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What to Watch on TV and at the Movies This Week

See ‘Matlock,’ ‘The Voice,’ ‘Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story’ and more


spinner image Kathy Bates smiles while entering through a courtroom door in the CBS series Matlock
Kathy Bates stars in "Matlock."
Courtesy Paramount

What’s on this week? Whether it’s what’s on cable, streaming on Prime Video or Netflix, or opening at your local movie theater, we’ve got your must-watch list. Start with TV and scroll down for movies. It’s all right here.

On TV this week …

The Golden Bachelorette (ABC, Hulu)

The first-ever Golden Bachelorette, Joan Vassos, 61, sizes up 24 men to find out who’s the prize. Stay tuned to aarp.org/entertainment to see how she’s doing — and if you agree with her choices.

Watch it: The Golden Bachelorette, Sept. 19 on Hulu (new episodes Wednesdays on ABC, Thursdays on Hulu)

Don’t miss this: Get to Know ‘The Golden Bachelorette’ Star Joan Vassos (AARP interview with video)

And don’t miss this: Meet the 24 Men Who Will Court ‘The Golden Bachelorette’

The Penguin (HBO)

Tune in to figure out how in the world Irish hunk Colin Farrell (reprising his role from the 2022 film The Batman) could possibly play this iconic scary-looking DC Universe villain. Then stay for eight episodes of a darkly absorbing story about one of the most fascinating bad guys in one of the best franchises in comic book history. The Thursday night premiere will repeat over the weekend, then settle into Sunday night drops.

Watch it: The Penguin, Sept. 19 on HBO

His Three Daughters (Netflix)

After a string of poor showings at the Oscars, Netflix hasn’t thrown in the towel (yet) on awards-bait movies. This prestige drama from writer-director Azazel Jacobs, 52, finds costars Elizabeth Olsen, Carrie Coon and Natasha Lyonne as estranged sisters forced to reunite to look after their dying father (Jay O. Sanders, 71) — and possibly bury a lifetime’s worth of hatchets. With a near-perfect 99 percent critics’ rating on Rotten Tomatoes, it’s a good bet for Oscar consideration.

Watch it: His Three Daughters, Sept. 20 on Netflix

Matlock (CBS)

Who could possibly top Andy Griffith from the 1980s, playing the folksy, cantankerous old attorney people underestimate at their peril? Oscar and Emmy winner Kathy Bates, 76.

Watch it: Matlock, Sept. 22, 8 p.m. ET on CBS

Don’t miss this: AARP’s Favorite Network Shows of 2024 (So Far) in AARP Members Edition

The Voice (NBC)

Coaches Reba McEntire, 69, Gwen Stefani, 54, Snoop Dogg, 52, and Michael Bublé bring you the best singers you haven’t heard of — yet.

Watch it: The Voice, Sept. 23, 8 p.m. ET on NBC

Brilliant Minds (NBC)

Zachary Quinto stars as neurologist Oliver Wolf (inspired by the actual doctor Oliver Sacks, played by Robin Williams in Awakenings), who helps his patients while coping with his own extraordinary eccentricities.

Watch it: Brilliant Minds, Sept. 23, 10 p.m. ET on NBC

Grostesquerie (FX)

Niecy Nash-Betts, 54, who stole the show in Dahmer — Monster, plays a detective in a small town beset by scary crimes in a new horror series from Ryan Murphy, 58, with Courtney B. Vance, 64, as her hospitalized husband.

Watch it: Grotesquerie, Sept. 25 on FX

Your Netflix Watch of the Week is here!

Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story (Netflix)

When brothers Lyle Menendez, 56, and Erik, 53, were sent to prison for killing their parents, Jose and Kitty, in 1989, few bought their defense that they feared their record-exec dad’s abuse. But now there’s evidence supporting their case, and a member of Jose’s boy band Menudo accused him of rape. Chloë Sevigny (50 on Nov. 18) and Javier Bardem, 55, play the doomed parents in a surefire Ryan Murphy true-crime hit, with Nathan Lane, 68, as crime journalist Dominick Dunne covering the case.

Watch it: Monsters, Sept. 19 on Netflix

Don’t miss this: The Best Movies on Netflix Right Now

And don’t miss this: The 15 Best Things Coming to Netflix in September

Your Prime Video Watch of the Week is here!

