The most anticipated TV shows of 2024

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By Lucy Ford and Jack King

With the wide range of fantastic TV hits of 2023 in the rearview mirror, it’s time to turn our heads to the future: to our most anticipated TV screens for 2024.

The year is already shaping up to deliver plenty of gems on the small screen, from more Star Wars spin-offs to long-awaited returning seasons like The Diplomat and a sparkly new Netflix remake of David Nicholl’s One Day.

Whether you like to fill your calfinishar with binge-watching displays or just want some light at the end of the five p. m. Tunnel of darkness, here are all the expected maximum TV screens from 2024.

Release Date: February 8

Who doesn’t love an old romance, right? Adapted from David Nicholls’ popular 2009 novel, which was also later made into a 2011 film, One Day tells the story of two attractive young men (This Going to Hurt’s Ambika Mod and The White Lotus’s Leo Woodall) who find themselves cosmically reunited. over and over, and. . . again, in the area of ​​about two decades. Expect: masses of tears, a few laughs, and plenty of ’90s hits.

Release Date: February 13

The O. La reaction to Welcome to Wrexham follows the progress of Sunderland FC’s resurgence as they move up the table, now back in the league following their League One play-off win over Wycombe Wanderers. It’s this triumphant path to victory that Season 3 seeks to cover, and the creators claim that they will end Sunderland’ Til I Die, which ends this season, on a high note. Come on, black cats. . .

Release Date: February 14

This story about the origin of Christian Dior (he rarely gets more GQ TV than that) will star Ben Mendelsohn as the stylish designer in the midst of his post-war debut, with the launch of his fashion line “New Look. “France’s Juliette Binoche (Oscar-winner for The English Patient in 1996 and a full-fledged mother) plays the role of Coco Chanel, with Glenn Close (she’s a mom!) as Carmel Snow and Game of Thrones’ Maisie Williams as Catherine Dior.

Release date: 21 February

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Apple TV is temporarily building itself up as a contender for HBO’s TV crown. Just take a look at the prestigious quality exhibits such as Severance, Silo and For All Mankind; They expel the festival from the cosmos. Constellation seems to be another twinkling star in its expanding TV universe. Noomi Repace plays an astronaut who returns to Earth after a crisis in space, but it’s not all that results when she returns to dry land. The trailer shows some compelling psychodramatic elements as his brain crumbles. . . right?Let’s see if Apple continues its momentum.

Release date: 22 February

Based on the popular animated series of the same name, this live-action Netflix series seeks to right the wrongs of the famous and horrific movie Avatar: The Last Airbender that was given to us in 2010. The series follows a war-torn global situation. where other people can control the elements. Aang, the last known airbender, will have to maintain order in this fragile global and fend off plans for a general takeover. It will star Daniel Dae Kim and a host of newcomers.

Release Date: March 21

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David Benioff and D. B. Weiss have left the rudimentary tools of Westeros behind and have entered into the science fiction game with this adaptation of the bestselling novel of the same name. It follows an astrophysicist who, after seeing her father brutally murdered during the Chinese Cultural Revolution, is conscripted by the military sent to a secret radar base in a remote region of the country. There, decisions she makes in the 1960s ripple through time. So popular is this property that it’s also just had an unrelated Chinese adaptation released.

Release date: 4 April

It’s been a long road for Andrew Scott’s small screen adaptation of The Talented Mr Ripley to be on the horizon. Originally scheduled for release on Showtime, it has now been picked up via Netflix for a spring release. Since then, the streamer has been drip-feeding us with some first photos and an ambiguous teaser. Not much is known about this iteration of Tom Ripley, however, we can safely assume that he will take on familiar territory like a movie starring Matt Damon and Jude Law in the same book. Andrew Scott passing through Italy? He counts on us.

Release Date: April 5

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Colin Farrell dives headfirst into the bowels of Hollywood in this upcoming Apple TV series that promises to be a mind-blowing edition of the noir crime drama. The main points of the series are kept fairly secret, the connecting line states that Farrell’s Detective Sugar will be tasked with tracking down the missing daughter of a big Hollywood producer, to uncover some very shady secrets about the elite circle of relatives. that threaten to shake things up. The exhibit will also feature Succession star James Cromwell and The Good Lugar’s Kirby Howell-Baptiste.

Release Date: April 5

Mary & George will see Nicholas Galitzine step into his second queer royal role after Red, White & Royal Blue, although this one is more rooted in history than it is a ripped-from-fanfic companion. Mary & George is inspired by the true story of Mary Villiers, played by Julianne Moore, who moulded her son, George, to seduce King James VI and become his most trusted lover and advisor so that the pair could scheme their way to the upper echelons of the royal court. Not to beat an internet saying like a dead horse, but: Mother!

