![]() Journalist Taffy Brodesser-Akner broke into fiction in a big way with this 2019 novel about a doctor attempting to care for his kids - and confront what happened to his marriage - after his ex-wife disappears. Watch on Netflix here.įleishman is in Trouble (Hulu, November 17) Here’s what we know: it concerns immigrants on a steamship coming to America - or at least attempting to. So it makes sense that they’d keep the details of this follow-up under wraps. German creators Jantje Friese and Baran bo Odar’s previous TV collaboration, Dark, became a sleeper hit in part because of its intriguing mysteries. Related: How to Watch Yellowstone Online Free Stallone stars as Dwight “The General” Manfredi, a mafia boss whose reward after serving 25 years in prison isn’t as plum as he’d hoped: he’s charged with expanding the organization’s criminal empire into Tulsa. None of that core crew is a stranger to tales of crime and tough guys and the series looks to play into those skills. Sylvester Stallone makes his starring TV debut in a series co-created by Taylor Sheridan ( Yellowstone) and Terrence Winter ( Boardwalk Empire). Jacob Tremblay voices Elmer Elevator, a boy who forms an unusual relationship with a dragon named Boris (Galen Matarazzo). The latest from Ireland’s Cartoon Saloon studio, the animators behind Wolfwalkers, The Secret of Kells and other acclaimed films, adapts a classic 1948 fantasy novel from Ruth Stiles Gannett. My Father’s Dragon (Netflix, November 11) Jackson, Glynn Turman, Billy Dee Williams and others critic Elvis Mitchell dives deep into the Black filmmaking, and Black representation, in the 1970s in this decade-spanning documentary. With some help from Harry Belafonte, Whoopi Goldberg, Samuel L. Is That Black Enough For You?!? (Netflix, November 11) Steven Spielberg’s latest delves into the director’s own origins via the story of a movie-mad kid (played at different ages by Mateo Zoryon Francis-DeFord and Gabrel LaBelle) coming of age in post-War America as the bonds between his parents (Michelle Williams and Paul Dano) start to fray. Fittingly, this follow-up makes the loss of T’Challa central to its story as Wakanda struggles to move forward after the death of their beloved leader. The death of Chadwick Boseman threw plans for a Black Panther sequel into chaos, forcing writer/director Ryan Coogler to throw out the film he planned to make. ( Bardo will also be hitting Netflix next month.)īlack Panther: Wakanda Forever (Theaters, November 11) ![]() Running 174 minutes it’s reportedly as visually ambitious as any film in the Iñárritu filmography. The latest from the director of Birdman and The Revenant concerns Silverio (Daniel Giménez Cacho), a Mexican journalist who returns to his homeland after spending years away in Los Angeles and finds himself in the middle of an identity crisis. We’ll start there.īardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths (Theaters, November 4)Īlejandro González Iñárritu doesn’t go small no matter how intimate the story he’s telling. Meanwhile, theaters are starting to fill up with awards-season movies, including new efforts by Steven Spielberg, Luca Guadagnino, and an auteur known for big gestures. On the TV front, the month sees the return of some old favorites like Apple TV+’s Mythic Quest and Netflix’s The Crown and some intriguing new shows, including a big movie star’s first venture into the medium. November is traditionally when things cool down outside but heat up when it comes to movies and television and 2022 is no exception. If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission.
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