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July
Sugar (season 1)
8 episodes
“Sugar” (season 1) — centers on John Sugar, a polished private investigator and devoted film lover who returns to Los Angeles after completing a case in Japan and is hired by legendary producer Jonathan Siegel to find his missing granddaughter, Olivia. The assignment draws Sugar into a wealthy Hollywood family where affection, addiction, resentment, and reputation have been tangled together for years. Olivia’s father Bernie wants the search contained, her half-brother Davy reacts with hostility, and Melanie Mackintosh, a woman close to Olivia, seems to know more than she is ready to admit. As Sugar moves through luxury hotels, studio offices, nightclubs, abandoned streets, and private homes, he uncovers a body hidden in Olivia’s car, disturbing connections to powerful men, and evidence that someone is trying to steer him away from the truth. Ruby, his trusted handler, urges caution, while Henry and others from Sugar’s private circle hint that his interest in the case may expose secrets of his own. Beneath his calm manners and refusal to carry a gun lies a man haunted by a missing sister, sudden physical episodes, and an identity he keeps carefully concealed. Blending classic noir imagery with a mystery that gradually shifts into stranger territory, “Sugar” (season 1) becomes a stylish detective drama about empathy, obsession, Hollywood corruption, and a man searching for one missing woman while trying not to reveal how deeply he understands the feeling of being lost. More …
July
The Dark (season 1)
6 episodes
“The Dark” (season 1) — opens in the Scottish Highlands, where DI Monica Kennedy is called away from a tense family situation after the body of 17-year-old Jason Morgan is discovered deliberately posed in the wilderness. The crime immediately reopens an older wound: Jason’s brother Nichol disappeared five years earlier, and Monica was part of the investigation that never gave their mother Bethany a clear answer. Paired with new detective Connor Crawford, whose instinctive, direct style unsettles her more guarded approach, Monica begins tracing links between the brothers, a second victim, and a rural community where fear spreads faster than facts. Suspicion falls across isolated homes, hotel corridors, woodland tracks, and people who seem ordinary until their stories stop matching, including a withdrawn poacher, a troubled young waiter, and an unsettling social worker. As anonymous phones, carefully staged bodies, hidden observation, and signs of another intended victim turn the inquiry into a race against time, Monica’s own past begins pressing into the case and weakening her trust in her judgment. The killer appears to know not only the landscape but the private fractures of the people being hunted, making every familiar place feel watched. “The Dark” (season 1) becomes a cold, atmospheric Scottish crime thriller about buried guilt, family trauma, paranoia, and a detective pursuing a predator whose campaign is designed to make an entire community afraid of what may be hiding beside them. More …
July
Moana (2026)
“Moana” (2026) — centers on Moana, the strong-willed daughter of Chief Tui and Sina, whose island home of Motunui begins to suffer as crops fail, fish disappear, and an ancient darkness spreads across the ocean. Though her father insists that their people must never sail beyond the reef, Moana has always felt drawn toward the water and the voyaging traditions her community has forgotten. Guided by her grandmother Tala and chosen by the Ocean itself, she sets out on a daring journey to find Maui, the boastful shape-shifting demigod whose theft of the heart of Te Fiti disturbed the balance of nature generations earlier. Maui is more interested in recovering his magical fishhook and protecting his legend than helping an inexperienced wayfinder, but storms, monsters, Kakamora pirates, and the fiery threat of Te Kā force the unlikely pair to depend on each other. With Heihei causing chaos aboard the canoe and memories of Pua and her family keeping home close, Moana must learn to read the stars, command the waves, and trust the voice that has called her beyond everything familiar. The live-action adventure expands the landscapes, music, and cultural spirit of the animated story while keeping its emotional focus on identity, courage, and responsibility. “Moana” (2026) becomes a sweeping oceanic fantasy about restoring a wounded world, honoring ancestral knowledge, and a young leader discovering that the path her people fear may be the one capable of guiding them home. More …
