Theaters are still closed, but new streaming movies are coming to entertain you and your family during socially-distanced times.
This weekend definitely offers a potpourri of releases: Young soldiers deal with the supernatural in a World War II psychological thriller, Lin-Manuel Miranda fans get a look at his early theater work in a new Hulu documentary, a visceral Holocaust movie tests your mettle as an empathetic viewer, and things get melodramatic in Australia with a new romantic drama.
If that’s not enough to get you online and watching movies, the 48th Dance on Camera Film Festival has gone virtual this year, running Friday through Monday. The festival premieres a bunch of shorts and feature films including “Uprooted – The Journey of Jazz Dance” featuring Debbie Allen.
Here’s a rundown of new movies hitting streaming this weekend, for every cinematic taste:
If you’re curious to see what a military haunted-house flick looks like: ‘Ghosts of War’
A group of battle-weary Army soldiers (Brenton Thwaites, Skylar Astin, Theo Rossi, Alan Ritchson and Kyle Gallner) are assigned to guard a chateau in Nazi-occupied France that once held German high command. However, the house has some dark secrets and a more supernatural threat worse than gun-toting Germans presents itself to the American grunts. While there are some decent jump scares in the film directed by Eric Bress (“The Butterfly Effect”) and the movie’s huge twist packs a wallop, a headscratching ending fumbles the positives.
Where to watch: Apple TV, Vudu, Fandango Now
If you’re in need of a rap-filled pick-me-up: Broadway documentary ‘We Are Freestyle Love Supreme’
“There’s a good chance no one will ever know who you are,” Thomas Kail says to his friend (and soon-to-be Broadway superstar) Lin-Manuel Miranda in the mid-2000s during a scene in the documentary about their improv hip-hop comedy musical troupe Freestyle Love Supreme. That line will garner a knowing smirk, but there are also laughs, rhymes and feels to be had with this entertaining and insightful origin story of sorts for Miranda and Kail’s pre-“Hamilton” passion project.
Where to watch: Hulu
If you could use a good cry: ‘Father Soldier Son’ documentary
Get ready to have your heart warmed when Army soldier – and single dad – Brian Eisch arrives home to Wisconsin for a two-week vacation to see his young boys, Isaac and Joey. But the thoughtful documentary gets much more touching and heartbreaking from there as it chronicles the family for the next 10 years: Brian is critically wounded in Afghanistan, he struggles physically and mentally with the aftermath, and his kids themselves weigh the cost of military service.
Where to watch: Netflix
If you’re yearning for a ridiculous escape: ‘Fatal Affair’
Nia Long is a San Francisco lawyer who’s got it all – from a loving husband (Stephen Bishop) to a new beachfront empty nest with their daughter (Aubrey Cleland) in college – yet still is persuaded into a moment of indiscretion with an old college friend (Omar Epps). He’s still crazy for her – emphasis on the “crazy” part – in this soapy and proudly bonkers psychological thriller. If you subsist on over-the-top Lifetime flicks, this “Affair” checks all the boxes.
Where to watch: Netflix
If you’ve got a strong stomach for gut-punching movies: ‘The Painted Bird’
Part Holocaust drama and part Homeric epic, this is a truly tough watch. Nearly three hours of black-and-white cruelty and brutality – done to man and beast alike, and much of it disturbing – fills the haunting tale of a pre-teen Jewish boy (Petr Kotlár) making his way through Eastern Europe during World War II. He meets different characters along the way, from a kind priest (Harvey Keitel) to a stoic Soviet solder (Barry Pepper), and viewers daring enough to make it through will find satisfaction by the end.
Where to watch: Apple TV, Vudu, Amazon