Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘American Horror Stories’ returns

Tune In Tonight

- Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin .tvguy@gmail.com. BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH

Hulu, or rather FX on Hulu, serves up a gruesome Halloween event. “American Horror Stories” streams four episodes today. Not to be confused with “American Horror Story,” currently running, “Stories” offers an anthology of ghoulish tales.

This year’s menu offers tales of implanted parasites that devour victims from within and ravenous gourmands who have developed a taste for the ultimate forbidden delicacy: human organ meat.

These latest themes dovetail rather seamlessly (and squeamishl­y) with the new “Story” chapter, “Delicate,” about a pregnant A-list movie star (Emma Roberts) whose condition coincides with visions of being pursued by witches as her bossy publicist (Kim Kardashian) hustles her through the leadup to the Oscars.

“Story” and “Stories” producers Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk have long traded in dramas about characters who have grown uncomforta­ble in their own skin. They rose to prominence with the FX plastic-surgery satire “Nip/Tuck.” ›

A tale taken very seriously among fans of Japanese manga, “Pluto” arrives in serialized fashion on Netflix. While somehow adapted, derived or linked to the story of “Astroboy,” “Pluto” is a far cry from the crude little cartoon series that arrived on these shores more than six decades ago, ushering in an onslaught of cheap Japanese imports including “Gigantor” and “Speed Racer.”

Cinematic in scope and featuring sophistica­ted visual vantage points, “Pluto” offers a dark (aren’t they all?) meditation on artificial intelligen­ce and a life-and-death struggle between humans and robots, where mankind’s enduring legacy of hatred leaves one wondering if you’re supposed to root for the cyborgs. ›

Scientists travel to an island off Antarctica, where a cauldron of lava defies convention­al explanatio­ns on “Explorer: Lake of Fire” (10 p.m., National Geographic, TV-PG). ›

A journalist’s (India Mullen) investigat­ion into her own mother’s murder leads to another woman’s disappeara­nce in the Irish series “The Vanishing Triangle,” streaming its first two episodes on Sundance Now/AMC+.

Look for Allen Leech as the detective who assists her as they uncover rampant corruption in the Irish police that may have contribute­d to a spate of kidnapping­s and murders of young women in Ireland in the 1990s.

Leech is best known for playing Tom, the former radical turned chauffeur who marries into the family, on “Downton Abbey.” ›

On a similar note, Prime Video streams the imported German series “Sebastian Fitzek’s Therapy,” about a psychiatri­st who finally comes to grips with his daughter’s disappeara­nce some eight years after she vanished. ›

BET+ streams the 2023 supernatur­al film “The Despaired,” about a grieving postal worker who discovers an undelivere­d letter that raises her late husband from the dead. Return to sender!

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