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July
Star City (season 1)
8 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 …
July
Silo (season 3)
2 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
Cape Fear (season 1)
7 episodes
“Cape Fear” (season 1) — opens with Tom and Anna Bowden, a successful married pair of attorneys whose polished family life begins to fracture when Max Cady, the violent man from their past, is released from prison and starts moving back toward them with frightening patience. Years earlier, both Bowdens played a part in putting Cady away, and his return turns their home, careers, marriage, and children into targets in a campaign that is as psychological as it is physical. Anna’s history as Cady’s former defense lawyer adds guilt and ambiguity to the threat, while Tom’s role as prosecutor forces the family to confront whether justice was ever as clean as they wanted to believe. As Cady uses charm, legal knowledge, intimidation, and unnerving proximity to infiltrate their world, Natalie and Zack Bowden are pulled into a danger they barely understand, and figures like Noa Toussaint and investigator Ray Rawlins circle a case where every old decision seems to carry a new consequence. The season turns courtrooms, suburban comfort, public events, and private family spaces into places of surveillance and dread, asking whether Cady is simply seeking revenge or exposing something rotten beneath the Bowdens’ respectable surface. “Cape Fear” (season 1) becomes a tense psychological thriller about guilt, power, moral compromise, and the terrifying collapse of safety when the past refuses to stay buried. More …
July
Backrooms (2026)
“Backrooms” (2026) — opens inside the ordinary glow of a furniture store, where Clark, a weary owner surrounded by showroom lamps, carpeted displays, and artificial domestic comfort, discovers a hidden passage into a place that should not exist. Beyond the familiar walls lies the Backrooms: an endless maze of yellowed halls, buzzing fluorescent lights, empty offices, impossible corridors, and rooms that feel copied from the real world by something that never understood how people live. Clark’s attempts to explain what he has seen pull his therapist, Dr. Mary Kline, into the same nightmare, while Bobby, Kat, and others become connected to disturbing home videos and supernatural events that suggest the space is not just a location but a system that observes, imitates, and traps. As the group searches for missing people and a way back to recognizable reality, every turn makes the architecture feel less abandoned than hungry, turning silence, bad lighting, carpet stains, and distant mechanical hums into sources of dread. The film uses liminal horror not through simple monsters, but through the fear of being lost in a place that looks almost familiar and still feels utterly wrong. “Backrooms” (2026) becomes a cold, unsettling sci-fi horror film about isolation, memory, modern emptiness, and the terrifying possibility that some doors do not lead somewhere else so much as remove you from the world entirely. More …
July
The Five-Star Weekend (season 1)
8 episodes
“The Five-Star Weekend” (season 1) — centers on Hollis Shaw, a beloved food influencer and bestselling author whose beautifully curated Nantucket life cracks after the sudden death of her husband Matthew exposes grief, loneliness, and problems her followers never saw. Unable to move forward, Hollis decides to host a “five-star weekend,” inviting one important woman from each stage of her life to her coastal home: Tatum, her childhood best friend who still carries old wounds; Dru-Ann, her glamorous college friend facing professional and personal pressure; Brooke, a newer friend from motherhood whose polished life hides its own strain; and Gigi, a devoted fan from Hollis’s online world who arrives as both outsider and unsettling mirror. As Caroline, Hollis’s daughter, struggles with resentment and distance, and Jack, Hollis’s first love, reappears with memories of a life not taken, the weekend becomes less a luxury escape than an emotional reckoning. Shared meals, beach walks, old photographs, expensive rooms, private confessions, and quiet betrayals slowly reveal that each woman has brought her own unfinished story to Nantucket. “The Five-Star Weekend” (season 1) becomes a sunlit but bittersweet drama about female friendship, grief, reinvention, and the dangerous gap between the perfect life someone presents and the complicated truth waiting behind it. More …
July
Ms. X (season 1)
6 episodes
“Ms. X” (season 1) — centers on Mia Bennett, a stretched-thin Auckland mother of two whose carefully managed suburban routine begins to crack when she suspects her husband is cheating and decides that quiet humiliation is no longer enough. Between school drop-offs, neighborhood meetings, money worries, judgmental parents, and the exhausting performance of looking in control, Mia reunites with Oscar Clarke, an old high school friend and would-be private investigator whose confidence is far greater than his actual skill. Their plan is supposed to be simple: scare her husband into staying faithful, expose the lie, and let Mia reclaim some dignity. Instead, one reckless choice turns accidentally deadly, pulling them into a criminal world neither of them understands. Soon Mia is trapped between suspicious police, dangerous cartel figures, vicious parents from the school circle, and suburban responsibilities that refuse to pause just because her life has become a crime scene. As Oscar keeps improvising badly and Mia discovers that motherhood has given her stranger survival skills than she ever realized, the season turns domestic frustration into a fast, darkly comic spiral of panic, lies, cash, and consequences. “Ms. X” (season 1) becomes a sharp New Zealand crime comedy-drama about betrayal, reinvention, and the terrifying discovery that an ordinary mum can become very dangerous when pushed too far. More …
