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'A Minecraft Movie' is now streaming: How to watch and everything you need to know
'A Minecraft Movie' is now streaming: How to watch and everything you need to know

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

'A Minecraft Movie' is now streaming: How to watch and everything you need to know

Ready to experience the viral chicken jockey moment from the comfort of your own home? A Minecraft Movie dominated the box office — and headlines — this past spring, raking in nearly $1 billion worldwide and causing reports of chaos inside theaters across the country. Starting Friday, you can experience the film in all its block-y glory on streaming. The video game-inspired blockbuster starring Jack Black and Jason Mamoa starts streaming on HBO's Max (still soon to be renamed HBO Max, again) this Friday, June 20. In addition to the standard version of the film, Max is also releasing a version featuring American Sign Language interpretation. Here's what else you need to know about how to watch A Minecraft Movie at home. A Minecraft Movie hits streaming this Friday, June 20. You'll be able to watch two versions of the box office hit, the standard A Minecraft Movie and a version with American Sign Language (ASL) interpretations by Deaf ASL Interpreter Sophia Morales. A Minecraft Movie stars Jack Black, Jason Momoa Emma Myers, Danielle Brooks and Sebastian Hansen. Jennifer Coolidge is also featured. A Minecraft Movie has generated over $951.51 million worldwide since it debuted in theaters, making it this year's biggest box office earner of the Western world so far (per Box Office Mojo). While there's been no official announcement, comments in a Deadline interview with Warner Bros. co-chairmen and CEOs Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy all but confirmed that there are plans in the works for A Minecraft Movie sequel. When asked about possible sequels to both A Minecraft Movie and Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024), De Luca said that they expect cinematic follow-ups to both, further explaining, "The ink might not be dry on the deals yet, but imminently."

'The Gilded Age' Season 3 premiere: Release date, trailer, new cast members and how to watch. Plus, what fans can expect.
'The Gilded Age' Season 3 premiere: Release date, trailer, new cast members and how to watch. Plus, what fans can expect.

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

'The Gilded Age' Season 3 premiere: Release date, trailer, new cast members and how to watch. Plus, what fans can expect.

Marriage proposals, robber baron business deals and new characters — oh my! You're cordially invited to the unfolding of juicy melodrama among high society in 1800s New York with the Season 3 premiere of HBO's Emmy-nominated show, The Gilded Age. So pull up an opulent velvet chair and grab your opera glasses as we take a closer look at what's to come in this period drama from Downton Abbey creator Julian Fellowes. Season 3 of The Gilded Age drops this Sunday, June 22, at 9 p.m. ET on HBO and will also be available to stream on HBO Max. There will be a total of eight episodes this season, with a new episode airing every Sunday through Aug. 10. The battle between old and new money families continued… Bertha Russell (Carrie Coon), whose family is considered 'new money' because of her railroad tycoon husband's fortune, was still shut out by old money elites like Mrs. Astor (Donna Murphy), an influential patron at the well-established Academy of Music. Bertha was fed up with Mrs. Astor denying her family an opera box, which was seen as a symbol of status and power. Hell-bent on climbing the social ladder, Bertha started an opera war and used her family's wealth to support the newly built Metropolitan Opera. The new venue threatened audience attendance on opening night at the Academy of Music. Bertha won the opera war when the Duke of Buckingham (Ben Lamb) ultimately decided to attend the Met opening, which was met with high societal fanfare. But Bertha's victory came at a cost, it seems, which is implied at the end of the season that she promised her daughter Gladys's (Taissa Farmiga) hand to the Duke. The Russell family patriarch, George Russell (Morgan Spector), faced backlash from the steelworkers who manufactured his railroads and demanded fair pay and better working conditions. Tensions reached a boiling point when armed militia were ready to shoot the protesting laborers. George called off his men before things turned violent and granted some of the laborers' demands. Meanwhile, Agnes van Rhijn (Christine Baranski) found out that her son Oscar (Blake Ritson) had lost the family fortune. Ada Forte (Cynthia Nixon), Agnes's sister, learns that her late husband left her a substantial fortune, and the power dynamic Agnes had with Ada has started to shift. The period melodrama included juicy romances in the love lives of Marian Brook (Louisa Jacobson) and Peggy Scott (Denée Benton). Marian realized she's in love with Larry Russell (Harry Richardson), while Peggy shut down her affair with T. Thomas Fortune (Sullivan Jones), a married man. According to a media release from HBO, the Russell family is poised to take their place at the head of high society, following Bertha's victory in the opera wars. 'Bertha sets her sights on a prize that would elevate the family to unimaginable heights, while George risks everything on a gambit that could revolutionize the railroad industry — if it doesn't ruin him first,' HBO says. Bertha has high hopes for a marriage between her daughter Gladys and the Duke, despite her daughter's interest in another young man, Billy Carlton (Matt Walker). In Season 2, George had also promised Gladys she could marry for love, even if it went against Bertha's wishes. This leads to greater conflict between George and Bertha in the new season. Across 61st Street from the Russell household on the Upper East Side, Agnes struggles to accept Ada's new position as lady of the house with her newfound wealth. Peggy meets a new love interest from Newport, R.I., whose family isn't keen on her career as a writer and journalist. The Gilded Age features a big cast of show regulars, including: Carrie Coon as Bertha Russell, Christine Baranski as Agnes Van Rhijn, Cynthia Nixon as Ada Forte, Morgan Spector as George Russell, Louisa Jacobson as Marian Brook, Denée Benton as Peggy Scott, Taissa Farmiga as Gladys Russell, Harry Richardson as Larry Russell, Blake Ritson as Oscar Van Rhijn and Ben Ahlers as Jack Trotter. New additions to the cast in Season 3 include: Jordan Donica, Andrea Martin, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Hattie Morahan, Leslie Uggams, Merritt Wever, Bill Camp and Phylicia Rashad.

