Wairarapa Times-Age E-Edition

Joy of love over the decades

PICK OF THE WEEK My Love: Six Stories of True Love

Netflix

What’s the secret to a long, successful marriage? According to David and

Ginger, the American couple celebrating their 60th wedding anniversary in the first episode of Netflix documentary series My Love, it’s having as little to do with each other as possible.

For much of their six decades together, David was busy running the family farm while Ginger was busy looking after the kids. “We both led different lives,” she reflects. “I think when we could get together, it was really special.”

My Love is what you might call a hidden gem of the Netflix library, another reminder not to judge a show by its thumbnail. This is a series of almost impossibly tender portraits of couples around the world, all of whom have been together for a very, very long time.

This quiet, observational series is based on My Love, Don’t Cross That River, a 2014 documentary directed by Jin Mo-young, which followed an elderly couple until the final moments of their 76-year marriage. The Netflix series — or the first episode, at least — isn’t quite that emotionally devastating, though it’s probably best to keep the tissues handy.

Each episode — the others take place in Spain, Brazil, Japan, South Korea and India — follows its couple over the course of a year.

In David and Ginger’s case, that means you see them walking in the winter snow around their picturesque Vermont farm, enjoying the fireworks on the 4th of July, then chopping down a tree for

Christmas. In between times, they’re busy making arrangements for funerals and wills, approaching end-of-life with the same pragmatism that got them this far.

Just about every shot looks like it could be an oil painting. The real beauty, though, is in all the small moments captured, and in the careful way they’re all put together.

MUST SEE Teine Sa¯ — The Ancient Ones Prime, 9.30pm, Thursday

You might not have seen them on the screen before, but the Pacific Islands have some pretty intense supernatural legends. New series Teine Sa¯ — The Ancient Ones takes six from across the Pacific and brings them into the modern day, full of influencers and online dating. In the first one, a young artist (Frankie Adams) opens a portal to the spirit world when she tramples an ancient heirloom; in another, a bullied teenager evokes an ancient Solomon Islands guardian spirit.

There’s a cannibal in one of them, and some sort of shapeshifting reptilian lizard — but it’s unlikely any of it is quite like anything you’ve seen before.

Jupiter’s Legacy Netflix

For a young athlete or musician, following in the footsteps of a famous parent can seem like a bit of a poisoned chalice — who’s to say it’s any different for the children of actual superheroes? Jupiter’s Legacy, based on the popular comic book series, follows a group of supercharged youngsters struggling to live up to the expectations set by the legendary feats of their parents. They were called The Union, and were classical superheroes who used their powers for the good of all mankind. The comics got into big intergenerational themes around socio-economics and capitalism and all that — so, not exactly your typical superhero series.

The Apprentice Aotearoa TVNZ 1, 8.30pm, tonight

There has never been a funnier episode of New Zealand reality TV than the first episode of the Terry Serepisos series of The Apprentice NZ, where the teams of aspiring capitalists had to organise a sausage sizzle. Happily, the first episode of all-new Mike Peroled The Apprentice Aotearoa captures the exact same vibe as the teams full of marketing types climb over each other to create a new kids’ popcorn flavour, coming up with ad concepts on the fly and pitching their products to the supermarkets. It looks and feels straight out of 2004, in the best possible way.

MOVIE OF THE WEEK Nomadland, Disney Plus

It used to be you had to leave the house if you wanted to see the year’s Academy Awardwinning best movie, but not this year. Nomadland, in which Frances Mcdormand’s character leaves her hometown, after her husband dies and the last factory closes, to live a nomadic life out of her van, is available now on

Disney Plus, Sky Movies Premiere and Sky Go from

May 12 and on Neon from May 16. If it is screening at your local cinema, though, it’ll definitely be better that way.

FROM THE VAULT 13 Going on 30 (2004) Neon

Anyone who was 13 when 13 Going on 30 was first released, is turning the big 3-0 this year. Congratulations, time to rewatch from the other end of the looking glass and have a long, hard think about your life, reflect on the unstoppable passage of time and consider whether or not 30 is as good as Jennifer Garner made you think it would be. It’s also just a nice funny movie, if that’s what you’re after.

TV PREVIEW

en-nz

2021-05-10T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-05-10T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://times-age.pressreader.com/article/281801401838278

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