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Sonequa Martin-Green as Lena Silver and Donnie Wahlberg as Danny Reagan in
TV & Streaming

Lena Goes Rogue Like Danny in Case That Gets Personal in Episode 7

by jummy84 December 6, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • Lena Silver becomes personally invested in a case involving a murderous senator and struggles with balancing her instincts and proper police procedure.
  • With Danny Reagan’s guidance, Lena resists the urge to cut corners to solve her long-standing “white whale” case.
  • The case strengthens Lena and Danny’s partnership and highlights Danny’s growing attachment to Boston.

[Warning: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for Boston Blue Season 1 Episode 7, “Baggage Claim.”]

Lena Silver’s (Sonequa Martin-Green) “white whale” case resurfaced in Boston Blue‘s December 5 episode. Her feelings about the case made her hellbent on catching the killer, similar to how Danny Reagan (Donnie Wahlberg) would make cases personal on Blue Bloods. Danny had to teach Lena what he learned at the NYPD, which was that when you care so deeply about a case, it matters even more to solve it by following police procedures down to the letter.

Lena and Danny attended a gala in disguise to get into the same room as their suspect, Senator Lowell (Gabriel Burrafato). Lena was seething with anger when questioning the politician, revealing they had a history. During her first years as a detective in Boston, Lena suspected that Lowell murdered a sex worker. She was right, but she didn’t investigate properly, allowing him to slip through the cracks and get away with murder. It took Lena years to trust her instincts again and rebuild her credibility. There was no way she was letting him get away this time.

Lowell was suspected of killing a woman he encountered in a hotel, who wound up dead, her body stuffed in a suitcase and left in a public park to be discovered by Sean (Mika Amonsen) and Jonah (Marcus Scribner) while on the job. Lena knew in her gut that Lowell killed Claire, and her hunger to bring him to justice made her want to cut corners. Danny kept her on the straight and narrow, but eventually she snapped, asking why he was “questioning every instinct” she had.

Michael Gibson/CBS

“Why don’t you trust me?” she pressed. “I need your help, Danny. And I thought you were the kind of partner who would understand and who would stand with me. Was I wrong about you?”

“Of course, I trust you. And more importantly. I believe in you. You think I would be in this city if I didn’t? Sean or no Sean, I would be out of here,” Danny replied. “I also happen to believe that you are 100 percent correct about Senator Lowell. I’ve been down this road many times. We have to be smarter than him, so when we nail that son of a bitch, we nail him for good. That’s what the victims deserve. And maybe you could trust me a little bit, too.”

Lena grit her teeth and worked with Danny to find the evidence they needed. They finally found the real crime scene, as well as damning photos of Lowell taken by Claire, and his hair at the scene of the crime. They brought the crooked senator to the station for one last question before he was arrested.

“How does it feel to know that after all this time escaping justice, you are finally going away for good?” Lena said while staring him down.

This case strengthened the bond between Danny and Lena, proving that they make each other better as partners. Danny’s attachment to Boston is growing by the day. How will that impact the future of his relationship with Maria Baez (Marisa Ramirez), who wants to keep on living in New York? Boston Blue was renewed for Season 2 on Wednesday, December 3, so the show has plenty of time to figure that out.

Boston Blue, Fridays, 10/9c, CBS

December 6, 2025 0 comments
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Emerald Fennell, Margot Robbie Confirm Fans' 'Wuthering Heights' Fears
TV & Streaming

Emerald Fennell, Margot Robbie Confirm Fans’ ‘Wuthering Heights’ Fears

by jummy84 December 6, 2025
written by jummy84

With the release date of Oscar-winning filmmaker Emerald Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” adaptation growing nearer, it should be a great time for Emily Brontë fans. But instead, every new piece of intel about the film, which stars Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi as Cathy and Heathcliff, leaves serious bibliophiles feeling left out in the cold. 

The rift began with the “Promising Young Woman” director’s choice of Robbie and Elordi as her leads, which was unpopular with fans of Brontë’s 1847 novel about sadomasochistic obsession from the word go. Beyond the obvious physical incongruences between the actors and Brontë’s characters — including discrepancies around age, hair color, and skin color — there’s been heavy speculation about whether the dazzling Australian stars would capture the essence of their morally decrepit literary equivalents, whose affection for each other literally ruins lives. 

NO OTHER CHOICE, (aka EOJJEOLSUGA EOBSDA), LEE Byung-hun, 2025. © Neon /Courtesy Everett Collection

After all, “I, Tonya” is arguably the most crazed Robbie has ever been on screen, and Elordi’s charm, despite his best efforts, always seems to shine through his performances, even while playing abusive men in “Euphoria” and “Priscilla” and a literal monster in the new “Frankenstein.” 

