Entertainment
The 6 Best New TV Shows of February 2024
TVâs hottest month is, for some reason, February. The weeks leading up to Leap Day 2024 have brought us stunning prestige epics like ShĆgun, heart-twisting romantic dramedies like One Day, cerebral sci-fi head trips like Constellation, and surprisingly fun auteur vehicles like Mr. & Mrs. Smithâplus a few under-the-radar gems that deserve more attention than theyâve gotten. Which is why there are not five but six titles in this monthâs roundup of the best new shows.
Constellation (Apple TV+)
Space Travel is bound to change a personâs perspective. Astronauts see our world from a vantage point that has been shared by just a few people in its 4.5 billion-year History. The longer they spend drifting through the solar system, the more their experiences diverge from the human norm and thus the harder, one would imagine, it becomes to reconnect with earthbound loved ones. Life in space inevitably alters life on the ground.
So maybe thatâs what is going on with Jo Ericsson, an astronaut played by The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo star Noomi Rapace, who appears, in the opening scenes of the gripping Apple TV+ thriller Constellation, to be losing her mind. Holed up in a cabin in snowy northern Sweden with her 10-year-old daughter, Alice (Rosie and Davina Coleman), Jo dashes out into the frigid night, in pursuit of another voice screaming âMama!â Little of what we see in these first few minutes makes sense. But the disconcerting sequence sets up a smartly paced sci-fi epic that is as perceptive about human psychology as it is about quantum physics. [Read the full review.]
Mr. & Mrs. Smith (Amazon)
Donald Glover is known as a provocateur, taking aim at pieties around race, Celebrity, and the Entertainment industry in dark comedies like the shape-shifting Atlanta and last year's stan satire Swarm. But he also has a romantic side. It has fueled Atlanta story lines about his character Earnâs relationship with his daughterâs mother (Zazie Beetz) and some of the best music heâs released as Childish Gambino.
Mr. & Mrs. Smith, Glover and co-creator Francesca Sloaneâs reimagining of the 2005 action romp that birthed Brangelina, is his first series to foreground that sweeter sensibility. In fact, itâs more reminiscent in tone of Rian Johnson and Natasha Lyonneâs (mostly) lighthearted detective dramedy Poker Face than of its high-octane inspiration about two married assassins who lie to each other about their professions until theyâre assigned to kill one another. [Read the full review.]
One Day (Netflix)
The second coming-of-age that happens in early adulthood is the subject of this charming and perceptive Netflix dramedy. The series is also a love story with a controversial ending, as millions who read the megahit novel by David Nicholls or watched the disappointing film adaptation starring Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess are already well aware. But itâs lead writer Nicole Taylorâs patient attention to the two protagonistsâ evolution from wide-eyed students into adults weathered by lifeâs vicissitudes, much more than the will-they-or-wonât-they plot, that defines this lovely retelling. Even if you donât like the destination, itâs a journey worth taking. [Read the full review.]
The Second Best Hospital in the Galaxy (Amazon)
Keke Palmer. Stephanie Hsu. Kieran Culkin. Natasha Lyonne. Maya Rudolph. Greta Lee. Sam Smith. Bowen Yang. Abbi Jacobson. If that voice castâand the further involvement of Lyonne and Rudolph as executive producersâisnât enough to pique your interest in this animated comedy for adults, consider the wonderfully weird premise: Humanoid-alien best friends Dr. Sleech (Hsu) and Dr. Klak (Palmer) are star surgeons at an intergalactic hospital where their challenges include defusing a literal, anthropomorphic sex bomb. They occupy a candy-colored universe where talking yellow whales serve as modes of transportation and the hospital admin is a two-headed creature whoâs always playing good-cop-bad-cop with themself. But, just like physicians in our own public healthcare system, they face challenges like bureaucracy and scant funding. And just like all of us Earthlings, theyâre rife with neuroses, from anxiety to mommy issues.
ShĆgun (FX)
The new ShĆgun is not a remake of the wildly popular 1980 miniseries so much as a radical reimagining. Adapted directly from James Clavellâs best-selling 1975 novel, this sprawling, 10-part historical drama takes a far broader view than its predecessor, moving beyond the Western outsiderâs perspective to survey a fracturing society that is just as baffled by this interloperâs ways as he is by theirs. Itâs an epic of war, love, faith, honor, culture clash, and political intrigue. And at a time when so many of TVâs biggest swings, from Amazonâs The Rings of Power and Citadel to Netflixâs Stranger Things and The Crown, have yielded at least partial misses, FXâs ShĆgun stands apart as a genuine masterpiece. [Read the full review.]
The Vince Staples Show (Netflix)
The best thing to come out of black-ish creator Kenya Barrisâ Netflix deal is this semi-autobiographical comedy co-created by and starring the rapper Vince Staples. Set in Staplesâ hometown of Long Beach, Calif., the series has a touch of Atlantaâs racially conscious surrealism and a dose of Daveâs bemusement about the often-absurd experience of being a niche Celebrity. Vince is anonymous enough to be put in jail for a traffic violation but famous enough that a guard there quotes one of his best-known lyrics back to him: ââI ainât never run from nothinâ but the police.â Well, I guess we got ya.â In another episode, he and his girlfriend (Andrea Ellsworth) take her kid brother to a janky, budget theme park for the boyâs birthday and Vince gets sucked into a quest for chicken that involves a hidden door, a cursed magic show, and the wrath of the parkâs cuddly mascots. At just five episodes, some of them less than 20 minutes long, the show offers a skewed slice of an unusual life that is bound to leave you wanting more.
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