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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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Netflix's 'Death By Lightning' Director Matt Ross Interview
TV & Streaming

Netflix’s ‘Death By Lightning’ Director Matt Ross Interview

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

[Editor’s note: This interview contains spoilers for “Death by Lightning.”] 

We all only have one wild and precious life to live, and while James A. Garfield couldn’t spend any of his watching a Netflix miniseries, director Matt Ross wants any story we do spend two or four or 10 hours on to be worth it. Ross immediately knew he’d found such a story on reading Mike Makowsky’s script for “Death by Lightning,” which follows both Garfield (Michael Shannon) and his eventual assassin Charles Guiteau (Matthew Macfadyen) from the former’s surprise nomination for President at the 1880 Republican National Convention through the latter’s hanging for murder. He wanted to take on the challenge of making the visual storytelling feel as immediate, surprising, and modern as Makowsky’s script read. 

Poker Face

Much of that work, Ross told IndieWire, has nothing to do with the cinematic apparatus itself. “I want to be taken away and not the whole time think, ‘Oh, great shot. Oh, that’s an interesting costume choice. Oh, why did they choose to shoot it that way?’” Ross said. “I want to have an intellectual and emotional response.” 

The intellectual and emotional response to “Death by Lightning,” for Ross, is all wrapped up in people — and in picnic tables. “[The script] wasn’t a history lesson. It was through the prism of these two men who I think represented very polar opposites of a desire for legacy — a thing men probably, historically, had more of a desire for because of women’s lack of agency in patriarchal societies, right? There’s this desire to matter,” Ross said. “The meaning of the entire thing is the last scene with Crete [Betty Gilpin] and her children… These two men are left with nothing. They’re both dead. The actual legacy is our friends and our family — the love we share, the people we connect with while we’re alive.” 

Ross’s task for “Death by Lightning,” then, was to realize a group of people and make their surprising complexity be the thing that matters far more than any turn of the plot — which is, after all, just a Wikipedia article away. Knowing that thematic idea is the destination the series is driving toward allowed Ross to build a team and direct accordingly.

Death By Lightning. (L to R) Michael Shannon as James Garfield, Betty Gilpin as Crete Garfield in episode 103 of Death By Lightning. Cr. Larry Horricks/Netflix © 2024
‘Death by Lightning’LARRY HORRICKS/NETFLIX

When thinking about Garfield and Guiteau, Ross wanted to bring on actors who could flex new sides of themselves and slightly play with an audience’s expectation of their personas. It is a testament to Matthew Macfadyen’s acting chops (and awful haircut) that you really do believe no one in the Oneida free love commune to which Guiteau belonged for five years wants to have sex with Mr. Darcy. Michael Shannon has a history of playing, shall we say, rather intense individuals; “Death by Lightning” was a chance for him to embody much more of a Clark Kent than a General Zod. 

“ I try and cast, personally, the same way one casts in theater — which is to say, you’re assuming that this person can do anything. So what have they not done recently that might be fun for them to do, you know?” Ross said. “Then it just becomes a conversation of how you illuminate the humanity of the characters, because for me, I didn’t want Garfield to be a one-note good guy. I wanted him to be grumpy and complicated and angry at times, frustrated, and have his own maybe nascent ambitions.” 

Ross gives full credit to the actors — “I learned like 35 years ago, and it’s true, that there’s a misconception about an actor/director relationship that somehow a director is getting something from an actor. I think that’s a negation of an actor’s talent. I don’t get anything from them that they don’t want to give me,” Ross said. There’s only the work of collaborating on the right levels on the day, trying something a little more or a little less, or experimenting with different eyes, and there is the small, invisible work that Ross does behind the camera to properly focus the audience on an actor’s performance. 

Death by Lightning. (L to R) Matthew Macfadyen as Charles Guiteau, Shea Whigham as Roscoe Conkling in episode 101 of Death by Lightning. Cr. Larry Horricks/Netflix © 2025
‘Death by Lightning’LARRY HORRICKS/NETFLIX

An example of this is the scene where Guiteau is hanged for Garfield’s assassination. The setup is quite simple. We follow Guiteau across the prison yard from the front (the better to see the poem he has written for the grand occasion) and behind, two other views of the crowd (spotty) and the gallows (simple). Once on the gallows, Ross mostly sticks to a pretty straight-on medium closeup of Guiteau as the noose is put around his neck. We get the most devastatingly silent “Wow, is this thing on?” reaction shot from the observers after Guiteau sings “I’m Going to the Lordy” and laughs, thrilled at his own handiwork. It’s all perfectly serviceable, invisible filmmaking. 