Until now, the team behind the new “Wuthering Heights” hasn’t been especially reassuring in the face of those critiques. During an appearance in April at the Sands Film Festival in St Andrews, Scotland, the film’s casting director invoked the merits of “racially blind casting” and encouraged people to give the film a chance. But she also said, “There’s definitely going to be some English Lit fans that are not going to be happy.” 

“There was one Instagram comment that said the casting director should be shot. But just wait till you see it, and then you can decide whether you want to shoot me or not. But you really don’t need to be accurate. It’s just a book. That is not based on real life. It’s all art,” she said, teasing that the set design was “even more shocking” than the choice of leads and that “there may or may not be a dog collar in it.” 

And this week, Robbie and Fennell upped the ante, weighing in with what may be the most discouraging news yet for hardcore devotees of Brontë’s Gothic text. During a conversation with British Vogue that was published on Thursday, the director and actor — whose company, LuckyChap, produced Fennell’s debut and her second feature, “Saltburn” — explained that their vision for the film was an epic love story in the vein of Baz Luhrmann’s “Romeo + Juliet” and other highly watchable Hollywood romances.

“In one of our first conversations about this film, I asked Emerald what her dream outcome was. She said, ‘I want this to be this generation’s “Titanic.” I went to the cinema to watch “Romeo & Juliet” eight times and I was on the ground crying when I wasn’t allowed to go back for a ninth. I want it to be that,’” Robbie said, adding that she thinks the film, which releases on Valentine’s Day next year, is “going to be an amazing date movie.” 

The actor added that she and Fennell spent a lot of time discussing the film’s intimate scenes, which are teased in the bouncy trailer, and that, again, their focus was on making a film befitting a romantic evening or a girls’ night out.  

“Everyone’s expecting this to be very, very raunchy. I think people will be surprised. Not to say there aren’t sexual elements and that it’s not provocative — it definitely is provocative — but it’s more romantic than provocative,” Robbie said. “This is a big epic romance. It’s just been so long since we’ve had one — maybe ‘The Notebook,’ also ‘The English Patient.’ You have to go back decades.”  

While Fennell was apparently a fan of “Wuthering Heights” from a young age — telling the magazine that her inspiration for the adaptation came from seeing Elordi on the set of “Saltburn,” wearing sideburns reminiscent of the Heathcliff on her teenage copy — Robbie had never read the book or watched previous film versions before getting involved in the project. She was just wooed by Fennell’s script and its take on Cathy, which worked out well for the director who was looking for a heavy dose of likability in her female lead. 

“Cathy is a star,” the director said in the interview. “She’s willful, mean, a recreational sadist, a provocateur. She engages in cruelty in a way that is disturbing and fascinating. It was about finding someone who you would forgive in spite of yourself, someone who literally everyone in the world would understand why you love her. It’s difficult to find that supersized star power. Margot comes with big dick energy. That’s what Cathy needs.” 

Together, Fennell and Robbie’s comments pretty much validate what a certain group of moviegoers have feared: that the new film version of “Wuthering Heights” has much less in common with the original text and more with a highly stylized, star-studded blockbuster romance — and that was always going to be the case.

That doesn’t mean that the director and star own anyone an apology, or that they don’t have the right to deviate as much as they want from the book. It’s not as if the previous film versions have been exactly faithful — with many of them, going back to the 1939 rendition starring Laurence Olivier, even cutting out half the plot. And Hollywood adaptations of novels take liberties as a rule, as evidenced by Guillermo del Toro’s portrayal of “Frankenstein,” which includes new characters and major plot points, along with a somehow alluring Elordi in the lead role.  

But it is worth saying that there’s a definite ideological divide between the Hollywood powerhouses and the dedicated fanbase of Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights.” Anyone who has read the novel knows that “Wuthering Heights” is not a romance: It’s a warning. And marketing that as “the greatest love story of all time,” as the film’s promotional materials have, doesn’t do justice to its author’s brilliance — with all due respect to Nicholas Sparks.  
 

December 6, 2025 0 comments
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Geena Davis Institute Study Shows Film Lacks Stories of Women Aging
TV & Streaming

Geena Davis Institute Study Shows Film Lacks Stories of Women Aging

by jummy84 December 5, 2025
written by jummy84

The Geena Davis Institute has unveiled a new study showing how menopause and aging are portrayed in the 100 top-grossing domestic films from 2009 to 2024 that prominently feature women ages 40 and older on screen.

