Everything That’s Streaming in October 2023
A bone-chilling lineup for Halloween season, but nothing is scarier than a Niles-free reboot of ‘Frasier’
With the end of the WGA/SAG-AFTRA strike comes the promise of squeaky-fresh scripts, renewed production schedules and reinvigorated platforms, closing out a historic 148-day dry streak on American TV and film projects. Meanwhile, streamers are kicking off the spooky season with bone-rattling Halloween lineups, slasher classics and ghastly new anthologies for horror fans of every stripe. Watch for The Blackening on Starz, along with collections from masters of horror Stephen King, George A. Romero, and Alfred Hitchcock on AMC+. Netflix offers a sophisticated fright experience with The Fall of the House of Usher, while Amazon Prime is hosting retro gorefest Totally Killer. *Cryptkeeper voice* Whatever your chosen nightmare fuel, Book and Film Globe’s comprehensive list has your next screaming–I mean, streaming–favorites.
Netflix
Bodies (Oct 19) – Eat it, Dr. Who: a new time-hopping British mystery series follows a corpse through time as four detectives in four different London eras find themselves investigating the same murder—and the strange link between them that will unearth a 150-year-old conspiracy. Set against the turbulence of culture-shifting events like Jack the Ripper, the London Blitz, post-9/11 anti-Muslim riots and a futuristic techno-apocalypse, each character reflects the angst of their age while battling personal demons, secrets and corruption stirred up by the haunting murder case. The crime thriller limited series is based on Si Spencer’s DC graphic novel and stars Stephen Graham (Snatch, The Irishman), Amaka Okafor, Shira Haas, Kyle Soller and Jacob Fortune-Lloyd.
Old Dads (Oct 20) – Bill Burr hitches up his anger issues like a faithful workhorse to plow the same old row in a new series about a middle-aged father riding the generation gap with the grace of an angry drunk on a mechanical bull. When Jack (Burr), Connor (Bobby Cannavale) and Mike (Bokeem Woodbine) sell their longtime company to an arrogant millennial, they find themselves struggling to keep up with changing culture. The script soft-lobs obnoxious characters into the path of Jack’s choleric zingers, but all the rancor begins to sour his relationships. Meanwhile, Connor clings cringingly to his youth and Mike spirals when he finds out his much younger girlfriend is pregnant. Burr (who produced, co-wrote and directed the film) lets his rage-mask slip just a little to reveal a soft spot for his family, hinting that Jack and friends find a balance between keeping it old school and getting with the times.
Get Gotti (Oct 24) – The makers of Fear City take an ambivalent look at crime boss John Gotti “told from both sides of the law,” according to a Netflix synopsis for their new gangster docuseries. Get Gotti chronicles his rise from low-level henchman to crime king, offering context for the media circus surrounding his trial at the dawn of a tabloid culture that was metastasizing into full bloom with the Menendez brothers and OJ Simpson trials around the same time. The series follows the FBI’s battle to bring down the Gambino crime boss with the help of an obscure federal law and slapstick-clever surveillance tactics like hiding a lockpicking agent inside a refrigerator box.
Pain Hustlers (Oct 27) – Emily Blunt and Chris Evans headline this new drama about a woman ascending through the medical industry ranks at the dawn of the opioid epidemic. Struggling single mom Liza takes a marketing job at pharmaceutical startup and finds herself at the center of a racketeering conspiracy, facing ethical decisions that carry life-or-death consequences. Joining a wave of fictionalized drug exposés like Painkiller and Dopesick, the film is loosely based on the true story of a small opioid company that sold a pain relief spray with fentanyl as the main ingredient. The movie also stars Catherine O’Hara, Andy Garcia, and Evans as the skeevy sales rep who recruited Liza.
Also playing:
The Fall of the House of Usher (Oct 12)
Big Vape: The Rise and Fall of Juul Season 1 (Oct 11)
Big Mouth Season 7 (Oct 20)
Fair Play (Oct 6)
Visit Netflix for a full list of releases.
Hulu
Shoresy Season 2 (Oct 27) – The puck is dropping on a second period of the hit Letterkenny spinoff as stick-snapping Shoresy hits the ice again with his struggling Canadian hockey team. After taking over as coach, he makes an aggressive game plan to end their losing streak after the first season’s mission to “never lose again” failed miserably. With a brutal comeback to lead, a possible arena renovation and new sponsor in the works, Shoresy has his gloves full—not to mention a possible romance with reporter Laura (Camille Sullivan). Joining writer, creator and star Jared Keeso this season are Canadian pop star Rêve, Catherine St-Laurent and Jordana Lajoie (The Boys), with guest stars including Scott Thompson, Jacob Tierney, and Kim Cloutier.