Then just as simply and invisibly, Ross tightens the visual noose. The camera slowly pushes in on Guiteau’s face as he absorbs the silence, and lets out an “Oh” so horrified you can almost hear the italics. “We thought that would be powerful,” Ross said. “Matthew and I talked about what that would be — I mean, here’s a man who was in prison for murder and he was writing a manifesto and trying to solicit a wife and all this craziness, and he thought it would change everything and that he would be saved and loved and he was making jokes on the way to the gallows, but… would it not be profound for this man, if at the very last moment, he realizes his insignificance.” 

A dance between performer and camera like that one requires a clear, shared vision for the emotional intent of a scene, a willingness to play and experiment, and trust that the story is, in fact, worth the four hours. “I could spend an hour discussing what each actor brought, whether it’s, you know, the emotional power that Betty brings or Nick [Offerman, or Shea Wigham], but with each person, I just want to illuminate them and their work. We’re only as good as the people with whom we play, and they all brought their A game and were so willing to explore and to try to push the characters in different ways.” 

“Death by Lightning” is now streaming on Netflix.

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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Is Netflix's 'Frankenstein' Guillermo Del Toro's Last Monster Movie?
TV & Streaming

Is Netflix’s ‘Frankenstein’ Guillermo Del Toro’s Last Monster Movie?

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein” is Guillermo del Toro’s bible. When he was 11 years old, the novel and subsequent movies were not only his first love, they were how he processed his relationship with his father, and wrestled with his Catholicism.

“I do believe the book questions God for why are we here and what makes us human,” said del Toro. “So the perfect analogy for me, between me and my father, Catholic dogma, the idea that God sends Jesus to be crucified and experience pain and death. And I always wondered as a kid, ‘Why did he do that?’”

While as a kid the story became how del Toro started articulating his feelings about his Catholicism, as an adult, he built a room in his house dedicated to Shelley, a life-size silicon recreation of the author at her desk. His Los Angeles “living room” is dedicated to the various movie incarnations of Victor Frankenstein’s monster through the years, including eight statues.

"Little Amélie or the Character of Rain"

And as a filmmaker, del Toro’s dream of making “Frankenstein” dated back to his childhood years as an 8mm auteur. The director said all the hyperbole —  life’s quest, North Star, Mount Everest — applies, and while on the podcast, admitted his previous films were some version of him trying to tell the “Frankenstein” tale:

“Cronos”: “A 100 percent [“Frankenstein” inspired]. The scar is a Frankenstein scar on his forehead, he is about eternal life and he welcomes the sun in a translucent skin.”

“Blade II”: “Completely a ‘Frankenstein’ story with the villain Nomack [Luke Goss] and his father who sent him out into the world, and says, ‘Why did you make me like this?’”

“‘Hellboy’ is sort of half Frankenstein.”

“Mimic”:  “The science experiment gone awry, where somebody called the creatures ‘Little Frankensteins.’”

One of the defining characteristics of del Toro’s career has been his movie monsters, the pinnacle of which was his desire to make the most “beautiful” version of Victor Frankenstein’s creation imaginable, so much so that his decades-long collaboration with creature designer Mike Hill was a dress rehearsal.

“If Victor has been thinking about making this thing for 20 years or so, he would make a beautiful thing. He wouldn’t look like an ICU victim,” said Del Toro on how he envisioned the skin of the cobbled together monster. “That I’ve been rehearsing, if you watch my movies, the pale vampire on ‘Blade II,’ the pale vampire on ‘Cronos,’ is the same look I was trying to rehearse for ‘Frankenstein.’”

FRANKENSTEIN, from left: director Guillermo del Toro, Oscar Isaac, on set, 2025. ph: Ken Woroner / © Netflix / courtesy Everett Collection
Guillermo del Toro, Oscar Isaac, on the ‘Frankenstein’ set©Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection

But when it came time on set for Dr. Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac) to finally assemble del Toro’s dream of the perfect monster (Jacob Elordi), it was the filmmaker who felt unexpectedly transformed.

“Something happened when Victor was doing the anatomy assembly. Oscar and I were really linked, and I looked at him, he looked at me, and without saying anything, we felt something had changed,” said del Toro, who after having time to process the moment, has concluded, “I had dreamt of that scene so long, and all of a sudden we’re shooting it and I felt like something left — it was something to do with monsters, something to do with my filming language. Something changed and I think it’s never felt like that ever.”

While on the podcast, del Toro stated he didn’t know if he was done with movie monsters. He is deep in the process of making a stop motion animated version of Kazuo Ishiguro’s fantasy novel “The Buried Giant,” which does feature some creatures, but said his curiosity for the first time lies away from the movie monsters that have defined his career.