July
Grantchester (season 11)
5 episodes
“Grantchester” (season 11) — returns to the Cambridgeshire village in the summer of 1963 for the series’ final chapter, with Reverend Alphy Kottaram and DI Geordie Keating still solving murders together while everyone around them seems to be standing at a personal crossroads. Alphy’s growing connection with Meg Grey opens a gentler future than he expected, but new discoveries about his past and the family he might have known force him to question where he truly belongs and what faith means when identity itself feels unfinished. Geordie enjoys a rare calm with Cathy and their family, only for a tempting professional offer to threaten the unofficial partnership with Alphy that has become central to both his work and his life. Leonard Finch faces quieter but no less profound change as caring for a neighbour’s son awakens a paternal side he never fully imagined, while Mrs. C, Jack, Daniel, Miss Scott, Larry Peters, and the rest of the village continue to carry their own burdens through another run of baffling crimes. From parish tensions and locked-room suspicion to family secrets, forgiveness, and the cost of moving on, the season uses each mystery to push its characters toward decisions they can no longer delay. “Grantchester” (season 11) becomes a tender farewell to a long-running detective drama about friendship, faith, love, and the difficult grace of accepting that even beloved lives must change. More …
July
The Westies (season 1)
2 episodes
“The Westies” (season 1) — drops into early-1980s Hell’s Kitchen, where construction of the Jacob Javits Convention Center promises a fortune large enough to upset the neighborhood’s violent balance of power. Eamon Sweeney leads the Westies, a small but feared Irish-American gang whose brutality has allowed it to survive beside criminal organizations many times its size, but the arrival of new money forces him into an uneasy arrangement with John Gotti and the Gambino family. Jimmy Roarke, Eamon’s trusted lieutenant, tries to manage the crew’s reckless impulses while questioning how much loyalty is worth when every deal seems designed to make the Italians richer and the Westies more expendable. His volatile friend Mickey Flanagan brings danger from inside the gang, while Bridget Walsh’s connections to Irish republican politics add another layer of secrets, conviction, and divided allegiance. Across the city, veteran NYPD officer Glenn Keenan carries a hidden relationship with Eamon that stretches back to childhood, only to find himself pressured by FBI agent Birdie Polk to turn that history into a weapon. As construction rackets, union influence, federal surveillance, family obligations, and street violence push old friendships toward betrayal, “The Westies” (season 1) becomes a gritty period crime drama about loyalty, ambition, community power, and the dangerous price of remaining useful when larger empires move into your territory. More …
July
House of the Dragon (season 3)
4 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 …
July
Interview with the Vampire (season 3)
6 episodes
“Interview with the Vampire” (season 3) — opens after Daniel Molloy’s explosive book has dragged Louis, Claudia, Armand, and Lestat into the public imagination, leaving Lestat de Lioncourt unwilling to remain the monster in someone else’s version of the story. Reinventing himself as a vampire rock star, Lestat takes the stage with a band, a camera crew, and a dangerous hunger for control, turning concerts, interviews, rehearsals, and backstage chaos into his own confession, performance, and revenge. But his attempt to rewrite the past keeps pulling him back through memories of aristocratic France, his violent making by Magnus, his bond with his mother Gabrielle, his love for Nicolas, and the old wounds that shaped him long before New Orleans. As Daniel, now changed by his own immortal transformation, circles the tour with the instincts of a journalist and the appetite of something less human, Louis and Armand remain emotional ghosts in Lestat’s orbit, forcing the season to question whose memory can ever be trusted. With ancient vampire power stirring through figures like Akasha, the glamour of rock fame begins to look less like freedom and more like a signal fire to creatures far older than Lestat understands. “Interview with the Vampire” (season 3) becomes a flamboyant gothic reinvention about fame, confession, desire, and a vampire determined to make the world hear his truth, even if telling it wakes something terrible. More …
July