Appendage (Oct 7) – Body horror meets unresolved trauma in this psychological thriller from Anna Zlokovic, just one of several pants-pooping features in the Huluween fright lineup offered throughout the month of October. Hannah (Hadley Robinson) is an insecure fashion student scrambling for a coveted role working under a perfectionist designer when her repressed anxieties begin to manifest in a monstrous growth on her flank. While Hannah spirals, it saps her body and feeds anxieties about her career, her withholding parents, and crumbling relationships. After her critical inner voice turns into a nasty doppelganger and upends her life, Hannah discovers a surprising truth: there are others (like Schitt’s Creek’s Emily Hampshire) out there like her.
The Mill (Oct 9) – After absolutely killing the role of a murderous barbecue restaurant mogul on Poker Face, Lil Rel Howery learns that corporate culture can be a literal grind in a cautionary horror story from director Sean King O’Grady. Howery is a businessman who wakes up in an outdoor prison cell with the Sisyphean task of pushing a giant grist mill as part of a “transformative experience” hosted by a mysterious entity called Mallard. It’s a Saw-meets-Squid Game struggle for survival as he listens to the day’s lowest-performing fellow prisoner get ripped limb from limb. Can he solve the puzzle of his imprisonment and escape back to his family before he inevitably fails to make quota? Like The Other Black Girl, Appendage, and The Consultant, when it comes to literalizing Gen Z’s workplace anxieties there’s plenty of grist for… you know.
Bob’s Burgers Season 14 premiere (Oct 2) – Bob’s Burgers is serving up a toasty fresh season of twisted chaos and hamburger puns as part of a trio of Fox renewals this month that includes Family Guy and The Simpsons. The Belchers will bicker over chores and bake high-stakes casseroles as the quirky family does what it takes to keep their restaurant afloat through a fourteenth season—and with season fifteen already approved, there’s no danger the greasy spoon will be turning off the burners anytime soon. Listen for voice guests joining the shenanigans like Megan Mullally, Rachel Dratch, Jillian Bell, Billy Eichner and Sarah Silverman.
Also playing:
The Simpsons Season 35 premiere (Oct 2)
Family Guy Season 22 premiere (Oct 2)
Visit Hulu for a full list of releases.
Amazon Prime
Upload Season 3 (Oct 20) – The anticipated third season of Upload unveils a complex chapter in a not-too-distant future where death is rendered obsolete by uploading human consciousness into a virtual afterlife. Dead programmer Nathan ends up in a tony cybercommunity where he finds himself under the control of Ingrid, his still-living girlfriend who can’t let him go– and falling for his transition guide Nora. This season, Nathan downloads into an experimental clone body and joins with an anti-tech movement in the real world to stop the villainous corporation Freeyond, while getting closer to uncovering the truth behind his own suspicious death. The series lays a taut through line of hacking, doxxing, stalking, deepfake manipulation and blackmail as corporate and human corruption shred future cyber ethics.
Totally Killer (Oct 6) –35 years after the shocking murder of three teens, the infamous Sweet Sixteen Killer returns on Halloween night to claim a fourth victim. 17-year-old Jamie (Kiernan Shipka) ignores her overprotective mom’s warning and comes face-to-face with the masked maniac, dashing into a carnival photo booth and accidentally time-traveling to the year of the original killings. Forced to navigate the unfamiliar culture of the 80s, Jamie teams up with her teen mom (Olivia Holt) to save her friends and take down the killer before she’s stuck in the past forever. The script practically cackles at itself, satirizing 80s horror and time travel movies while leaning into generational changes: skunk weed vs. concentrated gummies, cyborg future vs. social media rot, with the teens’ naivete a pastel counterpoint to Jamie’s post-millennial cynicism.
