, suddenly gain a range of supernatur­al powers.

A “The Stand”: Stephen King ’s post-apocalypti­c tale gets a new treatment in this Paramount+ limited series starring Whoopi Goldberg, Alexander Skarsgard and James Marsden.

A “Audrey Hepburn 7-Movie Collection” (Blu-ray): Celebratin­g the 60th anniversar­y of “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” originally released on Oct. 5, 1961, this set also includes “My Fair Lady,” “Funny Face,” “Sabrina,” “Roman Holiday,” “Paris When It Sizzles” and “War and Peace,” as well as bonus content for most of the films.

Digital HD

A “Old”: A family on vacation starts aging rapidly after some leisure time on a secluded beach, reducing their life expectancy to one day, in M. Night Shyamalan’s latest thriller.

A “The Amityville Moon”: Two girls try to escape from the church home that holds them captive, only for one of them to be killed by a werewolf.

A “Because of Charley”: An estranged stepfamily reluctantl­y gathers in Florida for an anniversar­y party, fully intending to keep things brief, but Hurricane Charley changes their plans.

A “Paul Newman - The Paul Newman Trilogy”: Three early live TV performanc­es starring Paul Newman as a college student, clothing manufactur­er and cowardly soldier respective­ly that have not been seen since their original 1956-57 air dates. A “The Power and the Glory”: 1961 TV movie adaptation of the

Graham Greene novel about a priest in 1930s Mexico, starring Laurence Olivier, Julie Harris and George C. Scott.

A “Saving Sloane”: Family drama about a spoiled city girl sent to the country by her parents, where she forms an improbable bond with a horse.

A “Sunset on the River Styx”: A chance meeting of two young lovers sends them spiraling down a surreal rabbit hole into their pasts, futures and even a vampire death cult in this horror thriller.

 ?? Warner Bros. Pictures / Washington Post News Service ?? From left, Lola Bunny, Lebron James and Daffy Duck in "Space Jam: A New Legacy."
Warner Bros. Pictures / Washington Post News Service From left, Lola Bunny, Lebron James and Daffy Duck in "Space Jam: A New Legacy."

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