Narcos
The Narcos pilot opens with a provocation: “Magical realism is just another way of saying ‘the shit that happens in […]
The Narcos pilot opens with a provocation: “Magical realism is just another way of saying ‘the shit that happens in […]
The Ozark pilot solves a genuinely hard problem: how do you make an unsympathetic protagonist compelling without softening them? The
Nobody Wants This opens with a conversational ease that feels immediate and unforced, drawing the audience into a story built
Killing Eve opens with a sense of playful menace, immediately signalling that this is a thriller with a distinct personality.
Bridgerton opens with elegance and momentum, inviting the audience into a highly stylised world where status, romance, and reputation are
Succession opens with a sense of unease beneath its surface confidence, introducing a world of immense wealth where control is
Sex Education opens with a frankness that feels both refreshing and disarming, setting the tone for a story that refuses
Mare of Easttown opens with a sense of place that feels immediate and lived-in, grounding the story in a tight-knit
The Boys opens with impact—sharp, shocking, and deliberately disorienting. Within minutes, the pilot dismantles the familiar superhero ideal, replacing it
The Flight Attendant opens at full speed, pulling the audience into a story that feels chaotic, disorienting, and immediately high-stakes.