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pThe new year is only a few days old, and already you’re behind on seemingly everything. Work is overwhelming, and those pesky resolutions are still waiting to be followed through on. Worse yet, your streaming queues are just getting longer, and that 2022 backlog is only going to get more crowded with newer, fresher content showing up.
It can be a hassle to decide which movies and TV shows are worth your time, so here’s a brief list of some that are worth checking out. From a surprisingly deep docuseries about one of the world’s most famous acting couples to a detective movie that barely got released, these hidden gems from 2022 are fit for discovery in 2023 — or any year you can find the time to enjoy them.
Bad Sisters
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Who did it? And why? And just how many shots of the beautiful coasts of Ireland can one show have? All of these questions are asked and answered throughout the show’s entertaining 10 episodes, which alternate between showing John Paul’s past indiscretions and the current investigation into his death. The show never takes itself too seriously, and its excellent female-led cast makes Bad Sisters an oddly comforting watch even though it can deal with tough issues like mental abuse and depression. The show’s already been renewed for a second season, so now’s the time to catch up before the next installment premieres.
Season 1 of Bad Sisters is now streaming on Apple TV+.
The Outfit
The first-time director, Graham Moore, relishes setting up the byzantine plot, and takes pleasure in focusing on details like Leonard’s methodical tailoring tasks or how a small pool of blood grows alarmingly larger near the bottom of a trunk. As the movie progresses, the suspense slowly and expertly increases, but it never compromises the careful character development Moore establishes throughout. In a rare leading role, Rylance, one of our very best actors, sells the movie from start to finish, and makes you wish for more entries in The Outfit Cinematic Universe. (Editor’s note: that’s not a real thing.)
The Outfit is streaming on Prime Video.
The Last Movie Stars
There’s nothing more boring than actors praising other actors, but Hawke largely avoids this by making the series more than just a simple hagiography. Created during the COVID-19 pandemic, The Last Movie Stars is about many things: how people deal with loneliness; how artists are affected by their peers’ work; how a parent can be successful with one child and fail with another; and most of all, how a marriage doesn’t have to be nearly perfect to be successful or lasting. Combined with an outstanding use of archival footage and music (Hawke’s use of Hamilton Leithauser’s cover of Dolphin over footage of the couple’s forgotten 1969 movie Winning says more about the state of their marriage than any narration ever could), The Last Movie Stars is not only worth a watch, but demands multiple viewings for you to get all of what it has to offer. Keep this one in the queue for a while.
The Last Movie Stars is currently streaming on HBO Max.
The Midnight Club
If you’re expecting creaky old houses, ghostly apparitions, and an increasingly strange plot, you won’t be disappointed. Yet, The Midnight Club is satisfying on a more basic and fundamental level: it’s fun just to watch and hear these kids tell ghost stories to each other. That these stories are mini-adaptations of Pike’s other novels like The Eternal Enemy and Witch is a bonus for anyone who grew up reading him or other young adult horror authors like Lois Duncan and R.L. Stine. The diverse cast of young newcomers only adds to the richness of the tale Flanagan weaves in adapting Pike’s oeuvre. The series was just canceledso forgive the rushed cliffhanger in the finale and enjoy a show that is both scary and touching at the same time.
The Midnight Club is streaming on Netflix.
Confess, Fletch
There’s more to the movie than that simple plot though. Throw in some stolen paintings, a horny Italian countess, and an accident-prone ditzy neighbor with a perpetually peeing pooch, and what you get is one of 2022’s best comedies. Directed by Superbad‘s Gregory Mottola, the film give Hamm the cinematic showcase he deserves, and his reunion with Mad Men co-star John Slattery (as Fletch’s ornery former newspaper boss) is such a pleasure, you want more Fletch movies just to hear them insult each other some more. Perhaps most importantly, Confess, Fletch is just a blast to watch, and who doesn’t want a movie you can vibe with for just under two hours?
Confess, Fletch is currently streaming on Showtime.
Editors’ Recommendations
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