Streaming services are known for having award-worthy series but also plenty of duds. Our guide to the best TV shows on Netflix is updated weekly to help you know which series you should move to the top of your queue. They arenât all surefire winnersâwe love a good less-than-obvious gemâbut theyâre all worth your time, trust us.
Feel like youâve already watched everything on this list that you want to see? Try our guide to the best movies on Netflix for more options. And if youâve already completed Netflix and are in need of a new challenge, check out our picks for the best shows on Hulu and the best shows on Disney+. Donât like our picks or want to offer suggestions of your own? Head to the comments below.
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Dept. Q
Edinburgh police detective Carl Morck (The Crownâs Matthew Goode) used to be one of the bestâuntil his arrogance got his partner paralyzed, a uniformed officer killed, and saw him narrowly survive a bullet through his own neck. After returning to work following a lengthy period of mandatory leave, Morck finds himself heading up the new Department Qâan underfunded, under-staffed operation in the precinctâs dank basement, dedicated to solving the iciest of cold cases. Gathering a team of misfits, including Rose (Leah Byrne), eager-to-please but recovering from a breakdown, Akram (Alexej Manvelov), a Syrian refugee, and Morckâs still-bedbound partner James (Jamie Sives), the department has a lot to proveâbut solving the disappearance of Merritt Linguard (Chloe Pirrie) might be a good start. Based on the novels by Danish author Jussi Adler-Olsen, Dept. Q is a brilliant blend of Scandi noir and gritty British crime drama.
Sirens
First The White Lotus, then The Perfect Couple, and now SirensâMeghann Fahy is making a career out of starring in shows where we get to see awfully rich people doing awfully bad things to each other. Here, she plays down-on-her-luck Devon, drawn into the luxurious world her sister Simone (Milly Alcock, imminently Supergirl) inhabits by proxy, working as an assistant to billionaireâs wife Michaela (Julianne Moore). Itâs never clear how willingly Simone got involved with the charismatic Michaela, who may be a mentor or cult leader or something else entirely, nor how over-protective or paranoid Devon is, but the hook of this glossy, dark comedy is in finding out.
The Eternaut
Juan Salvo (Ricardo DarĂn) was settling in for a card game with his friends. Then the snow started fallingâunusual enough for Buenos Aires in the summer, and downright terrifying when everyone touched by the freak weather event drops dead. But as Salvo desperately tries to find his daughter and ex-wife among the few survivors, an even deeper horror emerges. Adapted from a beloved Argentinian comic book by HĂ©ctor GermĂĄn Oesterheld and Francisco Solano LĂłpez, The Eternaut offers a unique piece of postapocalyptic drama, focusing on grounded, authentic characters before spinning off into wilder sci-fi directions.
Blood of Zeus
This adult animated take on Greek mythology returns for its third and final season, bringing the odyssey of demigod Heronâson of Zeus and mortal woman Electraâto a brutal conclusion. After years of manipulation, power plays, and betrayals, the season picks up with the Olympian gods and their Titan predecessors lined up against each other, the fate of the world hanging on the outcome of the ultimate family feud. Heron and his estranged brother Seraphim may be the only ones able to bring peaceâso itâs rather inconvenient that Heron is dead. From start to finish, Blood of Zeus has impressed with smart writing that offers compelling twists on the classic myths, all brought to life with top-tier animation and phenomenal voice acting, and it doesnât disappoint as it reaches its finale. One of Netflixâs best animated series.
You
Based on the novels of Caroline Kepnes, You is an often deeply disturbing series. During the first season, bookstore manager Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) falls in deranged-love-at-first-sight with aspiring author Guinevere Beck (Elizabeth Lail). In subsequent ones, he relocates to Los Angeles, where heiress Love Quinn (Victoria Pedretti) became the focus of his attention, and then to London, where he poses as an unassuming university professor before meeting his match in Kate Galvin (Charlotte Ritchie). At each turn, the globe-hopping saga of murderous obsession has become more and more unsettling. In the fifth and final season, Joe returns to New York with his new wife, Kate, but the darkness and brutality thatâs followed him around the world is never far behind. Often shocking, You is a gripping thriller that hits the same sinister sweet spot as early (read: good) seasons of Dexter.