A Very Royal Scandal

Michael Sheen, 55, stars as scandal-plagued Prince Andrew, who agrees to a TV interview with journalist Emily Maitlis (Ruth Wilson) that he hopes will burnish his reputation. Instead, it sinks him further into the royal doghouse. (For another dramatization, try Netflix’s 2024 Scoop, with Rufus Sewell, 56, as the prince and Gillian Anderson, 56, as Maitlis).

Watch it: A Very Royal Scandal, Sept. 19 on Prime Video

Don’t miss this: The 11 Best Things Coming to Prime Video in September

And don’t miss this: AARP’s Favorite Streaming Shows of 2024 (So Far), in AARP Members Edition

New at the movies …

⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ The Substance, R

In a year of major comebacks for actresses over 50, the biggest may be Demi Moore, 61. The one-time Ghost romantic lead slays as an over-the-hill Hollywood star who hosts a bouncy exercise show recalling that of Jane Fonda, 86. Frustrated by her waning power and dismissed by her ageist boss (an exaggerated Dennis Quaid, 70), the desperate thespian becomes vulnerable to an offer for “the substance.” This mysterious fictional chemical treatment splits her into her young, supple, gorgeous self (played by Margaret Qualley) every other week. What could go wrong? With this cross between David Cronenberg body horror and Sunset Boulevard, Moore inserts herself into the Oscar conversation, giving a performance that is both literally naked and operatically dark. —Thelma M. Adams (T.M.A.)

Watch it: The Substance, Sept. 20 in theaters​

⭐⭐⭐☆☆ Wolfs, R

The good news is that even though Brad Pitt, 60, and gorgeously graying George Clooney, 63, spend some of Wolfs zinging each other about their ages, the two still look every inch the global superstars in their matching black leather jackets. They need them during the course of a snowy Manhattan night that goes wrong when Pitt is mistakenly called to a hotel room to dispose of a corpse where Clooney, who's in the same “fixer” or “cleanup” trade, is already on the job. These lone “wolfs” — get it? — are forced, buddy-cop style, to work together in a convoluted story involving a local DA, a young man (Austin Abrams with the freshest monologue in the film), and Albanian and Croatian drug kingpins. Also showcased are Clooney’s considerable driving skills during a chase sequence near the Brooklyn Bridge. Pitt and Clooney haven’t worked together since they made the last of the Ocean's trilogy in 2007. This doesn't come close to equaling those films, but it's a nice return to form. —Dana Kennedy (D.K.)

Watch it: Wolfs, Sept. 20 in theaters, Sept. 27 on Apple TV+

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story, PG-13

Yes, it’s the story of Reeve’s career, from stardom as a movie Superman to the horse-riding accident that left him with quadriplegia. But the documentary wouldn’t have a 100 percent Rotten Tomatoes score if it weren’t more than that familiar saga. Through gripping, sometimes funny, often heartrending interviews and clips, it plunges you into his emotional life story. Reeve, his kids, the two mothers of his kids and his closest A-list friends tell how Reeve’s high-IQ dad coldly rejected him and how the actor triumphed over the bitter legacy of his multiply broken early family, at last creating a warm, unified one. Astoundingly, paralysis turned Reeve from a frenetic, ambitious, self-absorbed life to one focused on his loved ones. He made movie history and revolutionized disability activism, but his ultimate triumph was personal, in his own home. This is a superb work of cinematic art about a man who responded to tragedy by making himself into a hero for real. —Tim Appelo (T.A.)

Watch it: Super/Man, in limited theaters Sept. 21 and Sept. 25

Also catch up with …

​Tulsa King, Season 2 (Paramount+)​

Dwight “The General” Manfredi (Sylvester Stallone, 78) is out of the hoosegow and back in the gambling and pot business, but now he’s got rivals muscling in on his turf: A-list tough guys Neal McDonough, 58 (who played an unforgettable psycho criminal in Justified), and Frank Grillo, 59 (Gangster Squad). In the new season by showrunner Terence Winter, 63 (The Sopranos, Boardwalk Empire), Dwight faces an even tougher challenge: repairing his relationships with his daughter, sister and grandkids. Plus, rich horse ranch owner Margaret Devereaux (Dana Delany, 68, China Beach) just might want to lasso his heart.​

Watch it: Tulsa King on Paramount+

Note: Paramount+ provides a discount to AARP members and pays AARP a royalty for the use of its intellectual property

⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ My Old Ass, R (Prime Video)

While tripping on mushrooms, a teenager (Nashville alum Maisy Stella) encounters her future thirtysomething self, played by master of deadpan Aubrey Plaza. But will she heed the hindsight-fueled advice of her middle-aged mentor — especially when she meets the hunky older guy she’s been told will ruin her life? And does she have a big lesson to teach her older self, too? The film won raves at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, and its finale is more romantic than any rom-com of the year.