But it’s not just creatures, it’s his filmmaking. The polished, precise, colorful, grand, sweeping soundstage craft he has been perfecting for decades — much like Elordi’s monster — seems to have also culminated on “Frankenstein.” In particular, del Toro talked about how he had been sharpening his mastery of camera movement with his last four films, growing to the point he was shooting almost exclusively on a technocrane, as he learned how to dial into the exact emotional rhythm and feeling of a moment with how his camera moved through space.

“I thought about [camera movement] like a symphony, but I want to do something rougher, I want to try different uses of light on set,” said del Toro. “I’m very intrigued by the ’70s. I’ve never allowed cuts to not breathe, I leave every moment to breathe.”

On the podcast, del Toro talked about wanting to make his version of a grounded, gritty ’70s film, with films by Sidney Lumet, Don Siegel, Alan Pakula, and what he calls the “ugly Paris trilogy” of Roman Polanski (“The Tenant,” “Frantic”), calling his name. In other words, the polar opposite of the filmic language he’s been honing for 30 years.

Del Toro, 61, admitted age does have something to do with wanting to mix it up for the first time — inspired by his friend, the sci-fi body horror master David Cronenberg’s 2005 shift to more grounded thrillers, “A History of Violence” and “Eastern Promises.”

“When I talked to David Cronenberg when he turned 74, he said to me, ‘I’m trying to scare myself into being young. You have to, or it goes away.’ And he did ‘A History of Violence’ — it’s a departure, but it’s not,” said del Toro, referring to the fact Cronenberg’s POV as filmmaker is still recognizable in his later films. “So, I’m sure I will not be unrecognizable,  but it would be pushing myself to something else.”

To hear Guilermo del Toro’s full interview, subscribe to the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast on Apple, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform.

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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The King Of Sarcasm Turns Villain! Ryan Reynolds Stars In Netflix's Eloise With Amy Sherman-Palladino | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

The King Of Sarcasm Turns Villain! Ryan Reynolds Stars In Netflix’s Eloise With Amy Sherman-Palladino | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Netflix is set to revive a timeless childhood favorite with a new live-action adaptation of Eloise, inspired by Kay Thompson’s beloved book series and Hilary Knight’s iconic illustrations. The streaming giant announced that Gilmore Girls creator Amy Sherman-Palladino will direct and co-write the film, which stars young newcomer Mae Schenk as Eloise. Ryan Reynolds joins the project as both producer and actor, portraying a brand-new villain created specifically for the movie.

First published in 1955, Eloise follows a mischievous six-year-old who lives on the top floor of New York City’s famed Plaza Hotel. The character became a cultural icon for her wit, humor, and boundless imagination. The stories enjoyed renewed popularity in the 2000s with new books from Simon & Schuster and two Disney television films starring Sofia Vassilieva as Eloise and Julie Andrews as her nurturing nanny.

Although specific plot details for Netflix’s adaptation remain under wraps, the film is described as a fresh, original adventure inspired by the classic books. According to Hannah Minghella, Head of Feature Animation and Family Film at Netflix, “Eloise has been beloved for generations… It’s an honor to reintroduce this cherished character with two people who share her signature mischief and charm, Amy Sherman-Palladino and Ryan Reynolds.”

Also Read: DEADPOOL’S DOOMSDAY Dilemma!” – Ryan Reynolds’ Character Won’t Be Joining the Avengers Team!

ELOISE is coming to Netflix!

Amy Sherman-Palladino will write and direct a new feature adaptation of the beloved children’s book series starring newcomer Mae Schenk and Ryan Reynolds. pic.twitter.com/kHJyoj9d7J

— Netflix (@netflix) November 3, 2025

MRC Film co-presidents Jonathan Golfman and Brye Adler revealed that they have been developing the project for years, having first secured the rights in 2019. Partnering with Reynolds’ Maximum Effort, Sherman-Palladino, and Netflix, MRC aims to deliver a bold, hilarious, and heartfelt family film that blends the original spirit of Eloise with modern flair—bringing one of literature’s most iconic little girls to a whole new generation of viewers.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix’s First ‘Sesame Street’ Season: Watch the Trailer
TV & Streaming

Netflix’s First ‘Sesame Street’ Season: Watch the Trailer

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Netflix is for the children!

On Monday, the streaming giant revealed the trailer for its first Sesame Street season — the 56th season overall of the iconic preschool series — which premieres in exactly one week. Netflix promises its version will have an all-new playability, as well as more comedy.