The Four Seasons
Three couplesâlovebirds Kate and Jack (Tina Fey and Will Forte), glamorous Danny and Claude (Colman Domingo and Marco Calvani), and fraying Nick and Anne (Steve Carrell and Kerri Kenney-Silver)âhave known each other since college, maintaining their decades-long friendship with a series of regular vacations together. But when Nick finally splits with Anneâwho was about to surprise him with a vow renewalâthe groupâs dynamic completely changes. It sounds like the premise for a depressing drama, but The Four Seasons is instead a surprisingly life-affirming comedy, bolstered by fantastic performances across-the-board. A loose adaptation of the 1981 movie of the same name, this eight-episode miniseriesâcocreated by Feyâsometimes takes things in more farcical, physical comedy directions, but maintains a charming sense of warmth and humanity throughout.
Black Mirror
Black Mirror returns with six new episodes that continue to explore humanityâs complicated relationship with technology. Although the new, seventh season includes a couple of rare sequels to previous Black Mirror episodes, the anthology format means every episode remains accessible. That means you can jump right in with the heartbreaking âEulogy,â where Paul Giamattiâs Phillip dives through his own fractured memories of a lost lover. Or you can start with the sinister âPlaything,â in which a gaming journalist gets murderously obsessed with a strange life-sim game, partly inspired by series creator Charlie Brookerâs own background. (In a very meta twist, you can play the game for real.) Whether youâre a longtime fan or this is your first encounter with poignant tech dystopias, all of Black Mirror awaits your viewing.
North of North
Young Inuk woman Siaja (Anna Lambe, True Detective: Night Country) married straight out of high school, then spent years trapped in the shadow of her shallow, selfish husband, Tingâthe golden boy of their small town of Ice Cove, nestled far in the Arctic Circle. A brush with deathâand possibly the goddess Nuliajukâgives her the push to make a fresh start, but an explosive breakup in a community of only 2,000 people means Siajaâs personal life is now everyoneâs business. Netflixâs first Canadian original series, this sharp sitcom is packed with warmth and humor, while its on-location shooting in Iqaluit (the real-life capital of the Arctic Canadian territory of Nunavut) delivers breathtaking natural beauty along with the laughs.
Devil May Cry
Building on the success of Castlevania, Netflixâs take on Capcomâs Devil May Cry series continues the streamerâs strong track record of animated video game adaptations. For those whoâve never picked up a controller, the series follows half-demon devil hunter Dante, a stylish slayer with a penchant for slicing up hellâs worst offenders. This eight-episode spectacular sees Dante (voiced by Johnny Yong Bosch) clashing with the horrific White Rabbit (Hoon Lee), a twisted monster aiming to tear down the barrier between Earth and hell. Animation fans will also appreciate one of the final performances from the venerable, sadly-passed Kevin Conroy as the villainous US Vice President Baines. Devil May Cry may be unashamedly in love with its own early 2000s originsâas evidenced by a soundtrack filled with songs from the likes of Limp Bizkit and Papa Roachâbut this slickly animated action masterpiece is a hellishly good time.
The Residence
The latest outing from Shondaland, this satisfyingly twisty whodunnit finds Orange Is the New Blackâs Uzo Aduba in unassailable top form as Cordelia Cupp, a brilliant but quirky detectiveâand bird-watcher, which proves importantâcalled in when White House chief usher AB Wynter (Giancarlo Esposito) is found dead on-site midway through a state dinner with Australian dignitaries. While aides are keen to write it off as suicide, Cupp isnât convincedâwhich means locking everyone (including the actual Kylie Minogue) in while she investigates. Itâs all brilliantly shot, with the White House itself a pivotal character (at times becoming a doll house diorama where each room continues to play out their own tableaux), but itâs the phenomenal cast that makes this dark comedy top viewing.
Adolescence
A quiet English town. 6 am. Police raid the house of Jamie Miller on suspicion of murdering an innocent girl. Jamie is 13 years old. A shocking mini-series, this isnât a whodunit, but a whydunit. Its four episodesâeach masterfully shot in a single real-time takeâexplore how boys are radicalized online to hate women, and the horrifying effects it has. The powerhouse cast includes cocreator and writer Stephen Graham (Bodies, A Thousand Blows) as Jamieâs father Eddie, Ashley Walters (Bulletproof) as Detective Boscombe, the arresting officer and investigator of Jamieâs crime, and Erin Doherty (The Crown) as the psychologist evaluating Jamie. Each brings this incredibly difficult material to life, but itâs newcomer Owen Cooper as Jamie who most astounds, turning from petrified to cheeky to vitriolic in a terrifying heartbeat. Adolescence is harrowing but important viewing.
