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A New ‘Pinocchio,’ ‘Emancipation,’ On and Off Stage with Idina Menzel, ‘Fire’ Rescue Trauma, HBO Revives ‘Walls’

Pinocchio-'Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio'

Netflix

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio

If we can have multiple A Christmas Carol adaptations every year, why not two new Pinocchio films in 2022? Following the live-action Disney+ remake, Oscar-winning director Guillermo del Toro teams with stop-motion animation whiz Mark Gustafson for a lavish new animated treatment of the classic about the wooden puppet who yearns to be a real boy. The sterling voice cast includes Ewan McGregor, Tilda Swinton, Christoph Waltz, Cate Blanchett and John Turturro.

Apple TV+

Emancipation

Try to look past his infuriating career-stalling Oscar slap to appreciate Will Smith’s committed performance in director Antoine Fuqua’s grueling film about the travails of Peter, a runaway slave in 1863. Traveling through a Louisiana hellscape of torture, pursuit (by Ben Foster’s relentless slavecatcher) and natural perils—watch out for that crocodile—Peter fights to the death if he must to achieve freedom and be reunited with his family. Much of the movie is so agonizing that you want to turn away, but there’s no denying its primal power.

Apple TV+

Little America

For uplift without as much trauma, consider a second season of the anthology featuring acclaimed dramatic vignettes about the immigrant experience. Among the stories, inspired by real people: a Somali chef readying his wares for the Minnesota State Fair, a Japanese woman in Ohio assembling a women’s baseball team, a Sri Lankan woman participating in a Texas car-kissing contest and a Korean medical student in Detroit who’d rather be designing hats.

Eric Maldin/Walkman Productions Inc.

Idina Menzel: Which Way to the Stage?

Just don’t call her Adele Dazeem. The powerhouse vocalist, who found fame on Broadway (Rent, Wicked) and hit next-level stardom belting “Let It Go” in Frozen, takes center stage in a documentary following her on a 2018 national tour culminating in her dream venue of New York’s Madison Square Garden. The special includes performance and backstage footage and candid interview segments about her life as a working mom and wife. Also new on Disney+: the animated Night at the Museum: Kahmunrah Rises Again, in which Larry Daley’s hapless teenage son Nick takes over as night watchman for the summer, only to let loose the power-hungry Egyptian ruler Kahmunrah.

Lindsay Siu/CBS

Fire Country

CBS’s Friday lineup signs off until the new year with midseason finales, including an emotional outing for Battalion 1608 Chief Vince Leone (Billy Burke). The team’s latest rescue, involving two siblings in a wrecked car in peril, triggers traumatic memories of when Vince’s daughter Riley (Jade Pettyjohn) perished in a fatal car accident.

HBO / Courtesy: Everett Collection

If These Walls Could Talk

Timely then, perhaps timelier now. HBO revives its Emmy-nominated 1996 film that spans the decades telling stories about women in 1952, 1974 and 1996—all occupying the same home—who deal with the polarizing issue of abortion. In 1952, Demi Moore plays a woman going to desperate lengths to seek an abortion during a time when it was strictly illegal. In 1974, a year after the Roe v. Wade decision, Sissy Spacek plays a struggling mother of four who considers terminating her latest pregnancy. Cher stars in and directs the final segment, set in 1996, as an abortion doctor facing violent protests as she tends to a pregnant college student (Anne Heche).

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