The Best Movies and TV Shows New to Netflix, Amazon and Stan in Australia in July

The subsequent movies go further into the past — specifically 1978 and 1966 — building out a story that’s partly a spooky mystery and partly a knowing homage to the horror genre itself, in all its bloody and disturbing varieties.

The first season of this offbeat, fast-paced sketch comedy anthology became a left-field hit, helped along by fans on social media who turned a handful of moments from the show into viral memes.

This stylish action-comedy stars Karen Gillan as Sam, an assassin who relies on help from a team of righteously ferocious ladies, played by Angela Bassett, Michelle Yeoh, Carla Gugino and Lena Headey.

One of 2020s happiest surprises had unexpectedly landed two potential boyfriends, and in the process worried her mom to a frazzle.

The job stirs up a lot of conflicting feelings in Sam, who spent time in a prison camp as a boy and who sees the seeds of new conflicts growing in a Pacific region rocked by revolution and corruption.

As always, “Miracle Workers” features the same core cast — led by Steve Buscemi, Daniel Radcliffe, Geraldine Viswanathan and Karan Soni — but shuffles around their personality types, to keep the energy as unique as the premise.

In this version Sean Keenan plays John Grant, a schoolteacher who gets stuck in a mining town and soon finds himself drawn into the locals’ world of drunken binges and shady schemes.

Stephen Frears directs the first two episodes of this true-crime series about how even in a profession driven by science, the appearance of confidence can be dangerously persuasive.

Robert De Niro plays the producer, Max Barber, while Tommy Lee Jones is the actor, Duke Montana — a grizzled old western hero who proves frustratingly hard to murder.

When he reluctantly returns to the Northern Territory over a decade later to hunt the ruthless warrior Baywara — one of the massacre’s survivors — to help with the tracking.

Amazon has lately been getting into the blockbuster business: first with Eddie Murphy’s “Coming 2 America,” and now with this reportedly 200 million-dollar science-fiction thriller, originally intended to be Paramount’s big Christmas Day 2020 theatrical release .

In “Luxe Listings Sydney,” the wealthy folks in question are in the market for stunning new Australian homes, which they find with the help of three experienced and highly competitive real estate agents.

Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn resume their reality competition series — which follows the basic format of their old show “Project Runway” — with designers whipping up eye-catching clothes on a tight deadline.

Emily Mortimer wrote and directed this three-part mini-series adaptation of Nancy Mitford’s semi-autobiographical novel about the generation of young aristocrats sometimes called “the bright young things,” who questioned the old British values in the years between the first two world wars.

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