Toxic Town
Based on the real-world Corby toxic waste case, this four-part drama follows the decades-long battle for justice faced by the former steelworking English town, after widespread industrial pollution led to multiple children being born with physical disabilities. Centered largely on the lives of mothers Susan McIntyre (former Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker), Tracey Taylor (Aimee Lou Wood), and Maggie Mahon (Claudia Jessie), Toxic Town fiercely explores how far the community had to go for justice and how low the people responsible would stoop to avoid culpability. A searing, powerful, heart-wrenching drama that willâand shouldâleave you absolutely furious at corporate greed.
Pantheon
Originally an AMC+ show, both seasons of Pantheon are now available on Netflix. Good timing too, since its nightmarish scenario of digitally uploaded human consciousnesses and exploration of the impact such technology would have on society feels worryingly prescient. With plot threads weaving between isolated Maddie Kim, whose dead father may have been reborn as an âUploaded Intelligence,â Caspian Keyes, a genius teenager whose entire life is a Truman Showâstyle lie, and Vinod Chanda, an engineer investigating UI, this hard sci-fi outingâbased on the short fiction of Ken Liuâoffers a dark examination of virtual immortality. A uniquely brilliant adult animated series.
Zero Day
Cards on the table: A significant part of the appeal here is seeing the iconic Robert De Niro in his first major English-language TV role (he previously appeared in the Argentinian Nada, aka Nothing). He doesnât disappoint with his performance as former US president George Mullenâpulled out of retirement to oversee a commission investigating a colossal cyberattack that left thousands of Americans dead and the terrifying warning that âthis will happen againââcommanding the screen with his trademark gravitas. Director Lesli Linka Glatter wrings great drama from the whodunit of it all (Russians? hackers? hedge fund bros?), but with Mullen handed unprecedented powers to track down the culprits, the real nail-biting moments come from its suddenly timely explorations of abuses of power. With a powerhouse cast that includes Angela Bassett, Lizzy Caplan, and Jesse Plemons, Zero Day is an engaging political thriller, and at six episodes it makes for a great binge-watch.
Apple Cider Vinegar
Influencers have been known to hawk nonsense diets and spurious âwellnessâ regimens, but few have ever done it like Belle Gibson, the real-life Australian influencer who went as far as faking brain cancer for attention. And while she hailed alternative diets and whole foods for keeping her nonexistent illness at bayâlaunching an app and cookbook in the processâactual cancer sufferers paid the price for her extreme narcissism and greed. This dramatized limited seriesââa true-ish story ⊠based on a lie,â as Netflix puts itâmakes for uncomfortably gripping viewing as it charts the rise and fall of Gibson (Kaitlyn Dever, with a flawless Aussie accent) and her rivalry with Milla Blake (Alycia Debnam-Cary), a fellow influencer and actual cancer patient. Better than doomscrolling reels on Instagram or TikTok, and a reminder that everyone should be a lot more skeptical of anything influencers are shilling on social media.
The Night Agent
Special agent Peter Sutherland (Gabriel Basso) is back, and the stakes have never been higher. While the first season of The Night Agent wove a compelling spy drama out of the idea of a mole at the heart of Americaâs intelligence services, the newly arrived second season takes a more global approachâSutherland hunts down a stolen chemical weapon project, drawing him back into the orbit of tech savant and sometime love interest Rose Larkin (Luciane Buchanan), while Iranian diplomatic aide Noor Taheri (Arienne Mandi) offers secrets to the CIA in return for asylum, and a deposed Eastern European dictator aims to manipulate everything from behind bars. Sure, the showâs mix of politics and spook work wonât surprise genre diehards, but it weaves together its many influencesâand many more plot threadsâinto a supremely entertaining thriller.
Asura
The four Takezawa sisters are close but have little in common. Eldest Tsunako (Rie Miyazawa) is already a widow; repressed Takiko (YĂ» Aoi) and rebellious Sakiko (Suzu Hirose) are always at each otherâs throats; and second-born Makiko (Machiko Ono) tries to balance keeping the peace with being a housewife and mother to her own two children. Yet when Takiko learns that their father Kotaro (Jun Kunimura) may have a second, secret, family, the sistersâ bonds are put to the test as they struggle to uncover the truth. Asura is far more than a turgid family dramaâitâs equal parts heartwarming and hilarious, capturing the complexities of the relationships between its quartet of protagonists. Keeping the 1970s setting of Kuniko MukĆdaâs original novel allows Palme dâOrâ winning director Hirokazu Kore-eda (Shoplifters) to craft a gorgeously shot period piece that still feels incredibly timely and modern.
