1) “Beverly Hills Cop” (1984, shown here) and its sequel (1987), 6 and 8:15 p.m., Sundance. On Sunday, Netflix will add this year’s ceremony, with the America Film Institute giving Eddie Murphy its Lifetime Achievement Award. First, here are two of his best films, skillfully mixing action, intensity and big, Murphy-style humor.
2) “Craig Ferguson: American on Purpose,” 9 p.m. ET, CNN, rerunning at 11. Ferguson spent decades bouncing between his native Scotland and the U.S., the place he says he’d always wanted to live. He found fame here — as a late-night host, game-show host and voice actor — and has been a citizen for 18 years. At 64, he reflects on that with other immigrants.
3) Basketball. The Spurs and Thunder collide at 8:30 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock,. It’s Game 6 (if needed) of the best-of-seven series, to decide who faces the Knicks in the finals. Also tonight: baseball on Fox (7:15), NASCAR on CW (7:30), WNBA basketball on CBS (8).
4) “The Devil Wears Prada” (2006), 6:15 p.m., Freeform. The longest gap between a film and its sequel may be the 34 years after “National Velvet.” But lately, two films kept the original stars despite big gaps — 22 years for “Freaky Friday,” 20 for this one. Its sequel (now in theaters) is good, but this one is better, with Meryl Streep as Anne Hathaway’s steely boss.
5) New movies, 8 p.m., cable. On Lifetime, “Where the Heart Lands” has a traditional plot: A city guy inherits race horses and meets a trainer (Jana Kramer); both happen to be single and attractive. On Hallmark, “Key to the Castle” is non-traditional — the third movie in which Tamera Mowry-Housley solves a mystery with the help of a friendly ghost.