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June
From (season 4)
7 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
You’re Killing Me (season 1)
4 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)
8 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
Rick and Morty (season 9)
3 episodes
“Rick and Morty” (season 9) — throws Rick Sanchez and Morty Smith back into another run of unstable sci-fi chaos, where the family’s attempts to act even slightly normal are constantly derailed by portals, cosmic grudges, and adventures that turn dumb ideas into universe-threatening disasters. After years of multiverse trauma, Rick is still trying to pretend he has everything under control, while Morty keeps drifting further from the role of terrified sidekick and into someone more willing to question, resist, or make terrible choices of his own. The season sends them through strange new corners of space and reality, from the long-promised madness of Boob World and a parking-lot battle outside Trader Joe’s to sentient furniture, alien summer camp, and bizarre domestic crises that drag Beth, Space Beth, Jerry, and Summer into Rick’s orbit whether they want it or not. As every mission mutates from joke to catastrophe, the Smith family is forced to deal with old resentment, shifting power inside the household, and the uncomfortable truth that Rick’s genius rarely saves anyone without creating a bigger mess first. With its mix of brutal jokes, cosmic absurdity, family dysfunction, and sudden emotional turns, “Rick and Morty” (season 9) becomes another sharp, unpredictable chapter about control, dependence, growing up, and the terrifying freedom of realizing that even infinite realities cannot stop your family from being your biggest problem. More …
June
Solo Mio (2026)
“Solo Mio” (2026) — centers on Matt Taylor, an American schoolteacher whose dream wedding in Rome collapses when his fiancée Heather leaves him at the altar, turning a romantic escape into public humiliation, heartbreak, and a non-refundable honeymoon package he has no idea how to survive alone. Instead of flying home, Matt stays in Italy and drifts through the itinerary meant for two, stumbling from elegant hotels and tourist landmarks to awkward dinners, couple-focused activities, and moments where every beautiful view only makes his loneliness louder. His misery is complicated by Meghan and Julian, Neil and Donna, and other travelers who try to pull him out of himself with advice, meddling, and their own imperfect versions of love, while Gia, a warm and direct café owner, challenges the story Matt keeps telling himself about rejection. As Rome and Tuscany open around him through music, food, scooters, unexpected friendships, and encounters that keep pushing him past embarrassment, Matt begins to see that the end of one relationship may not have to define the rest of his life. “Solo Mio” (2026) becomes a gentle romantic comedy about heartbreak, self-respect, second chances, and the strange freedom of discovering that being alone in a place built for romance can still lead someone back toward hope. More …
June
Ready or Not: Here I Come (2026)
“Ready or Not: Here I Come” (2026) — picks up in the immediate wreckage of Grace’s blood-soaked wedding-night nightmare, as she discovers that surviving the Le Domas family was not the end of the game but an entrance into something older, richer, and far more powerful. Still traumatized, furious, and barely able to process what happened, Grace is pulled into a new ritual when her estranged sister Faith reappears, forcing the two women to survive together despite years of resentment and abandonment between them. This time, the hunt is not confined to one cursed mansion: four elite families tied to Le Bail’s hidden council want Grace dead before she can claim the High Seat, and their wealth turns hotels, estates, casinos, private rooms, and polished social spaces into traps. Figures like Ursula and Titus Danforth, Chester Danforth, Ignacio El Caido, Bill Wilkinson, Wan Chen Xing, and the eerie Lawyer surround the sisters with old money, occult rules, and smiling cruelty, while Grace’s exhausted survival instincts clash with Faith’s disbelief and anger. As the game escalates through weapons, bargains, family secrets, and grotesque violence disguised as tradition, Grace must decide whether she is only running from another nightmare or finally learning how to turn the rules against the people who wrote them. “Ready or Not: Here I Come” (2026) becomes a bloody horror-comedy sequel about sisterhood, class rage, inherited power, and the brutal absurdity of a world where the richest people treat murder like a boardroom promotion. More …
June
The Sheep Detectives (2026)
