What to stream: Mountainhead, Bono Documentary and Elizabeth Banks and Jessica Biel Play Sisters

New York (AP) – The satirical drama “Mountainhead” of the “Succession” and Elizabeth Banks and Jessica Biel playing dysfunctional siblings in the Murder Thriller series “The Better Sister”, are some of the new television, films, music and games that are close to you. Also among the streaming offers worth your time, as selected by the Associated Press’s entertainment journalists: a new concert special with Aretha Franklin, U2’s front man reveals everything in the documentary “Bono: Stories of Surrender” and Multiplayer players get Elden Ring: Nightreign, which sends teams of three wilers to the flamboyante of a haunted soil. – Creator Jesse Armstrong, ‘Succession’, makes his debut with the satirical drama ‘Mountainhead’, which streams on HBO Max on Saturday 31 May. Film stars Steve Carell, Jason Schwartzman, Ramy Youssef and Cory Michael Smith as Tech Techans on a boys’ journey whose billionaire Shenanigans is interrupted by an international crisis fed by their platforms. The film was shot earlier this year, in March. – The story of hostage crisis at the Munich Olympics in 1972 was told in many films, but “September 5” takes audiences in the ABC news room as it all unfolded. The film, from Tim Fehlbaum and with Peter Sarsgaard, John Magaro and Ben Chaplin, is a semi-fictionalization of the tense 22 hours, where a group of sports reporters, including Peter Jennings, succeeded in broadcasting this international incident for the first time directly to the world. In my review, I wrote that News Junkies will find a lot to enjoy in the spiritual debates about journalistic ethics and the vintage technology. It’s also just a resounding tick. “September 5” is available on Tuesday to watch Prime video. -The directing team (and real life partners) behind “Saint Frances” made one of the AP film writer Jake Coyle’s favorite films of 2024 in ‘Ghostlight’, which streams on Kanopy on Friday 30 May. The film focuses on a construction worker that joins a community theater production by ‘Romeo & Juliet’ after the death of his teenage son. Coyle calls it “a sublime little jewel of a film about a Chicago family struggling to process tragedy.” – Celebrate the late, big, eternal Aretha Franklin with a wonderful new concert special, “Aretha! With Sheléa and the Pacific Symphony” broadcast on PBS. The title is a giveaway: Shelea and the Pacific Symphony team up to hit the Queen of Soul’s bigger than life: ‘Respect’, ‘Natural Woman’ and ‘Chain of Fools’ among them. On Friday, it will be available to stream on PBS.org and the PBS app. – “These are the high stories of a short rock star,” U2 -Frontman Bono introduces ‘Bono: Stories of Surrender’, a documentary film based on his memoir, “Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story.” The project will be available on Friday to stream on Apple TV worldwide, and for the Tech Heads among us it is also the first full-length film available in Apple immersive on Vision Pro. This is a video of 180 degrees! -For film fans, Yule is perhaps best known for their contribution to the award-winning “I Saw the TV Glow”, which contains their dreamy cover of broken social scene’s “anthems for a seventeen year-old girl” as a kind of theme song. The singer-songwriter producer sets their latest album, Evangelic Girl on Friday, free via Ninja Tune Records-an ambitious collection of electronic doll from a non-to-far future. – Sheri Papini, a woman who pleaded guilty and served a prison sentence to lie for law enforcement on the abduction, shares her story for the first time. A new documents contain interviews with Papini himself, her family, attorneys and psychiatrist. She also takes a lie-detector test on the camera and participates in re-activities. Papini maintains that she was kidnapped by an ex-boyfriend, but says they had an emotional relationship at the time. She claims to have kept her against her, sexually and physically abused before she let her go. “Sheri Papini: Caught in the Lie” is a four -part series that will be broadcast on Monday, and Tuesday on ID. It will stream on Max. – Elizabeth Banks and Jessica Biel are Nicky and Chloe, dysfunctional sisters in the new prime video series “The Better Sister.” It is based on a novel by Alafair Burke. The two are alienated and Chloe raises Nicky’s son as her own – and is also married to her ex. If a murder occurs, the sisters must become a united front. It’s on Prime video on Thursday. – In “Downton Abbey” and “The Crown,” Matthew Goode plays a charming English lord. In his new series “Dept. Q” for Netflix, he is … English. Goode plays Carl, a horrific detective who is banned to the basement of the police station and dedicated to cold cases. He forms a cloth -tag group to solve a crime that no one, not even himself, thinks it can be cracked. “Dept. Q” is of the author and director of “The Queen’s Gambit.” It premiere Thursday. – A new PBS documentary looks at the life and impact of artist George Rodrigue. He is known for paintings of a large blue dog with yellow eyes (called Blue Dog), but is also credited for art depicting Cajun life in his home state Louisiana. Rodrigue’s paintings contributed to preserving the Cajun culture. What people may not realize is how the blue dog is linked to Cajun folklore. “Blue: The Art and Life of George Rodrigue” debuted on Thursday and will also stream on PBS.org. -Tokio based on software is best known for morbid adventures such as Dark Souls and Elden Ring games that tackle most players solo, although they do have some cooperative options. Elden Ring: Nightreign is built for multiplayer and sends teams from three warriors to fight the flamboyant samples of a haunting country called Limveld. Your goal is to survive three days and three nights before confronting an overwhelming night lord. It is not the vast, character-building epic fans of the studio, but those who are hungry for more of his cruel, almost sadistic action are likely to be satisfied. Take your swords on Friday 30 May at PlayStation 5/4, Xbox X/S/One of PC.