Castlevania: Nocturne
In the midst of the French Revolution, citizens rise up against a parasitic ruling classâbut vampire hunter Richter Belmont and his magic-wielding allies Maria and Annette are more concerned with whatâs literally bleeding the people dry. The first season of this grisly adult animated series saw the team coming together to face the rise of a âVampire Messiahâ prophesied to devour the sun, but the new second season ratchets up the action as the heroes team with Alucard, son of Dracula, to try to restore light to the world. Letâs just say the stakes (sorry) have never been higher. While Nocturneâs second season has some closer links to the previous Castlevania animated series, it still works perfectly well on its own, delivering high quality animation, brilliant action, and a fantastic cast of characters to sink your teeth into (sorry, again).
Jentry Chau vs the Underworld
You know the drillâeveryday teenager learns she has superpowers and is destined to fight the forces of darkness. Except Jentry Chau (voiced by Ali Wong) is not like any other teenage girlâsheâs known about the supernatural her whole life (her uncontrollable fire powers were a giveaway) and spent a lifetime avoiding it. Sent to study in Korea for her own safety, Jentry is drawn back into the mystic world after being attacked in Seoul by a jiangshi named Ed (Bowen Yang). Brought back to her home in Texas by her great-aunt, Jentry has to survive not only the formidable mogui Mr. Cheng, who intends to drain her soul and powers, but the horrors of high school, culture shock, and the pain of her own past. Taking the âhigh school is hellâ metaphor of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, adding a dash of Gravity Fallsâ mystery, and rooting it all in Asian mythology, Jentry Chau vs the Underworld is one of Netflixâs freshest animated shows in years.
Squid Game
Produced in Korea, Squid Game blends Hunger Games and Parasite with a battle-royal-style contest. Hundreds of desperate, broke people are recruited to a contest where they can win enough money to never need to worry about their debts again. All they have to do to win the â©45.6 billion ($35.8 million) jackpot is complete six childrenâs games. But itâs not that simple: All the games have a twist, and very few people make it out alive. Squid Game is intense, brutal, and often very graphic, but it is also completely gripping. After the show became a cultural phenomenon in 2021, fans waited what felt like an eternity for another season. That second season finally dropped on December 26.
Queer Eye
A reformatted Fab Five return, ready to change the lives of 10 new heroes. Relocating to Las Vegas, the ninth season of Queer Eye sees Karamo, Tan, Antoni, Jonathan, and new host Jeremiah Brentâtaking Bobby Berkâs seat as the design whizâhelping a retired showgirl regain her sparkle, organizing a dream wedding for new parents, and, in possibly their strangest case yet, teaching a magic dragon to shed his scaly exterior. No, really. Netflixâs most feel-good show.
No Good Deed
Take Selling Sunset and add a grisly tragicomic twist and you just about have No Good Deed. A dark comedy from Liz Feldman, creator of Dead to Me, this eight-part series starts with Lydia and Paul Morgan (Lisa Kudrow and Ray Romano) putting their gorgeous home on the market, and descends into darker territory as prospective buyers go to ever more desperate attempts to get their hands on the house, nosy neighbors interfere, and the grisly history of the house itself threatens to come to light. Buoyed by a stellar cast including Teyonah Parris, Abbi Jacobson, Luke Wilson, and Denis Leary, this is a glossy, witty, and possibly only slightly exaggerated take on the brutality of the Los Angeles property market.
A Man on the Inside
The latest show from comedy mastermind Michael Schur (The Good Place, Parks and Recreation, Brooklyn Nine-Nine), A Man on the Inside features Ted Danson as Charles Nieuwendyk, a retired engineering professor whoâs lost all direction since his wife passed. But when private investigator Julie Kovalenko (Lilah Richcreek Estrada) needs a man of his demographic to go undercover in a retirement community to investigate allegations of resident abuse, Charles may find an unlikely new lease on lifeâif he can figure out how to use his smartphone, that is. Reflecting on end-of-life realities as much as it plays up Charlesâ fish-out-of-water situation, itâs a show thatâs equal parts poignant, melancholic, and achingly funnyâand itâs based on a true story, to boot.
Black Doves
Helen Webb (Keira Knightley) is wife to the UK defense secretary, mother to two children, and bored with her picture-perfect life. Spectacular cover then, since sheâs actually a spy for the mercenary organization Black Doves, selling state secrets to the highest bidder. But when her real love Jason (Andrew Koji) is killed, Helen is determined to find out who killed him and whyâand her pursuit of the truth threatens both her public and private lives. Paired with assassin and old friend Sam (Ben Whishaw, in a very different spy role to his turn in the James Bond films) at the behest of stern operator Mrs. Reed (Sarah Lancashire), Helenâs obsession could have led to a dour, gritty thriller, but Black Doves bucks the grim-dark trend to serve up a pulpy, colorful outing with enough heart to balance its violence. At only six episodes (with a second season already confirmed), itâs a brisk watch too.