Tom Daley Gets Candid On Fame, Fatherhood And His Closeted Past In New Documentary
Tom Daley Gets Candid On Fame, Fatherhood And His Closeted Past In New Documentary

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Tom Daley Gets Candid On Fame, Fatherhood And His Closeted Past In New Documentary

As a young diver, Tom Daley never imagined he'd one day feel confident enough to share specifics of his personal life with fans. That changed in 2013, when the British Olympic diver came out as gay in a YouTube video. Twelve years later, Daley gets even more candid in a new documentary, 'Tom Daley: 1.6 Seconds.' Released this month on Discovery+ and in the U.S. and on HBO Max elsewhere, the film finds the now-retired athlete reflecting on his rise to fame, his path toward living as his true self and his relationships with his husband of eight years, screenwriter and filmmaker Dustin Lance Black, and his late father, Robert Daley. 'It's weird when somebody comes to you and says, 'We want to make a documentary about your life.' I was a little bit hesitant to start with, because ... what do I even have to say? What do I want to say?' Daley told HuffPost in an interview. 'But the more I got into what was going on beneath the surface when I was growing up ... the fact that my kids are going to be able to understand a bit more about what their papa did ... it felt like therapy.' Admirers of Daley's aquatic prowess won't be disappointed by '1.6 Seconds,' the title of which alludes to his gold medal win in the men's synchronized 10-meter platform at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, held in 2021. While working on the film, director Vaughan Sivell pored through hours of archival footage showing Daley training for childhood competitions and, later, his four Olympic Games. In fact, Daley himself hadn't watched many of the videos before he sat down to provide his on-camera commentary. He can be seen tearing up after some particularly emotional clips, some of which include his father, who died of cancer in 2011 at age 40. 'If I could be half the dad my dad was to me, I feel like my life would be complete,' Daley said. 'My middle name is Robert, named after my dad. My oldest son is also a Robert ― we call him Robbie. The relationship I had with my dad is how I model being a father now.' Other emotional moments in the film include the lead-up to Daley's coming out as well as the early days of his relationship with Black, whom he refers to simply as 'Lance.' In addition to 6-year-old Robbie, Black and Daley share a 1-year-old son, Phoenix. 'When I came out, I had no idea what was going to happen on the other side of it,' Daley said. 'I was told I was going to lose sponsorships and not be able to compete in certain countries. There was a lot of fear around it [and] I didn't think I'd be able to open myself up to falling in love beyond a surface level. But when I met Lance, it felt like I'd met my forever teammate.' Black recently completed work on a documentary of his own, 'Rock Out,' which examines the LGBTQ+ community's unheralded influence on heavy metal, punk and rock music. Daley, meanwhile, has shifted his professional focus. As seen in '1.6 Seconds,' he famously took up knitting and crocheting in 2020, and has since launched the Made With Love brand dedicated to his handiwork. He continues to tout knitting as his 'superpower' and a 'mental reset,' and will further showcase his skills as the host of 'The Game of Wool,' a forthcoming television series. Sports and knitting both factor into Daley's newfound role as a mental health advocate. At the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, he was granted a re-dive after getting distracted by a large number of camera flashes from the crowd ― a chilling moment captured in '1.6 Seconds' that impacted his own mental health. 'We spend all of our life training our bodies to be able to do the thing,' he said. 'But if you don't train your brain as well, how do you know if you're going to be able to hold it together in competition? On a micro or macro level, at some point, everybody deals with a really stressful situation, and how you navigate that and perform under stress and under pressure really will play into how successful that moment might be. So I think for me, I wish I'd started those mindfulness practices slightly earlier in my career.' These days, his routine also includes 'going on walks with my husband. We drop our kids off at school, and then we go for a hike, and we just spend the first hour of our morning just talking to each other. And I know that might not necessarily be 100% mindfulness, but it's our way of talking to each other about anything and everything.' This Glam-Pop Singer Has Been Called 'Gen Z's Elton John.' His New Album Lives Up To That Title. Lily Gladstone Embraces Her Evolving Sexuality Amid New Film's Success Lance Bass Feels 'Danger' For Queer Community As Marriage Anniversary Approaches