Key findings in the study called, “Missing in action: Writing a new narrative for women in midlife on the big screen,” showed how menopause is nearly invisible: Of the 225 films prominently featuring a 40-plus female character released between 2009 and 2024, only 6% (or 14 films) mentioned menopause. These mentions were usually side comments. Only one film featured a prominent menopause storyline.

Furthermore, menopause was often used as a comedic device. When featured, it was used as a joke to explain women’s anger or mood swings, and even non-menopausal characters were assumed to be menopausal when they expressed anger.

The study also revealed that 40-plus female characters were appearing in fewer comedies, pointing to a strong link between menopause mentions and comedy.

The findings showed how general aging narratives were more frequent. Yet the narratives between men and women aging were vastly different. Women ages 40 and older on screen were twice as likely as men to have a narrative focused on physical aging (15% vs. 7%). Overall, 23 characters shown engaging in cosmetic treatments, 17 (74%) were women. Male characters’ treatments were minor (i.e., dye for graying hair, nose trimming, botox), while women’s treatments often involved surgery or fantastical interventions to restore youth (i.e., vaginal rejuvenation, brow lifts, liposuction).

Another finding showed the sad widow trope and how Hollywood narratives centered on grief and loneliness. In the 225 films that were analyzed, 19 featured “sad widows,” compared with eight featuring “sad widowers,” suggesting aging is more often framed as a story of loss for women than for men.

Findings showed there was a desire for better representation. Overall, 2 in 3 respondents (67%) agree on the importance of realistic portrayals of menopause on screen (72% men, 63% women). This signals a broad audience appetite for menopause stories that move beyond jokes or silence.

The report concluded that the absence of women over 50 in Hollywood, especially as romantic leads, likely reinforces negative stereotypes about women, aging and sexuality.

The study found that audiences across age, gender, and race want more realistic portrayals of menopause.

Madeline Di Nonno, President & CEO of the Geena Davis Institute said Hollywoood needs to do better. In a statement, Di Nonno said, “Womanhood is more than reproduction. One of the more damaging narratives about menopause is that it ‘feels like the finish line for women, whose value in society is being reduced to motherhood.’”

She went on to say, “Avoid characterizations of menopause that conflate womanhood with fertility, and work to provide a more nuanced and less reductive portrayal of womanhood that treats older women as multidimensional, fully fleshed-out characters. Laugh with menopausal women, not at them.”

The report will be unveiled at the Impact+Profit25 conference hosted by the SIE Society and Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs on Friday afternoon.

Actress Constance Zimmer, a panelist on at the conference commented on how menopause storylines almost never appear unless they’re comedic — and even then, they’re often inaccurate or dismissive. Zimmer called for Hollywood storytellers to be more authentic to female storytelling. In a statement, she said, ‘If we take my beloved character Quinn King for example, an unapologetic, revenge driven, crisis loving bad bitch who was clearly and silently going through perimenopause – i now know – having gone through it myself – that we missed so many layers to her story line. She wasn’t simply filled with rage – she was witnessing her entire life shift from the inside out. Menopause is not the side character – she is the leading lady.”

Dominique Debroux, producer of the documentary, “Wise Women” said, “The Geena Davis Institute’s data exposes these gaps, and the ‘Wise Women’ documentary adds the science showing that women’s contributions have always been far broader, strategic, communal, and essential to our successful evolution.” She went on to say, “The real barrier now is investment. There is no shortage of powerful stories about women’s identity, purpose, and wisdom. What’s missing is the willingness to finance them, somehow overlooking the size of the audience (70 million 50+ women just in the US & Canada). Hollywood needs to support stories that reflect women’s true range, not just their appearance.”

The study will be published here.

December 5, 2025 0 comments
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DGA Says WBD-Netflix Talks Raise "Significant Concerns"
TV & Streaming

DGA Says WBD-Netflix Talks Raise “Significant Concerns”

by jummy84 December 5, 2025
written by jummy84

The Directors Guild of America says it plans to meet with Netflix to discuss “concerns” regarding the streamer’s potential acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery.

After news broke Thursday night that Netflix had won the bidding war for the legacy media company and the two would be entering exclusive talks to secure a deal, a guild spokesperson told Deadline that the development “raises significant concerns for the DGA.”

“We believe that a vibrant, competitive industry — one that fosters creativity and encourages genuine competition for talent — is essential to safeguarding the careers and creative rights of directors and their teams. We will be meeting with Netflix to outline our concerns and better understand their vision for the future of the company. While we undertake this due diligence we will not be commenting further,” the statement continued.

