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March
The Pendragon Cycle: Rise of the Merlin (season 1)
7 episodes
“The Pendragon Cycle: Rise of the Merlin” (Season 1) — unfolds in a Britain collapsing under the weight of Roman withdrawal, Saxon brutality, and the slow death of old magic, where a young Emrys grows from an outcast boy with fractured memories into a force whose visions cut through time like a blade. Haunted by glimpses of a future soaked in blood and crowned in destiny, he’s drawn into the orbit of Queen Charis, a survivor of Atlantis whose presence awakens powers he barely understands, pushing him toward a fate that terrifies him as much as it defines him. As rival warlords tear the land apart and ancient druidic orders fracture under fear of the rising darkness, Emrys becomes the reluctant fulcrum between fading myth and encroaching chaos, hunted by those who see him as a threat and coveted by those who crave the power he cannot yet control. His journey through betrayal, prophecy, and forbidden knowledge forges the first sparks of a legend that will one day shape kings, but in this beginning he is only a boy standing against a world determined to break him. “The Pendragon Cycle: Rise of the Merlin” (Season 1) positions itself as a mythic, emotionally charged origin story where destiny, magic, and the birth of Britain collide in the shadow of a future only Merlin can see. More …
March
The Beauty (season 1)
11 episodes
“The Beauty” (Season 1) — unfolds in a world where a sexually transmitted treatment known as the Beauty spreads with viral speed, granting its users flawless physical perfection while hiding a lethal biological cost that soon erupts into public panic as supermodels, influencers, and ordinary people begin dying in grotesque, unexplained ways. FBI agents Cooper Madsen and Jordan Bennett are pulled into the chaos when a series of high‑profile deaths in Paris exposes a global epidemic engineered by a shadowy tech billionaire, Byron Forst, whose trillion‑dollar empire depends on keeping the drug’s true nature buried. As the investigation deepens, the line between enhancement and mutation becomes terrifyingly thin, leaving even the agents unsure of what counts as human anymore. And every new victim reveals a pattern that feels less like an accident and more like a controlled evolution spiraling out of control. Their investigation drags them through the glittering rot of the fashion world and into the crosshairs of The Assassin, a lethal enforcer who took the drug years ago and now lives in a body decades younger than his real age, hunting anyone who threatens the Corporation’s secrets. As the virus spreads across Paris, Venice, Rome, and New York, an outsider named Jeremy is swept into the storm, searching for meaning while the agents race to stop a threat capable of reshaping humanity itself. “The Beauty” (Season 1) positions itself as a body‑horror, sci‑fi thriller where desire, vanity, and corporate power collide in a world willing to risk everything for perfection. More …
March
The Electric State (2025)
“The Electric State” (2025) — follows a runaway teenager traveling across a collapsing retro‑futuristic America with a loyal yellow robot sent by her missing brother, their journey cutting through abandoned suburbs, militarized zones, and corporate wastelands where malfunctioning drones and derelict machines haunt the landscape like ghosts of a world that broke itself. As she searches for the truth behind her brother’s disappearance, she becomes entangled in a conflict between rogue AIs, private armies, and a government desperate to hide the consequences of its own technological hubris. The deeper she moves into the electric‑scarred frontier, the more the line blurs between memory and manipulation, between the world she remembers and the one being rewritten around her. Each new encounter forces her to question whether the robot guiding her is a protector or a witness to something far darker. Every mile forward feels like stepping deeper into a story someone else has already decided she must play a part in. The film builds its tension through desolate Americana, fractured family ties, and the quiet dread of a society that surrendered its future to machines it no longer understands. “The Electric State” (2025) positions itself as a melancholic sci‑fi odyssey where hope, loss, and rebellion collide against the neon ruins of a dying world. More …
March
Dirty Business (season 1)
3 episodes