What to Stream: 'The Bear,' Lorde, 'Smoke,' 'A Minecraft Movie,' 'Nosferatu' and Nelly and Ashanti
What to Stream: 'The Bear,' Lorde, 'Smoke,' 'A Minecraft Movie,' 'Nosferatu' and Nelly and Ashanti

San Francisco Chronicle​

time38 minutes ago

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

What to Stream: 'The Bear,' Lorde, 'Smoke,' 'A Minecraft Movie,' 'Nosferatu' and Nelly and Ashanti

The Jack Black-led movie phenomenon 'A Minecraft Movie' and Lorde's fourth studio album, "Virgin," are some of the new television, films, music and games headed to a device near you. Also among the streaming offerings worth your time, as selected by The Associated Press' entertainment journalists: All 10 episodes of season four of FX's 'The Bear' drop Wednesday, Nelly and Ashanti get their own reality show and Bill Skarsgård leads an update of the 1922 silent vampire classic 'Nosferatu.' New movies to stream from June 23-29 — The Porky Pig and Daffy Duck movie 'The Day The Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie' is coming to HBO Max on Friday, June 27 (it will also broadcast on HBO on June 28 at 8 p.m. ET). Reviews were a little mixed, but mostly positive for the full-length animated feature. Bob Strauss wrote in the San Francisco Chronicle that 'The laugh ratio is more hit-and-miss than in the tightly scripted shorts, but enough jokes land to satisfy most funny bones.' The film had a wild ride to end up where it was originally intended, including a theatrical release in December not from Warner Bros. but Ketchup Entertainment (who will also distribute the previously shelved 'Coyote vs. Acme' ). — Mariska Hargitay's documentary about her mother Jayne Mansfield, 'My Mom Jayne,' will also be streaming on HBO Max on Friday, June 27. The Hollywood bombshell died in a car accident at 34, when Hargitay was only 3. — La-la-la-lava, ch-ch-ch-chicken, Steve's lava chicken is now streaming on HBO Max, as is the rest of 'A Minecraft Movie.' A box office phenomenon with over $950 million in worldwide ticket sales and counting, this movie adaptation of the popular game stars Jack Black and Jason Momoa. In his AP review, Mark Kennedy wrote that 'the Jared Hess-directed action-adventure artfully straddles the line between delighting preteen gamers and keeping their parents awake. It's an often-bananas adaptation, with bizarre digressions into turquoise blouses and tater tot pizzas. It has Jennifer Coolidge being very Jennifer Coolidge. Need we say more?' — Nicholas Hoult, Lily-Rose Depp and Bill Skarsgård lead the Robert Eggers-directed update of the 1922 silent vampire classic 'Nosferatu,' streaming on Prime Video starting Friday, June 27. Jocelyn Noveck wrote in her AP review that 'it will chill you to the bone' but that 'it may not terrify you.' Everything, she adds, in Eggers 'faithful, even adoring remake... looks great. But with its stylized, often stilted dialogue and overly dramatic storytelling, it feels more like everyone is living in a quaint period painting rather than a world populated by real humans (and, well, vampires) made of flesh and, er, blood.' New music to stream from June 23-29 — What will the next era of Lorde look like? 'What Was That,' the singer's first new single in four years, recalls the clever synth-pop of her 2017 album 'Melodrama,' casting aside the folk detour of 2021's 'Solar Power.' The song that followed, 'Man of the Year,' is stripped and spare – just Lorde and a sorrowful bass. Who knows what will come next? Listeners will have to wait until Friday, June 27, when she releases her fourth studio album, 'Virgin.' — The 'F1' movie, starring Brad Pitt and Damson Idris, is quickly gearing up to be a summer tentpole. Naturally, the filmmakers knew its sound had to be