Apple TV+’s workplace sitcom has an impressive ensemble—and thankfully, they’re all back for season two. , Michaela Jaé Rodriguez, Nat Faxon, Ron Funches, and Joel Kim Booster return for goofy shenanigans at the Wells Foundation. After her divorce from an affluent douchebag, Molly Novak (Rudolph) inherits $87 billion and a midlife crisis. So she starts going to the office of a non-profit she started and unexpectedly forms a tight-knit friendship with her colleagues. Look out for ’s review on Monday. is going from to a fictional serial killer with his new TV project. He stars in the ’60s-set show, based on Patricia Highsmith’s acclaimed novel, as Tom Ripley, a grifter hired by a wealthy man to go to
Italy and bring his unruly son back home. Accepting the
Job leads him to a life of fraud and murder. Johnny Flynn, Dakota Fanning, John Malkovich, and Eliot Summer co-star, and the psychological thriller is helmed by ’s Steven Zallian. ’s review of the series publishes this week. Based on a
British drama called , features doing what he does best—that is, playing a badass character. Here, he tackles a man who gave up his life of crime decades ago, but after his son is violently killed, he’s pulled back into a world he left behind for revenge. : does have a couple things going for it to raise the stakes beyond a thinking dad’s March Madness cooldown show though. The first is the setting of New Orleans herself, a backdrop that’s as sensual as it is languid, as friendly as it is menacing, and as good-timey as it is back-alley. In his directorial debut, Rudy Mancuso stars in the rom-com , which also features Camila Mendes and J.B. Smoove. He plays Rudy, a man plagued with
music in his head as he navigates love, work, and Brazilian culture while living in Newark, New Jersey. We’re never getting rid of , especially not after the “ ” saga. So Hulu is jumping into the game with a reality series spinoff called , which takes place in Chateau Rosabelle, a French estate where Lisa Vanderpump’s hand-picked staff “ .” has covered multiple cases in the U.S., and now the Joe Berlinger-developed true-crime docuseries moves to
Germany for . The three episodes focus on
Berlin, which became a hunting ground for a notorious murderer who stalked the queer community in 2012, sending shockwaves through city’s party scene.