“Dirty Business” (season 1) — follows retired detective Ash Smith and computational biologist Peter Hammond, two neighbors in rural Oxfordshire whose quiet lives fracture when they discover fish dying in the Windrush River and receive evasive, suspicious answers from the local water company. Their curiosity turns into a decade‑long investigation that exposes systemic sewage dumping, falsified reports, and a corporate‑regulatory machine built to bury environmental crimes rather than prevent them. As Ash and Peter dig deeper, they encounter whistleblowers terrified of retaliation, grieving families who lost children to E‑coli contamination, and a trail of corruption stretching from sewage plants to government offices, each revelation tightening the noose around the companies responsible. The deeper they push, the more they realize the cover‑up isn’t a series of accidents but a coordinated strategy designed to outlast public outrage. Every new testimony forces them to confront how far powerful institutions will go to protect profit at the expense of human lives. Parallel threads follow activists, agency insiders, and victims whose stories collide into a portrait of a country poisoned by negligence and protected by profit‑driven secrecy. “Dirty Business” (season 1) positions itself as a docudrama thriller where truth, accountability, and public health are pitted against corporate power, and where two ordinary citizens become the only line of defense against a scandal the system was designed to hide. More …
March
Hudson & Rex (season 8)
14 episodes
“Hudson & Rex” (Season 8) picks up in the aftermath of the Season 7 cliffhanger, where Detective Charlie Hudson was mysteriously disappeared during a high-stakes case. His brother Mark Hudson steps in as the new lead detective, joining Rex to continue the fight for justice in St. John’s. A covert investigation into Charlie’s last known movements reveals encrypted files hidden in his apartment, suggesting he may have uncovered a mole within the department. Meanwhile, Rex begins reacting to specific locations with agitation, hinting at unresolved trauma and possible clues. A mysterious informant begins feeding the team coded messages, each pointing to a different unsolved case from Charlie’s past. At the same time, a journalist launches an exposé on Slattery’s internal affairs division, threatening to derail the investigation. As the team adjusts to this seismic shift, they face a wave of new crimes — including a deadly art heist, a tech-driven hostage crisis, and a string of poisonings linked to a local political scandal. Mark must earn the trust of both the K-9 unit and the rest of the team. Dr. Sarah Truong, Jesse Mills, and Superintendent Donovan rally to support the transition, but tensions rise as secrets from Charlie’s past begin to surface. With the episodes, “Hudson & Rex” (Season 8) delivers a tighter, emotionally charged chapter that redefines the heart of the series while preserving its signature blend of action, warmth, and Newfoundland charm. More …
March
Hijack (season 2)
8 episodes
“Hijack” (Season 2) — follows Sam Nelson as he’s pulled into a new nightmare far from the skies, trapped aboard a Berlin underground train seized by armed hostage‑takers, where every carriage becomes a pressure chamber and every wrong word could ignite catastrophe. Above ground, authorities scramble through political fog and fragmented intel to save hundreds of commuters, while below, Sam is forced to navigate a labyrinth of shifting motives, terrified passengers, and captors whose agenda is far more intricate than the chaos they project. The deeper he moves through the train, the more the crisis feels engineered to target him specifically, as if someone has been studying his every instinct. Even the rhythm of the train itself becomes a weapon, amplifying tension with every tunnel and every jolt of metal on metal. The season sharpens its real‑time tension into something colder and more psychological, as Sam’s year‑long hunt for the remnants of the first hijacking bleeds into the present crisis, blurring the line between justice and obsession. With the train hurtling through Berlin and negotiations collapsing faster than they can begin, the story coils into a claustrophobic thriller where control is an illusion, alliances fracture under pressure, and survival depends on whether Sam can outthink a threat evolving in real time. “Hijack” (Season 2) positions itself as a tighter, darker escalation — a hostage drama where momentum is a weapon and the past refuses to stay buried. More …
March
Bridgerton (season 4)
8 episodes
“Bridgerton” (season 4) — centers on Benedict Bridgerton and Sophie Baek, whose unexpected connection begins at a masquerade ball where he falls for the mysterious “Lady in Silver”, unaware she is actually a maid trapped under the control of the ruthless Lady Araminta Gun. Their romance unfolds against the rigid class expectations of Mayfair, forcing Benedict to confront his own fear of commitment while Sophie fights to protect her identity and dignity in a world determined to keep her in her place. As their relationship deepens, secrets involving Sophie’s stolen dowry, Araminta’s hidden crimes, and Lord Penwood’s concealed will push them into a web of danger that threatens both their reputations and their future. The closer they grow, the more Benedict begins to sense the fractures in Sophie’s carefully guarded façade, even as she struggles to keep her past from consuming her present. Every stolen moment between them becomes a reminder that their love is balanced on a knife‑edge sharpened by class, power, and the threat of exposure. Parallel storylines weave through Queen Charlotte’s scrutiny, the reemergence of Lady Whistledown, and the shifting alliances within the Bridgerton family, all of which heighten the stakes as Benedict and Sophie navigate lies, social pressure, and the threat of scandal. “Bridgerton” (season 4) positions itself as a romantic drama where identity, class, and desire collide, and where every secret, betrayal, and stolen moment becomes part of a love story determined to survive the ton’s unforgiving gaze. More …
