Reservation Dogs to Faraway Downs: the six best shows to stream this week

Publish date: 2024-07-31
The seven best shows to stream this weekTelevision & radio

The inspired comedy returns for its final season, while Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman are back in Baz Luhrmann’s Australia. Plus: the return of Slow Horses!

Pick of the week

Reservation Dogs

As we left the Rez Dogs, they’d made it to California and were metaphorically laying Daniel to rest on a beach. The final season of Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi’s inspired comedy sees the Dogs now looking for sustainable futures. Some of them are ready to accept that Oklahoma is where they belong. Elora is talking about college. Willie Jack is considering a career in (traditional) medicine. In short, they’re facing up to adulthood. This is a melancholy moment for any teenage waster but Reservation Dogs handles these transitions elegantly, interweaving the show’s serious considerations of Native American displacement and cultural identity into the usual endearing comedy.
Disney+, from Wednesday 29 November

The Doll Factory

Gothic Victoriana … Mirren Mack and Esmé Creed-Miles in the Doll Factory. Photograph: Buccaneer TV

This adaptation of Elizabeth Macneal’s novel is a tale of obsession and transgression in Victorian London. Iris works with her sullen sister Rose in a doll factory, but dreams of being an artist. When she catches the eye of a glamorous member of the pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Louis, her dreams seem within reach. But their relationship spirals into unhealthy realms. Is Iris Louis’s muse? Or is she being manipulated? As themes of identity loss unfurl, the story’s milieu – the doll shop, art galleries – feels a little contrived. But it’s an enjoyable, if slightly self-conscious, slice of gothic period melodrama.
Paramount+, from Monday 27 November

Faraway Downs

A blend of cheese and earnestness … Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman in Faraway Downs. Photograph: Disney

The consensus on Baz Luhrmann’s 2008 film Australia: too long and too melodramatic. Luhrmann has returned to the story for this series and doubled down on its original issues – clocking in at more than four hours and reprising the film’s blend of cheese and earnestness. Once again, Lady Sarah Ashley (Nicole Kidman) is forced into a relationship of convenience with Hugh Jackman’s nameless drover as she tries to sell the titular cattle ranch. And once again, their story is told through the eyes of young Indigenous Australian Nullah (Brandon Walters).
Disney+, from Sunday 26 November

Obliterated

Like the Hangover, but with millions of lives at stake … Kimi Rutledge as Maya Lerner in Obliterated. Photograph: Ursula Coyote/Netflix

An amusing premise for a comedy-drama in which the cliches of special ops thrillers are subverted by booze and drugs. When terrorists threaten to nuke Las Vegas, a team of soldiers and bomb disposal experts are assembled to stop them. They make light work of their task, and then the fun begins. In the middle of a days-long bender, the group receive a message: the bomb they deactivated was a decoy. They’re going to have to start again. It’s silly and funny, the Hangover with millions of lives at stake. Nick Zano and Shelley Hennig star.
Netflix, from Thursday 30 November

Slow Horses

Lucky me … Gary Oldman as Jackson Lamb Slow Horses. Photograph: Jack English/Apple

First things first: Gary Oldman’s Jackson Lamb hasn’t cleaned up his act. If anything, as season three of this funny, smart spy drama arrives, he’s more raddled than ever. In other news, Kristin Scott-Thomas’s Diana Taverner is back (“I still have oversight of the Slow Horses,” she deadpans. “Lucky me”). Another big problem has found its way into the inbox of the wastrel agents as a romantic liaison threatens the future of MI5. But the real fun is to be had in the performances and dialogue: everyone involved clearly cherishes their involvement in this tone-perfect show.
Apple TV+, from Friday 1 December

Live at the Queer Comedy Club

An institution … (from left) Christopher Hall, David Ian and Su Mi Live at the Queer Comedy Club. Photograph: Steve Ullathorne/Froot TV

The Queer Comedy Club in London’s Archway has gradually become an institution in the capital’s LGBTQ+ scene. This series filmed at the venue showcases a host of its most established acts and offers exposure to some promising up-and-coming performers. Co-founders of the club David Ian, Kate Dale and Jeremy Topp feature prominently, of course. But also look out for the musical comedy of Ben Pollard, transgender comic, actor and playwright Dian Cathal and TikTok and Edinburgh fringe sensation Christopher Hall.
Froot TV, from Friday 1 December

This article was amended on 11 December 2023 to remove a section on the season of American Horror Stories that started on 29 November, because it inaccurately related to different seasons of the show.

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