Arcane
Animated series based on video games can run the gamut from cheap cash-ins to half-decent if forgettable tie-ins, inaccessible to anyone but hardcore devotees. Yet Arcane stood out by making its connections to Riot Gamesâ League of Legends almost optional. While its central figures, orphaned sisters Vi and Jinx, are playable characters in the game, this steampunk saga of class war, civil uprising, and the people caught in between is entirely accessible. The second and final season, released in a trio of movie-length blocks of three episodes apiece, escalates the conflict between the warring factions but never loses its central focus on the fractured relationship between sisters. With a gorgeous painterly art style, strong characters, and frequently shocking story beats, Arcane is one of the best animated series in yearsâand it has racked up plenty of awards, including a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Animated Program, to prove it.
Cobra Kai
Picking up decades after Daniel LaRusso and Johnny Lawrenceâs iconic fight at the end of the first Karate Kid movie, Cobra Kai initially follows a washed-up Johnny as he reopens the Cobra Kai karate dojo, finding new purpose after defending his young neighbor Miguel (Xolo Maridueña, Blue Beetle) in a fight. Over the course of six seasons, the stakes get higherâand frankly, increasingly, gloriously, ludicrousâas rival martial arts schools start cropping up all over California. Alliances are forged and broken with alarming regularity, and everything gears toward a global battle for karate supremacy. Itâs all a little bit tongue-in-cheek, and with Ralph Macchio and William Zabka reprising their 1980s roles, the show is an unabashed love letter to the classic action flicks, but thanks to some seriously impressive fights and stunt work, itâs a retro-styled delight.
Heartstopper
One of the most joyful shows on Netflix returns for another school year of teen drama and heartfelt queer romance. In the long-awaited third season, things heat up between the central couple, with Charlie (Joe Locke) preparing to say three little words to Nick (Kit Connor) for the first time, while Elle (Yasmin Finney) and Tao (William Gao) try to have the perfect romantic summer before Elle starts art college. Heartstopperâs return also sheds some of its earlier cloying tendencies, growing up alongside its talented young cast and giving them more serious material to work with, tackling more mature themes of sex, eating disorders, and gender dysphoriaâall without losing the warmth and charm that made audiences fall in love with the show in the first place. The show younger LGBTQ+ viewers need now, older ones needed years ago, and one that everyone needs to watch, whatever their sexuality.
The Boyfriend
âAnyone can fall in love with anyoneâ is the opening narration to The Boyfriend, Japanâs first same-sex dating showâa bold and progressive statement that reflects the shifting tide of opinion in the country. Throwing nine single men together in an idyllic beach house for a summer and charging them with running a coffee truck, the over-arching concept is to see whoâll pair up, but the series is as interested in exploring the friendships that emerge between the cast as it is the romantic relationships. Unlike Western dating shows, there are no scandals, no dramatic twists, no betrayals, and the âchallengesâ are adorably focused on confessing feelings. The gentleness of it all adds an almost relaxing quality, with the men discussing their emotionsâand the nature of being queer in Japanâearnestly. An absolutely joyful example of reality TV.
Kleo
If youâre pining for more Killing Eve, then this German thriller may be the next best thing. Set in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the series follows the eponymous Kleo (Jella Haase), a Stasi assassin imprisoned by her agency on false treason charges. Released after the fall of the Berlin Wall, she seeks revenge on her former handlersâbut West German detective Sven (Dimitrij Schaad), the only witness to her last kill, may have something to say about that. As dark and violent as youâd expect given the period and the themes of betrayal and vengeance, Kleo is lightened by its oft-deranged sense of humor and a charismatic lead duo who brilliantly bounce off one anotherâchemistry thatâs only heightened in the second season as Kleoâs pursuit of her old allies intensifies, attracting attention from international spy agencies in the aftermath of the Cold War.
Sweet Home
Based on the Korean webcomic by Kim Carnby and Hwang Young-chan, Sweet Home offers a very different vision of apocalyptic end timesârather than pandemics, disasters, or even zombies, this posits an end of the world brought about by peopleâs transformation into grotesque monsters, each unique and seemingly based on their deepest desires when they were human. The first season is a masterclass in claustrophobic horror, as the residents of an isolated, run-down apartment buildingâchiefly suicidal teen Cha Hyun-su (Song Kang), former firefighter Seo Yi-kyung (Lee Si-young), and Pyeon Sang-wook (Lee Jin-wook), who may be a brutal gangsterâbattle for survival. The second and third seasons explore what remains of the wider world, delving into the true nature of both monster and manâand if thereâs any hope for what remains of humanity. With phenomenal effects work blending prosthetics, CGI, and even stop-motion animation for some disturbingly juddering creatures, this stands apart from the horror crowd.