Silo (season 3)
3 episodes
“Silo” (season 3) — splits its story between the shaken present of Silo 18 and the buried history of the world before the silos existed, turning Juliette Nichols’ fight for truth into something much larger than one rebellion. After surviving the outside and returning to the people who once believed every official lie, Juliette is left carrying memory gaps, political responsibility, and the dangerous role of mayor in a community still divided by fear, grief, and the need for answers. Bernard, Sims, Shirley, Knox, Martha Walker, Lukas, and the survivors of the uprising must decide whether freedom is possible inside a system designed to keep people obedient, while the threat of the Algorithm and the mysterious Safeguard suggest that the silo’s rules were never only about control from within. In the past, Congressman Daniel Keene and journalist Helen Drew begin uncovering the conspiracy that leads humanity underground, with Charlotte Keene, Senator Thurman, Anna, and powerful figures around Washington turning the “before times” into a political thriller of secrecy, disaster planning, and impossible moral choices. As the two timelines echo each other through lies, erased history, and people trying to survive decisions made generations earlier, “Silo” (season 3) becomes a broader, more revealing sci-fi drama about memory, rebellion, engineered truth, and the terrifying question of whether humanity was saved by the silos or imprisoned by the people who built them. More …
July
Unsinkable (2024)
“Unsinkable” (2024) — begins in the days after the Titanic disaster, when the RMS Carpathia reaches New York carrying survivors whose testimony may determine whether the sinking is remembered as unavoidable tragedy or preventable failure. Senator William Alden Smith quickly convenes a public inquiry before key witnesses can leave the country, placing himself against shipping interests, political pressure, and officials eager to keep the investigation narrow. At his side, secretary Maggie Malloy organizes a flood of statements, while investigative journalist Alaine Ricard follows contradictions pointing toward ignored warnings, inadequate lifeboats, and decisions shaped by money and reputation. As White Star Line chairman J. Bruce Ismay, surviving officers, wireless operators, passengers, and crew recount the final hours, the hearings are interwoven with flashbacks to the freezing Atlantic, desperate lifeboat launches, acts of sacrifice, and confusion aboard a ship advertised as nearly impossible to sink. Nancy Smith watches the inquiry consume her husband, reminding him that accountability carries personal as well as political costs. With every testimony challenged and every powerful institution seeking distance from blame, the film shifts the familiar Titanic story away from spectacle and toward the struggle to establish responsibility after catastrophe. “Unsinkable” (2024) becomes a sober historical drama about courage, corporate influence, public truth, and the difficult work of ensuring that the dead are not reduced to statistics once the headlines fade. More …
July
Deadliest Catch (season 22)
9 episodes
“Deadliest Catch” (season 22) — sails farther north than the fleet has gone in years, as a rare population of red king crab pulls the captains 225 miles toward St. George Island and into colder seas, heavier ice, and storms that make every set feel like a gamble against the edge of the map. With familiar grounds no longer enough to protect their livelihoods, Sig Hansen launches a risky underwater-drone scouting mission, guided by Wild Bill Wichrowski’s hard-earned knowledge of the region, while Johnathan Hillstrand, Keith Colburn, Rick Shelford, and the rest of the fleet chase crab that could save a season or break a boat before the first big haul is landed. Jake Anderson enters the year at his lowest point, stripped of both his vessel and stability at home, only to find one last chance at redemption through the legendary Cornelia Marie. Around the hunt, the season carries the emotional weight of real danger, especially aboard the Aleutian Lady, where the loss of deckhand Todd Meadows reminds every crew that the Bering Sea does not separate television drama from life-and-death risk. Between crushing ice, mechanical strain, exhausted deckhands, family pressure, and captains forced to bet on unfamiliar water, “Deadliest Catch” (season 22) becomes a harsh, mournful, high-stakes chapter about survival, legacy, and the brutal price of chasing fortune in one of the most unforgiving fisheries on Earth. More …























