


1” includes contributions from Suzanna Son, Moses Sumney, Mike Dean, Ramsey, Jennie Kim and Lily Rose-Depp, who fills the role of pop phenom Jocelyn and sings “World Class Sinner/I’m a Freak.” Still need a reason? Check out “Double Fantasy” featuring Future - and you’ll be hooked, even if, as The Weeknd sings, it’s wrong. Fans of The Weeknd get a new album, thanks to the TV show “The Idol.” He plays a scheming Svengali in the Sam Levinson-directed HBO series, which has produced the awesome “Popular” with Playboi Carti and Madonna. As if Shiv isn’t enough of a sell, Snook also gets to use her native Australian accent. Now out on Netflix is “Run Rabbit Run,” a horror starring “Succession’s” Sarah Snook as the single mother of a young girl who says she has memories of another life. The film is vibrant and clever, with a fun soundtrack and LGBTQ+ themes that aren’t clumsily handled. She teams up with a disgraced knight, Ballister (Riz Ahmed), who is on the run after being accused of killing the queen. Chloë Grace Moretz voices Nimona, a rebellious outsider with riot-grrrrl energy who lives in the shadows of a futuristic kingdom with medieval touches. Netflix also has a new film perfect for the tween set in the animated “Nimona,” inspired by ND Stevenson’s graphic novel about a shapeshifting girl. It could make for a great double feature with the documentary “Judy Blume Forever,” which is available on Prime Video. Rachel McAdams is also a standout as Margaret’s mother. Like the book, it's set in the early 1970s, because Blume did not want the characters to be texting. It is sweet, playful and reverential to its source material, which is hardly a requirement for enjoying the film. Directed by Kelly Fremon Craig (“The Edge of Seventeen”), Abby Ryder Fortson plays the 11-year-old narrator who is navigating a move to the suburbs, new friends, puberty, periods, first crushes and her faith. The film adaptation of Judy Blume’s classic coming-of-age novel “Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret” is now available on video on demand - perfect for summer sleepovers or mother-daughter movie nights at home.

John Krasinski makes his final bow in season four of “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan,” a new album from Lucinda Williams and the debut of the mystery video game Crime O’Clock are among the new television, movies, music and games headed to a device near you.Īmong the offerings worth your time as selected by The Associated Press’ entertainment journalists are Idris Elba on the worst flight ever in the new series “Hijack” for Apple TV+ and a horror movie starring “Succession’s” Sarah Snook as the single mother of a young girl who says she has memories of another life.
