If you haven't found some series, write to us and we will try to find it!
June
Harry Wild (season 5)
1 episodes
“Harry Wild” (season 5) — returns to Dublin with retired literature professor turned private investigator Harry Wild facing a new run of murders that feel stranger, more theatrical, and more personal than the usual cozy cases she and Fergus Reid stumble into. The season opens when new state pathologist Pierce Kennedy notices that several supposedly accidental deaths share an eerie connection: matching musical-note tattoos tied to Debussy’s “Clair de Lune.” His discovery pulls Harry and Fergus into a case where medicine, music, memory, and staged tragedy begin to overlap, while Garda DS Jordan McDonald and Charlie Wild try to keep the investigation from becoming another one of Harry’s rule-breaking adventures. Pierce’s arrival also changes the rhythm of Harry’s world, bringing professional friction, quick banter, and a spark that unsettles her just as she and Fergus are both dealing with the emotional bruises left by recent heartbreak. Across undercover missions, suspicious deaths, family tension, pub conversations with Glenn, and Lola’s continuing place in the team’s orbit, Harry must decide when to trust instinct, when to trust evidence, and when a charming new ally may be complicating both. “Harry Wild” (season 5) becomes another warm, witty mystery chapter about grief, reinvention, partnership, and the pleasure of watching Harry refuse to age quietly while murder keeps giving her reasons to interfere. More …
June
Mortal Kombat II (2026)
“Mortal Kombat II” (2026) — brings Earthrealm’s champions into the tournament they spent the previous battle trying to survive long enough to reach, with Liu Kang, Sonya Blade, Jax, Raiden, Cole Young, and their allies now facing the full threat of Shao Kahn’s rule over Outworld. Their uneasy lineup gains its loudest new weapon in Johnny Cage, a faded action star whose ego, one-liners, and hunger for a comeback make him look completely unprepared for a war built on ancient realms, chosen fighters, and brutal fatality-driven combat. But behind the spectacle, the fight becomes more than a test of strength: Kitana’s connection to Edenia, Jade’s loyalty, Sindel’s power, Baraka’s savagery, and the return of familiar enemies push every champion to question what they are really fighting for. As portals open, rival warriors clash, and the tournament finally forces Earthrealm and Outworld into direct collision, the film expands the mythology beyond survival horror and into a larger fantasy war where bloodlines, betrayals, and destiny matter as much as every punch. Johnny’s showmanship brings humor and chaos, but the closer he gets to the truth of Mortal Kombat, the more he realizes that being famous in one world means nothing when another wants to destroy it. “Mortal Kombat II” (2026) becomes a violent, effects-heavy martial-arts fantasy about legacy, courage, realm-shaking rivalry, and the moment Earthrealm’s defenders must stop reacting to invasion and start fighting like champions. More …
June
House of the Dragon (season 3)
1 episodes
“House of the Dragon” (season 3) — plunges Westeros into the full fury of the Dance of the Dragons, as Rhaenyra Targaryen and the Blacks move from fragile planning to open war against the Greens holding King’s Landing in Aegon II’s name. With Aemond One-Eye ruling through fear, Alicent trapped between guilt and survival, and Daemon still haunted by the cost of power, the season turns every council meeting, raven, fleet movement, and dragon flight into part of a civil war no one can truly control. Rhaenyra’s advantage grows through Dragonstone, House Velaryon, Jacaerys, Baela, Rhaena, and newly claimed dragonriders, but victory becomes more dangerous as the Triarchy, Corlys’s fleet, and the looming Battle of the Gullet threaten to make the sea as bloody as the sky. In King’s Landing, Criston Cole, Larys Strong, Helaena, Aegon, and Otto’s shadow keep the Greens divided by ambition, paranoia, and grief, while houses across the realm choose sides for reasons of loyalty, fear, revenge, or simple survival. As dragons become weapons of state and family bonds burn under political necessity, the war stops feeling like a question of rightful succession and becomes a tragedy spreading through every corner of Westeros. “House of the Dragon” (season 3) becomes a grand, brutal fantasy drama about inheritance, vengeance, loyalty, and the moment a dynasty begins destroying itself with the very fire that made it untouchable. More …
June
From (season 4)
9 episodes