Watch it: My Old Ass, in theaters now, Sept. 27 on Prime Video

⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, PG-13

The sequel doesn’t quite pack the exhilarating punch of the 1988 original, and the plot is scattershot even by director Tim Burton’s standards. But he hasn’t lost his gloriously ghastly/silly visual imagination, his love of film homages (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Trainspotting, 1960s Italian horror flicks) and his bubbly sense of humor. Michael Keaton, 73, is still aces as the cartoonish titular demon pursuing the same goth girl (Winona Ryder, 52) for a marriage that’s his ticket out of the afterlife. Lydia’s now a grownup with a daughter (Jenna Ortega) in a similar predicament. And Catherine O’Hara, 70, remains inimitably narcissistic as Lydia’s appalling artist mom. Monica Bellucci, 59, is lively as a dismembered cadaver who staples together her hacked-up parts, sucks out people’s souls and wants to marry Beetlejuice. There’s a climactic wedding-day scene in which everybody lip-syncs to “MacArthur Park,” the grandiose 1968 tune, which makes more sense than people realize (its composer really saw a cake melting in the rain in that park by his ex’s office, and to him, it symbolized his lost wedding plans). But the song is way more fun as a senseless send-up in a Beetlejuice movie. —T.A.

Watch it: Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, in theaters

Don’t miss this: Test Your Knowledge in AARP’s ‘Beetlejuice’ Trivia Quiz

Rebel Ridge (Netflix)

The only thing that may be better than a dirty-cop movie is a dirty-cop movie starring a sinister Don Johnson, 74. The Underground Railroad’s Aaron Pierre plays a Black former Marine who travels to a small, largely white town to bail his cousin out of jail and stumbles on to a conspiracy involving the police. Directed by Jeremy Saulnier (2015’s tense and taut Green Room), Rebel Ridge is an extremely interesting late-night thriller.

Watch it: Rebel Ridge on Netflix

Don't miss this: Don Johnson Tells AARP He Will Never Retire: ‘I’m Getting Better!’ in AARP Members Edition

⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ Look Into My Eyes, R

Lana Wilson’s film about a handful of NYC seers will probably not change your preexisting opinions about psychics’ ability to converse with the dead. Proof isn’t the filmmaker’s intention in this absorbing, straightforward and occasionally spine-tingling documentary. The camera largely is a silent witness to interactions between professionals and their varied clientele. The audience accesses the private sessions between seekers of answers to their lives’ problems, contact with their late loved ones or clues to future prosperity and romance. In some sessions, it appears the clairvoyant is asking 20 questions, then extrapolating from knowledge divulged by the subject. Sometimes it’s a method close to therapy by which the intuitive opens a portal to knowledge the seekers wouldn’t otherwise have, revealing secrets and voices from beyond the veil that crack open the client. The emotional connections are frequently profound, intimate and, like the film itself, compelling. —T.M.A.

Watch it: Look Into My Eyes, in theaters

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The Idea of You (Prime Video)

The best (and best reviewed) 2024 movie on Prime Video this week is this rom-com about a midlife single mom (Anne Hathaway) who has a whirlwind romance with the 24-year-old superstar lead singer of the hottest boy band on the planet. The film’s popularity inspired AARP’s number 1 hit watch list: 12 Classic Older Woman-Younger Man Movies to Watch After Anne Hathaway’s ‘The Idea of You.’

