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February
Shifting Gears (season 2)
13 episodes
“Shifting Gears” (Season 2) returns with the Parker family shop fighting to survive as a corporate restoration chain moves into the neighborhood, forcing Matt to reinvent the business while navigating a tentative new romance that challenges his priorities, and his daughter faces a job opportunity that could pull her away from her children and upend the household balance. Longstanding customers and neighbors rally around the shop as a legal battle over the lease exposes old wounds and forces long-buried family secrets into the open. A surprise visit from a former rival reignites tensions and forces Matt to confront past decisions. Meanwhile, Riley’s oldest child begins acting out at school, revealing deeper emotional fallout from the family’s instability. The team improvises inventive ways to keep the business afloat, sparking unexpected alliances and rivalries in equal measure. Tensions rise when a trusted mechanic contemplates leaving, threatening the shop’s fragile momentum and pushing Matt to consider unconventional partnerships. A community fundraiser becomes a tipping point that reveals who truly stands with the Parkers. By season’s end, the family faces hard choices that test their resilience, unity, and ability to adapt in the face of change. “Shifting Gears” (Season 2) deepens its emotional engine, proving that resilience is just as vital as horsepower. More …
February
The Summer Book (2025)
“The Summer Book” (2025) — unfolds as young Sophia spends a quiet, sun‑drenched season on a tiny island in the Gulf of Finland with her grieving father and her sharp‑tongued, fiercely loving grandmother, the three of them circling one another in the aftermath of the mother’s death, each carrying their sorrow differently as the island’s stillness forces them into moments of tenderness, friction, and fragile understanding. The island becomes a kind of emotional mirror, reflecting back the things they try hardest not to say aloud. Even the smallest rituals take on a charged intimacy, as if every shared gesture is an attempt to stitch together what grief has torn apart. Their days drift through rituals of exploration, midsummer celebrations, and small domestic rhythms that reveal the shifting emotional tides between childhood and adulthood, loss and resilience, memory and renewal, while the grandmother’s wry wisdom and Sophia’s restless curiosity form the beating heart of their fragile summer equilibrium. “The Summer Book” (2025) positions itself as a meditative drama where nature becomes both witness and balm, and a family learns to navigate grief not through grand revelations but through the quiet, accumulating weight of shared days. More …
February
Kevin Hart: Acting My Age (2025)
“Kevin Hart: Acting My Age” (2025) — unfolds as Kevin Hart storms the stage with a hyper‑charged, self‑mocking dive into the absurdities of middle age, riffing on intimacy pills, surprise injuries, family chaos, and the creeping panic of realizing that the body no longer obeys the mind with the same reckless loyalty it once did, all delivered with the breathless velocity and physical exaggeration that have become his signature. As Hart ricochets between domestic meltdowns, aging catastrophes, and a wildly inflated jungle‑encounter saga, the special leans into escalation over introspection, ballooning every anecdote into a high‑gloss spectacle where momentum substitutes for meaning and comedy becomes a frantic sprint away from anything too revealing. Beneath the noise, brief sparks of honesty flicker — a tossed‑off line about irrelevance, a moment where bravado slips — hinting at a deeper, sharper show that never fully emerges before being swallowed again by Hart’s relentless, crowd‑pleasing energy. “Kevin Hart: Acting My Age” (2025) positions itself as a loud, polished, middle‑aged misadventure where humor becomes both shield and performance, a kinetic attempt to outrun the weight of growing older while daring the audience to keep up. More …
February
Waiting for the Out (season 1)
6 episodes
