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5 shows to watch: Catastrophe, Hannibal Takes Edinburgh, and more

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As streaming video grows at a monster pace, there’s always something awesome coming online, no matter the week. What’s dropping and when becomes important knowledge as you organize your queue and schedule your binge time accordingly. We know you don’t have time to cull the good from the bad in the barrage of new movies and TV shows loading up the Internet pipelines, but don’t worry — we do.

This week, Amazon gets season two of a popular British romantic comedy, Netflix gets some cool behind-the-scenes comedy, and HBO shows off a compelling new horror film.

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Here are our picks for five of the best titles to stream this week:

Catastrophe (Season 2)

Catastrophe

Amazon

Catastrophe, a popular British series about an American who gets a woman pregnant in the U.K. while on a business trip, returns to Amazon this week with a whole new season. A well written comedy which uses awkward moments to its advantage, the series features excellent performances from lead actors Sharon Horgan and Rob Delaney, who help to meld as many moving moments as quirky ones.

Hannibal Takes Edinburgh

Hannibal Buress

Netflix

A stand up comedian who can make even improvised observations into hilarious audience fodder, Hannibal Buress has quickly risen to be among the most acclaimed at his craft. In his latest Netflix outing, Hannibal Takes Edinburgh, Buress performs at the Edinburg Festival Fringe — the largest comedy and art festival in the world. The new documentary offers compelling moments for both fans and comedy students, with explorations of the comedian’s methods alongside numerous hilarious clips from live sets during his time in Scotland.

Hush

Hush

HBO

Hush is a horror film which bucks boring genre tropes in favor of something new and exciting. An interesting take on the “someone is at the window” genre which premiered at this year’s South By Southwest Film Festival, the film’s protagonist is deaf and mute. The character device allows filmmakers to employ silence as a tool, creating highly tense confrontations between good and evil with little to no extraneous sound. In another cool twist on typical horror stereotypes, the film doesn’t make fans wait to see face-to-mask interactions between good and evil, with the hero and villain meeting and plotting against each other from the very start.

Look Who’s Back

Look Who's Back

Netflix

Comedic interpretations of Adolf Hitler are rarely as good as they seem to those involved, but German-language film Look Who’s Back is a notable exception. The film, an on-screen adaptation of a bestselling satirical novel of the same name, follows a Hitler character with post-1945 amnesia through a series of Borat-style unscripted vignettes in present day Berlin. When he becomes mistaken for a method actor, Hitler lands himself a career in TV — where he attempts to stage a political comeback.

Nothing Left Unsaid: Gloria Vanderbilt & Anderson Cooper

Nothing Left Unsaid

HBO

Nothing Left Unsaid is a documentary which follows news anchor Anderson Cooper and his mother Gloria Vanderbilt in a series of candid conversations, aimed at preserving the 92 year-old’s experiences for generations to come. An investigation into the life of an iconic American heiress and artist, the film was directed by Academy Award nominee Liz Garbus, and covers the interesting history of one of America’s most famous and powerful families — straight from the horse’s mouth.

Parker Hall
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Parker Hall is a writer and musician from Portland, OR. He is a graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Oberlin…
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