massive, too. That arrives via a score by the many-time Oscar winner Hans Zimmer and a huge soundtrack releasing as 'F1 The Album' via Atlantic Records, the team behind the award-winning 'Barbie' album — with bespoke tracks from Chris Stapleton, Ed Sheeran, Myke Towers, Blackpink's Rosé, Tate McRae and many more. Learn all about how the soundtrack came together here. — On Friday, June 27, arty alt-rock legends Failure will receive documentary treatment in 'Every Time You Lose Your Mind: A Film about Failure,' available to stream on Hulu and Hulu on Disney+. The unorthodox and influential band finally gets their due in the project, directed by frontman Ken Andrews. And don't worry if Failure isn't a familiar name to you. Some of the featured voices in the documentary certainly will be: Paramore's Hayley Williams, actor Jason Schwartzman, comedian Margaret Cho, legendary producers Steve Albini and Butch Vig and many more participate. — AP Music Writer Maria Sherman New series to stream from June 23-29 — All 10 episodes of season four of FX's 'The Bear' drop Wednesday on Hulu. Viewers will find out if Michelin-starred chef Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) can successfully run an acclaimed and profitable fine dining restaurant in Chicago. The series has led to acting awards for White, Ayo Edebiri, Ebon Moss-Bachrach and Liza Colón-Zayas. — Jensen Ackles ('Supernatural,' 'Tracker') stars in a new crime thriller series for Prime Video called 'Countdown.' Ackles plays a LAPD detective assigned to a task force investigating the murder of a government official. Eric Dane of 'Grey's Anatomy' and 'Euphoria' also stars. It premieres Wednesday. — Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez's second shot at love didn't work out but there's another celebrity couple who has rekindled a past flame. Recording artists Nelly and Ashanti were an item for more than 10 years before their breakup in 2013. They got back together in 2023 and are now married with a son. The pair are the subject of their own reality show called 'Nelly & Ashanti: We Belong Together.' It debuts Thursday on Peacock. — Taron Egerton and Jurnee Smollett star in the new thriller 'Smoke' for Apple TV+ as investigators working together to catch two serial arsonists. It's created by Dennis Lehane and based on a true story where an arson investigator turned out to be a serial arsonist. 'Smoke' reunites Egerton and Lehane who worked on the Apple limited-series 'Blackbird." John Leguizamo and Greg Kinnear also appear in 'Smoke,' out Friday. — 'Nautilus,' a reimagining of Jules Verne's novel 'Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas' comes to AMC+ Friday, June 29. It's an origin story of the character known as Captain Nemo and portrayed by Shazad Latif. Nemo is an Indian prince whose birthright was stolen from him and he's on a mission for revenge. — Alicia Rancilio New video games to play from June 23-29 — In 2019's Death Stranding, a courier named Sam worked to reconnect survivors in a postapocalyptic America beset by 'beached things,' gooey monsters trapped between the worlds of the living and the dead. Sam is back in Death Stranding 2: On the Beach, but now he faces a question we've all asked in the internet age: Was connecting everyone really such a good idea? The series is the brainchild of legendary 'Metal Gear Solid' mastermind Hideo Kojima, and fans know they can expect a complex story, flamboyant graphics and some off-the-wall gameplay ideas. (The original included a lot of walking and inventory management next to some mind-blowing boss battles.) Norman Reedus of 'The Walking Dead' returns as Sam, and yes, he's still carrying a baby who has psychic powers. Embrace the weirdness Thursday on PlayStation 5.