Netflix will release Sesame Street episodes four at a time over three separate premiere periods — think Stranger Things season five, just with much furrier monsters. The first feature guest appearance on season 56 is NASCAR champion Bubba Wallace, whom parents might remember from this incident.

“Season 56 reimagines Sesame Street, inviting children into the action and bringing them hand-in-hand through high-stakes stories, powerful learning moments and laugh-out-loud surprises,” Sal Perez, Sesame Street executive producer, said in a statement. “As always, Sesame Street’s curriculum is designed to meet children’s most pressing needs — so our focus this season is on kindness and compassion, something we can all use more of today.”  

Sesame Street episodes on Netflix will remain 30-minutes long; until 2016, they were an hour.

The show’s new head writer is Halcyon Person, who served the same role on Netflix’s Karma’s World (2021), the animated show from rapper Ludacris starring his daughter, and Dee & Friends in Oz (2024). Netflix’s Sesame Street will be available in 30-plus languages.

Sesame Street first launched on Nov. 10, 1969, exactly 56 years prior to its Netflix era (the seasons align to the years). The new Sesame Street episodes will simultaneously premiere on the PBS Kids app.

Watch the trailer, below:

These changes have been in the works for a while. More than two years ago, Steve Youngwood, the CEO of Sesame Workshop, walked The Hollywood Reporter through the new vision for the old show.

The single-largest change will see the program drop the “magazine”-style format it has long used in favor of two longer, more narrative-driven segments, which will be paired with a new animated series, Tales From 123. The new format will feature two 11-minute story segments, with the new animated series sandwiched in between them. Read more here.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix's Movie Theater Stunts Might Help Make It Cool
TV & Streaming

Netflix’s Movie Theater Stunts Might Help Make It Cool

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

For years, it’s been Netflix and Chill, but it’s increasingly becoming Netflix and Party.

On Halloween on Friday, Netflix is again releasing a Sing-a-Long version of its mega-hit “KPop Demon Hunters” into theaters, encouraging costumes and trying to get even more fans out of the house by expanding to more territories and theaters. It’s a repeat of an event Netflix staged in August that managed to bring in a box office-topping $19.2 million. And following a trailer on Thursday, Netflix will screen its finale of “Stranger Things” in theaters on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day.

It’s attracted a ton of speculation that maybe, just maybe, Netflix is finally softening its stance on putting movies into theaters. Even though Netflix keeps telling you, no and please, for the love of God, stop asking.

Diane Lane, Zoey Deutch, Jan Komasa, Madeline Brewer at the "Anniversary" New York premiere held at the Metrograph on October 21, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty Images)

“There’s no change in the strategy. Our strategy is to give our members exclusive first-run movies on
Netflix,” Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos said just last week during earnings. “We occasionally release certain films in theaters for our fans like we did with ‘KPop Demon Hunters,’ or as part of our launch strategy, publicity, marketing, qualification, all those things, and we’ll continue to do that.”

Sure, Ted, but what do you really think about theaters?

“Behaviors evolve. Consumer behavior changes. I do think there’s something very special about it, but thank God it’s not the only way I can see a movie,” Sarandos said on a podcast in February.

But really? Still not sure I believe you.

“I believe it’s an outmoded idea, for most people, not for everybody,” he said again in April.

Fine, but Netflix said it would never have ads until it did, that it would never have sports until it did, and that it would never have live stand-up specials or password sharing crackdowns or stop telling us how many subscribers it had or in-person theme parks that inherently get you away from watching Netflix… all until it did.

STRANGER THINGS: SEASON 5. (L to R) Joe Keery as Steve Harrington, Natalia Dyer as Nancy Wheeler, Charlie Heaton as Jonathan Byers, Maya Hawke as Robin Buckley, Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler, Winona Ryder as Joyce Byers, Noah Schnapp as Will Byers, Gaten Matarazzo as Dustin Henderson, and Caleb McLaughlin as Lucas Sinclair in Stranger Things: Season 5. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025
‘Stranger Things: Season 5’COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025

All that said, Netflix still isn’t doing “theatrical distribution.” It will never get to Amazon’s level of hoping to release 14-16 movies in theaters a year, report box office numbers, and play that volatile game of success and failure. But it has been ramping up its live events that drive fan engagement, sign-ups, and retention. And, oh by the way, just some of those events also take place inside movie theaters.

What Netflix is great at, more than any other legacy media company, is pivoting and reacting to a hit, capitalizing on what audiences are responding to on its platform. Netflix didn’t plan in advance to do live sing-a-long stunts for “KPop Demon Hunters,” but when the movie became quite literally its biggest of all time in a matter of weeks, it found a way to stage an event and maximize the film‘s pop culture impact.

