Clockwise: Ahsoka, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, My Life is Murder, Constantine.
Clockwise: Ahsoka, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, My Life is Murder, Constantine.

Pop CultureAugust 21, 2023

New to streaming: What to watch on Netflix NZ, Neon and more this week

Clockwise: Ahsoka, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, My Life is Murder, Constantine.
Clockwise: Ahsoka, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, My Life is Murder, Constantine.

What are you going to be watching this week? We round up everything coming to streaming services this week, including Netflix, Amazon Prime, Disney+, Apple TV+, Neon and TVNZ+.

The biggies

Ahsoka (limited series on Disney+ from August 23)

Now this is the Star Wars series I’ve been waiting for. Ahsoka follows the popular character from critically acclaimed animated Star Wars series, and is a spinoff from The Mandalorian. Rosario Dawson played Ahsoka for a few memorable episodes, but she takes the lead here to play the former Jedi padawan, on the hunt to stop a “existential threat to the universe”. Dawson was tremendous in this role back in that series, and I have no doubt she’ll be just as great here, supported by Ray Stevenson, Mary Elizabeth Winstead and even Hayden Christiansen, back as Darth Vader once again. / Sam Brooks

Who is Erin Carter? (on Netflix from August 24)

This limited series comes from Doc Martin and Strike Back writer Jack Lothiank, and follows a British expat teacher, Erin Carter (played by Swedish-Kurdish actor Evin Ahmad), whose past catches up with her after she and her daughter are caught up in a supermarket robbery in Spain. It becomes extremely clear that she’s more than just some teacher. A little bit domestic drama, a little bit action, what more could you want?/ SB

Kin (on TVNZ+ from August 24)

This series revolves around a fictional Dublin family embroiled in gangland war, and stars Aiden Gillen and Ciarn Hinds as rival gang leaders, Frank Kinsella and Eamonn Cunningham. The series debuted to rave reviews in 2020, and was quickly commissioned for a second series. Irish drama stalwarts Charlie Cox, Clare Dunne and Maria Doyle Kennedy round out the cast of this acclaimed series. / SB

The notables

Invasion (season two on AppleTV+ from August 23)

I have never heard of this Apple TV+ sci-fi drama, now in its second season, but it sounds pretty damn fascinating. As the title implies, Earth is “visited” by an alien species that threatens humanity’s existence, and the show follows five ordinary people across the globe as they try make sense of civilisation crumbling. Sam Neill played a sheriff in the first season./ SB

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia (season 16 on Disney+ from August 23)

Has any other show been as consistently at the top of its game for as long as It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia? My take is absolutely not. Somehow, this mean-spirited, black-hearted sitcom about the four worst people in Philadelphia remains a goddamned delight, despite having been on the air for about a decade before streaming services were ever a thing. You’re unlikely to jump in at the sixteenth season, but luckily for you, the rest of the episodes are all on Disney+. Hop to it! / SB

My Life is Murder (season three on Acorn TV from August 21)

From Tara Ward’s interview with Lucy Lawless from last year: “It’s not often a series about murder is full of joy, but My Life is Murder breaks the mould. The third season of the murder-mystery series dropped on TVNZ+ this week, and the show’s star Lucy Lawless has never been prouder to see her home town on the telly. My Life is Murder is a vibrant love letter to Tāmaki Makaurau.”

The films

You Are So Not Invited to My Bat Mitzvah (on Netflix from August 25)

Worth it for the title alone, to be frank. This film, from Adam Sandler’s studio Happy Madison Productions, is about two best friends, played by newcomers Sunny Sandler (wonder who she’s related to) and Samantha Lorraine, who have dreamed about having huge blow-out bat mitzvahs since they were little girls. Things go comically awry when they fall in love with the same boy, and drama threatens to destroy not just their friendship but their individual rites of passage. / SB

Constantine (on Neon from August 23)

I’m old enough to remember when Constantine was considered a terrible comic book movie. If you look back at it, it’s probably not the best, but this Keanu Reeves vehicle deserves more flowers than it got at the time. It’s impressively gothic without taking itself too seriously, has a stacked cast (Rachel Weisz, Tilda Swinton, Djimon Honsou… Gavin Rossdale?), and is way better than like, the last four Marvel/DC films. / SB

Bottle Rocket (on TVNZ+ from August 23)

In an imaginary world where people ask what my favourite Wes Anderson movie is, I smugly reply: Bottle Rocket. Released in 1996, the idiosyncratic director’s first feature film is his most overlooked and least “Wes Andersonny” work. His signature mix of whimsy and melancholy is still very much evident, though, as are plenty of his longtime collaborators – this is the Wilson brothers’ first and arguably best movie too. / Calum Henderson

Netflix

August 21

Blood Diamond

August 22

LIGHTHOUSE

August 23

Squared Love Everlasting

August 24

Ragnarok: Season 3

Who is Erin Carter?