Mr Dressup: The Magic of Make-Believe (Oct 10) – A new documentary chronicles the life and cultural reach of Canadian kids’ TV host and Mr. Dressup star Ernie Coombs. Coombs developed a mentorship under Fred Rogers when he worked as a puppeteer on Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood, where the men forged a creative friendship over the shared belief that children’s television could help kids thrive. Mr. Dressup became a beloved character across Canada, filling 29 seasons with imagination-driven lessons about inclusivity, community and agency that continue to captivate and inspire youngsters. Director Rob McCallum calls Rogers and Coombs the “Lennon and McCartney” of children’s entertainment. “It’s just an adventure, whether it’s with a pair of scissors or a pen or pencil. Life is full of unending, imaginative possibilities.”
The Burial (Oct 13) – When a handshake deal goes sour, funeral home owner Jeremiah O’Keefe (Tommy Lee Jones) hires flashy, charismatic attorney Willie Gary (Jamie Foxx) to save his family business from the clutches of a rich bully at the head of a megacorporation. The underdog drama plays out in courtroom performances and tense strategy sessions, while smooth-talking Gary and grumpy O’Keefe fly around in Gary’s personal plane called Wings of Justice and bond over their shared goal of exposing corruption and injustice. Jurnee Smollett plays the no-nonsense corporate lawyer pitted against Foxx, with Mamoudou Athie, Pamela Reed, Bill Camp and Alan Ruck shining in supporting roles.
Also playing:
Everybody Loves Diamonds (Oct 13)
Bosch: Legacy Season 2 (Oct 20)
Zainab Johnson: Hijabs Off (Oct 24)
Visit Amazon Prime for a full list of releases.
Max
AKA Mr. Chow (Oct 22) – Oscar-nominated producer Diane Quon (Mind the Gap) and director Nick Hooker (Agnelli) flesh out the fascinating story of culinary boss Michael Chow, founder of the high-end Chinese dining empire and Studio 54 of restaurants, Mr. Chow. With clips from his past work, animated vignettes and photos of his famous customers, AKA Mr. Chow offers a first look at the personal life and professional inspiration of the enigmatic actor/artist-turned-restauranteur-turned-cultural figure. After turning a difficult childhood, personal loss and systemic prejudice into fame and fortune in the West, Mr. Chow celebrates his roots by returning to painting as the artist M. Watch for interviews with artists, authors, filmmakers, family and friends including Fran Lebowitz, Ed Ruscha and Brian Grazer.
Our Flag Means Death Season 2 (Oct 5) – The second season of the pirate comedy continues to follow inept aristocrat Stede Bonnet (Rhys Darby) and his dysfunctional crew on more ridiculous high-seas adventures. After blowing up his life in the throes of a midlife crisis to become a swashbuckling pirate ship captain, Stede struggles to earn the respect of his crew—and his fortunes deteriorate further when the fearsome Captain Blackbeard (Taika Waititi) steals his ship. Now he’s in pursuit of the smoky-eyed marauder while fending off the British navy and other bloodthirsty pirates. One dissenter from a fleet of breathless reviews says the sophomore season is in its doldrums, riddled with endless flashbacks, callbacks and long stretches of inaction— essentially becoming fanfiction of its own first season. “Our Flag Means Death loses sight of the wild pirate antics that built the foundation of the show, and is instead fixated on feeding the nostalgia around its central relationship. It’s so caught up in a feedback loop of fan service, that it forgets to tell an actual story.”
The Gilded Age Season 2 (Oct 29) – The second season of the hit historical prestige drama promises a full-on war between the wealthy women of late 19th-century New York society. Ambitious, stupendously rich Bertha Russell (Carrie Coon) and her railroad tycoon husband (Morgan Spector) fight for a spot in the established scene led by rival Mrs. Astor (Donna Murphy) and her old-money crew. As fin de siècle social upheaval pits generational wealth against newly-minted industrial fortunes, debutante balls and club memberships can make fortunes or blight prospects forever—and the Russell family are determined to climb to the top of American society, no matter the cost. Featuring a crisp supporting cast including Nathan Lane, Christine Baranski and Cynthia Nixon, season two will also introduce famous historical figures like Booker T. Washington (Michael Braugher) and Thomas Fortune (Sullivan Jones).
Also playing:
Adult Swim Smalls Season 5 (Oct 27)
The Matthew Shepard Story: An American Hate Crime (Oct 9)
The Ringleader: The Case of the Bling Ring (Oct 1)
Visit Max for a full list of releases.
