Sentinel & Enterprise

Great new series to check out

- By Noel Murray The New York Times

New to Netflix

▪ “Crime Scene: The Vanishing at the Cecil Hotel”

Documentar­ian Joe Berlinger has been telling true-crime stories in film and on TV since the 1990s with projects like “Brother’s Keeper,” the “Paradise Lost” trilogy and “Conversati­ons With a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes.” His new anthology series, “Crime Scene,” is an ambitious one, examining mysteries and murder in the context of where they occurred. The four-episode first season is ostensibly about a tourist who disappeare­d from a seedy Los Angeles hotel in 2013.

▪ “Kid Cosmic” Craig McCracken, creator of “The Powerpuff Girls,” indulges in his passion for superheroe­s, science fiction and Saturday morning cartoon mayhem with this new animated series. The show tells the story of a cocky preteen misfit who discovers powerful alien gemstones and distribute­s them among his friends in a remote New Mexico town, forming a makeshift superteam to save the Earth. Typical of McCracken’s shows, “Kid Cosmic” is franticall­y paced and filled with wacky humor.

▪ “City of Ghosts” An inspired mix of documentar­y, kiddie cartoon and avant-garde cinema, this charmingly offbeat animation is about an intrepid band of young paranormal investigat­ors who venture into different Los Angeles neighborho­ods interviewi­ng the proprietor­s of local businesses and the spirits that haunt their establishm­ents.

It’s beautiful to look at, with a soft and gentle tone that may appeal even more to stressed-out adults than to children.

New to HBO Max

▪ “The Investigat­ion’” Accomplish­ed Danish screenwrit­er and director Tobias Lindholm tackles a bizarre recent true-crime story in this six-part miniseries about what happened after Swedish journalist Kim Wall’s dismembere­d corpse was found scattered around Koge Bay in Denmark in 2017.

Lindholm doesn’t dramatize the murder, which eventually led to the arrest and conviction of an entreprene­ur who had invited Wall to interview him on his submarine. .

New to Disney+

▪ “The Muppet Show” (Seasons 1-5)

Fans of puppeteer and filmmaker Jim Henson have been waiting a while for his TV series “The Muppet Show” to arrive on a subscripti­on streaming service.

For five seasons and 120 episodes from 1976 to 1981, Henson and his team of writers, craftspeop­le and performers brought joy and whimsy to the small screen through the conceit of a low-rent variety show run by high-strung weirdos. From its catchy songs to its string of A-list guest hosts (including pretty much every big-name entertaine­r of the era), “The Muppet Show” helped define the popular culture of its time while always remaining family-friendly.

New to Apple TV+

▪ “Dickinson” (Season 2) The second season of this loopy historical dramedy has all the charms of the first, beginning with Hailee Steinfeld’s winning performanc­e as poet Emily Dickinson, portrayed as a headstrong young woman who bucks her family’s ideas of respectabl­e femininity.

The clever hook is that while it is set in the distant past, the characters behave as if they are in a modern suburban TV household. Season 2 opens with an admission that the historical record is vague on this phase of the writer’s life.

 ?? DISNEY ?? The Muppet Show’ finally returns, as seasons 1-5 are available on Disney+.
DISNEY The Muppet Show’ finally returns, as seasons 1-5 are available on Disney+.

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