Baki Hanna: Season 2: Part 2

August 25

Killer Book Club

You Are So Not Invited to my Bat Mitzvah

Neon

August 22

Teen Mom Family Reunion

August 23

Swiping America

Constantine

August 25

Nancy Drew

August 25

Fisherman’s Friends

Fisherman’s Friend 2: One And All

The Amazing Maurice

August 27

Ray

TVNZ+

August 21

Slaves to Habit

The Ransom

August 23

As Good As It Gets

The Interview

Austenland

Bottle Rocket

Drinking Buddies

Just Go With It

August 24

Kin

Disney+

August 23

Ahsoka

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia: Season 16

Solar Opposites: Season 4

The Wonder Years: Season 2

What’s Wrong with Secretary Kim

August 25

Vacation Friends 2

The Squad: Homerun

Explorer: Lost in the Arctic

Prime Video

N/A

Apple TV+

August 23

Invasion: Season 2

August 25

Wanted: The Escape of Carlos Ghosn

Acorn

August 21

My Life is Murder

Shudder

August 21

Dead End Drive-In

Terminal Island

AMC+

N/A

Keep going!
Jennifer Ludlam as Binka in I Want to Be Happy. Yep, she’s a guinea pig. (Image Design: Archi Banal)
Jennifer Ludlam as Binka in I Want to Be Happy. Yep, she’s a guinea pig. (Image Design: Archi Banal)

Pop CultureAugust 19, 2023

‘You have to drop the research after a while’: Jennifer Ludlam on playing a guinea pig

Jennifer Ludlam as Binka in I Want to Be Happy. Yep, she’s a guinea pig. (Image Design: Archi Banal)
Jennifer Ludlam as Binka in I Want to Be Happy. Yep, she’s a guinea pig. (Image Design: Archi Banal)

In new play I Want to Be Happy, New Zealand acting icon Jennifer Ludlam plays a lab rodent called Binka. She tells Sam Brooks about the challenges and freedom of playing a caged animal.

A few weeks ago, in a draughty plane hangar that sometimes serves as a rehearsal room, theatre company Nightsong had their annual fundraiser event. A barebones rehearsal set featured a large, wooden cage, flanked by a table meant to represent a lab assistant’s workstation, opposite the usual expected catering of charcuterie and champagne. 

Alongside the usual fundraiser business – speeches from board members, sales of one-off merch, theatre people mashed up against moneyed people – the company presented a short excerpt from their new show, I Want To Be Happy.

Joel Tobeck, a familiar face to everybody in the room and many New Zealanders beyond it, bounded onto the stage, while Jennifer Ludlam, equally familiar, skulked behind him in a (faux) fur coat. Tobeck plays Paul, a lab assistant assigned to look after a guinea pig. 

Ludlam plays the guinea pig. Her name is Binka.

Jennifer Ludlam as guinea pig Binka in I Want To Be Happy. (Photo: Supplied)

A few weeks later, Ludlam and I huddle around a heater in that airport hanger for a chat. Charcuterie and champagne have been replaced by costumes and chattels. The rest of the cast and crew, including writer Carl Bland and director Ben Crowder, usher themselves into the foyer to give us some space.

It’s very easy, even natural, to associate an actor with the role you first saw them in. People a generation or two older than me might associate Jennifer Ludlam as one of the hosts of children’s TV show Play School. For people my generation or younger, it’s likely for her near decade-long role as Shortland Street’s most entertaining, loveable receptionist, Leanne. For me? Her towering performance as the poisonous matriarch Violet in Auckland Theatre Company’s production of August: Osage County (a performance which rightly won her multiple awards across two cities).