Disney+
Loki Season 2 (Oct 6) – The mercurial villain is counting on himself (well, a version of himself) after the events of season one’s stunning finale, in which Loki unwittingly unleashed an infinity-Kang (Jonathan Majors) in his struggle against the timeline crisis brought on by the Time Variance Authority. Along with Mobius (Owen Wilson), Hunter B-15 (Wunmi Mosaku), and a gang of new and returning characters, Loki navigates an increasingly destabilized multiverse in search of his alternate version Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino), Judge Renslayer (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), Miss Minutes (Tara Strong) and, a Disney synopsis adds, “the truth of what it means to possess free will and glorious purpose.”
Bobi Wine: The People’s President (Oct 6) – This electrifying documentary with a 100% critic rating on Rotten Tomatoes charts the courageous rise of Bobi Wine, the pop star-turned-politician who galvanized his country in an inspiring bid to end Uganda’s 40-year dictatorship under autocratic tyrant Yoweri Museveni. Rising from the slums to national superstardom, Bobi begins to use his music to call out corruption, then joins Parliament to affect real change. Bobi and his wife Barbie risk their careers, family, and lives to challenge Musveni for the 2021 presidency and bring democracy to Uganda as the state tries to silence them. Directors Christopher Sharp and Moses Bwayo were embedded with Wine and his family for years, capturing breathtaking footage of pulsing crowds, fiery campaign speeches, and mid-interview arrests as Wine was repeatedly imprisoned and tortured – but never silenced.
Goosebumps (Oct 13) – Inspired by the bestselling book series from the Judy Bloom of adolescent horror, R.L. Stine, Goosebumps follows a group of five high schoolers as they investigate the tragic death of a teen named Harold Biddle three decades earlier – while unearthing dark secrets from their parents’ past and unleashing supernatural forces on their town that they must recapture. Meanwhile, new teacher Nathan (Justin Long) moves into the Biddle home and develops an uncanny connection to the supernatural murder.
Also playing:
Select vintage animated Disney shorts (Oct 6)
The complete Treehouse of Horror Collection from The Simpsons (Oct 1)
Werewolf By Night in Color (Oct 20)
Explorer: Lake of Fire (Oct 27)
Visit Disney+ for a full list of releases.
Apple TV+
Lessons in Chemistry (Oct 13) – The miniseries adaptation of the bestselling Bonnie Garmus novel follows aspiring scientist Elizabeth Zott (Brie Larson), whose career dreams are crushed under the steamroller of 1950s social expectations. After she’s fired for getting pregnant, she trades her lab coat for an apron as a TV cooking show host– “it’s just chemistry,” she chirps resignedly. Folding proto-feminist and civil rights ideologies into meatloaf tutorials, Elizabeth sets out to teach a nation of neglected housewives– and the patriarchy– a lot more than recipes. Lewis Pullman (Top Gun: Maverick), Aja Naomi King (How to Get Away with Murder), and Stephanie Koenig (The Flight Attendant) and Kevin Sussman (The Big Bang Theory) also star.
The Pigeon Tunnel (Oct 20) – Oscar-winning filmmaker Errol Morris (The Fog of War) interrogates the legendary life and career of former British spy turned bestselling author David Cornwell, who wrote hit novels Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and The Constant Gardener under the pen name John le Carré. The film spans six decades of real and fictional spy games as Cornwell delivers his final and most candid interview before his death in 2020, interspersed with rare archival footage. He remains evasive about his past, dropping elegant neutralisms like “I see my own life as a series of embraces and escapes.” At one point Morris mentions that Cornwell, ever vigilant, asked him about the nature of their filmmaker-subject relationship before agreeing to participate. “I needed to know who I was talking to. Are you my friend across the fire? Who are you?” Cornwell quizzes. “And if I can’t answer that question?” Morris replies. Cornwell, genuinely amused, gives a warm and terrifying smile.
The Enfield Poltergeist (Oct 27)– A new four-part documentary tells the true story of a world-famous poltergeist case in 1970s London, when a terrified family reported a flurry of supernatural activity centering around two adolescent sisters. The Enfield Poltergeist combines over 250 hours of original audio recordings made inside the house, meticulous scene recreations, and interviews with those still haunted by the chilling events. Real or hoax, the series dares viewers to peer into a prismatic tale that explores the human fascination with the unexplained, and the impact it leaves on those who experience it.
Also playing:
Curses! Season 1 premiere (Oct 27)
Visit Apple TV+ for a full list of releases.