So with the right thing, why wouldn’t Netflix do more of that? “Adolescence” or “Baby Reindeer” might never work in theaters, but it would not be a surprise to see an increase from one or two theatrical events a year to a handful more (Netflix had no comment for this story).

The question will be whether Netflix can bolster its events a bit more, giving the awards titles that get theatrical releases a bit more of a marketing bump to let audiences know they’re there? Guillermo del Toro recently touted that “Frankenstein” had expanded — “really” — to more theaters than you were probably aware. So can it do more to get butts in theater seats and not just make you aware that something is on Netflix?

Enter Greta Gerwig. For her “Narnia” movie, the only way Netflix could make sure it was working with a director on her caliber is to play ball with her desire for theaters. For that film, it’s splitting the difference between a wider theatrical release and utilizing IMAX in order to generate the feeling that this is a special, limited engagement event. We imagine the marketing dollars will come with it.

By doing more things out in the open, be it theatrical events, “Stranger Things” stage plays, Tudum fan events, or the Netflix House opening next month, Netflix is demonstrating that Netflix isn’t only a brand you can engage with in your home. If it can become an affinity brand and develop a similar loyalty, like the kind that people have for A24 or Criterion (in many ways, it already has and by a mile), all that is valuable toward getting more subscribers and keeping them around.

Even more than that, it can make Netflix cool.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix's 'Run Away,' Harlan Coben Series, First Photos: Minnie Driver
TV & Streaming

Netflix’s ‘Run Away,’ Harlan Coben Series, First Photos: Minnie Driver

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Run Away, an upcoming Harlan Coben series starring James Nesbitt, Ruth Jones, Minnie Driver, and Alfred Enoch, will debut on Netflix on Jan. 1, 2026, following the 2025 success of the limited thriller series Missing You. On Monday, Netflix unveiled first-look pictures for the series, which uses the tagline: “How far would you go to bring her back?”

Run Away is produced by Quay Street Productions, part of ITV Studios. Coben serves as executive producer through his company, Final Twist Productions. Danny Brocklehurst is the lead writer and serves as executive producer. Quay Street Productions, Nicola Shindler and Richard Fee are executive producers.

Run Away

Courtesy of Netflix/Ben Blackall

Other castmembers include Lucian Msamati, Jon Pointing, Tracy-Ann Oberman, Annette Badland, Maeve Courtier-Lilley, Ellie de Lange, Adrian Greensmith, Ellie Henry, Ingrid Oliver, Finty Williams, Joe McGann and Amy Gledhill.

The lead directors for Run Away are Nimer Rashed, who led episodes 1-3 and 7-8, as well as Isher Sahota, who handled episodes 4-6.

“Simon (Nesbitt) had the perfect life: loving wife and kids, great job, beautiful home. But then his eldest daughter Paige ran away, and everything fell apart,” reads a synopsis of the series. “So now, when he finds her, vulnerable and strung out on drugs in a city park, he finally has the chance to bring his little girl home. But it turns out she’s not alone, and an argument escalates into shocking violence. In the aftermath, Simon loses his daughter all over again, and his search to find her will take him into a dangerous underworld, revealing deep secrets that could tear his family apart forever.”

Run Away

Courtesy of Netflix/Ben Blackall

Run Away is one of 13 titles from best-selling author Coben produced for Netflix. It will feature eight hourlong episodes.

In keeping with previous Coben adaptations, Run Away is relocating the story from the U.S. to the U.K.. Filming took place in and around Manchester and the North West of England.

The first-look images released Monday show various characters in various scenes.

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Manav Kaul
Bollywood

Manav Kaul Is All Set To Come Back Starring in Netflix’s Supernatural Drama Movie, Baramulla: Release Dates Out!

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Manav Kaul, renowned for his acting and writing, is making a comeback with his upcoming film Baramulla. Fans are eager to see him on the big screen once again. As a writer, he has consistently captivated readers with his compelling storytelling. Beyond writing, Manav has also showcased his talent in theatre, performing plays across multiple states and thrilling audiences with his powerful performances. Baramulla, directed by Aditya Suhas Jambhale, is set to premiere on Netflix on November 7, 2025. The film stars Manav Kaul in the lead role and promises to transport viewers into a mysterious and captivating world. 