Ludlam is nothing like any of these characters in real life, of course. She’s also nothing like a guinea pig.

“I went online and studied guinea pigs, their behaviour, how they move, stuff like that. Apparently guinea pigs have fabulous eyesight,” she says, with the enthusiasm of a first-year uni student. “Then I relate it to my humanness. This play is an interesting way for Carl to explore different human behaviours through another vessel.”

She compares playing a guinea pig to playing a famous person, which she’s done several times across her decades-long career. “You have to drop the research after a while,” she says. “You can do all the reading, but ultimately it has to be coming from you, and your body.” The key difference here is that sometimes famous people can actually watch the actor playing them. Guinea pigs, presumably, will not be in the audience of I Want to Be Happy.

It also takes some calibration and direction to figure out where to pitch Binka: how much Ludlam leans into the spirit of the rodent, and how much human she brings with her. “Sometimes [Ben and Carl] will say, ‘don’t twitch, Jen!’,” she says. “When to put ‘it’ in and when not to is just trial and error for me, at the moment. It will probably change night to night.”

The costume is also a key element. Next to us are several fur coats, procured by award-winning costume designer Elizabeth Whiting. “We’re moving further and further away from her looking like a guinea pig,” she says. “But I also didn’t want it to suddenly look like I was in Cats!” (Reader, don’t fear. We are far from the Rum Tum Tugger in this show.)

Despite the specificity required in how Ludlam pitches her performance, the frame around her ends up being freeing. “Who’s gonna know?” she says bluntly. “Who’s gonna know if what I’m doing is the ‘right way’ to do it, because this is my way.” She refers back to August: Osage County, where she had to play a woman well beyond her own years, strung out on downers well beyond her tolerance.

“That gave me a huge freedom in the palette to work from,” she says. “I could go anywhere! In a funny way, even though I’m a guinea pig in a cage, I can go anywhere in this play.”

Jennifer Ludlam in rehearsal for I Want to Be Happy (Photo: Supplied)

Ludlam has been a fan of Nightsong’s work since she saw their award-winning production of 360, which brought the audience onstage of the Civic, sat them in swivel chairs and had them watch as a show happened around them. “Ever since I saw that, I thought that I’d really like to work with them,” she says.

It is, in fact, the third time she’s worked with the company – after bakery hostage comedy Mr. Red Light and the pandemic pivot film Call it a Night. “I like things that aren’t totally naturalistic,” she continues. “I like something that’s going to take me into another world, and take the audience into another world.”

Of Crowder and Bland, Nightsong’s founders and the co-directors of this show, she calls them, carefully, “idio… syncratic.” Crowder she calls extraordinary in his tenacity to keep going, and she marvels at the way Bland’s mind works. “Their pieces are not naturalistic. There’s magic realism, often big puppets and animals. I find their shows a challenge, but exciting to do.”

Crowder speaks equally highly of Ludlam, having admired her greatly before working with her. “I was drawn not only to her strength as an actor, but also her bold choices and generous approach to an audience,” he says. “She is a bloody hard worker, with great instincts, and will stubbornly return to any nagging concerns, like a dog to a bone, until they are sorted.”

“Ultimately, she is driven to deliver her best.”

Jennifer Ludlam in I Want To Be Happy. (Photo: Supplied)

Weeks before our interview, and weeks before Ludlam will step onstage in front of audiences, she stepped in front of an invited fundraiser crowd in a fur coat, with a focus that any actor would kill for, and many people would pay a pretty penny to watch.

“I live here,” she said, looking into a world far beyond the walls of the near sub-zero airplane hangar. She pointed at her head. “In here is a freedom nobody can take from me.”

You could hear a pin drop, or someone sip surreptitiously from their free champagne. In that moment, it didn’t matter if Ludlam was accurately portraying a guinea pig or not (and in my experience, guinea pigs tend not to be so eloquent). Everybody was in rapture.

“Sometimes if I close my eyes I see the lights and shadows of the Andes. I hear the sound of mountain streams. Feel cold, clear water on my face.”

Was she a human? Was she a guinea pig? It didn’t matter to us. She was Binka. Even better, she was Jennifer Ludlam, at her best.

I Want to Be Happy runs until September 2 at the Herald Theatre, and tours to Circa Theatre on September 7 and runs until September 30.