18 TV Shows You Absolutely Can't Miss This Summer
18 TV Shows You Absolutely Can't Miss This Summer

Elle

timean hour ago

  • Entertainment
  • Elle

18 TV Shows You Absolutely Can't Miss This Summer

Sometimes the best getaways are the ones where you don't have to leave your couch—all you have to do is press play. Maybe the destination is a high-pressure kitchen in Chicago, or the upper crust of England in the 1870s, or—for the more gothically inclined—the spooky halls of Nevermore Academy. No matter where you're headed, rest assured there are no lines or bumpy airplane rides involved. There's a lot to watch this summer, both on the big and small screen. If the latter is more up your alley, you just might find your next watch among our recommended titles below. And if you're still catching up on this year's TV offerings, check out our picks for the best TV shows of 2025 so far. And Just Like That...'s third season picked up after the emotional season 2 finale, where Carrie hosted a farewell party for her apartment and Aidan announced he wanted to take a five-year break, for family reasons. Showrunner Michael Patrick King promised in Entertainment Weekly to deliver 'new loves, fresh challenges, and surprising reunions,' plus an exciting twist: the return of Carrie's iconic voiceover as she writes a new book. Follow along as she works on her draft—and her romance with Aidan. New episodes arrive weekly on Thursdays on HBO Max through August 14. Watch Now on HBO Max Based on Edith Wharton's (unfinished) novel of the same name, The Buccaneers follows five young American women in the 1870s who set off across the pond to marry into high society Britain. Kristine Frøseth, Alisha Boe, Aubri Ibrag, Josie Totah, Imogen Waterhouse, Mia Threapleton, and Christina Hendricks star. This season, they are joined by Leighton Meester, in a guest role. Another bonus: Season 2's soundtrack includes Chappell Roan, Taylor Swift, Lady Gaga, Sabrina Carpenter, and more. New episodes arrive weekly on Wednesdays on Apple TV+ through August 6. Watch Now on Apple TV+ Sometimes, a teen drama summer drama just does the trick. We Were Liars, based on E. Lockhart's 2014 bestseller, follows a group of elite teenagers who call themselves 'the Liars.' They're the kind of kids who vacation on a friend's private island in New England every summer. But when their ringleader, Cadence Sinclair Eastman, experiences a mysterious accident, everyone's secrets come to the surface. Watch Now on Prime Video After the first season made a splash on Netflix, season 2 of America's Sweethearts once again takes us behind the curtain of the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders franchise, this time focused on tryouts for the 2024-25 season. Meet new stars as they vie for a spot on the iconic squad, dive into the members' personal lives, and follow along as they negotiate for equitable pay. Watch Now on Netflix HBO's The Gilded Age returns for a third season full of even more drama and social intrigue among the elites in 1880s New York. Deadline reports Manhattan's 'society will change drastically' in this installment, and there will be new cast members, including Phylicia Rashad, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Victoria Clark, Dylan Baker, Kate Baldwin, Michael Cumpsty, John Ellison Conlee, Bobby Steggert, and Hannah Shealy. On HBO June 22. After making her debut as Riri Williams in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, Dominique Thorne returns in Ironheart as the young tech genius, who engineers a super suit that could rival Iron Man's. The series is set in Chicago following the events of the film, and finds Riri and her inventions clashing with Parker Robbins, a.k.a. The Hood (Anthony Ramos). On Disney+ June 24. Attention, chefs! Season 4 of FX's The Bear is set to return this year. It will likely tie up loose ends from the season 3 finale, including Sydney's major career decision, and the restaurant's struggle to earn a Michelin star while balancing Carmy's exacting standards. Fans are also expecting to see the outcome of Carmy's unresolved tension with his staff members, the results of The Chicago Tribune's review, and more on Richie's personal growth, Marcus's dessert innovations, and the future of the partnership with Cicero. On FX and Hulu June 25. The final season of Squid Game promises a face-off between Seong Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae) and the enigmatic Front Man (Lee Byung-hun), concluding the high-stakes cliffhangers introduced in season 2. Series creator Hwang Dong-hyuk confirmed the news in a letter per Netflix's Tudum, stating, 'The fierce clash between their two worlds will continue into the series finale.' On Netflix June 27. What if you had