Streaming on a screen near you this week: what Ellen DeGeneres says is her last comedy special landed on Netflix, and George Clooney and Brad Pitt star in a sleek New York City caper. Also among the streaming offerings worth your time include two Ryan Murphy series — “Grotesquerie” on FX and the ABC medical drama “Doctor Odyssey” — and nearly 40 years after the debut of The Legend of Zelda, Nintendo is finally making the title character the star of her own game.
MOVIES TO STREAM
Hard as this may be to believe, George Clooney and Brad Pitt are good together. Yes, stop the presses and all that. But it’s been a while since Clooney and Pitt, who first teamed up for “Ocean’s 11,” had a movie built around their easy charisma. “Wolfs,” streaming Friday on Apple TV+, corrects that with a sleek New York caper about two fixers hired for the same clean‑up job.
Some Pixar fans have quibbled when the digital animation studio has leaned too hard into sequels. But the “Inside Out 2” box office is hard to refute. It’s the year’s biggest box-office hit, with nearly $1.7 billion in ticket sales. On Wednesday, “Inside Out 2” arrived on Disney+ to make one of the most anticipated streaming debuts of the year. In it, Riley has grown up a couple of years but entered a new chapter in life: puberty, bringing with it several new emotions.
Will Ferrell and Harper Steele became friends and collaborators at “Saturday Night Live,” where Steele was head writer from 2004 to 2008. When Steele came out as transgender a few years ago, Ferrell, interested in reconnecting, proposed a road trip. In “Will & Harper,” streaming Friday on Netflix, the two embark on a cross-country expedition full of revelations about what this changes and doesn’t change in their relationship.
MUSIC TO STREAM
Serj Tankian, frontman of the Grammy-award-winning Armenian-American nu-metal band System of a Down, will release a short solo EP, “Foundations,” on Friday. The release maintains his band’s abrasion but experiments with different forms of audial rebellion. For example, the single “A.F. Day” is a kind of psychedelic-punk treatise on the absurdity of everyday mundanity. And it sounds explosive.
Nothing is predictable about the band Being Dead’s sophomore album, “EELS,” produced by Grammy-award winner John Congleton. Across 16 tracks that move from asymmetrical egg punk, Devo-worship, a recording of a bus driver who has had enough timeless, near-psychedelic harmonies and various other oddball sensibilities that make them the best college radio rock band in recent history — Being Dead’s organized chaos is future-seeking and familiar all at once.
SHOWS TO STREAM
Ellen DeGeneres says her next comedy special on Netflix will be her last. “For Your Approval” dropped Sept. 24, and the comedian “goes there” by addressing reports that she was difficult to deal with behind the scenes of her daytime talk show, which ended its run in 2022 after 19 seasons. “I got kicked out of show business,” she says in the trailer.
Ryan Murphy’s new series on FX, “Grotesquerie,” premiered on Wednesday. Niecy Nash stars as a detective who agrees to help a nun and reporter (Micaela Diamond) with a Catholic newspaper investigate a series of gruesome murders. Super Bowl-winning Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (otherwise known as Taylor Swift’s boyfriend) has a secret role in the show.
If “Grotesquerie” isn’t your bag, another Ryan Murphy series is making its debut this week. A medical drama called “Doctor Odyssey” premieres Thursday on ABC. Joshua Jackson plays a doctor on board a luxury cruise ship called the Odyssey. Don Johnson, Philippa Soo and Sean Teale are also stars. The show also boasts several guest stars, including John Stamos, Kelsea Ballerini, Shania Twain and Chord Overstreet. A trailer for the show had nearly 78 million views within 48 hours, making it the most‑watched trailer for a new broadcast TV show. Episodes also stream on Hulu.
One might assume a TV show called “Colin from Accounts” takes place in an office setting. Instead, it’s a modern-day romantic comedy made in Australia. It’s created by and co-stars real-life husband and wife Harriet Dyer and Patrick Brammel, who play two people brought together by an injured dog named Colin — all eight episodes of season two debut Thursday on Paramount+.
The Walking Dead characters Daryl and Carol (played by Norman Reedus and Melissa McBride) are one of the most popular platonic pairings on television. The two unlikely friends bond over similar pasts and share a deep trust. They next co-star in “The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon — The Book of Carol.” It premieres Sunday on AMC and AMC+.
Zachry Quinto is back on TV in a medical drama. But he’s not portraying any dour, by‑the‑rules doctor — he’s playing Dr. Oliver Sacks, the famed neurologist, path-breaking researcher and author once called the “poet laureate of medicine.” NBC’s “Brilliant Minds” takes Sack’s personality — a motorcycle-riding, fern-loving doctor who died in 2015 at 82 — and puts his career in the present day, where the creators theorize he would have no idea who Taylor Swift is or own a cell phone.
VIDEO GAMES TO PLAY
Nearly 40 years after the debut of The Legend of Zelda, Nintendo is finally making the title character the star of her own game. As The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom begins, Link — our usual hero — has vanished, so it’s off to the rescue for Princess Z. She’s hardly a damsel in distress, armed with a “Tri Rod” that lets her duplicate objects she finds outside her castle. She can even make copies of monsters and have them fight on her side. The magical staff gives Zelda the improvisational skills that made last year’s Tears of the Kingdom a smash, while the top-down dungeon exploration will remind old-school fans of early games in the franchise. The Echoes begin reverberating Thursday on Switch.