Star Trek Prodigy
Paramount+âs loss remains Netflixâs gain, as the streamerâs license rescue of this great Star Trek spin-off warps into its second season. After escaping a distant prison planet and becoming Starfleet cadets under the watchful eye of Star Trek Voyagerâs Admiral Janeway (voiced by the venerable Kate Mulgrew), the ragtag crewâled by aspiring captain Dal RâEl and bolstered by astrolinguist Gwyndala, engineer Jankom Pog, energy being Zero, scientist Rok-Tahk, and indestructible, gelatinous Murfâfind themselves cast through time on the most dangerous mission of their young lives. While aimed at younger audiences and intended as an intro to the wider Trek universe and its ethics, Prodigy packs in plenty for older Trekkers to appreciate, particularly with a slate of returning Star Trek legends voiced by their original actors. Prodigy is something of a sleeper hit, but one of the best Trek shows in years.
Supacell
One by one, five Black Londoners awaken to strange superpowers. Struggling father Andre (Eric Kofi-Abrefa) develops superstrength, nurse Sabrina (Nadine Mills) unleashes phenomenal telekinetic might, drug dealer Rodney (Calvin Demba) races at superspeed, and wannabe gang leader Tazer (Josh Tedeku) turns invisible. But itâs Michael (Tosin Cole, Doctor Who) who may be the most pivotal, realizing he can leap through time and space and learning he only has three months to save his fiancĂ©eâs life. Created by Andrew âRapmanâ Onwubolu, Supacell is a show about superpowers, but not necessarily superheroes, with its fantastic cast offering up a far more realistic and human exploration of now-familiar ideas than anything youâll find in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. And the mystery of whyâand howâonly Black people seem to be gaining powers builds up to a more powerful punch than an Asgardian god of thunder. A smart, modern, and refreshing take on the genre.
The Good Place
After suffering an improbable and humiliating death, Eleanor (Kristen Bell) finds herself in âThe Good Place,â a perfect neighborhood inhabited by the worldâs worthiest people. The only problem? Sheâs not meant to be there. Desperate to not be sent to âThe Bad Place,â she tries to correct her behavior in the afterlife, with the help of her assigned soulmate, philosophy professor Chidi (William Jackson Harper). A twist at the end of the first season remains one of the best ever, while the showâs ability to sprinkle ethical and philosophical precepts into a sitcom format is frankly astounding. With a sensational cast rounded out by Manny Jacinto, Jameela Jamil, DâArcy Carden, and Ted Danson, The Good Place more than earns its place in the good place of TV history.
Bridgerton
Still ranking as one of Netflixâs most-watched series ever, Bridgerton is set during the Regency period in England and follows the powerful Bridgerton family as they navigate love, marriage, and scandalâwith most of the latter stirred up by the gossip columns penned by the anonymous Lady Whistledown. Created for screen by Chris Van Dusen and executive produced by Shonda Rhimes, this incredibly bingeable and shockingly entertaining show is based on a series of novels by Julia Quinn, with each season focusing on a different branch of the Bridgerton tree. The third and latest season sees the spotlight fall on the long-simmering relationship between wallflower Penelope Featherington (Nicola Coughlan) and Colin Bridgerton (Luke Newton), a pairing that threatens to reveal powerful secrets that have been bubbling away since the very first episode.
3 Body Problem
In 1960s China, at the height of the Cultural Revolution, gifted scholar Wenjie Ye witnesses her physicist father being beaten to death for his research, only for her to be recruited to a secret project relying on that same knowledge. Fast-forward to the present day, and physics is broken: Particle accelerators around the world are delivering impossible data, while scientists are being plagued by countdowns only they can see. Meanwhile, strange VR headsets appear to be transporting players to an entirely different worldâand humanityâs continued existence may rely on there being no âgame over.â Game of Thronesâ creators D. B. Weiss and David Benioff and True Blood executive producer Alexander Woo reimagine Chinese author Cixin Liuâs acclaimed hard sci-fi trilogy of first contact and looming interplanetary conflict as a more global affair. Wildly ambitious, and boasting an international cast featuring the likes of Benedict Wong, Rosalind Chao, Eiza GonzĂĄlez, and GOT alum John Bradley, Netflixâs 3 Body Problem serves up the opening salvo in a richly detailed and staggeringly complex saga.
