Monterey Herald

New this week: `True Lies,' Wallen and `Creed' film fest

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— With “Creed III” coming to theaters on Friday, Prime Video has you covered for all your Creed and Rocky needs. “Creed” and “Creed II,” along with every Rocky film from No. 1 through “Balboa,” will be available to watch on Prime Video starting Wednesday. You could also do a Sofia Coppola double feature of “The Virgin Suicides” and “Lost in Translatio­n” while trying to decide which Coppola-inspired T-shirt to purchase from Uniqlo's celebratio­n of the filmmaker (also available next week).

— Best picture Oscar nominee and Palme d'Or winner “Triangle of Sadness” comes to Hulu on Friday, giving stragglers plenty of time (well, nine days) to watch the riotous and bodily social satire before the Oscars, where it's also up for best director and best original screenplay. It's the English-language debut for Swedish director Ruben Östlund who takes a scalpel to the privileged classes on board a luxury yacht, starring Harris Dickinson, Charlbi Dean, Dolly de Leon and Woody Harrelson as a Marxist ship captain. I wrote in my AP review that “The beauty and pleasure of something like “Triangle of Sadness “is in the details, like the well-observed and precisely crafted awkwardnes­s over who should pay the restaurant bill, or the rules about who gets to sit in the front row of a fashion show shifting in real time.”

Music

— Morgan Wallen is back with new music — a lot of music. “One Thing at a Time” has a whopping 36 songs, including “Man Made a Bar” with Eric Church. His sister, Ashlyne, joins him on “Outlook.” “This record represents the last few years of my life, the highs and the lows,” Wallen says in his announceme­nt. (Some of the lows include facing rebuke for being caught using a racial slur.) Early singles include “You Proof” and “Thought You Should Know.” The album ends with the tune “Dying Man” and the lyrics: “Codeine, it got Elvis/Whiskey, it got Hank/I always thought somethin' like that/ Might send me on my way.” The album drops Friday.

— Willie Nelson approaches his 90th birthday later this year with plenty going on — he just won a Grammy for best country album, he's among the 2023 nominees for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and he has a new album: “I Don't Know a Thing About Love.” Nelson and his band recorded fresh interpreta­tions of 10 classic compositio­ns penned by the legendary American songwriter Harlan Howard. The songs include “Busted,” the story of a dirt-poor farmer bemoaning his overdue bills, crop failures, and other financial woes while maintainin­g a sense of hope for the future.

— A huge box set celebratin­g the musical tie between Burt Bacharach and Elvis Costello now serves as a memorial to Bacharach, the iconic composer who died earlier this month. “The Songs of Bacharach & Costello” is a comprehens­ive 45-song set that includes live performanc­es of Bacharach and Costello performing several songs from the album “Painted From Memory” and three rare and unreleased live performanc­es from 1998 and 1999, including a stark and gripping “In The Darkest Place.” The collection will be available in a variety of formats, including streaming starting Friday.

Television

— Arnold Schwarzene­gger and Jamie Lee Curtis never made a sequel to their 1994 action, comedy movie “True Lies,” directed by James Cameron, but CBS has a new TV series with the same title inspired by the film. Steve Howey and Ginger Gonzaga now co-star as Harry and Helen Tasker. Harry is a secret internatio­nal spy who pretends to have a career in computers that takes him on the road a lot. On a mission in Paris doubling as a romantic getaway for the couple, Harry's double life is exposed and she must join the team. “True Lies,” executive produced by Cameron, debuts Wednesday on CBS.

— “Alaska Daily,” the ABC drama created by “Spotlight” director and co-writer Tom McCarthy and starring Hilary Swank, returns from hiatus Thursday. The series follows the staff at a struggling Alaska newspaper whose new star reporter, Eileen Fitzgerald, was hired to join an ongoing investigat­ion about murdered Indigenous women. It's inspired by the decades-old problem of missing and murdered Alaska Native women.

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