The DGA is the first, but likely not the last, Hollywood union to comment on the latest development in the WBD acquisition saga. The Writers Guild of America East and West said in a joint statement in October that they planned to block any potential merger of WBD and Paramount, warning that further media consolidation “would be a disaster for writers, for consumers, and for competition.”

Thursday was a tumultuous day that saw Paramount move aggressively to counter Netflix’s offer and seal a deal of its own for WBD. According to sources, Netflix offered around $28 a share for the company, mostly in cash.

WBD put itself on the block in October to open up the process after receiving three consecutive offers from Paramount. Warner has hoped to get a deal in place by mid-to-late December.

December 5, 2025 0 comments
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Peter Claffey, Dexter Sol Ansell in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms
TV & Streaming

Game of Thrones Prequel’s Cast at CCXP

by jummy84 December 4, 2025
written by jummy84

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms brought the firepower to CCXP in São Paulo.

The panel for HBO‘s forthcoming Game of Thrones prequel series kicked off Thursday in Brazil with a live brass band performing the original show’s iconic theme music as cosplayers acted out aspects of the program. The actual event featured Peter Claffey, who stars as the titular Ser Duncan the Tall, aka Dunk, and Dexter Sol Ansell, who portrays Dunk’s squire, Prince Aegon Targaryen, known as Egg. Its six-episode first season is set to premiere Jan. 18 on HBO, and the project has already been renewed for a second season.

When the moderator asked Claffey how Dunk remains such a cool guy on the show, the actor replied, “I don’t know if he’s ‘cool,’ but he’s quite an anxious, nervous but very lovable guy. He just wants to do what’s right.” Claffey added, “It’s a hard thing to do in Westeros, is try to be that chivalrous knight.”

Claffey said that his character learns quite a bit from the youthful Egg. “Dunk has a very black-and-white idea of how to do things,” he said. Claffey explained that Egg’s “intelligence and knowledge” about navigating interpersonal connections proves helpful for Dunk: “It’s quite a symbiotic relationship.”

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms

Courtesy of HBO

When it was noted that Dunk is a direct ancestor of Brienne of Tarth, Gwendoline Christie‘s character in Game of Thrones, Claffey said that he was a big fan of the original series and sees a link between his own work and what Christie did with her role. “I loved Gwendoline Christie as Brienne,” Claffey said. “There’s a lot of aspects to Dunk’s character that she shares.”

Claffey explained that the cast loved meeting with author George R.R. Martin, who took the performers out to dinner in New York to celebrate the latest adaptation of his work. “He told Ira Parker, our showrunner and writer: ‘Please don’t mess it up,’” Claffey recalled.

The panel included a video message from Fabien Frankel, who plays Ser Criston Cole on HBO’s House of the Dragon, and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, known for his role as Jaime Lannister on Game of Thrones. “I just want to say hi, and I want to welcome the new guy and wish him all the best of luck,” Coster-Waldau said in the video. “Just friendly advice: Try to keep all of your limbs intact.”

Claffey, who hadn’t expected the video, appeared thrilled by it. “That is so cool!” the actor said before marveling about Coster-Waldau: “He knows my name.”

Ansell told the crowd that he initially felt it would be a big decision to keep his head shaved as Egg, and indeed, Ansell’s head appeared to have been recently shaved prior to the panel. “That was a lot to handle,” the young actor said about knowing he would need to lose his hair. But it didn’t take him long to embrace the change: “[Ultimately,] I was like, ‘Yeah! Let’s do it.” He added, “Showers are a lot quicker.”

The young star has appreciated his time bonding with Claffey away from the set. “Every weekend, me and Peter, we’d be having Five Guys and having burgers and going to the arcade,” Ansell said. This led Claffey to quip, “I like to unwind on the weekend by kicking Dexter’s ass in Mario Kart.”

Before ending the panel, Claffey revealed that A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms would soon be starting to shoot its second season. “On Tuesday, we start filming season two!” he exclaimed to the enthusiastic audience. He didn’t tease much about what he might be filming but noted that he and Ansell would be needing spray tans soon.

Acknowledging that he had in fact seen the first script, Claffey said, “We just need to learn all our lines.”

Martin and Parker co-created the Game of Thrones prequel series. It adapts Martin’s Tales of Dunk and Egg novellas and is set 90 years ahead of the events of Game of Thrones’ first season.

Finn Bennett, who co-stars as Egg’s older brother, Prince Aerion “Brightflame” Targaryen, previously told The Hollywood Reporter that he was convinced his initial audition for the series had gone poorly.