to choose your bandmates without ever seeing them? That's the premise of Building the Band, Netflix's new reality competition where connection and chemistry are judged purely by sound—until the big reveal. Hosted by AJ McLean, with Nicole Scherzinger mentoring, and Kelly Rowland and the late Liam Payne joining as guest judges, the show brings together aspiring artists to form the next great pop group. On Netflix July 9. Eight years after the finale of Girls, Lena Dunham is back. Her new series Too Much, stars Meg Stalter (the gem of Hacks) as Jessica, a 30-something New Yorker who just underwent a terrible breakup. She decides to turn the page with a new job in London, where she meets Felix (Will Sharpe), who's equal parts attractive and complicated. The cast also includes Michael Zegan, Janicza Bravo, Richard E. Grant, Adele Exarchopoulos, Rita Wilson, Naomi Watts, Andrew Rannells, Emily Ratajkowski, and more. On Netflix July 10. This adaptation of the third book in Jenny Han's The Summer I Turned Pretty series will see Belly's love triangle with Conrad and Jeremiah finally come to a close as she sorts out her feelings about the brothers and makes her choice. 'I know Jenny is really just strong on staying as true to the books as possible and hitting the main points,' Gavin Casalegno (Jeremiah) told People. Kyra Sedgwick, who played Aunt Julia, won't return, but fans can look forward to new twists inspired by Han's novel. On Prime Video on July 16. We've been blessed with another Sterling K. Brown show. The Paradise and This Is Us star leads this new Hulu series as the titular protagonist, an enslaved boy on a sugar plantation in Barbados, who also happens to be a scientific genius. When a traumatic event sends him on the run, his escape turns into a series of travels around the world. This decades-spanning saga is based on the 2018 book of the same name by Esi Edugyan. On Hulu July 23. Fashion gets competitive again this summer as Project Runway kicks off its 21st season with a fresh cast and some familiar faces. Judges Nina Garcia, Law Roach, and Heidi Klum return to the panel, with Christian Siriano back as a mentor. With sharp critiques, high-stakes challenges, and the kind of runway drama that never goes out of style, this season promises to give us plenty to talk about both on and off the catwalk. On Freeform, Hulu, and Disney+ July 31. If you're waiting to see more Seth Rogen on your screen after The Studio, check out his other Apple TV+ comedy, Platonic, co-starring Rose Byrne. The duo play a pair of best friends who 'contend with new mid-life hurdles including work, weddings and partners in crises' in season 2, according to the streamer. Saturday Night Live alums Aidy Bryant, Kyle Mooney, and Beck Bennett are set to guest-star. On Apple TV+ August 6. Season 2 of Wednesday introduces new characters as Jenna Ortega's titular Addams Family character faces darker challenges at Nevermore. The new cast members include Steve Buscemi, Evie Templeton, Owen Painter, Noah Taylor, and Billie Piper, according to Netflix's Tudum. Showrunners Al Gough and Miles Millar told the site they aimed to 'discover some fresh faces as well as invite some acting legends we've always admired to join Jenna and the gang at Nevermore.' And they did exactly that: 'Mission accomplished,' the duo added. Part 1 on Netflix August 6; part 2 on Netflix September 3. Outlander might be nearing its eighth and final season, but Jamie and Claire's universe only continues to grow. This prequel series dives into the equally romantic love stories of their parents, set in the Scottish Highlands in the 18th century and Britain amid World War I. Prepare to see new faces behind familiar names—hello, young Dougal MacKenzie and Murtagh Fraser. On Starz August 8. Noah Hawley, creator of the Fargo series and Legion, is behind this new chapter of the Alien franchise. It's set in the future—the year 2120, to be exact—when a space research vessel crash-lands onto Earth. Wendy, a 'humanoid robot infused with human consciousness,' according to FX, encounters the crash and finds a grave threat to the planet. On FX and Hulu August 12. Grace Van Patten steps into the role of Amanda Knox in this limited series based on Knox's years-long fight to clear her name. Created by This Is Us writer KJ Steinberg and executive produced in part by Monica Lewinsky and Knox herself, The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox dramatizes the infamous case that began with a study-abroad semester in Italy and spiraled into a global media storm. The result is a psychological drama about protecting one's identity, the search for justice, and who gets to control the narrative. On Hulu August 20.

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