Combining elements of supernatural intrigue, suspense, and drama, the story unfolds against the hauntingly beautiful landscapes of Kashmir. With its gripping narrative and atmospheric visuals, Baramulla aims to keep audiences on the edge of their seats. Manav Kaul’s compelling performance anchors the film, making it a highly anticipated release for fans of thrilling, enigmatic cinema on the OTT giant.

actor and writer Manav Kaul

Manav Kaul portrays DSP Ridwaan Sayyad, a recently transferred officer tasked with investigating missing children. When a young boy vanishes under mysterious circumstances, a series of events unfolds, revealing dark secrets that shake the town to its core. Moving into a new house, Ridwaan finds his past shadowing him, turning the investigation into a personal reckoning. As he delves deeper, the line between reality and the supernatural blurs, exposing hidden truths. The unsettling discoveries not only threaten the town’s fragile peace but also put his family in jeopardy, forcing him to confront both past and present.

On Friday, Netflix posted an eye-catching Baramulla poster starring Manav Kaul on social media, accompanied by the caption, “Welcome to the town, where truth is a myth, and myths have truth. Enter the world of ‘Baramulla’ on 7th November. Only on Netflix (sic)”.

The film features Bhasha Sumbli in the role of Gulnaar. It is written and directed by Aditya Suhas Jambhale, known for Article 370. The story is by Aditya Dhar, and the film is produced by Jyoti Deshpande of Jio Studios, along with Aditya and Lokesh Dhar of B62 Studios.

Manav Kaul Photo

Director Aditya Suhas Jambhale shared in a statement, stated: “With a genre-bending film like Baramulla, we wanted to tell a story rooted in emotion but elevated by tension and the supernatural. Kashmir is not just the setting; it’s a living, breathing character that shapes every moment and every mystery. We hope the audience across the world feels the pulse of the valley and the humanity at the heart of this journey.”

On the work front, Baramulla will premiere on Netflix on November 7, 2025.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix’s ‘Boots’ Cast From Miles Heizer to Vera Farmiga – Hollywood Life
Hollywood

Netflix’s ‘Boots’ Cast From Miles Heizer to Vera Farmiga – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Patti Perret/Netflix © 2024

Boots became one of Netflix’s most popular TV series in 2025. Following its October release, viewers were gripped by its emotional and witty adaptation of Greg Cope White’s 2015 memoir, The Pink Marine. Leading the cast is 13 Reasons Why alum Miles Heizer.

According to Boots‘ tagline, Miles plays a “bullied gay teen [who] joins the Marine Corps with his best friend despite risks. In boot camp they experience profound personal change amid danger, as their platoon confronts both literal and figurative landmines.”

Below, meet the main cast of Boots and learn where you’ve seen each actor before.

Netflix's 'Boots' Cast From Miles Heizer to Vera Farmiga: Meet the Actors
Credit: Alfonso “Pompo” Bresciani/Netflix

Miles Heizer – Cameron Cope

As previously noted, Miles is recognized for his performance as Alex Standall in Netflix’s 13 Reasons Why. He also starred in NBC’s Parenthood, playing the character Drew Holt. Miles has also appeared in multiple movies, including The Stanford Prison Experiment and Love, Simon.

Though there’s been no word of a second season for Boots yet, Miles told Variety in October 2025 that there were still “a lot of stories to tell, from more of Greg’s different experiences in the Marines to ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ to when it was repealed.”

“I would do it for 10 seasons if they let us,” Miles added.

Liam Oh – Ray McAffey

Liam plays the role of Cameron Cope’s straight friend in Boots. The series is the actor’s breakout role, and he previously appeared in The Thing About Henry and an uncredited role in Code 3. 

Vera Farmiga – Barbara Cope

Vera plays Cameron’s mother, and the actress is best known for her long-standing portrayal of Lorraine Warren in The Conjuring universe. She has also starred in films such as Orphan, Source Code and Godzilla: King of the Monsters.

Max Parker – Sergeant Liam Robert Sullivan

Max stepped into the shoes of a sergeant for the series. He’s been seen in a multitude of films and shows, such as Casualty, Emmerdale and Vampire Academy. 

Cedrick Cooper – Staff Sergeant Marcus McKinnon

Cedrick also plays a sergeant in the series and has been seen in the series Will Trent in addition to the films The Comeback and Wallbanger.

Ana Ayora – Captain Denise Fajardo

Ana plays the strong female captain in Boots and has appeared in a slew of TV shows, including Lincoln Heights, Banshee, MacGyver and In the Dark.

Angus O’Brien – Thaddeus Beau Sterling Hicks

Angus is gaining traction in his career so far, and Boots isn’t the only series he’s appeared in. The actor has also been seen in Night Sky, The Path, Hightown and the short film The Pass.

Dominic Goodman – Isaiah Nash

Dominic has been on TV for a few years, having appeared in other shows such as Young Rock and First Kill. 