July
Criminal Minds (season 19)
8 episodes
“Criminal Minds” (season 19) — reopens the BAU’s darkest modern case as Emily Prentiss, David Rossi, JJ Jareau, Tara Lewis, Luke Alvez, Penelope Garcia, and Tyler Green are forced to work in the shadow of Elias Voit, the imprisoned serial killer whose Sicarius network still keeps spreading damage beyond his cell. As a new copycat begins echoing Voit’s methods, the team must decide how much access, attention, and trust they can risk giving a man who has already manipulated victims, investigators, and institutions for years. Rossi’s obsession with understanding Voit clashes with Prentiss’s need to protect the unit, while JJ tries to keep moving through a deeply personal season of grief, Garcia is pulled back into emotional and digital territory she would rather escape, and Tyler’s complicated connection to the case keeps testing where personal vengeance ends and justice begins. Each investigation pushes the BAU through online radicalization, hidden networks, staged brutality, and suspects who treat violence like a contagious idea rather than an isolated crime. With new guest figures circling the team and Voit turning every conversation into a psychological trap, the season becomes less about catching one monster than understanding how his influence keeps reproducing itself. “Criminal Minds” (season 19) becomes a tense continuation of the Evolution era, built around trauma, manipulation, loyalty, and the terrifying question of what happens when evil stops being one person and starts behaving like an infection. More …
July
The Furious (2026)
“The Furious” (2026) — centers on Wang Wei, a mute working-class father whose quiet life is destroyed when his daughter Rainy is kidnapped by a criminal network and the corrupt police refuse to help. With no faith left in the system, Wei turns grief into motion and begins tearing his way through the Bangkok underworld, following scraps of information from alleys and warehouses to clubs, back rooms, and violent hideouts where trafficked children have become part of a larger business. His path collides with Navin, a journalist searching for his missing wife Matia after her own investigation into the kidnappings brought her too close to the same organization. Together, the two men become an unlikely force: Wei driven by wordless fury and paternal fear, Navin by guilt, love, and the need to expose the people who have been protected by money and official silence. Around them, brutal henchmen, corrupt officers, and crime bosses turn every location into a new battlefield, with martial-arts skill replacing conversation as the clearest language of desperation. The film keeps its story direct but uses that simplicity to fuel relentless action, making every fight feel like another step deeper into a world where children are treated as currency and mercy has almost disappeared. “The Furious” (2026) becomes a blistering Hong Kong action thriller about fatherhood, rage, corruption, and the terrifying force unleashed when an ordinary man decides that no one else is coming to save his child. More …
July
Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu (2026)
“Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu” (2026) — launches Din Djarin and Grogu from the quieter life they earned on Nevarro into a larger mission for the young New Republic, which is still trying to protect a galaxy where the Empire has fallen but its warlords, loyalists, and hidden weapons have not disappeared. No longer just a lone bounty hunter with a mysterious child, Din is now a mentor to Grogu, whose Force instincts, Mandalorian training, and unpredictable curiosity make him both a powerful ally and a tiny source of constant trouble. Their assignment pulls them across frontier worlds, shadowy Imperial holdouts, crowded ports, and dangerous negotiations where every remnant faction seems to be waiting for the Republic to show weakness. Colonel Ward brings military pressure and uneasy authority to the mission, while figures like Zeb Orrelios and Rotta the Hutt widen the story beyond the familiar path of the Razor Crest’s old adventures, tying Din and Grogu to bigger struggles over order, criminal power, and the future of the Outer Rim. As blaster fights, starship chases, old enemies, and new alliances test the bond between warrior and apprentice, the film keeps the heart of their found-family journey while expanding it into a theatrical Star Wars adventure about duty, fatherhood, and a galaxy still deciding what peace is supposed to look like. “Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu” (2026) becomes a fast, emotional space-western about legacy, trust, and the moment two unlikely heroes are asked to protect more than just each other. More …
July
House of the Dragon (season 3)
3 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 …