Release date: April 12

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We’ll all be tracking Fallout in April, when the TV adaptation of the super mutant from video game giant Bethesda arrives on Prime Video. Historically, the game’s on-screen channel has been more clogged than Mario’s bathroom, but all symptoms point to this. One was a hit, and the first trailer generated excitement among fans of the franchise up to eleventh.

The action is set in post-apocalyptic Los Angeles, two hundred years after a nuclear war devastated humanity, with the inhabitants of the underground vaults emerging to rebuild from the ashes. It’s not all doom and gloom: with its tongue-in-cheek ’50s American satire and caustic sense of humor, Fallout brings a-ha’s to the apocalypse. Get those Geiger counters ready.

Release Date: Part 1: May 16, Part 2: June 13

Be prepared for more bodices to break. The Ton will hum along once the new season of Bridgerton hits our screens, and this season will focus on the love story between Penelope (Lady Whistledown, in case you don’t know) and Colin. After she insulted the rest of the boys in the last episode of last season, it’s going to take a lot of work to get Colin back to the right books.

Expect more of the same — dresses, dances, confusing concepts about the English Regency — and get ready to watch TV’s most outlandish show, which Netflix recently announced will be distributed in two parts in May and June via Netflix on Twitter.

Release Date: June 14

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Our expectations are high for Presumed Innocent, as he managed to lure Jake Gyllenhaal to the small screen after all. Yes, that’s right, Hollywood’s leading purveyor of bizarre roles has never been drawn to prestige global television, until now. The 8-part series is based on the 1987 novel of the same name, which was also adapted into a film in the 1990s starring Harrison Ford. Gyllenhaal will play Rusty Sabich, a prosecutor accused of murdering his colleague. The concept is that he was the one who investigated the homicide in the first place. If you can’t wait until June, you can already enjoy the finale in a number of ways.

Release Date: Spring

Happy Valley was the sort of televisual success that would grant showrunner Sally Wainwright an effective blank check to do whatever the hell she wanted for her next project. Enter Renegade Nell, marking a shift from dark police procedural to… period plunderer? Arriving on Disney+ at some point in the spring, this one is set to star Louisa Harling as the titular Nell Jackson, a real-life historical figure who became a fearsome highway(wo)man after she was framed for murder. Bo Bragason and Florence Keen star as Nell’s sisters, with Joely Richardson, Ted Lasso’s Nick Mohammed and Trigger Point’s Adrian Lester.

Release Date: Summer

Perhaps the most welcome wonder of 2022, a return to Game of Thrones form over the charming sets of Matt Smith, Emma D’Arcy and Paddy Considine, the latter setting up the most underrated TV update of the declining year. King Viserys. (That ultimate monologue!! Consider him one of the greatest Emmy snobs of all time. ) If you can overlook it for a second, the season without Considine is an open question, but all the symptoms point to a continued dominance over the fantastic. of.

Release Date: Fall

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Colin Farrell wears prosthetics again to reprise his role as Gotham’s biggest crime lord from 2022’s The Batman. Landing on HBO’s Max, the series will explore the rise of Oswald Cobblepot in the ranks of the city’s underworld and will consist of 8 episodes. There’s no word yet on the exhibit, but that’s precisely how the shadows of organized crime work, you know?

Originally slated for release in early 2024, The Penguin was forced to roll back through the actors’ moves that affected Hollywood and froze everything for six months last year. A preview of Max’s roster in November reported that we’ll now see The Penguin. until the fall, but let’s see how it plays out.

Release Date: Fall

Dune will be the newest sci-fi franchise to get its own TV spin-off in a series arriving this fall, although that hasn’t happened yet, and will cover the origins of the Bene Gesserit cult sorority. (Interestingly, it was originally subtitled The Sisterhood. ) We have no idea what it will be about at this point, but we assume the updated subtitle refers to the prophecy about Paul Atreides, played by Timmy Chalamet in Denis Villeneuve’s first film. . But who knows?

Release date: sometime in 2024

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The bloodiest (non-animated; see you soon, Invincible) superhero series returns for its fourth season in 2024, in which we can expect Homelander to go into fascist-murder-dad-Nazi mode and commit genocide or two with his eye. Lasers. That is, unless Butcher has something to do about it (before he, uh, dies). Fans of The Walking Dead will be extremely happy to see the arrival of Negan, the show’s own Jeffrey Dean Morgan, noticed here. without his iconic baseball bat. Not that it was useful to oppose a circle of megalomaniacal super-killers, anyway.

Release date: At some point in 2024

Good heavens, Industry season 2 ended on a nuclear-grade cliffhanger or whatever, when [redacted for spoilers] he was unceremoniously fired from Pierpoint, probably with nowhere to go and his career in the mud. Whomp whomp! We can only hope (and wish) that the third season will be as brutal, sexy, and vicious as the first and second, which combined create one of the most productive TV series we’ve seen in a long time, with frenetic emotions. and the crude character paintings of The Sopranos, or any other heavy TV classic worthy of the name. We ordered more from Ken Leung.

