The Devil Wears Prada 2 hits cinemas – here’s what to watch this week
The much-anticipated sequel reunites Anne Hathaway, Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci as they reprise their roles in the ever-changing world of fashion media.
April 29
Widow’s Bay, Apply TV
Matthew Rhys shows off his comic flair in this witty horror spoof, playing Tom Loftis, the well-meaning mayor of Widow’s Bay, a quaint New England island town with big tourism ambitions. Determined to turn the community into a seaside hotspot (despite its cutesy spots like The Salty Whale) the locals remain convinced the place is riddled with supernatural threats, from eerie fog to a deadly legend known as the Sea Hag.
April 30
Man on Fire, Netflix
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II plays John Creasy, a battle-scarred mercenary and former US Army special forces soldier, haunted by his past in Iraq and Afghanistan and struggling with PTSD. His path changes when he becomes the protector of Poe, a young girl who is the sole survivor of a devastating incident in Brazil. As danger closes in, Creasy teams up with a driver played by Alice Braga, forming an uneasy partnership as they work to keep Poe safe and uncover the forces targeting her. Based on AJ Quinnell’s 1980 novel.
May 1
The Devil Wears Prada 2, cinemas everywhere
In this much anticipated sequel, Andy Sachs (Anne Hathaway) returns to Runway as Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep) navigates a new media landscape and Runway‘s position within it. They reconnect with another former assistant, Emily (Emily Blunt), who is now the head of a luxury brand that possesses funding which could ensure Runway‘s survival.
What else to watch
The Drama, cinemas everywhere
The Drama is an A24 romantic thriller directed by Kristoffer Borgli, which follows seemingly perfect couple Emma (Zendaya) and Charlie (Robert Pattinson) as their relationship begins to unravel over the course of their wedding week in Boston. What starts as a glossy, high-fashion rom-com soon takes a sharp turn into darker territory, evolving into a “cringe”-tinged psychological drama that probes intimacy, hidden tensions and the secrets threatening to pull them apart.
The Testaments, Apple TV
A sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale, and based on Margaret Atwood’s 2019 novel, the story unfolds along two strands. One follows Aunt Lydia – the only major returning character, played by Ann Dowd, whose calm menace defined the original series – as she writes a memoir about the harrowing experiences that led to her complicity in patriarchal, authoritarian Gilead. The main plot focuses on the school years of Agnes (played by Chase Infiniti), who is in fact Hannah, the daughter June and Luke spent the entirety of The Handmaid’s Tale trying to reclaim after Gilead took her. Now, a young woman being groomed as a future wife for a commander, Agnes, meets Daisy (Lucy Halliday), a new student from free Canada, determined to undermine Gilead from within and who enlists Agnes’s help in her dangerous mission.
Big Mistakes, Netflix
Schitt’s Creek’s Dan Levy creates and stars in this crime comedy as Nicky, a New Jersey pastor. He is joined by Taylor Ortega as his sister, Morgan, and Laurie Metcalf as their mother. When Morgan impulsively steals a necklace from a jewellery store as a gift for their dying grandmother, the store’s mob-connected manager blackmails the siblings into working for his crime organisation, a job for which they are spectacularly unprepared.
The Miniature Wife, Sky Atlantic
Based on a short story by Manuel Gonzales, The Miniature Wife stars Matthew Macfadyen as Les, an inventor who creates a device capable of miniaturising matter, while Elizabeth Banks plays his more successful wife, Lindy, a prize-winning writer. When Les accidentally shrinks Lindy, he must prove he can reverse the process and restore her to full size or risk losing the patent for his invention.
Euphoria, HBO Max
After nearly four years off-screen, Euphoria is finally back for its long-awaited third season. With a five-year time jump, we will be following its characters as they navigate life in their twenties. Rue (Zendaya) is now in Mexico and in deep trouble with dangerous drug dealers, while Jules (Hunter Schafer) is pursuing art school alongside a questionable side hustle. Back home, Cassie (Sydney Sweeney) and Nate (Jacob Elordi) are engaged, though cracks are already showing, and Lexi (Maude Apatow) is working as an assistant to a Hollywood showrunner played by Sharon Stone.
Margo’s Got Money Troubles, Apple TV






