Past Lives to The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes – the seven best films to watch on TV this week

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"Top Films to Watch on TV This Week: Highlights Include 'Past Lives' and 'The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes'"

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Celine Song's film 'Past Lives' has garnered attention for its poignant exploration of love and identity, particularly through the lens of its central character who is confronted by an old flame long after she has moved on. The film intricately weaves themes of cultural identity and personal longing, creating a rich narrative that resonates with audiences. Greta Lee's performance has been highlighted as particularly outstanding, with many critics expressing disbelief over her lack of an Oscar nomination. This film is positioned as a modern update to classic romantic tales, offering a less conventional resolution that adds depth to its emotional impact. Scheduled for airing on Sunday, June 29, at 10 PM on BBC Two, 'Past Lives' serves as a reminder of the complexities of love and the paths we choose in life.

Another notable film to watch is Ed Zwick's 'Glory,' a powerful depiction of an African American regiment during the Civil War that has recently gained renewed interest due to Zwick's memoir. The film is celebrated for its epic storytelling and cinematic brilliance, marking Denzel Washington's emergence as a significant talent in Hollywood. Additionally, 'The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes,' a prequel to 'The Hunger Games,' is set to premiere on Netflix on July 1. This film has surprised many by incorporating musical elements, presenting a unique take on the origins of Coriolanus Snow. Other films recommended for viewing include 'The Swimmer,' a dark exploration of midlife crises starring Burt Lancaster, and 'Heads of State,' an action-comedy featuring John Cena and Idris Elba. The week also features 'White House Down,' a lighter counterpart to the more serious 'Olympus Has Fallen,' showcasing Channing Tatum's comedic flair. Each of these films offers a distinct narrative, appealing to a variety of tastes and interests among viewers this week.

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With Celine Song’s new filmMaterialistson the brink of release, now is the perfect time to revisit the film that put her on the map.Past Livesis an extraordinary piece of work about a woman forced to re-examine her entire sense of self when an old love reappears, long after she has moved on. It’s a film that aches with longing. It’s knotty with the mess of cultural identity. All three of its leads do tremendous, heartbreaking work, but Greta Lee deserved an Oscar for her outstanding central performance. That she didn’t even receive a nomination is utterly baffling. Nevertheless, consider this an update to Brief Encounter, only with a less infuriatingly paternalistic ending.Sunday 29 June, 10pm, BBC Two

Ed Zwick’s recent memoirHits, Flops, and Other Illusionshas much to recommend it (not least the astonishing bridge-burning chapter about his involvement with Shakespeare in Love), but chief among its qualities is how much it will make you want to rewatch Glory. Zwick’s film about an African American regiment in the civil war is a true epic. The script swings for the fences. Cinematically it spills from the screen. And, let’s not forget, this is the movie that announcedDenzel Washingtonas a major presence. He still may not have bettered this performance.Saturday 28 June, 12:30am, Channel 4

Starting life as a short John Cheever story in the New Yorker,The Swimmerdoes its best to defy as many conventions as it can. Burt Lancaster plays Ned Merrill, an ad executive who one day decides to “swim home” by clambering in and out of every pool he passes. Along the way he attempts to seduce a string of women, refers to himself in ever more grandiose terms and begins to detach from the easy suburbia he finds himself in. Before long he has spiralled out of control. Dark and hallucinogenic, it’s perhaps the best midlife crisis movie ever made.Monday 30 June, 4:55pm, Film4

This needs to be said upfront:The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakesis a musical. Even though the film’s publicity really did not want you to know about it, this is a film where Rachel Zegler will not stop singing. But forewarned is forearmed, and once the shock of the genre has worn off, what’s left might be the best Hunger Games movie yet. A prequel, this is an origin story for Coriolanus Snow (the authoritarian ruler played in previous movies by Donald Sutherland), so it gets to exist in the moral murk more happily than the rest of the series.Tuesday 1 July, Netflix

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Long beforeThe King’s Speechmade him an A-lister (and even longer beforeCatsblew his career to smithereens), Tom Hooper made arguably his best film. Awilfully inaccurate biopicof Brian Clough’s ill-fated stint as manager of Leeds United in 1974, the film is like a tug of war between a headstrong individual and an immovable corporation. It is truly fantastic, with Michael Sheen operating at the highest possible level as the cocky, obstinate Clough. A wonderful celebration of a complex man.Tuesday 1 July, 12am, BBC Two

Strongly in the running for the most gleefully preposterous film of the decade, Heads of State is a movie about the American president and the British prime minister. What’s preposterous is that they are respectively played by John Cena and Idris Elba. Even more preposterously, it’s an action buddy comedy by Ilya Naishuller, the director of Nobody. Did the world need a film where the leaders of the western world are stranded in the middle of nowhere and have to machine-gun their way out in a whirlwind of quips? Absolutely not. But the most preposterous thing of all is that it somehow works.Wednesday 2 July, Prime Video

If you couldn’t get enough of Heads of State, here’s a film that must have at least partially inspired it. Although it suffered at the time from comparisons toOlympus Has Fallen– Gerard Butler’s dour action film about a terrorist attack on the presidential residence –White House Downis a far lighter affair. Sure, the same things happen, but this has Channing Tatum instead of Butler, and he’s intent on delivering all his lines with the biggest wink imaginable. This is an impossibly silly film and, if you’re drunk enough, it forms a perfect double bill with Heads of State.Friday 4 July, 9pm, E4

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Source: The Guardian