“From” (season 4) — follows the survivors as the town’s reality begins to warp in ways that defy every rule they’ve clung to, with new structures, new sounds, and new patterns in the night suggesting that whatever controls this place is no longer hiding its intentions. Strange signals, shifting memories, and fractures in time pull the group into deeper paranoia as alliances strain under the weight of fear and unanswered questions. As whispers of impossible sightings spread through the town, a growing sense of déjà vu begins to erode the survivors’ trust in their own memories. As the boundaries of the town flicker and distort, some residents begin experiencing overlapping timelines that leave them unsure which version of events they can trust. And when a new arrival claims to have seen the group in a place that shouldn’t exist, it forces them to confront the possibility that the town’s influence extends far beyond its borders. The season tracks their attempts to decode the town’s evolving design — from unexplained disappearances to glimpses of alternate versions of their own lives — while the creatures outside grow bolder, smarter, and disturbingly coordinated. “From” (season 4) becomes a tense, dread‑soaked descent into a living labyrinth, where survival depends not on escape but on understanding the purpose of the nightmare they’ve been trapped in. More …
June
Big Mistakes (season 1)
8 episodes
“Big Mistakes” (season 1) — throws siblings Nicky and Morgan Dardano into a crime spiral after a simple errand for their dying nonna becomes a botched theft with consequences far beyond their New Jersey suburb. Nicky, anxious, image-conscious, and desperate to be seen as a decent person, and Morgan, a sharp but equally flailing elementary-school teacher, are already experts at arguing, disappointing each other, and avoiding adulthood. But when their mistake gives Yusuf and Ivan leverage over them, the pair are blackmailed into jobs they are wildly unqualified to handle, from funeral interference and awkward family cover-ups to cattle auctions, Miami trips, and encounters with people who treat organized crime like a business rather than a panic attack. Their mother Linda is trying to revive her own life through an increasingly absurd mayoral campaign, while Morgan’s relationship with Max, Nicky’s romance with Tareq, Natalie’s presence, and the intimidating orbit of Annette keep pulling the siblings’ private mess into public danger. As each attempt to fix one problem creates three worse ones, the season turns family dysfunction into a dark comedy of bad timing, terrible lies, and accidental criminal momentum. “Big Mistakes” (season 1) becomes a fast, chaotic crime comedy about sibling loyalty, shame, ambition, and the frightening discovery that some people are so bad at crime they become useful to criminals anyway. More …
June
You’re Killing Me (season 1)
6 episodes
“You’re Killing Me” (season 1) — follows bestselling mystery novelist Allie Chandler, whose once-glittering career is beginning to lose momentum just as she arrives in the quaint New England town of Founders’ Cove for a writers’ convention. When the suspicious death of a close friend turns the event from professional embarrassment into a real murder case, Allie cannot resist treating the crime like the kind of puzzle she used to solve on the page. Her instincts quickly put her at odds with Jack Kerrigan, the town’s newly arrived police detective, who wants evidence, order, and fewer dramatic theories from a celebrity author. But Allie also finds an unlikely partner in Andi Walker, an ambitious young true-crime podcaster whose digital sleuthing, recordings, and hunger for a breakthrough clash sharply with Allie’s old-school methods. As the two women dig into rival writers, local gossip, private grudges, and secrets hiding behind Founders’ Cove’s postcard charm, their partnership becomes both a source of comedy and the best chance of finding the killer. “You’re Killing Me” (season 1) becomes a cozy, sharp murder-mystery drama about relevance, reinvention, unlikely friendship, and the danger of discovering that real murder is far messier than fiction. More …
June
The Way Home (season 4)
10 episodes
“The Way Home” (season 4) — follows the Landry family as Alice approaches high‑school graduation, Kat and Elliot weigh the future of their relationship, and Del confronts the quiet ache of becoming an empty‑nester again, only to discover that the past refuses to stay buried. As Kat stumbles into a new era of Port Haven’s history and Alice revisits a familiar time, long‑dormant mysteries resurface, hinting that the answers they’ve sought for generations may lie in the shifting timelines that continue to pull them back toward the pond. As echoes of unresolved choices ripple across eras, the Landrys begin to sense that the timelines are no longer running parallel but slowly folding into each other. And with each crossing, the emotional stakes deepen, revealing connections that challenge everything they thought they understood about fate and family. The season tracks their attempts to navigate fresh beginnings while reckoning with unresolved secrets, unexpected reunions, and revelations that tie the Landry lineage to Port Haven more deeply than they ever imagined. “The Way Home” (season 4) becomes an emotional, time‑bending final chapter about family, legacy, and the inevitability of confronting the past before stepping into the future. More …
