New this week: 'Lost Daughter,' NYE in Nashville, Boba Fett
Christmas may be over, but a feast of movies and television shows arrive next week

Hereās a collection curated by The Associated Pressā entertainment journalists of whatās arriving on TV, streaming services and music platforms this week.
MOVIES
Maggie Gyllenhaalās feature directing debut, āThe Lost Daughter,ā scintillatingly adapts the 2008 Elena Ferrante novel about maternal ambivalence and a holiday in Greece The film, which begins streaming Friday on Netflix, stars Olivia Colman as a vacationing professor whose interactions with a boisterous, distracting clan (including a young mother in their midst played by Dakota Johnson), recall her own parenting history, seen in flashbacks with Jessie Buckley. āThe Lost Daughter" cleaned up last month at the Gotham Awards, which honor independent film, and topped AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr's best-of list for 2021. In her review, the AP's Jocelyn Noveck praised Colman's āblazingā performance as āa veritable onion shedding layers as she plays Leda, a prickly yet exceedingly vulnerable 48-year-old academic.ā
In the year-end rush of new movies, it's been easy to miss Mike Mills' tender, shaggy indie gem āC'mon C'mon." The film, which became available Dec. 23 for digital rental and video-on-demand, stars Joaquin Phoenix as a radio journalist who temporarily takes care of his 9-year-old nephew (Woody Norman). Shot in black-and-white and featuring interviews with real kids peppered throughout, āC'mon C'monā is an open-hearted movie about parenting with personal resonances for Mills, Phoenix and Norman. In her review, Bahr wrote that Mills āhas a unique way of blending everyday banalities with cosmic questions and ideas to create lovely symphonies of humanity.ā
Holiday festivity might call for a favorite cocktail or a warm fire, but it can, and should, also mean a Technicolor movie. Thankfully, the Criterion Channel collects titles made with this lush color process so you can run through a glittering array of options to fill some of the darkest days of winter. Drink in āVertigo,ā bathe in āThe River" or sink into āThe Red Shoes." Your eyes will thank you.
ā AP Film Writer Jake Coyle
MUSIC
ā CBSās New Yearās Eve telecast will have a distinctive twang to this year with the five-hour special being hosted in Nashville Tennessee with 50 performances from countryās biggest names. Dierks Bentley, Jason Aldean, Blake Shelton, Gabby Barrett, Kelsea Ballerini, Zac Brown Band, Miranda Lambert and more will perform on the CBS special, also airing on Paramount+. Bentley, Hunt and Zac Brown Band will co-headline a free show in Nashvilleās Bicentennial Mall, while other performances will be shot at the cityās honky tonks and clubs. The show will be hosted by radio and TV personality Bobby Bones and āEntertainment Tonightā correspondent Rachel Smith.
ā Entertainment Writer Kristin M. Hall
TELEVISION
The book is closing on āDickinson,ā the Peabody Award-winning series starring Hailee Steinfeld in a reimagination of Emily Dickinsonās youth. In the series finale streaming now on Apple TV+, the poetās work is flourishing but thereās strife in her family and across Civil War-torn America. For viewers playing catch-up on the concluding 10-episode third season, its new and returning guest stars include Ziwe as Sojourner Truth; Billy Eichner as Walt Whitman; Chloe Fineman as Sylvia Plath; Zosia Mamet as Louisa May Alcott and, as Death, Wiz Khalifa.
A looming figure in the āStar Warsā canon is coming into his own. āThe Book of Boba Fett ā starting Wednesday on Disney+, tracks the bounty hunter and mercenary Fennec Shand as they attempt to claim Tatooine land once controlled by Jabba the Hutt and his criminal syndicate. Temuera Morrison stars as Fett opposite Ming-Na Wenās Shand, with Jon Favreau and Robert Rodriguez among the seven-episode seriesā producers and directors. A trailer offers insight into Fettās viewpoint: Declaring he will rule with respect, he makes an offer to Jabbaās former captains that has a āThe Godfatherā ring to it. Episodes are out weekly on Wednesday.
Richard Gere is the narrator for āEarth Emergency,ā about a less-prominent aspect of climate change. According to scientists interviewed for the documentary, human-caused global warming activates a natural response from the Earth that releases further greenhouse gases ā and makes the planet even hotter. Activist Greta Thunberg and the Dalai Lama are among those featured in the film, which uses illustrations, graphics and video to examine whatās termed a ācrucial piece of the climate puzzleā and the urgency of addressing it. The hour-long documentary debuts Wednesday on PBS (check local stations for times) and on PBS.org.
ā Television Writer Lynn Elber.
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