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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Toni Collette in 'Wayward.'
TV & Streaming

A Closer Look at the Real-Life Inspiration in Netflix’s ‘Wayward’

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

In the hit Netflix series Wayward, the thriller-drama revolving around the inner workings and dark secrets of a fictional school for troubled teenagers, the devil is in the details. The eight-episode limited series traces dual fictional narratives that overlap at a remote institution in a small Vermont town, vividly creating glimpses of the troubling abuse of the teenagers being “treated,” within — and it’s tantamount to torture in many instances. While its primary characters — two wayward high school besties who become trapped at the campus; the institution’s intimidating and enigmatic leader; and a young married couple, one with secrets about the school and the other with ambitions to reveal them  — mostly have the feel of composite versions of the young people sent to these schools or those dealing with the trauma they tend to instill. Yet the series, whether it’s acknowledged officially or not, is filled with details of a very real, notorious institution, the people whose lives were impacted by what was endured and a missing persons case that remains cold after 22 years. 

Wayward creator Mae Martin, who portrays Officer Alex Dempsey in the show, revealed in a recent interview that Wayward’s scripts were drawn from her own real-life experiences — a wayward teen herself, she saw a close friend shipped off to a troubled teen camp. While Martin has not indicated any direct connections, several of the details in her scripts — from the therapeutic tactics down to the Tall Pines Academy logo — either identically mirror or uncannily resemble the people who attended and events that occurred at CEDU, one of the most notorious troubled teen facilities in the nation’s history. CEDU was shuttered decades ago amid a flurry of lawsuits, and like the Wayward’s fictional institution, it was rampant with brutality, cruelty and had multiple residents disappear under strange circumstances in cases that local police have all but abandoned. 

For many, CEDU is considered ground zero for the now multi-billion dollar troubled teen industry but the organization and its institutions have a dark history of emotional, physical and psychological abuse. It operated at multiple locations from 1967 until its closure in 2005, leaving behind a legacy of abuse with impunity that occurred within a cult-like environment and was based on degradation and stripping the identity from teenagers, who’d been sent there for reasons extending from harmful drug addictions to everyday teenage depression.

Desperate Escapes 

Wayward opens with a smashed window and a heart-pounding chase as a mysterious teenage boy desperately flees his Tall Pines Academy dorm, then the walls of the campus, and into the unforgiving woods. Meanwhile, the school’s security team flips the floodlights on and comes after the runaway with all of the institution’s power. That escape experience may be heightened for dramatic impact, but it’s easy to presume that a similar terror was most certainly felt by hundreds of teenagers trying to escape the camps or institutions where many were kidnapped at their parents’ instructions and forced to live there against their will. 

This was a consistent issue over the 40 years CEDU existed as a law-flouting, minor-endangering alternative for parents. The unknown levels of abuse were quite real for the hundreds who had attempted to flee, like the teen in Wayward’s opening moments, out of total desperation. 

Close Ties With Local Police

Wayward shows a close and corrupt relationship between law enforcement in Tall Pines — a town full of secrets — and the institution that brings money and young blood into the community. Tall Pines Academy’s founder and cult-leader-like headmistress “likes to be involved,” as Alex is told on day one at the local police force; he is also informed after a run-in with the desperate Tall Pines runaway (whose escape opens the series) that this happens all of the time and police often must bring them back to campus. CEDU’s San Bernadeno campus had a similar relationship with the local sheriff’s office. According to an investigation in Los Angeles Magazine, out of 415 reports of program-fleeing juveniles from CEDU’s San Bernardino location over eight years, local law enforcement logged only 10 “attempts to locate” and four search and rescue missions. The L.A. Mag report also indicates that the sheriff’s office consistently stonewalled their investigation into the death of a missing teenager, Daniel Yuen. 

Daniel Goes Missing — or Does He?

One of the many character-driven plot threads in Wayward involved a character named Daniel, a conniving young man who is one of a handful of the series’ characters who don’t live to appear in the eighth and final episode. Daniel’s death (spoiler alert: he is stabbed by a fellow student) is covered up when he’s said to have run away. At CEDU, a supposed runaway existed in real life: Daniel Yuen. L.A. Mag’s investigation reveals that many details emerged about the day of the teenager’s alleged escape. One that resonates, though, is an account by an unnamed source that Daniel had been disciplined for trying to flee, restrained by a fellow pupil “until a CEDU staff member arrived to take control.” Twenty-two years later, his parents having searched far and wide for their son — sometimes even aided by former CEDU staffers whom they were paying — have had no luck; Daniel Yuen is still missing. 

Group therapy in episode 103 of Wayward.

