Apart from watching Ted Lasso and missing Loki on Wednesdays, I also keep my Paramount Plus subscription current so that I can watch The Good Fight. Meanwhile, I'm still slogging through Manifest. I'm halfway through Season 2 and the plot is getting bizarrely complicated, but the show still remains so silly that I have to see what happens. We are still waiting for word from Netflix on whether there will be more seasons, but recent developments seem promising.Here are the most recent trailers:Y: The Last ManFinally, the long-awaited series based on the comic books of the same title by Brian K. Vaughan & Pia Guerra has arrived. All mammals in the world that have a Y-chromosome are suddenly exterminated, with the exception of Yorick (alas), and his pet monkey. Chaos ensues. Ben Schnetzer and Ashley Romans star alongside Diane Lane in the series Y: The Last Man. FX claims that it will have all-female directors. It will be available on Hulu September 13th at FXVenom: Let There be CarnageThis sequel to 2018's Venom has plenty of carnage. However, the title also refers Carnage, a former serial killer who becomes the host of an alien-symbiote. (Our hero?) Venoms enemy. Woody Harrelson and Naomie Williams star in Venom: There Be Carnage, directed Andy Serkis. It will be in theaters this autumn.The GreatI've complained before about the differences between trailers and teasers. But for now, we have Elle Fanning and Nicholas Hoult exchanging quips in period costumes. Hulu's The Great will return to us on November 19th.Army of ThievesThe safecracking Dieter was not the first character I considered when Zack Snyder's zombie movie Army of the Dead had a prequel. He is a bank teller who is drawn into a criminal ring that wants to crack safes in Europe. (He has heard about an outbreak in America that turns people into flesh-eating zombies). FYI, the trailer, sorry for the spoiler, shows only zombies on news reports. Dieter, aka Matthias Schweighfer directed Army of Thieves. It also stars Nathalie Emanuel and Ruby O. Fee. Fee.KateA poisoning of an assassin occurs just before she hits on an Asian bad boy. She has only hours to find out the truth. I'm not sure if the lady assassin plot is familiar and a bit tiresome, or if it's just that it seems a little strange to see a white woman kill a bunch of Asians while there has been an increase in violence against AAPI persons in the real world. But this trailer doesnt really do it justice. It is possible that I am wrong. After all, the trailer only contains two minutes and 45 seconds of the movie. Kate, starring Woody Harrelson and Mary Elizabeth Winstead, will be available on Netflix September 10th.