There are plenty of new releases just arrived on the streaming services, starting with Amazon Prime we have Truth Seekers, a new series starring Simon Pegg and Nick Frost about amateur paranormal investigators.

Pegg and Frost are a hugely watchable duo with a history dating back to the late 1990s, and when they work together they create the kind of enjoyable films and TV that slip down easily, looks like good undemanding fun.

With a new lockdown about to kick in, Netflix has Hugh Grant on hand to cheer us up with the lovely Music and Lyrics from 2007.

More undemanding fun with Hugh playing a washed up 80s pop star, meaning plenty of opportunities to see him made up as a new romantic, discovering a new muse to help him write a song for a pop diva. Expect industrial level bumbling, sit back, enjoy.

Also new to Netflix is White Boy Rick, a film based on the true story of the youngest ever FBI informant’s rise through the Detroit underworld in the 1980s. ‘WBR’ got lost at the box office, looking like yet another gangster film, but it boasts some great performances from a cast including Matthew McConaughey, and the true life origins give it a credibility that lifts it above the pack.

On the big screen at Kinokulture this weekend should have been the always excellent Sally Hawkins in Eternal Beauty, a realistic look at schizophrenia, something often poorly portrayed in film. Jane, (Hawkins) lives in a stifling family environment, when she stops taking her medication and meets fellow sufferer Mike, her life explodes into colourful surreal episodes.

Sadly, events have yet again overtaken us all, so to help our local cinema, why not stream this at home (via Amazon Prime) and make a donation via Kinokulture.org.uk.