“The Sheep Detectives” (2026) — opens in the seemingly peaceful English village of Denbrook, where kindly shepherd George Hardy spends his evenings reading murder mysteries aloud to the flock he raises only for wool, never suspecting that Lily, Mopple, Cloud, Sir Richfield, Zora, Wool-Eyes, Sebastian, and the rowdy twins Reggie and Ronnie understand far more than any human imagines. When George is found dead under suspicious circumstances, the sheep immediately apply everything they have learned from detective fiction and decide that their beloved shepherd has been murdered. Their investigation sends them nosing through fields, village lanes, the local inn, legal offices, church corners, and butcher-shop gossip, while clumsy policeman Tim Derry struggles to make sense of a case the animals may understand better than he does. Human suspects gather quickly, from George’s estranged daughter Rebecca Hampstead and mysterious lawyer Lydia Harbottle to innkeeper Beth Pennock, reporter Elliot Matthews, rival shepherd Caleb Merrow, Reverend Hillcoate, and other villagers with motives tucked behind polite smiles. As the flock tries to communicate clues without causing a full human panic, their cosy farm world turns into a comic whodunnit about grief, loyalty, memory, and the strange brilliance of creatures everyone keeps underestimating. “The Sheep Detectives” (2026) becomes a warm, eccentric family mystery where the smallest witnesses may be the only ones woolly enough, stubborn enough, and clever enough to uncover the truth. More …
June
Marriage (season 1)
4 episodes
“Marriage” (season 1) — centers on Ian and Emma, a long-married couple whose life together is built less on grand declarations than on habits, silences, irritation, loyalty, and the tiny negotiations that fill ordinary days. After returning from a holiday in Spain, they slip back into the familiar rhythm of home: awkward airport conversations, an argument over a jacket potato, visits to Emma’s difficult father Gerry, painful memories they rarely name directly, and a dinner with their daughter Jessica and her self-important boyfriend Adam. Ian, recently made redundant, drifts through his days with embarrassment, boredom, and a need for reassurance he does not always know how to ask for, while Emma throws herself into work at a law firm where her boss Jamie dismisses her ideas and blurs professional boundaries in quietly unsettling ways. Around them, small encounters at the gym, in restaurants, at the office, and inside family rooms expose how much resentment and tenderness can live inside the same relationship. The season avoids melodrama in favor of pauses, half-finished sentences, shared looks, and the strange intimacy of two people who know each other too well and still fail to understand each other completely. “Marriage” (season 1) becomes a restrained, painfully observant drama about middle age, grief, routine, and the fragile comfort of staying beside someone when love no longer looks simple but has not disappeared. More …
June
Star City (season 1)
3 episodes
“Star City” (season 1) — steps behind the Iron Curtain into the same alternate-history space race, shifting the perspective from NASA’s triumphs to the Soviet program after the USSR becomes the first nation to put a man on the Moon. Inside the secretive world of Star City, cosmonauts, engineers, military officials, and intelligence officers are pushed to risk their bodies, careers, and families for a victory the state cannot afford to lose. Irina Morozova, Colonel Lyudmilla Raskova, Anastasia Belikova, Sergei Nikulov, and the people around them move through a system built on ambition, surveillance, propaganda, and fear, where every successful launch hides technical failures, political threats, and personal compromises. As training intensifies at the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, the dream of reaching further into space becomes tangled with informants, loyalty tests, leaking secrets, and the constant pressure to make Soviet glory look effortless. The season turns the wonder of space exploration into a paranoid political thriller, where the stars promise freedom but the ground is ruled by secrecy, suspicion, and consequences. “Star City” (season 1) becomes a darker companion to the larger space-race saga, exploring sacrifice, ideology, and the people forced to decide how much of themselves they can give to a dream controlled by the state. More …
June
Mayflies (season 1)
2 episodes
“Mayflies” (season 1) — traces the lifelong friendship of Jimmy Collins and Tully Dawson, two men whose bond was forged in 1986 in a small Scottish town, when music, rebellion, school’s end, and a wild trip to Manchester made them believe they could escape the ordinary lives waiting for them. Thirty years later, Jimmy is a writer living in London with his wife Iona, while Tully remains in Scotland with Anna, still carrying the same reckless warmth that once made him feel untouchable. A sudden phone call pulls Jimmy back home, where Tully reveals a terminal cancer diagnosis and asks for help with a decision that turns their friendship into a test of love, loyalty, memory, and moral courage. As the present-day story moves through pubs, hospital rooms, old haunts, and painful conversations with Anna, Iona, Tibbs, Hogg, Limbo, Barbara, and Fiona, flashbacks return to the boys they once were: loud, hopeful, frightened, and desperate to live differently from their fathers. The season balances youthful euphoria with the brutal intimacy of saying goodbye, asking whether friendship can survive the weight of someone’s final wish. “Mayflies” (season 1) becomes a tender Scottish drama about male friendship, mortality, music, and the promises people make when they are young, only to discover decades later what keeping them may truly cost. More …