“I thought I had flubbed it,” the Warfare actor said earlier this year. “I thought I had done such a terrible job in the audition, and I called [my agent] as soon as I came out and said, ‘It didn’t go well. It didn’t go my way.’ She phoned the office of the lovely casting director, Lucy Bevan, and they said, ‘No, it went great. It went great.’”

December 4, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix's The Abandons isn't a complete mess – but there's a problem
TV & Streaming

Netflix’s The Abandons isn’t a complete mess – but there’s a problem

by jummy84 December 4, 2025
written by jummy84

As the so-called ‘streaming wars’ march on, it seems some of the participants are in a bind. Do they double down on the areas in which they have become successful and for which they are known, or branch out and try and take one another on at their own games?

When it comes to Netflix, at least when it was in the stage of commissioning a few years ago, it seems they opted for the latter. While Paramount+ may have become known as the home of Westerns thanks to Taylor Sheridan’s hugely popular Yellowstone, the original streamer clearly wanted a piece of the pie.

In fact, it didn’t just want one piece, but multiple. In just the past 14 months, we have seen the debuts of Territory, American Primeval and Ransom Canyon – to varying success.

Now, it’s the turn of The Abandons, a seven-part series which was first ordered in 2022 and which, according to reports, has had quite the troubled path to the screen.

Lena Headey as Fiona Nolan in The Abandons. MATTHIAS CLAMER/Netflix

We know for sure that this first season was originally meant to be made up of 10 episodes, but the number has shifted repeatedly over the years, now coming in at an irregular seven.

We also know that its creator Kurt Sutter, who had been thinking about the series before his previous show Sons of Anarchy even began, left it entirely just three weeks before shooting was set to wrap.

When this news broke, Deadline reported that it was due to creative differences. That report also noted that the first episode had to be cut in two and a new cliffhanger created in the middle, due to it originally running for 1 hours and 40 minutes, and that Netflix bosses felt the episodes were “disjointed and not propulsive enough”.

Naturally, although I attempted to put this history out of my mind when viewing the episodes, there is a part of me which was looking for signs of this apparent dysfunction in the final product, expecting one almighty mess to have been birthed. Thankfully, on that front, I have some good news.

While there are elements of this on display, with strange episode lengths and some abrupt endings, for the most part this is a competently put together series. If you didn’t know, I doubt you’d know. However, sadly, I have to report there is actually a bigger problem with the series, one which cannot be ignored.

Clayton Cardenas as Quentin Serra, Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers as Oma Serra, Katelyn Wells as Samara Alderton, Lena Headey as Fiona Nolan, Nick Robinson as Elias Teller and Diana Silvers as Dahlia Teller in The Abandons.

Clayton Cardenas as Quentin Serra, Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers as Oma Serra, Katelyn Wells as Samara Alderton, Lena Headey as Fiona Nolan, Nick Robinson as Elias Teller and Diana Silvers as Dahlia Teller in The Abandons. MICHELLE FAYE/Netflix

For context – the series stars Lena Headey and Gillian Anderson as the matriarchs of two very different families, both living in Washington Territory in 1854.

Headey’s Fiona heads up a found family – the titular Abandons. She was unable to have her own children, and instead has raised a group of orphans and outcasts.

Meanwhile, Anderson’s Constance is the head of the wealthy Van Ness family, who is trying to get her hands on the land held by the Abandons, as it is rich in silver. She and her family will use any means to take the land, but the Abandons will not give it up without a fight.

Other stars who play key roles include Nick Robinson, Diana Silvers, Lamar Johnson, Natalia Del Riego, Lucas Till and Aisling Franciosi, with all doing sterling work here.

So, what’s the problem? Well, the truth of the matter is that The Abandons is just really rather dull.

Gillian Anderson as Constance Van Ness in The Abandons, sat on a horse and wearing a stetson.

Gillian Anderson as Constance Van Ness in The Abandons. Netflix

The Deadline report noted a concern within Netflix that the series wasn’t propulsive enough, and I would say that despite all the apparent scrambling behind the scenes to rectify this, it is still the biggest problem with the series.

Having watched all seven episode, once all is said and done, I have to say that very little of substance actually happened. There’s an inciting incident, followed by a whole lot of pontificating and really rather mild family drama.

In among this, there are a number of different individual stories, each of which works to a greater or lesser extent, but none of which exactly romp through at a quick pace, nor are any of them in any way substantively new.

Perhaps the strongest of these storyline is a romance between Nick Robinson’s Elias, a member of the Abandons, and Trisha, the Van Ness daughter.

