The Day

Streaming: Jamie Foxx flick, ‘Frasier’ reboot

- By The Associated Press — Lou Kesten

New movies to stream

▪ Jamie Foxx and Tommy Lee Jones lead the crowd-pleasing courtroom drama “The Burial,” which came to Prime Video free for subscriber­s on Friday. Loosely based on a true story, Maggie Betts’ sophomore film starts out as a contract dispute between two funeral home owners but morphs into a bigger examinatio­n of race, inequality and corruption lingering in the “death care” industry. Foxx plays a slick, successful personal injury lawyer recruited to take on Jones’ character’s case to appeal to a largely Black jury. Other standouts in the cast include Bill Camp, Alan Ruck and Jurnee Smollett as the opposing counsel.

▪ Filmmaker Scott Derrickson re-teams with his “Sinister” star Ethan Hawke in the horror “The Black Phone,” which returned to Peacock on Thursday just in time for spooky-themed movie nights leading up to Halloween. Hawke plays a serial killer who has recently abducted a 13-year-old boy and locked him in a room with a seemingly defunct telephone — but the kid discovers that that phone lets him speak to the previous victims. The film was a modest box office hit, bringing in nearly $90 million in North America last summer.

▪ Also over on Prime Video, audiences can check out the Nicolas Cage Dracula movie “Renfield,” which started streaming on Tuesday. “The Lego Batman Movie” director Chris McKay was behind the camera here, with Cage playing Dracula and Nicholas Hoult as his long tortured assistant, Renfield. The film was a flop in theaters, grossing just $26 million against a reported production budget of $65 million and drew generally mixed reviews from critics. But some found joy in its horror-comedy mix.

— AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr

New series to stream

▪ Frontline takes a deep dive into Elon Musk’s purchase of the social platform formerly known as Twitter, now called X. “Elon Musk’s Twitter Takeover” is a two-hour special examining Musk’s relationsh­ip with Twitter as a user-turned-owner, and some of the controvers­ial decisions he’s made since acquiring the service. The program also features interviews with former Twitter employees. “Elon Musk’s Twitter Takeover” premiered Tuesday on PBS and Frontline’s YouTube channel. It also streams on the PBS App, which features other Fall programmin­g that’s largely been unaffected by strike disruption­s.

▪ It’s been nearly two decades since Kelsey Grammer has played Dr. Frasier Crane, the high-brow, refined psychiatri­st on NBC’s “Frasier” (and prior to that on “Cheers.”) Grammer resumes the role in a new Paramount+ sitcom — also called “Frasier” — reintroduc­ing the character on a new chapter. Frasier’s returned to Boston where his grown son Freddy lives and works as a firefighte­r. The first two episodes of “Frasier” dropped Thursday on Paramount+, with the remainder doled out weekly.

▪ With Halloween approachin­g, Netflix has a new eerie series from Mike Flanagan called “The Fall of the House of Usher.” It’s based on the short story by Edgar Allan Poe. For this project, Flanagan has tapped some of his favorite actors including Carla Gugino, Rahul Kohli, Henry Thomas, and Zach Gilford (plus new cast member Mark Hamill). The story follows siblings Roderick and Madeline Usher whose pharmaceut­ical company has amassed a fortune for their family. Secrets bubble to the surface when their heirs begin dying. “The Fall of the House of Usher” premiered Thursday.

▪ E! has recruited 10 socalled baddies of reality and competitio­n shows including Johnny Bananas (“The Challenge”), Omarosa Manigault Newman (“The Apprentice”), Jax Taylor (“Vanderpump Rules”), and Corinne Olympios (“Bachelor in Paradise”) to face off in a new reality game show called “House of Villains.” The contestant­s live together, compete in different challenges and one contestant is eliminated each episode. The one who remains at the end is awarded $200,000 and the title of America’s Favorite Supervilla­in. “House of Villains” debuted Thursday.

▪ “Lessons in Chemistry,” which premiered Friday on Apple TV+, follows Elizabeth Zott (Brie Larson), who works as a lab assistant in the 1950s. She’s just as smart — if not more — than her male colleagues and could easily be promoted if it weren’t for the rampant sexism that was commonplac­e for the time. Elizabeth meets a fellow scientist (played by Lewis Pullman) who appreciate­s her brains, beauty, and independen­ce. The eight-episode series is based on the best-selling novel by Bonnie Garmus.

— Alicia Rancilio New video games to play

▪ In video games, it’s OK to mess around with cars — you can crash them, steal them or throw giant banana peels from them. But if you want an ultra-realistic driving experience, Forza Motorsport is the way to go. The new installmen­t of Microsoft’s flagship auto racing franchise promises dazzling graphics, cutting-edge AI opponents, dynamic day/night lighting and dramatic weather effects. The real appeal of Forza is the chance to ditch the family minivan and take a Lamborghin­i for a spin. The lineup includes more than 500 cars that are sexier than what’s cluttering your driveway. On Xbox X/S and PC.

▪ If race cars aren’t fast enough for you, maybe you want to hop into a starship. Star Trek: Infinite puts you in command — not just of one vessel, but an entire fleet. You’re in charge of one of four factions: the United Federation of Planets, the Klingon Empire, the Romulan Star Empire or the Cardassian Union. As in classic Trek, the Federation’s all about diplomacy, the Romulans are stealthy and the Klingons and Cardassian­s are ready to pick a fight. Publisher Paradox Interactiv­e is known for the galaxy-spanning strategy epic Stellaris, but says Infinite has been streamline­d to fit better into the Trek universe. On PC.

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