March
Silent Witness (season 29)
10 episodes
“Silent Witness” (season 29) — unfolds as Dr Nikki Alexander and Jack Hodgson step into married life only to be thrust immediately into upheaval when the Lyell Centre relocates from London to Birmingham, a seismic shift triggered by Nikki’s acceptance of the Home Office’s offer to establish a new forensic Centre of Excellence — a move she agreed to only if Harriet remained in charge, despite pressure to force her retirement. Their fresh start begins with the disappearance of Alice Hill, the two‑part case that opens the season, pulling the newlywed team into a maze of political tension, institutional restructuring, and the emotional fallout of leaving their old world behind. As Nikki, Jack, Harriet, and Kit adjust to their new surroundings, the season deepens the long‑running interplay between personal stakes and forensic investigation, with the 30‑year legacy of the show looming over every decision they make and every body they examine. With Birmingham’s unfamiliar landscape reshaping the rhythm of their work and the threat of shifting power dynamics within the Home Office, the team faces cases that test not only their expertise but the fragile balance of their evolving relationships, hinting at major emotional and professional turning points ahead. “Silent Witness” (season 29) positions itself as a transitional, charged chapter where marriage, ambition, and institutional pressure collide, pushing the Lyell team into a new era as they fight to hold onto their identity while everything around them changes. More …
March
Industry (season 4)
8 episodes
“Industry” (Season 4) — follows Harper Stern and Yasmin Kara‑Hanani at the peak of the power they once clawed toward, only to discover that success has pushed them into a new, more vicious arena where a fast‑rising fintech giant detonates the fragile balance of their lives, dragging them into a global chase defined by shifting alliances, weaponized intimacy, and the kind of money that erases consequences. Harper, now operating at a hedge fund and pulled into the orbit of the enigmatic Whitney Halberstram, finds her ambition mutating into something sharper and more dangerous, while Yasmin, entangled with tech founder Sir Henry Muck, navigates a world where every relationship is a transaction and every secret is a liability waiting to explode. As the fintech darling Tender disrupts London’s financial ecosystem, the rivalry between Harper and Yasmin — once a simmering undercurrent — ignites into a full‑scale psychological war, each woman circling the other with equal parts fascination and dread, knowing that only one of them can stay on top. With Pierpoint gone and the old rules dissolved, the season becomes a study in reinvention and moral erosion, where characters who once chased opportunity now confront the cost of becoming the kind of people who thrive in a system built on manipulation, seduction, and the relentless pursuit of leverage. “Industry” (Season 4) positions itself as a high‑stakes, globe‑spanning financial thriller where identity, loyalty, and ambition collapse under the pressure of a world that rewards only those willing to burn everything to win. More …
February
56 Days (season 1)
8 episodes
“56 Days” (season 1) — centers on Ciara Wyse and Oliver Kennedy, whose intense romance begins with a chance meeting in a supermarket and quickly escalates into a secretive, high‑charge relationship set against the backdrop of a pandemic‑quiet Dublin. Their 56‑day timeline unfolds in parallel with a present‑day police investigation, where detectives Lee Reardon and Karl Connolly discover a decomposed, unidentified body in Oliver’s apartment, raising immediate suspicion that the lovers’ whirlwind connection may have ended in murder. As the narrative jumps between past and present, Ciara moves into Oliver’s upscale flat, unaware of the inconsistencies in his identity and the hidden dangers surrounding him, while Oliver’s paranoia deepens as he tries to keep his own secrets buried. The investigation intensifies when detectives uncover signs of a violent death and attempts to dissolve the body, forcing them to untangle whether Ciara was a victim, an accomplice, or something far more complicated. The season builds its tension on shifting perspectives, concealed motives, and the slow revelation of how obsession, deception, and emotional instability can turn a passionate romance into a fatal trap. “56 Days” (season 1) positions itself as a psychological thriller where love, fear, and identity collide, and where every detail of the couple’s brief relationship becomes a potential clue to a brutal crime. More …