It has some sweet moment and some dramatic moments for sure, and both actors give it their all, making it entirely watchable. Yet it’s all just so utterly clichéd – if you haven’t watched a star-crossed, forbidden lovers storyline you really haven’t engaged with any form of art of media.

Nick Robinson as Elias Teller and Aisling Franciosi as Trisha Van Ness in The Abandons.

Nick Robinson as Elias Teller and Aisling Franciosi as Trisha Van Ness in The Abandons. Michelle Faye/Netflix

The odd cliché can be overlooked or even enjoyed – sometimes a cliché is a cliché for a reason, because it’s a tried and tested form of storytelling that works on a deeply human level.

But when almost everything in a series falls into that camp, you start to wonder what exactly the point of it all is – especially when the whole thing is moving at such a glacial pace.

I suppose we’ll never know what Sutter’s original version of this would have been before any behind the scenes changes were made, but this does certainly feel like a Western made by a committee – a series which is desperately trying to capture a zeitgeist and which is therefore playing into every trope imaginable, with little of its own to say.

One would think that given it is led by two female leads in their fifties, it would at least have something novel and exciting to explore there. But, alas, there seems to be no interest in exploring what this means, given the time period and setting.

The series also takes itself far too seriously, meaning it’s not only narratively dull, but also tonally.

Lamar Johnson as Albert Mason, Diana Silvers as Dahlia Teller, Lena Headey as Fiona Nolan, Nick Robinson as Elias Teller and Natalia del Riego as Lilla Belle in The Abandons, riding horses through a dark field, lit up by trees on fire.

Lamar Johnson as Albert Mason, Diana Silvers as Dahlia Teller, Lena Headey as Fiona Nolan, Nick Robinson as Elias Teller and Natalia del Riego as Lilla Belle in The Abandons. Michelle Faye/Netflix

As with most series, there are still elements of worth here to discuss. For one thing, it’s visually stunning. It’s been reported that the series has been given quite the budget, and that certainly would seem to be the case given the incredible locations and visual splendour on screen.

As previously mentioned, there’s also the matter of the cast – even if the majority of them, if not all of them, are really rather wasted.

Headey and Anderson make for compelling nemeses in their scenes together, and there are glimpses of what this series could have been were there more chances for them to shine, and opportunities for deeper character scenes.

Were we allowed to see more of this dynamic, perhaps with a slimmed down cast and more focused gaze, then that also could have helped the series stand out from the crowd. A proper cat-and-mouse game between two matriarchs in the 1800s? That sounds like an interesting show.

Michiel Huisman as Xavier Roache in The Abandons.

Michiel Huisman as Xavier Roache in The Abandons. Michelle Faye/Netflix

But as it is, we get snippets of so many stories, most of which we’ve seen many times in different forms before, all in a backdrop which is sumptuous, no doubt, but which is also well explored within the genre, and at this point more an expectation than a bonus.

Maybe Western obsessives will find something to enjoy here – I have to confess that while I am certainly a big fan of a number of Western films and series, I am not a real devotee of the genre.

However, I would imagine that even they may find themselves growing tired of the show’s langorous pace and its stock characters and plots.

The fact that The Abandons is perfectly watchable and seems to be largely unencumbered by its behind-the-scenes shake-ups should be of some comfort for Netflix. However, if they thought this would be their rival to Yellowstone, think again. A franchise-starter this ain’t – it’s just a pale imitation of one.

The Abandons is available to stream now on Netflix. Sign up for Netflix from £5.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

Add The Abandons to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

Check out more of our Drama coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to see what’s on tonight. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

December 4, 2025 0 comments
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THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW REUNION, front from left: Ron Howard, Andy Griffith, Don Knotts, rear from left: Jim Nabors, Jack Dodson, George Lindsey, 1993
TV & Streaming

Check Out MeTV’s ‘Very Special Sunday’ Classic Sitcom Reunion Marathon Full Schedule

by jummy84 December 4, 2025
written by jummy84

The Sunday after Christmas, you’ll have spent plenty of quality time with your own family — so settle in and make some time for TV’s favorite families, as MeTV airs their “Very Special Sunday” marathon of classic sitcom reunion episodes. Starting at 11am EST on Sunday, December 28, 2025, MeTV will air five classic reunion episodes, featuring the casts of Happy Days, The Andy Griffith Show, I Love Lucy, Everybody Loves Raymond and All in the Family. Kick back for seven solid hours of retrospectives, reunions, and best-ofs, from the ’70s through the 2000s.

