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What’s on TV This Week: ‘The Thing About Pam’ and the Critics Choice Awards

Renée Zellweger stars in a new true-crime mini-series. And this year’s Critics Choice Awards ceremony airs on the CW and TBS.

Between network, cable and streaming, the modern television landscape is a vast one. Here are some of the shows, specials and movies coming to TV this week, March 7 -13. Details and times are subject to change.

THE THING ABOUT PAM 10 p.m. on NBC. The slurp of a Big-Gulp-size beverage becomes something sinister in this true-crime limited series, which stars Renée Zellweger as a Missouri woman, Pam Hupp, who is implicated in a murder that ultimately reveals a larger illicit scheme. It’s a juicy role for Zellweger, who squares off with Judy Greer (as a prosecutor) and Josh Duhamel (a defense attorney). For more true crime, see the two-part documentary UNDERCURRENT: THE DISAPPEARANCE OF KIM WALL, debuting on HBO at 9 p.m., which looks at the killing of Wall, a Swedish journalist, in 2017 while she was reporting a story aboard a submarine.

THE GREEN KNIGHT (2021) 7 p.m. on Showtime. You’ve probably already seen a movie about King Arthur — or at least have heard the tales, or baked with the flour. You’re less likely to have seen the tale of Arthur’s nephew Gawain — the subject of the anonymous 14th-century poem “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight” — on the big screen. This aesthetically pleasing adaptation from the filmmaker David Lowery stars Dev Patel as Gawain, who goes on a quest to hunt down a giant. In his review for The New York Times, A.O. Scott called the movie “sumptuous, ragged and inventive.”

DOMINO MASTERS 9 p.m. on Fox. Ambitious domino builders square off in this new competition show, in which contestants vie to create the most impressive toppling-domino arrangements, Rube Goldberg style. Expect the exactitude required here — where a false move can completely ruin a project — to create some tense moments. Imagine a reality cooking show in which chefs have to juggle their culinary creations before the judges sit down to eat.

Murray Close/STX Entertainment

FREE STATE OF JONES (2016) 7:40 p.m. on FXM. The composer Nicholas Britell and the actor Mahershala Ali worked on two notably different movies released in 2016: Barry Jenkins’s Oscar-winning contemporary coming-of-age story “Moonlight” and Gary Ross’s historical drama “Free State of Jones.” In Ross’s movie, Ali plays a man named Moses, who is a close friend and confidant of the film’s subject, Newton Knight (Matthew McConaughey), a Southern dissident who established a homespun army that rebelled against the Confederacy in Mississippi, and whose work on behalf of African American rights extended beyond the war. In his review for The Times, A.O. Scott praised what he called Ross’s “unusual respect for historical truth,” and wrote that he does “a good job of balancing the factual record with the demands of dramatic storytelling.” Another of Ross’s movies, the jockey drama SEABISCUIT (2003), will also air on Thursday, at 4 p.m. on Showtime.

JULIA (1977) 6 p.m. on TCM. Jane Fonda plays a fictionalized version of the playwright and author Lillian Hellman in this historical drama. Adapted from a slice of Hellman’s 1973 book, “Pentimento: A Book of Portraits,” the film takes place in the lead-up to the Second World War, centering on a friendship between Hellman and a character known only as Julia (Vanessa Redgrave), a young American woman from a wealthy family who uses her money to aid anti-Nazi efforts. The movie was also the feature debut of Meryl Streep, who has a small role as another friend of Hellman’s.

Niko Tavernise/20th Century Studios

WEST SIDE STORY (2021) 8 p.m. on HBO. The last few years have brought two attempts to reinvigorate “West Side Story.” On Broadway in 2020, the Belgian experimental theater director Ivo van Hove presented a version that injected the musical with projected video and skinny jeans. Even more recently, we got this big-screen rethink from Steven Spielberg, which reworks some elements while sticking closer to the original Broadway and Hollywood productions, at least on the surface (take one look at the sets and haircuts here, and you know we’re in mid-20th-century New York City). But this version of the forbidden-love story between Maria (Rachel Zegler) and Tony (Ansel Elgort) still has a lot of new ideas, thanks in large part to its substantial reworking of Arthur Laurents’s book by the playwright Tony Kushner and its ​​new choreography by Justin Peck. In his review for The Times, A.O. Scott wrote that the new movie makes the musical feel “bold, surprising and new,” even as the performances and the transitions between musical numbers and other scenes can be uneven. “The seams — joining past to present, comedy to tragedy, America to dreamland — sometimes show,” Scott wrote. “But those seams,” he added, “are part of what makes the movie so exciting. It’s a dazzling display of filmmaking craft that also feels raw, unsettled and alive.”

Kevin Winter/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association

THE 27TH ANNUAL CRITICS CHOICE AWARDS 7 p.m. on the CW and TBS. Awards season will continue on Sunday night with this broadcast of the Critics Choice Awards, which this year comes just two weeks before the Oscars. The nominees for best picture at the Critics Choice awards largely overlap with the Oscars — “West Side Story,” “CODA,” “Don’t Look Up,” “Dune,” “King Richard,” “Licorice Pizza,” “Nightmare Alley” and “The Power of the Dog” are all nominated for the top prize in both competitions — with Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Tick, Tick … Boom!” taking the place of the Haruki Murakami adaptation “Drive My Car” at the Critics Choice awards. There are also differences in the best actor and actress categories, which here include nominations for Nicolas Cage (“Pig”), Peter Dinklage (“Cyrano”), Lady Gaga (“House of Gucci”) and Alana Haim (“Licorice Pizza”), none of whom will be up for an acting award at the Oscars. Taye Diggs and Nicole Byer host.

Source: Television - nytimes.com


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