Watch it: The Idea of You on Prime Video

⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ Between the Temples, R

Like a ’70s flashback, this funky, funny-sad, character-driven drama about two iconoclasts in awkward love recalls — but doesn’t imitate — 1971’s Harold and Maude. Ben (an appealing Jason Schwartzman with a full-on emotional arc) is a cantor in spiritual crisis who loses his singing voice. Carla (Carol Kane, 72) is Ben’s grade-school music teacher who approaches her former student to guide her as an adult Bat Mitzvah student. Kane — warm, witty and vulnerable — deserves to be a long-shot Best Actress nominee after a lifetime of unique and original performances, from her Oscar-nominated breakout in Crossing Delancey to her recent stint as a long-lived alien on Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. Both stars — romantic leads with character actor cred — have the power to be funny and heartbreaking simultaneously, and their unique chemistry drives the film’s craziness and humanity. —T.M.A.

Watch it: Between the Temples, in theaters

Don't miss this: Carol Kane on her movie comeback at 72: ‘I'm having a ball!’

⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ Alien: Romulus, R

If you’re fretful about our Boeing Starliner’s NASA astronauts and their difficult commute, Alien: Romulus won’t help. Another episode in the “Alien-thology” launched by Ridley Scott, 86, puts audiences at an abandoned space station in the fictional time line between Alien (1979) and Aliens (1986). Enter a team of raggedy young colonizers seeking cryogenic sleep pods to escape their dreary mining planet. The gang includes Priscilla breakout Cailee Spaeny, her dedicated android (David Jonsson) and a precariously pregnant space colonist (Isabela Merced). The team begins to disappear spectacularly by ones and twos as they encounter our old goopy, acidic, spiky-toothed alien on the not-quite-as-abandoned-as-we’d-hoped outpost. Expect jump shocks and armrest clutching, and the gnarliest alien expensive CGI can offer, in this visually stunning match made for IMAX, regular theaters and communal screams. —T.M.A.

Watch it: Alien: Romulus, in theaters

Bad Monkey (Apple TV+)

Journalist Carl Hiaasen wrote a very funny 2013 Florida novel about rogue detective Andrew Yancy (Vince Vaughn, 54), his gay partner, his fugitive friend with benefits (on the run from her affair with a student) and his absolutely irritating neighbor trying to sell the neon yellow McMansion eyesore that ruins Yancy’s view. When a honeymooning fisherman hooks a human arm, it sets Yancy on a circuitous journey to discover the appendage’s owner, dead or alive. As the corpses start piling up, the hairy find leads to a far-fetched murder mystery created by Ted Lasso’s Bill Lawrence, 55, that starts with a “who was he?” and ends 10 episodes later with a hilariously convoluted plot involving none other than a diaper-wearing monkey.

Watch it: Bad Monkey on Apple TV+

⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ It Ends with Us, PG-13

Even if you’re not among the 20 million readers of Colleen Hoover’s fiction, you may fall for the movie adaptation of her novel about flower-shop owner Lily Blossom Bloom (Blake Lively) and her quest for love in a world lit up and shadowed by highly attractive, sometimes frighteningly morally ambiguous men. It sounds unpromising, but mostly it’s a gas, a rom-com with way more heart than most, and an important topic (domestic violence) handled a bit clunkily, but it makes you care about the heroine’s plight and delights. Gossip Girl's Lively is utterly adorable and convincing as Lily and Jenny Slate (Marcel the Shell With Shoes On) is aces as her shop employee/best friend. Lily’s opening meet cute scene with a hunky neurosurgeon (Justin Baldoni, who also directs) is wittily flirty. Her love interests (Baldoni and Alex Neustaedter) are two-dimensional but serviceable. The frothy romance comedy lands better than the dark parts about men’s scary tempers, but on the whole, it’s one of the year’s more satisfying films. —T.A.

Watch it: It Ends with Us, in theaters

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Good One, R

The terrific, deceptively simple, warm-hearted indie that played well at Sundance and Cannes follows two middle-aged best friends, the controlling Chris (James LeGros, 62) and doofus Matt (Danny McCarthy). They’re taking their recent high-school grads on a Catskill camping trip. Before the journey begins, Matt’s son bails during a father-son snit, casting a shadow from the drop. Now, carrying the burden of both kids, the watchful 17-year-old Sam (a knockout Lily Collias) is getting one last mountain trek with the old dudes, unbuffered, before she heads to college. The trio encounter bears, drink beers and pitch tents, as Sam’s levelheaded Gen Z camper observes nature and the follies of Gen X. The dads, egos flaring, are floating through life untethered, relationships adrift. They’re lost in the adult woods. By the time the campers return to the family car, it’s refreshingly clear to Sam, and the audience, that the teen has the sense of direction and self-awareness the men lack — and the restraint to keep her insights to herself. —T.M.A.