Netflix

The Synanon Connection

With her long coat, oversized glasses, and dead-on stare, Toni Colette’s central Wayward character gives off the uncomfortable feeling of a cult leader. So it’s not surprising to see that in a recent interview about the show, Martin revealed that her inspiration for Colette’s Evelyn Wade was the Synanon cult, once called the “most dangerous and violent cults America had ever seen.”

“In researching these schools — a lot of which are now being talked about in different documentaries — I learned about Synanon,” Martin said in the interview, per Esquire. “That was a self-help cult in the ’70s in L.A., which was ultimately shut down, but it kind of transformed and was part of the beginnings of the ‘troubled teen’ industry. So we took those facts and then dialed them up a bunch.”

One aspect included in the series is “The Synanon Game,” a group attack therapy dreamed up within the cult where members humiliated one another and encouraged the exposure of one another’s innermost weaknesses. This is directly lifted and placed into Wayward with the “Hot Seat” therapy session that the students endure. Following his time with Synanon, Charles DIetrich founded CEDU Educational Services, Inc. in 1967; “The Synanon Game” was adapted into hours-long emotional growth sessions called “raps,” where students were incentivized to “indict” their classmates for rule infractions and lay into their shame by screaming “disclosures” about them to the group. After this, at night, “smooshing” would soothe the pain felt in these sessions — as displayed in a form on Wayward. This is a session of group touching involving hugging, caressing, hair stroking and lap-sitting.   

Mae Martin as Alex Dempsey and Mark McKinney as Maurice in episode 105 of Wayward.

Netflix

One Good Cop

In Wayward, deputy Alex discovers that multiple teens have gone missing from the Academy and does a quick online search and discovers an activist and investigative blogger named Maurice — an unhinged man who is working to expose the dark truth about Tall Pines Academy. After the two meet, their potentially fruitful partnership veers into mistrust and meets a violent end. In San Bernadeno, as the investigation into some of CEDU’s missing kids was reopened, a remarkably similar meeting played out, according to David Safran, a CEDU survivor who has become involved in multiple media projects on the troubled teen industry and CEDU’s missing kids. 

“In real life, that happened exactly like that,” Safran told The Hollywood Reporter, referring to the outreach he received from Detective Alisha Rosa in November 2021. “It wasn’t Vermont. It was a newly-promoted California detective who was transferred to the Twin Peaks station in the San Bernardino Mountains. She discovered multiple kids had gone missing from CEDU and quickly found my blog post on Medium and reached out to me. It really became the story of an intrepid cop and a citizen journalist connecting on how to find out what happens to these kids.”

Despite some key differences in the fictional Maurice’s backstory (he’s a parent of a missing kid, not, as Safran is, a former pupil of the institution) and their demeanors (Safran does not give raving madman), Safran notes other striking similarities between Maurice’s experience on the show and his own. One notable moment came in the scene where Wayward’s local sleuth tells Alex that he has heard nothing but radio silence from every media outlet that he has contacted about exposing Tall Pines Academy; this was Safran’s experience when contacting media outlets about the CEDU missing persons cases, including that of Daniel Yuen. Finally, both Maurice and Safran were skeptical of a still green detective attempting to take on a massive, entrenched institution like CEDU or the fictional Tall Pines Academy. Safran told THR that this shifted with time and that the real story with Detective Rosa came later, when she was taken off the revived CEDU missing kids case in a rug-pull by her superiors as her investigation, aided by Safran, was progressing. 

***

With her series now a major hit, having shot to No. 1 on the Netflix Top 10 chart in its first week on the platform and remained in the top 10 since, it seems within the realm of possibility that Martin may be asked to bring the limited, one-and-done series back. Whether a potential second season would delve further into what life was like at CEDU — or focus on or even acknowledge the connections to actual events — the institution is now the central mystery for Wayward. But for survivors like Safran, many of whom have expressed their opinions on the series online, the show is commendable for shining a light on the dark tactics found in corners of the troubled teen industry and for buoying the conversation about these horrors — that can be deeply traumatizing and linger for a lifetime — but felt that it should also lean into the reality of its depictions of life there. And be clear with its audience: Wayward is fiction but plenty of what is seen is based in fact. This is real, and is still happening. 

“It’s just not the day-to-day counter therapeutic techniques, all that kind of stuff is similar, but not. It’s not authentic to the experience. They know the historical record, they know the lingo, they know the cult stuff,” Safran says of Wayward’s notable lack of acknowledgment of how fact-based it is. “Reality in the troubled teen industry is always darker and funnier and weirder.”

Netflix was contacted by The Hollywood Reporter to seek comment on the above connections, but did not immediately reply. This story will be updated with any response from the streamer.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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