June
Not Suitable for Work (season 1)
9 episodes
“Not Suitable for Work” (season 1) — centers on five ambitious twenty-somethings trying to turn post-college chaos into real adult lives in New York’s Murray Hill, where career pressure, rent, romance, and friendship all collide in apartments, offices, bars, and hallways that feel too small for everyone’s expectations. AJ Pascarelli arrives as an intense first-year analyst at a powerful investment bank, determined to prove she belongs in a world built on competition and impossible hours, while Davis Beau Bradley Barrett III hides insecurity behind finance-bro confidence and a messy longing for something more serious. Across the hall, Abby Chilukuri works as a fashion-obsessed assistant to demanding celebrity stylist Vanessa Hsu, chasing glamour while learning how easily style, status, and self-worth can blur. Josh Teitelbaum, a privileged aspiring media producer, wants to be taken seriously beyond his family name, and Kel Washington, a former med student turned substitute teacher and would-be actor, tries to redefine success without disappointing everyone around him. As bosses like Bill Gibson, old connections, awkward hookups, workplace disasters, and shifting roommate loyalties keep testing the group, the season turns professional ambition into a comedy of embarrassment, desire, and emotional growing pains. “Not Suitable for Work” (season 1) becomes a sharp, warm ensemble comedy about young adulthood, fragile confidence, chosen friendship, and the strange moment when getting the life you wanted still leaves you unsure who you are supposed to be. More …
June
American Dad! (season 22)
11 episodes
“American Dad!” (season 22) — continues to push its satirical edge as the Smith family stumbles through a new run of absurd, politically incorrect, and aggressively self‑aware storylines that target American culture, media hysteria, and domestic dysfunction. Stan’s rigid patriotism repeatedly clashes with a world that no longer fits his black‑and‑white worldview, dragging the family into misadventures involving government paranoia, corporate greed, and personal identity crises taken to cartoon extremes. Roger’s personas grow even more unhinged and central to the chaos, often driving entire episodes into spirals of deception, crime, and emotional manipulation. Several episodes lean heavily into meta‑commentary, openly mocking the show’s own longevity and shifting audience expectations. Recurring gags are pushed to their breaking point, turning familiar setups into deliberately excessive payoffs. Meanwhile, Francine, Hayley, Steve, and Klaus are each pulled into standalone plots that twist familiar sitcom setups into dark, surreal punchlines. “American Dad!” (season 22) maintains its identity as a fast‑paced animated comedy that thrives on escalation, shock humor, and the relentless dismantling of both family values and American exceptionalism. More …
June
Here We Go (season 1)
6 episodes
“Here We Go” (season 1) — tracks the Jessop family through a year of ordinary disasters in Bedford, all captured through the handheld camera of teenage son Sam, whose school project turns his relatives’ private chaos into an accidentally honest family record. Rachel tries to keep everyone moving with plans, courses, schemes, and anxious optimism, while her husband Paul drifts between good intentions, bruised pride, and deeply unhelpful attempts to prove he still has hidden talents. Their children Amy and Sam watch the adults unravel with dry skepticism, Amy’s relationship with Maya adds its own pressures, and grandmother Sue turns every simple situation into something louder, stranger, and harder to control. Across the season, the family’s attempts at bonding collapse into expired theme-park vouchers, a neighbour’s dog, failed fitness ambitions, awkward job interviews, a disastrous portrait, a pool bought for hip recovery, old sports grudges, Sue’s new boyfriend, and Robin’s desperate efforts to manage his relationship with Cherry. What makes the chaos work is not that the Jessops ever become sensible, but that their embarrassment, irritation, and selfish little choices keep circling back to a stubborn kind of affection. “Here We Go” (season 1) becomes a warm, sharply observed British family sitcom about holidays that go wrong, relatives who never learn, and the strange comfort of people who can ruin every plan while still somehow belonging together. More …