December 4, 2025 0 comments
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2025 National Board of Review Winners: 'One Battle After Another'
TV & Streaming

2025 National Board of Review Winners: ‘One Battle After Another’

by jummy84 December 3, 2025
written by jummy84


2025 National Board of Review Winners: ‘One Battle After Another’




























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Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest picks up some big wins from NBR, including Best Film, Best Director, Best Actor for Leonardo DiCaprio, Best Supporting Actor for Benicio Del Toro, and Breakthrough Performance for Chase Infiniti.

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December 3, 2025 0 comments
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'Harry Potter' Series Is 'Such a Delightful Adaptation': HBO Max Exec
TV & Streaming

‘Harry Potter’ Series Is ‘Such a Delightful Adaptation’: HBO Max Exec

by jummy84 December 3, 2025
written by jummy84

HBO‘s upcoming “Harry Potter” series is shaping up to be “such a delightful adaptation” of J.K. Rowling’s books, according to HBO Max head of original content Sarah Aubrey.

Speaking on a panel at Content London on Wednesday, Aubrey revealed that she is visiting the set of the series tomorrow. “I just keep thinking, it’s such a delightful adaptation of the books,” she teased. “And I think when people watch it, they [will] think, ‘These are the books.’”

Aubrey added that the series is a great representation of the U.K. industry as a whole. “It’s created by a British writer, it’s directed by a British filmmaker and its craftspeople are the best that this country has to offer,” she said. “I’m so excited for everyone to see it.”

Aubrey’s keynote at Content London came just hours after HBO Max announced a Jan. 13 launch date for the streamer in territories including Germany, Italy, Austria, Switzerland, Luxembourg and Liechtenstein. During her presentation, Aubrey spoke about the original content HBO Max has in the pipeline in those countries, including German production “4 Blocks Zero,” which she called a “fantastic, gritty thriller,” and Marco Bellocchio’s Italian series “Portobello,” which she said “swept the festival circuit.”

More to come…

December 3, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix Refutes Sean "Diddy" Combs Claims Over 'Reckoning' Docuseries
TV & Streaming

Netflix Refutes Sean “Diddy” Combs Claims Over ‘Reckoning’ Docuseries

by jummy84 December 3, 2025
written by jummy84

UPDATED with Netflix response: Less than a day after Sean Combs: The Reckoning debuted on Netflix, the Ted Sarandos-led streamer is taking Combs to task for claiming the docuseries executive produced by 50 Cent is an act of “corporate retaliation,” as Diddy lawyers allege.

“The claims being made about Sean Combs: The Reckoning are false,” a Netflix spokesperson told Deadline on Tuesday night.

In a cease-and-desist letter sent December 1, Combs’ attorneys insisted that failing to strong-arm the much accused and currently incarcerated Grammy winner to participate in a Netflix-controlled docu, co-CEO Sarandos turned to Diddy’s nemesis Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson in a “vindictive response.” With claims that 50 paid people to slag Diddy, the correspondence adds that damning pre-arrest footage of a seemingly scheming Combs from last year was “stolen.”

Today, as Combs looks to take formal legal action, the streamer says that’s all pure fiction.

“The project has no ties to any past conversations between Sean Combs and Netflix,” the rep added of Sarandos and Diddy’s professional relationship and any other docu project. “The footage of Combs leading up to his indictment and arrest were legally obtained.”

“This is not a hit piece or an act of retribution. Curtis Jackson is an executive producer but does not have creative control. No one was paid to participate.”

That’s pretty blunt, but still it seems there’s going to be a fifth episode to the four-part Reckoning — in court.

PREVIOUSLY, 3:19 PM PT: It turns out that the big man behind the scenes in the Sean Combs: The Reckoning saga isn’t Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson but Netflix boss Ted Sarandos, at least according to Diddy and his lawyers.

“Netflix chose Mr. Jackson as producer to punish Mr. Combs for refusing to play by its rules,” claims the December 1 cease-and-desist letter sent to the streamer’s top legal executive David Hyman by the incarcerated Combs’ attorneys over the four-parter docuseries that debuted today.

“In or about 2023, CEO Ted Sarandos proposed that Netflix produce a documentary about Mr. Combs. However, Mr. Combs rejected the proposal when Mr. Sarandos insisted he give up creative control,” the dense, four-page letter states of the latter, who attended the former’s 50th birthday party back in 2019. “Thus, the choice of Mr. Jackson to produce the Program was Netflix’s vindictive response to that rejection — an attempt by Netflix and Mr. Sarandos to ensure a one-sided character assassination, rather than a balanced and accurate portrayal.”

