Antelope Valley Press

‘Only Murders in the Building,’ ‘More Power’

- BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Here’s a collection curated by The Associated Press’ entertainm­ent journalist­s of what’s arriving on TV, streaming services and music platforms, this week.

Movies

• The biggest new movie streaming this week is “The Princess,” coming to Hulu, on Friday, starring Joey King as a royal who refuses to marry her intended (with good reason, as he’s a sociopath). Still, the act of defiance gets her kidnapped and imprisoned while her betrothed tries to overthrow the kingdom. Le-Van Kiet directed the film, which also stars Dominic Cooper and Olga Kurylenko.

• Netflix is adding an army of titles starting, Friday, including several films featuring recently departed actors. Ray Liotta’s star-making turn as aspiring mobster Henry Hill in Martin Scorsese’s “GoodFellas” is one of them. Liotta, who died, last month, at age 67, had to fight for the role in that cast of heavyweigh­ts like Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci. Also arriving on Netflix, on Friday, are “The Talented Mr. Ripley” and “Boogie Nights,” featuring two memorable performanc­es by Philip Baker Hall, who died, earlier this month, at 90, as a dogged detective and an unsentimen­tal producer.

• And if “The Talented Mr. Ripley” doesn’t satiate your dreams of an Italian vacation, Amazon Prime Video is getting Ridley Scott’s “House of Gucci,” on Saturday. The gaudy, operatic, two and a half hour family drama stars Adam Driver as the ill-fated Gucci heir Maurizio Gucci and Lady Gaga as his scorned wife Patrizia Reggiani, alongside a starry cast including Al Pacino, Jared Leto (unrecogniz­able under prosthetic­s) and Jeremy Irons.

Music

• Imagine Dragons are back with the second half of their two-album “Mercury” project. “Act 1” came out, in 2021, and was raw, confession­al and searing, with the songs “Follow You,” “Wrecked” and “Enemy.” The new set — “Act 2” — drops, Friday, and promises another 18 tunes, including the upbeat, anthemic “Sharks” and “Bones.”

• Super-producer Jack Antonoff has a ‘70s-era treat for us with the soundtrack for “Minions: Rise of Gru.” It features Diana Ross, Tame Impala, St. Vincent, Brockhampt­on, Kali Uchis and others covering hit ‘70s material from Kool & the Gang, Nancy Sinatra, the Carpenters, John Lennon and many more.

Television

• Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez are back as unlikely crime-solving New York City neighbors in Hulu’s “Only Murders in the Building.” In season two, the amateur sleuths are the talk of the town, or at least their apartment building, when they’re linked to the death of the building Board’s president. In a cruel twist, the trio that began a podcast to unravel a murder are under scrutiny by a rival podcast.

• “Home Improvemen­t” sitcom buddies Tim Allen and Richard Karn reunite for “More Power,” a nonfiction series that explores the developmen­t and mechanics of tools, from big (bulldozers) to small (batteries). Each half-hour episode focuses on one implement, which gets dissected in Allen’s workshop with help from April Wilkerson of YouTube do-ityourself fame. Karn explains the tool’s history, followed by field testing and a segment in which a skilled creator is challenged to devise innovative and “crazy new builds.” The series debuts, Wednesday, on History Channel. • Ken Burns adds his heft

“Hiding in Plain Sight: to

Youth Mental Illness,” which gives a voice to young people — ages 11 to 27 — with mental health conditions and those in their lives, including parents, teachers and friends, along with mental health care experts. The two-part, four-hour film directed and co-produced by Erik Ewers and Christophe­r Loren Ewers, with Burns as executive producer, airs, Monday and Tuesday, on PBS. The film is part of Well Beings, a public media campaign that uses storytelli­ng to help erase the stigma from physical and mental health issues.

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