“Waiting for the Out” (season 1) — unfolds as Dan Stewer, a young philosophy teacher working inside a British prison, finds his carefully built life cracking open when daily conversations with inmates about freedom, guilt, dominance, and fate force him to confront the violent legacy of his own family — a father, brother, and uncle who all ended up behind bars — and awaken a corrosive suspicion that he, too, belongs on the inside. As Dan’s sessions with the prisoners deepen, the boundaries between teacher and inmate blur, pulling him into the emotional gravity of men whose stories mirror the parts of himself he has spent years trying to outrun, while his past resurfaces through old wounds, buried memories, and the reappearance of figures tied to his father’s crimes. The pressure builds as Dan’s obsession with his own culpability begins to unravel his relationships, destabilize his sense of identity, and push him toward choices that threaten everything he still holds onto outside the prison walls. “Waiting for the Out” (season 1) positions itself as a tense, intimate character study about inherited cycles, the weight of guilt, and the dangerous seduction of believing that punishment is the only path to redemption. More …
February
Fallout (season 2)
8 episodes
“Fallout” (Season 2) — continues the post-apocalyptic saga by sending Lucy MacLean and The Ghoul into New Vegas, where they search for Lucy’s father, Hank, whose dark ties to Vault-Tec are revealed, while Maximus rises within the Brotherhood of Steel, which faces internal conflict, and the powerful figure Robert House emerges as a central player in the wasteland’s future. Set two centuries after the Great War, the story picks up directly after the explosive revelations of Season 1 as Lucy, shaken by the truth of her father’s past, reluctantly teams up with The Ghoul on a perilous journey to New Vegas, a city that survived the nuclear holocaust and now thrives under the enigmatic rule of Robert House. Their quest intertwines personal motives: Lucy seeks answers about Hank’s betrayal, while The Ghoul wrestles with fragments of his humanity and memories of his pre-war life as Cooper Howard. The Brotherhood, now wielding the Cold Fusion relic, becomes a major factional force, but internal divisions threaten civil war as Elder Cleric Quintus pushes for ruthless expansion, forcing Maximus to question his loyalty and morality. Themes of factional conflict, betrayal, and survival dominate, mirroring the branching narratives of Fallout: New Vegas, as Lucy’s struggle to retain her humanity contrasts with The Ghoul’s descent into moral ambiguity, while Maximus embodies the tension between duty and conscience, and the introduction of New Vegas expands the scope with political intrigue, shifting alliances, and brutal wasteland justice. “Fallout” (Season 2) blends authentic game elements with character-driven drama, raising the stakes and delivering a larger, more complex narrative that explores how individuals and factions shape the fragile balance of power in a devastated world. More …
February
Miss Scarlet & the Duke (season 6)
6 episodes
“Miss Scarlet & the Duke” (season 6) — unfolds as Eliza Scarlet steps into a new era of Victorian sleuthing, navigating shifting power at Scotland Yard after DI Alexander Blake’s rise and the arrival of ambitious newcomer Detective George Willows, whose presence unsettles the fragile balance of alliances around her, while Ivy and Potts adjust to married life and Nash continues to wreak havoc from across the globe, pulling strings that threaten to upend Eliza’s hard‑won independence. As Eliza and Blake’s once‑fraught partnership begins to evolve into something sharper and more volatile, their cases drag them through psychiatric escapes, elite scandals, treasure hunts, and diplomatic murders, each investigation tightening the tension between personal loyalty and professional ambition. With Moses Valentine returning to London just when she needs him most, Eliza finds herself caught between old loyalties and new dangers, forced to confront whether her relentless pursuit of justice leaves room for anything resembling a life beyond the job. “Miss Scarlet & the Duke” (season 6) positions itself as a charged, character‑driven mystery cycle where shifting alliances, rising stakes, and the ghosts of past seasons collide to test Eliza’s resolve more fiercely than ever. More …
February
V.C. Andrews’ Dawn (season 1)
4 episodes
“V.C. Andrews’ Dawn” (season 1) — unfolds as Dawn Longchamp, raised in a modest but loving family, has her entire world ripped apart when the shocking truth about her parentage forces her into the wealthy but poisonous Cutler clan, where her cruel grandmother Lillian rules with an iron fist and every secret in the mansion seems designed to break her spirit. As Dawn is pulled deeper into the family’s labyrinth of lies, she begins to sense that the truth about her past is even darker than anyone admits. Each new revelation tightens the emotional vise around her, pushing her to choose between survival and the person she once believed herself to be. As Dawn is thrust into a life of privilege laced with manipulation, obsession, and generational curses, she fights to hold onto her identity while navigating forbidden love, the trauma of being separated from everyone she once trusted, and the dark legacy that binds the Cutlers together. Her journey carries her from the suffocating halls of Cutler’s Cove to a New York performing‑arts school where new temptations and betrayals await. “V.C. Andrews’ Dawn” (season 1) positions itself as a gothic, emotionally charged saga of stolen childhoods, twisted loyalties, and a young woman’s fight to break a generational curse before it consumes her completely. More …