RELATED: ‘Sean Combs: The Reckoning’: Teaser Trailer For Shocking Doc Shows Diddy Warn “We’re Losing”

Putting the Reckoning and its damning portrait of Combs and his alleged crimes, rapes, violence against women, disregard for the law and more in the starkest light, the letter adds of Sarandos and Netflix’s supposed ploy: “It also ensured that a flagrant act of corporate retribution against Mr. Combs would be re-cast as one famous black man attacking another.” 

From left: Sean Combs, Ted Sarandos and Nicole Avant at Combs’ 50th birthday party in 2019

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

If the swipe against Sarandos (which Combs’ team also did in a public statement Monday), Netflix’s alleged true motivations and 50 Cent (who does not pop up in any way in Reckoning) weren’t crystal-clear from those comments, perhaps this from the letter will set you straight:

Considering the numerous derogatory and, frankly, ludicrous allegations Mr. Jackson has levelled against Mr. Combs during his years-long vengeful crusade to injure him, Mr. Jackson’s unconcealed animus towards Mr. Combs, and our understanding, based on information and belief, that individuals are being paid to participate—and are therefore incentivized to cast Mr. Combs in the most unfavorable light—it is a virtual certainty that the Program will be replete with false and defamatory statements, as well intimate details, obtained and published in violation of Mr. Combs’ privacy rights and in breach of numerous non-disclosure and non-disparagement agreements about which Netflix and Mr. Jackson are (or should have been) aware.

A Combs foe long before the Bad Boy Records founder’s September 2024 arrest and this past summer’s trial for racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution, that 50 Cent has trolled Diddy relentlessly, no one could argue. As well as announcing just after Combs’ arrest that he would produce a docu on his rival, Power franchise EP 50 Cent also has gone public in trying to derail a Donald Trump pardon for the “freak-off” obsessed ‘I’ll Be Missing You’ performer after Combs’ July 2 conviction on  two lesser counts of transportation to engage in prostitution.

RELATED: Trump Cools On Possible Diddy Pardon Over Risk Of MAGA Blowback

50 Cent poses on a red carpet.

Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson in 2024

Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images

Currently, with time served counted on his four-year sentence and an appeal on the criminal conviction underway, Diddy is behind bars(ish) at the cushy, low-security Fort Dix FCI in New Jersey. He is set to be released in June 2028. With a Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department probe opened on Combs last month over allegations of a 2020 sexual battery against a music producer, let’s just say a Trump pardon looks very unlikely at this juncture.

Despite accusing Netflix of having “stolen” (as that press release Monday said) and “copyrighted” (and pretty damning) pre-arrest footage of a scheming Combs, the Grammy winner’s Sher Tremont team clearly failed to get the Alexandria Stapleton-directed “hit piece” Reckoning pulled Monday before its Tuesday launch. In the December 1 letter, which cc’s Sarandos and Bela Bajaria and builds on a July 3 C&D letter on the same subject, Combs’ lawyers state, “As you are undoubtedly aware, Mr. Combs has not hesitated to take legal action against media entities and others who violate his rights, and he will not hesitate to do so against Netflix.”

That was before Sean Combs: The Reckoning hit the streamer in the early hours this morning.

Today, Combs’ reps told Deadline that “after watching the series and now knowing what is in it, Sean’s team is reviewing its legal options and will decide shortly how best to respond.”

Contacted by Deadline, Netflix –as it did Monday — had no comment on Combs’ legal threats.

As they did on December 1, the streamer run by Sarandos and Greg Peters, which is bidding to snag a big piece of Warner Bros Discovery right now, offered a week-old comment by director Stapleton. Specifically, the filmmaker was commenting on the BTS footage of Combs telling one of his lawyers “to find someone that’ll work with us that has dealt in the dirtiest of dirty business” to help turn the tide on the various claims against him. “It came to us, we obtained the footage legally and have the necessary rights,” Stapleton said of the September 2024 footage, which the much-accused Combs apparently wanted for his own documentary project.

As for Sean Combs: The Reckoning, turn down all the media and online noise and it is hard to tell how it is doing, even with a well-hyped and morning show-promoted launch. There are no viewing figures available as of today for Reckoning, however while it may not do Stranger Things 5 numbers, the series is expected to show up on Netflix’s domestic Top 10 chart on Wednesday. The four-parter’s international standing will be revealed next week.

Of course, by next week, this could have all gone way beyond cease-and-desist letters and CEO slagging and turned into a real legal showdown — the latest of many for Combs, who is facing literally dozens and dozens of civil suits on sexual assault, violence, drugging and more.

December 3, 2025 0 comments
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