Ripley
Perhaps best known nowadays from 1999âs The Talented Mr. Ripley starring Matt Damon, novelist Patricia Highsmithâs inveterate criminal Tom Ripley has a longer, darker legacy in print and on the screen. For this limited series, creator Steven Zaillian goes back to Highsmithâs original text, presenting Ridley (a never-more-sinister Andrew Scott of All of Us Strangers) as a down-on-his-luck con man in 1950s New York who is recruited by a wealthy shipbuilder to travel to Italy and persuade the businessmanâs spoiled son Dickie Greenleaf (Johnny Flynn) to return home. But once in Italy, Ripley finds himself enamored with Dickieâs lavish lifestyleâand will do anything to take it for himself. Shot in black and white to really sell its noir credentials, this is an instant contender for the finest interpretation of Highsmithâs works to date.
Avatar: The Last Airbender
A talented young cast bring to life the tale of Aang (Gordon Cormier), the latest in a long line of avatars who can control all four cardinal elements, but is frozen in time for a century when his world needed him most. Awakened by new friends Katara (Kiawentiio) and Sokka (Ian Ousley), he sets about continuing his training as the Avatar in an attempt to restore balance, all the while pursued by the relentless Prince Zuko (Dallas Liu), heir to the imperialist Fire Nation that has conquered the world. Consider this a cautious recommendationâthe original animated version, also on Netflix, remains superiorâbut Netflixâs live action Avatar remake serves up scale and spectacle, without betraying the heart of the classic show. Itâs also already confirmed for two more seasons, so viewers can look forward to the complete saga without the now-familiar Netflix cancellation worries.
The Legend of Korra
If youâre still not sold on the live-action Avatar, this sequel to the original series is well worth your time. Set 70 years after the animated Avatar: The Last Airbender, The Legend of Korra explores how Aangâs world has progressed after decades of relative peace. When Korra, the new Avatar, moves to Republic City to complete her training under the tutelage of TenzinâAangâs son, now with a family of his ownâshe finds herself and new friends Mako and Bolin caught in the growing tensions between element benders and the Equalist movement, who claim the unpowered are an oppressed class. As the series progresses over its four seasons, The Legend of Korra proves itself a very different beast than its predecessor, exploring political themes and social prejudices in deeperâand often darkerâdetail, while also expanding the more fantastic elements of the universe and revealing the origins of the first Avatar. Even more brilliantly animated, and with a unique 1920s inspired aesthetic, Korra is a show that grew up alongside its audience, and is all the stronger for it.
Beef
Ever been cut off in traffic? Ever had it happen when youâre having a really bad day? Ever just wanted to take the low road, chase the person down and make them pay?! Thenâafter a few deep breathsâBeef is the show for you. Itâs a pressure valve for every petty grievance youâve ever suffered, following rich Amy (Ali Wong) and struggling Danny (Steven Yeun) as they escalate a road rage encounter into a vengeance-fueled quest to destroy the other. Yet Beef is more than a city-wide revenge thrillerâitâs a biting look at how crushing modern life can be, particularly in its LA setting, where extravagant wealth brushes up against inescapable poverty and seemingly no one is truly happy. Part dramedy, part therapy, Beef is a bad example of conflict resolution but a cathartic binge watch that clearly resonatesâas evidenced by its growing clutch of awards, including the Golden Globe for Best Limited Series.
Loudermilk
Something of a sleeper hit for yearsâits first two seasons debuted on AT&Tâs now-defunct pay TV channel Audience in 2017, before its third season appeared over on Amazonâall three seasons of this bleak comedy are now available on Netflix. Ron Livingston stars as Sam Loudermilk, a vitriolic former music critic and recovering alcoholic who proves almost pathologically incapable of holding his tongue when faced with lifeâs small frustrationsâa personality type possibly ill-suited to leading others through addiction support groups. Itâs dark in places, and its central character is deliberately unlikeable, but smart writing and smarter performances shape this into something of an acerbic anti-Frasier.
Scott Pilgrim Takes Off
Adapted from the beloved graphic novel series by Bryan Lee OâMalley, animated by one of the most exciting and dynamic studios in Japan, and voiced by the entire returning cast of director Edgar Wrightâs 2010 live-action adaption, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off would have been cult gold even if it was a straight retelling of its eponymous slackerâs battles against lover Ramona Flowersâ seven evil exes. Yet somehow, in a world devoid of surprises, this packs in killer twists from the very first episode, making for a show thatâs as fresh and exciting as ever. Saying anything else would ruin itâjust watch.
