Sci-Fi Bonanza (‘Invasion,’ ‘Dune’), ‘Blue Bloods’ Backlash, More Scandals on ‘Morning Show,’ Hallmark’s Christmas Countdown

A global alien invasion unfolds, slowly, on the Apple TV+ series Invasion, while a new adaptation of Dune invades movie theaters, streaming simultaneously on HBO Max. One of the Reagan family police officers faces backlash from his peers on Blue Bloods. The public scandals continue to mount on Apple’s The Morning Show. Because it’s never too early for Hallmark to celebrate the holidays, the channel’s “Countdown to Christmas” TV-movie parade begins well before Halloween.

Shamier Anderson in Invasion on Apple TV+
Apple TV+

Invasion

Series Premiere

The slow burn common to so many streaming series—though not Squid Game, which could help account for its success—infects this ambitious but sluggishly paced international sci-fi drama about a worldwide extraterrestrial takeover. Recalling Sense8 with its diversity and global scope, although here it tends to diffuse the action, Invasion moves from rural Oklahoma—Sam Neill, the series’ most recognizable face, plays a town’s soon-to-retire sheriff—to a Japanese space agency to a troubled Syrian immigrant family on Long Island, N.Y., to a soldier in Afghanistan to a bullied British schoolboy. Nosebleeds and scrambled TV signals are among the first subtle signs that something’s amiss, but soon, random explosions and weird sightings suggest that life on Earth is about to change forever. If you have the patience for it.

'Dune,' HBO Max Premiere, October 2021
HBO Max

Dune

Movie Premiere

Word is you’re better off catching director Denis Villeneuve’s (Arrival) big-budget adaptation of the Frank Herbert sci-fi classic on the big screen. And yet Warner Bros’ mission to make all of its 2021 films available for immediate streaming on the HBO Max platform churns on, so if you’d just as soon absorb it at home, you’re in luck. Timothée Chalamet assumes the pivotal role of Paul Atreides, ensnared in a dynastic battle on the desert planet Arakis against the oppressive Harkonnen, with the prize being control of the all-important spice.

Will Estes as Jamie in Blue Bloods
John Paul Filo/CBS

Blue Bloods

The network’s most popular Friday drama puts officer Jamie Reagan (Will Estes) in a bind, facing backlash from his peers when he joins ADA sister Erin (Bridget Moynihan) and her investigator Anthony (Steven Schirripa) on a hunt for an underground bar where corrupt NYPD and FDNY officials do their criminal business. Elsewhere on the beat: Eddie (Vanessa Ray) learns her partner Rachel Witten (Lauren Patten) is thinking about leaving the force.

The Morning Show Julianna Margulies as Laura Peterson
Apple TV+

The Morning Show

A day without scandal would mean the fictional Morning Show had gone dark—but because the show-within-the-show must go on, the beleaguered news team scrambles to fill the spot suddenly vacated by mercurial star anchor Alex (Jennifer Aniston). When Laura (Julianna Margulies) is approached to return to her old early-morning gig, she quips: “It’s like Carrie being asked to speak at the high-school reunion.” She’s not wrong, because scandal at sunrise is this series’ specialty.

Benjamin Ayres, Danica McKellar in You, Me and The Christmas Trees
Ryan Plummer/Crown Media

You, Me & the Christmas Trees

Movie Premiere

Yes, I know, you’ve just hung your Halloween decorations, and Hallmark is already going on about Christmas trees? That’s their way, and the “Christmas to Countdown” holiday-movie frenzy with more than 40 new titles begins in earnest (and we do mean earnest) with The Wonder Years’ Danica McKellar starring as Olivia, Connecticut’s leading expert on evergreens. She heads to small-town Avon to help Jack (Benjamin Ayres), a fourth-generation tree farmer, save the family business from a mysterious illness that’s causing the firs to lose their luster. McKellar’s Wonder Years co-star Jason Hervey also appears.

Inside Friday TV:

  • Netflix Animation: The streamer triples down on animation with three new series: Adventure Beast, a spoof of wildlife/nature shows; Maya and the Three, a Caribbean-influenced nine-part fantasy epic; and the satirical Inside Job, a twisted workplace comedy set in a lab carrying out the whims of a shadow government.
  • Locke & Key (streaming on Netflix): The second season of the supernatural mystery, based on a comic-book series, finds the Locke siblings turning to Uncle Duncan (Aaron Ashmore) for help in defeating the key-hunting demon who shape-shifted into one of their friends. As demons do.
  • True Crime Watch: ABC’s 20/20 (9/8c) and correspondent John Quiñones dive deep into the twisted “Jekyll & Hyde” case of surgeon Robert Bierenbaum, whose terrified wife Gail mysteriously disappeared in 1985. The bad doc created a new life for himself across the country until his lies caught up to him. On Dateline NBC (9/8), reporter Andrea Canning looks into the 2017 murder of 27-year-old aspiring singer Egypt Covington, found bound and shot to death in her home.