Paramount+
Frasier (Oct 12) – Pour the sherry and carve the Hungarian goose: TV’s favorite bougie psychiatrist-radio host is back on the air in a revival of the Emmy-winning show that ran for eleven seasons through the early naughts. Frasier Crane embraces his “third act” in Boston, now working in college academia and trying to reconnect with his estranged son Freddy (Jack Cutmore-Scott). While Bebe Neuwirth and Peri Gilpin will make guest appearances as frosty ex Lilith and producer Roz, the passing of John Mahoney (Frasier’s father) and the absence of David Hyde Pierce as neurotic brother Niles and his wife Daphne (Jane Leeves) are leaving fans shook. One Twitter user said, “I cannot begin to tell how disinterested I am in a Niles-absent Frasier reboot.” “Barely interested in a Frasier reboot without Niles,” agreed another user. “Now a Niles reboot without Frasier? I’m listening…”
The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial (Oct 6) – The legal drama adapted from the 1953 Herman Wouk play (based on his own Pulitzer-winning novel) that examines a controversial naval mutiny is in good hands with veteran director William Friedkin (The Exorcist). An officer (Jake Lacy) stands trial after taking ship’s command from a respected but mentally unstable captain (Kiefer Sutherland) during a dangerous storm. As testimony unfolds, the officer’s skeptical defense lawyer (Jason Clarke) begins to suspect that his client acted courageously to save the ship and its crew. Confined to a sparse military courtroom, monotone uniforms and a fairly dry script, Friedkin (who passed away in August) uses the sterile, repressed environment to culture pure recall-driven tension without leaning too heavily on “you can’t handle the truth!” scenes.
Bargain (Oct 5) – A black market organ auction at a criminal-run high rise is disrupted when an earthquake collapses the building—with the kidnapped organ donor (Jin Sun-Kyu) still tied to a table. Trapped within tons of concrete ruins and chased by the auctioneer (Jun Jong-Seo) and her thugs, along with a desperate bidder (Chang Ryul) who feels entitled to his kidney, it’s a heart-stopping race to escape the rubble before he’s filleted like a tilapia. The innovative South Korean thriller series is a remake of the 2015 same-named short film, seismically reinforced with plenty of action and high-velocity thrills.
Also playing:
Pet Sematary: Bloodlines (Oct 6)
Fellow Travelers (Oct 27)
Milli Vanilli (Oct 24)
Visit Paramount+ for a full list of releases.
Peacock
Five Nights at Freddy’s (Oct 27) – Like its namesake video games that built a horror franchise out of homicidal puppets, Five Nights at Freddy’s plucks at the childhood terror of animatronic animals spawned at greasy pizza arcades across America since the late 70s. The movie follows a security guard played by Josh Hutcherson (The Hunger Games) who takes a job at the abandoned Freddy Fazbear’s Pizza, shut down in the 80s after the disappearance of several children. When he shows up for his first night shift with his young daughter, he realizes there’s something unsettling about the pizzeria’s animatronics— and Night at the Museum it ain’t. Animatronics for the film were created by Jim Henson’s Creature Shop, and slasher veteran Matthew Lillard appears as shady Fazbear Entertainment co-founder William Afton alongside Elizabeth Lail (You) and Mary Stuart Masterson (Blindspot).
Krishnas: Gurus. Karma. Murder. (Oct 24) – California cops didn’t believe longtime Hare Krishna devotee Steven Bryant when he reported child sexual abuse, heroin dealing and racketeering happening in an isolated Krishna sect in West Virginia. Bryant compared the group’s 4,000-acre compound to Jim Jones’ People’s Temple and warned police that he was on a hit list for his treachery. His 1985 death at the hands of a former Krishna (who along with another man was also connected to a second Krishna’s disappearance) triggered a federal investigation into drug dealing and conspiracy. The California temple had previously been investigated a few years before, when its leader was convicted of distributing heroin and laundering drug money through an investment company controlled by temple members.
Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey (Oct 27) – In a dark reimagining of the beloved childrens’ books, Pooh and Piglet go feral after Christopher Robin grows up and moves away to college. Left to starve, they develop a deep hatred for humans, vowing to revert to their gorier animal instincts. When Christopher returns years later, he’ll have to face the bloody consequences of abandoning his boyhood chums. The British slasher flick directed by Rhys Frake-Waterfield went into development after the original A.A. Milne book entered the public domain last year. Dodging Disney copyright lawyers and actual death threats from fans of the wholesome series, Blood and Honey was shot in England’s Ashdown Forest, which served as the inspiration for the Hundred Acre Wood in the Milne stories. With an online fanbase and a sequel in the works despite an abysmal 3% critic rating on Rotten Tomatoes, Frake-Waterfield is reveling in the feedback – good and bad. Score composer Andrew Scott Bell commented, “[Rhys’s Instagram] story had a screenshot of a person’s comment saying something to the effect of ‘your movie is ruining our childhoods.’ His reaction was, ‘that’s what I’m trying to do, ruin everyone’s childhood.’”
Also playing:
Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken (Oct 20)
Visit Peacock for a full list of releases.
Starz
Shining Vale Season 2 (Oct 13) – The show that blurs the line between personal and literal demons picks up with the dysfunctional Phelps family, after a move to a small Connecticut town ends up feeding their worst selves. But the dark shadow over their new home isn’t just metaphorical. Matriarch Pat (Courtney Cox) isn’t sure if she’s depressed or possessed—booze, pills and a domestic ghost haunt her straight into a psych facility. After her release, she and husband Terry (Greg Kinnear) struggle to rebuild their family and move past the axe incident, but Pat’s visions intensify as the house starts to reveal the secrets of its dark past. Season two’s talented supporting cast includes Allison Tolman (Krampus), Mira Sorvino, Judith Light and Sherilyn Fenn.
Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret (Oct 11) – From The Simpsons producer James L. Brooks comes a sweet rendition of the well-thumbed Judy Blume joint that asks and answers the big questions of adolescence. 11-year-old Margaret is moving to a new town and beginning to contemplate faith, friendship and the many mortifications of puberty. Rachel McAdams is Margaret’s mother who’s trying to support her daughter’s growth while finding her own footing in a new environment, and grandmother Sylvia (Kathy Bates) seeks happiness in a new phase of life. Their cross-generational search for meaning, place and identity brings them closer than ever, with a refreshing sincerity that continues to touch audiences fifty years later.
Also playing:
The Blackening (Oct 4)
Power Book IV: Force Season 2 (continuing with new episodes Fridays)
Visit STARZ for a full list of releases.
AMC+
Citizen Detective (Oct 12) – A new six-part crime series tells the gripping stories of everyday people who investigate and attempt to solve murders. Each episode focuses on a determined citizen detective (or group) and the case that haunts them, unpacking details and strategies while exploring the obsessive motivation behind their need know what happened– and why. The show’s strength lies in the can’t-look-away interplay between the tantalizing clues and the human drama of the investigators’ brainstorms, biases, breakdowns and breakthroughs. Taking crime personally has never been more watchable.
Lakota Nation vs. United States (Oct 9) – This provocative documentary chronicles the Lakota Indians’ fight to reclaim the Black Hills, sacred land stolen by the U.S. government in violation of treaty agreements. Written and narrated by poet Layli Long Soldier and co-directed by Jesse Short Bull and Laura Tomaselli, the film is a fiery testament to the strength of Indigenous resistance. With a trove of archival material, electrifying on-the-ground footage and interviews with veteran activists and young leaders, Lakota Nation vs. United States honors Indigenous culture that refuses to accept removal, exploitation and genocide.
Creepshow Season 4 (Oct 13) – The hit George A. Romero-inspired horror anthology from Greg Nicotero (The Walking Dead) is back with a new slate of ghosts and ghoulies just in time for spooky season. In season four a comic book comes to life, spilling eerie tales of aliens, creatures, monsters and supernatural mysteries to a chorus of shrieks and jump-scares. The trailer, which promises “the most fun you’ve ever had being scared,” features horror legend Tom Atkins (The Fog, Escape from New York), who appeared in the original 1982 Creepshow movie.
Also playing:
Fear the Walking Dead Season 8 Part 2 (Oct 22)
The Vanishing Triangle (Oct 26)
The Last Drive-In with Joe Bob Briggs: Halloween 1978 (live Oct 10)
Visit AMC+ for a full list of releases.




Well-done rundown.
I am most thrown by the awful-sounding “reimagined” Pooh. Admittedly, all around us, some people have no memory, no empathy, no shame.
But hey, “That’s (not) Entertainment”!