What’s worth your time in movies and TV this weekend?

He would know; he once put his head in lions' mouths for a living.

The concept here is simple: One fish out of two waters.

Angela Bassett in Wakanda Forever, Michelle Williams in The Fabelmans, and Sylvester Stallone in Tulsa King

Credit: Marvel / Universal / FOX

But in a lame non-twist, this unfrozen caveman gangster does just fine.

But he’s obviously a nice gangster, with no real threats.

The bad criminals are vain weaklings.

Michelle Williams in The Fabelmans

Paul Dano and Michelle Williams in ‘The Fabelmans’.Universal

Most Tulsans think Dwight’s awesome.

The best moments are the lighthearted ones.

There’s a scene where Stallone gets to act high as a kite, which is just delightful.

Black Panther Wakanda Forever

Danai Gurira and Angela Bassett in ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’.Eli Adé/Marvel Studios

It’s 1890, and she’s a Londoner far from home.

Wearing a ball gown on horseback, she’s great with a bow and arrow.

But he also embraces the genre’s guttural thrills.

Sylvester Stallone in ‘Tulsa King’

Sylvester Stallone in ‘Tulsa King’.Brian Douglas/Paramount+

Every episode has a gun duel, or a high-tension face-off with quick-cut close-ups to easily reachable weapons.

The central duo feels torn off the cover of an especially progressive pulp paperback.

Eli just wants to get the Nebraska acreage owed him by the Homestead Act.

The English Credit: Diego Lopez Calvin/Drama Republic/BBC/Amazon Studios Description: Chaske Spencer, Emily Blunt

Diego Lopez Calvin/Drama Republic/BBC/Amazon Studios

He agrees to get Cordelia where she needs.

They meet bad men, tough women, liars, crooks, and worse.

And then the wheels start to come off.

For Blunt, it’s another opportunity to play battle-hardened emotional resolve with a wink.