Blue Eye Samurai
In the 17th Century, Japan enforced its âsakokuâ isolationist foreign policy, effectively closing itself off from the world. Foreigners were few and far betweenâso when Mizu (voiced by Maya Erskine) is born with blue eyes, nine months after her mother was assaulted by one of the four white men in the country, it marks her as an outsider, regarded as less than human. Years later, after being trained by a blind sword master and now masquerading as a man, Mizu hunts down those four men, knowing that killing them all is the only way to guarantee her vengeance. Exquisitely animatedâwhich makes its unabashed violence all the more graphicâand with a phenomenal voice cast bolstered by the likes of George Takei, Brenda Song, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, and Kenneth Branagh, Blue Eye Samurai is one of the best adults-only animated series on Netflix.
Pending Train
Netflix: License one of Japanâs best SF dramas in years. Also Netflix: Do nothing, literally nothing, to promote it, not even create an English subbed trailer. Which is where WIRED comes inâPending Train is a show you (and Netflix) shouldnât sleep on. When a train carriage is mysteriously transported into a post-apocalyptic future, the disparate passengersâ first concern is simply survival. Between exploring their new surroundings and clashing with people from another stranded train car over scarce resources, one groupâincluding hairdresser Naoya, firefighter Yuto, and teacher Saeâbegins to realize that there may be a reason theyâve been catapulted through time: a chance to go back and avert the disaster that ruined the world. A tense, 10-episode journey, Pending Train offers a Japanese twist on Lost, but one with tighter pacing and showrunners who actually have a clue where they want the story to go.
One Piece
Mark one up for persistence: After numerous anime adaptations ranging from âawfulâ to ânot too bad,â Netflix finally strikes gold with its live-action take on the global phenomenon One Piece. Despite fansâ fears, this spectacularly captures the charm, optimism, and glorious weirdness of Eiichiro Odaâs beloved manga, manifesting a fantasy world where people brandish outlandish powers and hunt for a legendary treasure in an Age of Piracy almost verbatim from the page. The perfectly cast Iñaki Godoy stars as Monkey D. Luffy, would-be King of the Pirates, bringing an almost elastic innate physicality to the role that brilliantly matches the characters rubber-based stretching powers, while the crew Luffy gathers over this first seasonâincluding swordsmaster Roronoa Zoro (Mackenyu), navigator and skilled thief Nami (Emily Rudd), sharpshooter Usopp (Jacob Romero Gibson), and martial artist chef Sanji (Taz Skylar)âall brilliantly embody their characters. A lot could have gone wrong bringing One Piece to life, but this is a voyage well worth taking.
The Chosen One
Based on the comic American Jesus by writer Mark Millar (Kick-Ass, Kingsman) and artist Peter Gross (Lucifer), The Chosen One follows 12-year-old Jodie (Bobby Luhnow), raised in Mexico by his mother Sarah (Dianna Agron). While the young boy would rather hang out with his friends, his lifeâand potentially the worldâchanges forever when he starts exhibiting miraculous powers, attracting dangerous attention from sinister forces. While this could have been yet another formulaic entry in Netflixâs expansive library of supernatural teen dramas (the Stranger Things vibe is particularly strong), the decision to shoot on film and in a 4:3 aspect ratio make this a visual delight, unlike almost anything else on the streamer at present. Thereâs an English dub, but stick to the original Spanish with English subs for a better viewing experience. (Confusingly, thereâs another show with the exact same title on Netflix, a 2019 Brazilian series following a trio of relief doctors in a village dominated by a cult leaderâalso worth a watch, but donât get them confused!)
Alice in Borderland
When slacker Ryohei Arisu (Kento Yamazaki) is mysteriously transported to a deserted Tokyo, his keen gaming skills give him an edge navigating a series of lethal games that test intellect as much as physical prowess. Yet after barely scraping through several rounds, Arisu is no closer to uncovering the secrets of this strange borderland, or to finding a way homeâand the stakes are about to get even higher. Not only are Arisu and his allies Usagi (Tao Tsuchiya), Kuina (Aya Asahina), and Chishiya (Nijiro Murakami) faced with another gauntlet of sadistic games, but they find themselves caught between rival card suit âcourtsâ vying for powerâand not everyone can be trusted.
With its willingness to kill off main characters at a momentâs notice, the first season of this gripping adaptation of Haro Asoâs manga kept viewers on tenterhooks throughout. As the long-awaited second season leans further into its twisted Alice in Wonderland imagery, expect more shocking developments in this taut thriller.