February
Red Eye (season 2)
6 episodes
“Red Eye” (season 2) — unfolds as DC Hana Li, still reeling from the fallout of the Flight 357 conspiracy, is pulled into a new geopolitical nightmare when a high‑profile British tech executive vanishes in Beijing under circumstances that echo the cover‑ups she thought she’d left behind, forcing her back into the crosshairs of MI5, Chinese state security, and the shadow networks that profit from both. As Hana returns to China — this time not as a suspect but as the only person who understands the machinery of deception at play — the investigation drags her through surveillance‑soaked streets, corporate espionage rings, and diplomatic pressure cookers where every ally might be an informant and every truth is weaponised. With the British government desperate to avoid another international scandal and the Chinese authorities determined to control the narrative, Hana finds herself navigating a tightening maze of political theatre, personal betrayal, and buried trauma from her first ordeal, all while a new adversary emerges who seems to anticipate her every move. “Red Eye” (season 2) positions itself as a tense, escalating conspiracy thriller where borders blur, loyalties fracture, and Hana must decide how much of herself she’s willing to sacrifice to expose a truth that could ignite a global crisis. More …
February
Dear Life (season 1)
6 episodes
“Dear Life” (season 1) — unfolds as Lillian Vandenberg, shattered by the sudden death of her fiancé Ash after he is attacked at work and taken off life support, spirals through months of grief in Ballarat, unable to work, unable to heal, and unable to face the victim impact statement she is expected to write, while her cousin Hamish and her best friend Mary — who was on shift the night Ash died and now battles her own trauma — struggle to hold her together. When Lillian receives an anonymous letter from the man who received Ash’s donated heart, a Barossa Valley winemaker named Andrew Schneider, she becomes fixated on the lives saved by Ash’s organs and impulsively tracks Andrew down, only to trigger a painful, chaotic chain of encounters that expose the raw edges of her grief and the fractures in the people around her. As Lillian, Mary, and Hamish navigate the legal fallout of Ash’s death, the emotional wreckage of their intertwined relationships, and the strange, intimate connection between donor families and recipients, the season becomes a darkly comic, deeply human study of trauma, guilt, and the desperate search for meaning after loss. “Dear Life” (season 1) positions itself as a grounded, emotionally charged dramedy where healing is messy, connection is accidental, and every attempt to move forward risks reopening the wounds everyone is trying to hide. More …
February
Warren’s Vortex (season 1)
6 episodes
“Warren’s Vortex” (season 1) — unfolds as Lower Hutt dad Warren Harrison, who has spent twenty years casually tossing garden rubbish into the interdimensional vortex hidden in his shed, is thrust into chaos when his 18‑year‑old daughter Lucy is suddenly sucked inside, forcing him to leap after her and hurling them through a chain of bizarre future realities where intelligent refrigerators rule, backyard competitions become deadly, laser‑eyed real‑estate robots stalk empty cities, mobile‑game zombies overrun their street, and a 1930s murder‑mystery time loop resets with every wrong guess. In the split second before he jumps, Warren realizes he has no idea what kind of father he’ll need to become to get her back. And once inside, the vortex seems almost alive, twisting each world to test them in ways neither is prepared for. As they crash through each twisted timeline — encountering alternate versions of neighbors, friends, and enemies — Warren’s frantic attempts to protect Lucy collide with the absurdity of worlds that obey no logic but their own, turning their journey into a chaotic, heartfelt scramble for survival. “Warren’s Vortex” (season 1) positions itself as a fast‑moving, surreal sci‑fi comedy where family bonds are tested across dimensions, reality bends into nonsense, and an ordinary dad must improvise his way through universes that seem determined to break him. More …























