Plenty of first-run options in store for summer TV viewers

David Tennant (left) and Michael Sheen star in Good Omens. (Amazon/TNS)
David Tennant (left) and Michael Sheen star in Good Omens. (Amazon/TNS)

Summer TV isn't what it used to be: It's better.

Once a dead period for shows, summer has become an optimal time to roll out limited series and those that don't need 22 episodes to tell their stories.

Here are a few to rush home for, a few to catch up on later and a few not worth remembering.

WATCH

Catch-22 -- George Clooney's triumphant return to TV, alongside Christopher Abbott, Kyle Chandler and Hugh Laurie, comes in a miniseries based on Joseph Heller's Catch-22, about a World War II bomber pilot who wants to be released from duty by any means possible. Balancing the dark comedy and the cultural weight isn't easy work, but Clooney's crew seems up to the job.

All episodes are now on Hulu.

George Clooney stars in the Hulu miniseries, "Catch-22." (Invision/AP/RICHARD SHOTWELL)
George Clooney stars in the Hulu miniseries, "Catch-22." (Invision/AP/RICHARD SHOTWELL)

What/If -- Academy Award-winner Renee Zellweger is back in a neo-noir thriller anthology series about "the ripple effects of what happens when acceptable people start doing unacceptable things." It's a little bit The Purge and a little bit Butterfly Effect with the added bonus of Jane Levy and Blake Jenner.

Premieres Friday on Netflix.

Good Omens -- Against all odds, the adaptation of Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman's 1990 novel Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch works, mostly to the credit of stars David Tennant and Michael Sheen. The two, playing the demon Crowley and the angel Aziraphale are clearly having the time of their lives in this wild, hilarious six-part series about the battle between heaven and hell.

All episodes drop on Amazon Prime on May 31.

When They See Us -- Ava DuVernay's haunting, intense miniseries about the Central Park 5 is almost too intense to watch, but you must. It should be required viewing in every school, by every journalist and every police officer and every citizen. No matter how long it takes, watch it. Watch it all.

All episodes drop on Netflix on May 31.

Grand Hotel -- Eva Longoria stars in Grand Hotel, about the last family-owned hotel in Miami Beach and the extravagant family that owns it. It's gorgeous and luxurious and exactly as ridiculous as you want your escapism to be.

Premieres June 17 on ABC.

Veronica Mars -- Not quite a new show, our favorite Marshmallow returns to the small screen after rabid Veronica Mars fans turned out in droves for the Kickstarter-backed movie in 2014. The eight-episode revival puts Veronica (Kristen Bell) back in Neptune, where a serial killer is murdering spring breakers, and puts Veronica Mars back into its noir roots.

All episodes drop on Hulu on July 26.

TRY

The Society -- What if Lord of the Flies took place in New England? That's the premise of The Society, a new series about a group of unnaturally attractive teenagers who find themselves in an alternate reality, apocalyptic version of their own town. Left to rebuild civilization, they instead quickly devolve into anarchy and bloodlust.

All episodes drop are now on Netflix.

NOS4A2 -- This supernatural horror series, about a woman (Ashleigh Cummings) who can track an immortal being (Zachary Quinto) that feeds off the souls of children and leaves what's left in an eternal Christmasland where unhappiness is illegal, is bizarre by design. The line is going to be whether it's watchably bizarre or just too weird for words.

Premieres June 2 on AMC.

Pearson -- Gina Torres deserves so much more than Hollywood has given her and maybe, just maybe, this is her chance. Torres returns as powerhouse lawyer Jessica Pearson as she leaves the law office and becomes the mayor's fixer. Simon Kassianides (Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.), Bethany Joy Lenz (One Tree Hill), Chantel Riley (Wynnona Earp), Isabel Arraiza (The Oath) and Eli Goree (Ballers) costar.

Premieres July 17 on USA.

AVOID

The Hot Zone -- National Geographic probably had good intentions with this terrifying miniseries about the first appearance of Ebola in the United States, and a cast including Julianna Margulies, Noah Emmerich, Topher Grace and Robert Sean Leonard can rival most, but now it just looks like a scarier version of the current measles epidemic, and there's just no way that's going to be fun to watch.

Premieres May 27 at 9 p.m. on National Geographic.

Four Weddings and a Funeral -- Your mileage may vary on Mindy Kaling projects, but this one just feels unnecessary. The 1994 romantic comedy was a thing of beauty; this 10-episode series, starring Zoe Boyle (Frontier), Nathalie Emmanuel (Game of Thrones), Guz Khan (Turn Up Charlie), Sophia La Porta (the U.K.'s The Five), Rebecca Rittenhouse (The Mindy Project) and Brandon Mychal Smith (You're the Worst), makes too many people American and relies on them providing enough charm to carry a character-driven plot.

Premieres July 31 on Hulu.

Style on 05/19/2019

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