Watch it: Good One, in theaters

⭐⭐⭐☆☆ The Fabulous Four, R 

Bette Midler! Sheryl Lee Ralph! Susan Sarandon! Megan Mullally! What a quartet of fabulous entertainers over 50. In a fluffy plot, they play friends and frenemies at a Key West destination wedding that reunites bride-to-be Marilyn (Midler, 78), estranged doctor Lou (Sarandon, 77), weed-growing granny Kitty (Ralph, 67) and rocker Alice (Mullally, 65). Drugs will be consumed, festering secrets will surface, and men will strip. Meanwhile, the women encounter yummy silver foxes (Bruce Greenwood, 67, Timothy V. Murphy, 64) looking for love. With a wacky climax at Ernest Hemingway’s house, and an off-the-rails wedding ceremony, the movie doesn’t give the fabulous stars quite the vehicle their talents deserve. But we’re happy to see them gathered together, knowing the fab four could run circles around the premise if given half a chance. —T.M.A.

Watch it: The Fabulous Four on demand

Don’t miss this: Star Talk: Susan Sarandon and Sheryl Lee Ralph talk about The Fabulous Four (with video) on AARP Members Edition

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Sing Sing, R

The spark in this drama based on a true story set in Ossining, New York’s Sing Sing Correctional Facility — home of the electric chair dubbed “Old Sparky” — is the power of theater to liberate inmates, even a lifer. Charismatic Oscar nominee Colman Domingo, 54 (Rustin), is achingly good as Divine G, a model prisoner, insistent on his innocence, who drives a volunteer theater group. It’s a chit of good behavior on his epic legal journey to win parole. With a layered performance, graceful, compassionate and angry, he finds a form of release within the reality of his confinement. The movie fuses the inherent conflicts of felons coexisting in a ratty prison with a priceless view of the Hudson River, and the dramatic conflicts they plumb while digging into theatrical roles, including Shakespeare’s ever-relevant Hamlet. Bravo! —T.M.A.

Watch it: Sing Sing, in theaters

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The Bikeriders, R

Tom Hardy, Jodie Comer and Austin Butler could be cast in anything and sizzle. But, dressed in black leather, the trio delivers the most explosive, immersive motorcycle movie in years. Even while the engines roar, the complex characters evolve and explode, never easing off the gas. This fictional drama about the birth of the Vandals, inspired by a 1968 photo essay book about a Midwestern gang, foregrounds family man Johnny (Hardy) as the leader of the pack, and Benny (Butler) as the wild one. Comer’s Kathy narrates as a housewife who falls hard for Benny and surrenders the straight and narrow. All three confront challenges when what began in the ’60s as a beer-drinking local club faces a cultural sea change. As the bikers expand nationally, hard drugs and dealing become part of the action, and knives are exchanged for guns. Authentic, exciting and swift, The Bikeriders digs deep into a freedom-seeking American subculture, a cool companion piece to Easy Rider (which celebrates its 55th anniversary this year). —T.M.A.

Watch it: The Bikeriders on demand

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Thelma, PG-13

Seeking a 94-year-old superhero? Look no further than Los Angeleno Thelma Post (Oscar nominee June Squibb, 94). The widow may be one fall away from assisted living and boggled by all things computer, but when phone scammers weasel her out of $10,000, Thelma is not going to take it sitting down quietly doing needlepoint. Aided by her devoted but anxious grandson (a relatable Fred Hechinger), a determined Thelma pinches an electric scooter from an old friend (the dashing Richard Roundtree in his final role) and follows the clues to reclaim her bucks — and her dignity. The Sundance hit and audience award winner at the Provincetown Film Festival delivers delightful character-driven action and laughs, led by an irresistible Squibb. With Thelma, the lively actor on the verge of another Oscar nomination, has been liberated to be a leading lady for once in a 40-year career. The thieves may have grabbed this grandma’s stash, but Thelma steals the audience’s hearts. —T.M.A.

Watch it: Thelma, in theaters now and streaming

Don’t miss this: June Squibb lands her first lead movie role in Thelma, in AARP Members Edition​​​​

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