reactormag.com
What to Watch and Read This Weekend: Wicked: For Good, Mr. Robot For Chaos
News
What to Watch
What to Watch and Read This Weekend: Wicked: For Good, Mr. Robot For Chaos
Plus: Dev Patel is David Copperfield and all the books you haven’t read.
By Molly Templeton
|
Published on November 21, 2025
Photo: Universal Studios and USA Network
Comment
0
Share New
Share
Photo: Universal Studios and USA Network
We’re not talking about that holiday next week. You know the one. If you love it, more power to you! I will be at the bar, not doing holiday things, because that’s how I roll. But I will also be reading a lot of books. In fact that is my primary non-work plan for the rest of this year: reading books. It’s glum outside, I’m tired, my apartment is full of books. There are worse ways to spend a month. (I will also be watching Pluribus, which I finally started.)
That said, it is still—and always—the season to call your reps. And to kick some leaves if they’re falling where you live. And maybe to stomp in a puddle or four. You know. Fall! Fall, slinking into winter. Long scarves and warm beverages are coming, but they’re not here just yet.
Anyway, let’s watch some stuff, yeah?
Yes, Dev Patel Played David Copperfield in a Movie Directed by Armando Iannucci, and That Rules
Do you have a little mental list of movies that you always mean to watch, but whenever you sit down to watch something, the entire list deletes itself from your brain, only to return at some inopportune moment? I feel like I actually have a lot of these lists, and The Personal History of David Copperfield is on all of them. The thing is, this isn’t just Dev Patel as David Copperfield. It’s Dev Patel as David Copperfield, directed by Armando Iannucci. Iannucci isn’t exactly a household name, but should be; for one thing, he created Veep. But in my heart he’s primarily the writer and director of In the Loop, a political satire film spinoff of his series The Thick of It. I’ve still never seen The Thick of It, and I adore In the Loop, which features, among other delights, Twelfth Doctor Peter Capaldi saying “Fuckety-bye” with a truly biting depth of scorn. My point is, Iannucci is enjoyable, even without all the available context. The New York Times says he “exhibits a light touch” in his take on David Copperfield, which stars, along with Patel, the power trio of Tilda Swinton, Hugh Laurie, and Capaldi. And it’s got Ben Whishaw and Morfydd Clark! I have got to get to this before it leaves Hulu (where you can watch it now).
You Don’t Need an Excuse To Watch Mr. Robot, But We Have One
In any given year there are more TV, book, and movie anniversaries than a single human can possibly keep track of. But one particular anniversary this year didn’t get quite the attention I wish it had: the 10th anniversary of Mr. Robot. Yes, there was a panel at NYCC, and now that I’m actively searching for them, I’ve found a few articles. But, like, come on. The time was more than ripe for a lot of rich revisiting of this still-underrated show. Sam Esmail’s series was brilliant, prescient, incredibly acted—it’s one of those shows where you wonder why every single performer isn’t now the lead in seventeen new projects—brazen, daring, clever, human, biting … I could go on. The only reason I haven’t yet made it through a rewatch is because this show is dense, and smart, and requires attention and patience. The second season threw viewers into the deep end and expected you to tread water until the reality of what was happening to protagonist Eliot Alderson (Rami Malek) became clear. The constant machinations and complications are rich and elaborate—and so is the character work. (B.D. Wong is amazing in this.) If you never watched it, it’s on Netflix now. Plan your weekend(s) accordingly.
Yes, I Talked About Wicked Last Week, But This Is Different
In all the fuss over Wicked: For Good, it’s easy for one individual interview—especially one that’s not with one of the movie’s stars—to get overlooked. But Soraya Nadia McDonald’s interview with costume designer Paul Tazewell is simply the best thing I’ve read in connection with these big witchy spectacles. For all that John M. Chu’s Oz looks like cake overall, the details are fascinating (I’m still thinking about those damn tulips! And the water tank for Shiz!). Tazewell’s costumes are fantastic and lush across the board; he won an Oscar earlier this year for his work on the first film. McDonald’s interview isn’t only about Wicked, but about Tazewell’s career, and about fashion and justice and expression and texture and beauty—and his history with Wicked’s Cynthia Erivo, who Tazewell also costumed for Harriet. It’s just fantastic. I haven’t even seen the movie yet and I want Tazewell to win every Oscar.
It’s List-Making Season and the Books Are Looking at Me Funny
The end-of-year lists are beginning to roll in, despite the fact that it’s November. I’m not looking, honestly; I haven’t read enough new books this year to have strong opinions about what’s the year’s best (yet). I have a little running list of “things that people I trust have said are very good,” and it includes Notes from a Regicide, Audition (this one and this one, though the latter isn’t SFF), Luminous, and The Everlasting, among others. (The very short list of 2025 books that I’ve already read and loved is topped by The Raven Scholar.) Am I going to get to all of these before the year ends? No, and it doesn’t matter! Reading doesn’t have to happen on a schedule. I’m just taking this little moment to remind you of that: for readers, “best of” lists are subjective tools for future shopping. Not lists of things you should have already read or ever have to read. That said, what’s good? What did you love? What’s in your pile to read if you get a minute to yourself in the next few weeks?[end-mark]
The post What to Watch and Read This Weekend: <i>Wicked: For Good</i>, <i>Mr. Robot</i> For Chaos appeared first on Reactor.