Andrew Scott as Tom Ripley in the movie «Ripley» Photo: Netflix Ripley
Andrew Scott as Patricia Highsmith's charming sociopath Tom Ripley – how can we resist? Add in Johnny Flynn as Dickie Greenleaf and a gold standard showrunner (The Night Of's Steve Zaillian), and it should be great.
Netflix, April 4
Mode
The cowbell satire Kate Winslet plays a wavering authoritarian chancellor in an unnamed European country. Think «The Death of Stalin meets The Crown.»
April 8, Sky Atlantic
Franklin
Left-wing historical dramas are all the rage on TV right now. This Michael Douglas vehicle looks like a lot of fun as the Founding Father tries to woo the French.
April 12, Apple TV+
Fallout
A post-apocalyptic, retrofuturistic, sci-fi phantasmagoria in which Ella Purnell's young «Vault Survivor» drags herself, blinking, into a nuclear-war-scorched Los Angeles. Big, crazy, crazy fun.
April 11, Amazon Prime Video
The Sympathizer
Fresh off his Oscar win, Robert Downey Jr. plays a variety of roles in this thrilling adaptation of the Viet Thanh novel Nguyen's Pulitzer Prize-winning story about a Viet Cong soldier exiled to Los Angeles.
April 14, Sky Atlantic < /p>Feud: Capote vs. the Swans
After a superb series about Joan Crawford and Bette Davis, Ryan Murphy returns with another compelling story — the battle between Truman Capote and his brilliant entourage. Starring Tom Hollander, Naomi Watts, Demi Moore, Calista Flockhart, Chloë Sevigny, Molly Ringwald and many more.
April 17, Disney.
Disclaimer
Oscar-winning director Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity, Roma) returns to the small screen with an ambitious drama about a documentary filmmaker (Cate Blanchett) who discovers that she and her dark secrets have become the subject of a popular novel.
April 26, Apple TV+
Red Eyes
Bright, high-concept and just plain awesome, this conspiracy drama takes place on board a flight from Beijing to London, where Richard Armitage's doctor has been arrested for murder.
April (TBC), ITV1
Blue Lights
The Belfast-set police drama was one of the best shows on TV last year and is making a very welcome return. Vivid and relevant, unlike most police dramas.
April (TBC), BBC One
The Tattooist from Auschwitz
As real as they are, Harvey Keitel plays Lale Sokolov, a Jew from Auschwitz, who was tasked with tattooing identification numbers on the arms of other prisoners.
May 2, Sky Atlantic
Bridgerton S3
We return to Regency London — or rather, it should be, we return back to Bridgertonland, as Period fantasy hits its peak with a third season of betrayals and hijinks.
May 16, Netflix
The Gathering
One for parents to watch from behind the couch—a twisty drama about the state of the country about violent incident involving young gymnasts at an illegal rave. The children are not well.
May, Channel 4
Shardlake
C.J. Sansom Tudor's detective novels are getting a long-overdue TV adaptation, with Arthur Hughes playing the eponymous «hunchback» detective and Sean Bean as Thomas Cromwell.
May, Disney+
Presumption innocence
The small screen finally captures big Jake Gyllenhaal as he takes on the role of Rusty Sabich, a US attorney accused of murder Colleagues. Harrison Ford played the role in the 1990 film.
June 14 on Apple TV+
Rebus
Richard Rankin steps into the well-worn shoes of detective John Rebus, previously worn by John Hannah and Ken Stott in the new adaptation of Ian Rankin's best-selling crime novels.
Spring, BBC One
Eric
Benedict Cumberbutt is a puppeteer in 1980s New York whose life is ruined when his little the son disappears. The only person who can help? A 7-foot furry purple monster named Eric.
Summer, Netflix
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