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What to stream: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, 'The Wild Robot' and others

A medical procedural that is mixed with tales of Sherlock Holmes on CBS' "Watson" and Zoë Kravitz's stylish directorial debut "Blink Twice" 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: The animated charmer "The Wild Robot" begins streaming on Peacock, the FBI thriller "The Night Agent" returns for more adventures and recent Grammy-nominee Jordan Adetunji has a new mixtape, "A Jaguar's Dream"

NEW MOVIES TO STREAM JAN. 20-26

— The animated charmer "The Wild Robot" begins streaming on Peacock on Jan. 24. Writer-director Chris Sanders adapted Peter Brown's middle grade novel about a smart robot (voiced by Lupita Nyong'o) who gets stranded in the wild, and becomes caretaker for a young gosling. In his review for the Associated Press, critic Mark Kennedy wrote that it is an "absolute movie triumph, a soulful sweet-sad animated journey that may have your kids asking why you're tearing up so much." He also noted the striking visuals, "a textured world that is almost painterly. You can see snowflakes settle on mottled fur, moss on rocks, individual leaves in a den." It's a shoo-in for an Oscar nomination.

— Zoë Kravitz's directorial debut "Blink Twice" will be free for Prime Video subscribers starting Jan. 21. Channing Tatum plays a tech mogul who flies cocktail waitress Friday (Naomi Ackie) out to a private island where strange things start happening. The AP's Jocelyn Noveck called it a "stylish, ambitious, buzzy film that seems to aspire to be a gender-themed 'Get Out,' or a #MeToo-era thriller with echoes of 'Promising Young Woman.'" Kravitz, she added, "almost pulls it off."

— Julia Louis-Dreyfus plays a New York writer who accidentally overhears her loving husband's (Tobias Menzies) brutally honest assessment of her new book in "You Hurt My Feelings," which comes to Netflix on Jan. 26. It's one of several comedic dramas that play out in the film, written and directed by Nicole Holofcener, which co-stars Michaela Watkins as her sister, Jeannie Berlin as her mother and Arian Moayed of "Succession" as her brother-in-law. In his review, AP Film Writer Jake Coyle wrote that, "for Holofcener, something as commonplace as little white lies between a married couple is just as fertile territory as, say, time travel is to Christopher Nolan. To her, such a minefield of insecurity is a playground. And in "You Hurt My Feelings," it's glorious — albeit in a profoundly awkward way that can be mortifying — to watch her at play."

Source: Associated Press


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