Release date: Sometime in 2024

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The biggest screen Netflix has ever released is, of course, a series of moments. How could it not be? It’s clever that the first series, about a fatal game inflicted on the most indebted people in society, ended on a cliffhanger. After scoring big wins, Gi-hun has his attractions set on the masters of the game who need nothing but him for closure so that he can continue betting on his evil games. It looks like Season 2 will open everything up with a bang, but we still have to wait a bit before a release date is communicated (hopefully, not sinister playground speakers).

Release date: Sometime in 2024

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The most dysfunctional family in the universe has one last adventure. The fourth and final season of The Umbrella Academy, based on Gerard Way’s comic book of the same name, will hit our small screens this year, taking a big turn. That surprised enthusiasts at the end of his latest run. Season 3 ended with the enhanced siblings without their superpowers, meaning Season 4 will revolve around either getting them back or looking to live without them. According to Netflix, this latest season will also see them face opposing enemies. to an enemy that is bigger and worse than ever, one that needs to be eliminated forever.

Release date: in 2024

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We only have to indulge in a handful of spy shenanigans every year to keep the world spinning on its axis. It’s just science. Black Doves stars Keira Knightley, Ben Whishaw and Sarah Lancashire and revolves around a secret spy who hides his identity from his new partner, only for him to find himself drawn into the dark truth of London’s subglobal. With a runtime of only six episodes, it will most likely be a miniseries.

Release date: At some point in 2024

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The Diplomat’s first season became an overnight success when it launched on Netflix last year, so it’s no surprise they’re raring to get its second outing out the door. At the end of season one, the titular diplomat, Kate Wyler (Keri Russell), who is on deployment in London to prevent all-out war, is left reeling from the potential death of her husband Hal (Rufus Sewell) in an explosion ordered by the Prime Minister (Rory Kinnear) who is trying to cover up his international faux pas. Clearly, we’re going to start season two with a bang. The streamer has also announced that Allison Janney will make her political drama return after The West Wing by joining for season two.

Release Date: TBD

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If there’s one thing Marvel’s takeover of culture has taught us, it’s that if you were given Robert Downey Jr. , you’d be better off making the most of it. In The Sympathizer, he plays a master of disguise, inhabiting all the characters that make up The Man’s confused perception in this story of a Viet Cong spy who infiltrates the South Vietnamese network in 1970s Los Angeles. Directed by South Korean legend Park Chan-wook, the series has been described as both a mystery and a satire.

Release date: TBD

The world fell to its knees when the first season of The Night Manager hit our screens in 2016, introducing us to Tom Hiddleston’s former military officer Jonathan Pine. Based on the John le Carré novel, it was a slick and sexy spy offering and one we thought we’d left back in the ’10s. However, it was announced this year that not only will The Night Manager be back, but Hiddleston will be returning too. There’s no word yet on where this espionage caper will take us (and no word yet on when). Shooting was due to begin late last year, which could give us a 2024 release — if not early 2025.

Release Date: TBD

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The most grumpy woman in the world will return for the second round. Wednesday’s first season broke the viewership records of Stranger Things’ fourth season at breakneck speed, so it’s only natural that the Addams Family spinoff returns to find out more. Jenna Ortega’s opinion of the sullen sister is seen at Nevermore Academy, a boarding school for the marginalized. After fending off a literal beast in Season 1, many more monstrous and familiar battles await us in round two.

Release Date: TBD

Hi you, back (and back and back and back and back). You just can’t get rid of Joe Goldberg; After all, bullies are like that. Back with a final season, the fifth season of You, the series about a desperate stalker, a romantic killer, and an e-book enthusiast, will land where it all began in New York City. Joe is happy to settle in with Kate, who knows (mostly) his dirty little secrets, but when he returns home he is always met with a reunion. According to Netflix, a familiar face is back in the spotlight. – out Joe, and with the gigantic list of victims left in his wake, anyone can guess the Avenger.

The series was originally scheduled to premiere in 2024, but writers and actors are moving forward and may delay it until 2025. Only time will tell.

Release Date: TBD

There’s a lot of Alien to look at on the horizon. Not only will we have a new movie, Alien: Romulus, but also a TV series. With so many Alien timelines everywhere, you’d be forgiven if you don’t know where it is exactly. The series will fit. While the main points are being kept under wraps, we do know that the film is set 70 years in the future, meaning it falls somewhere between the original franchise and past films (Prometheus and Alien: Covenant). This will also take up position on Earth, somewhere where the Xenomorphs haven’t been yet. The series is helmed by Fargo and Legion showrunner Noah Hawley, so at least the notoriously variable quality assets are in smart hands.

Release Date: TBD

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Idris Elba might be the unluckiest passenger of all time. After successfully negotiating the hijacking of a flight in the first season of Hijack, it was announced that the Apple TV series would return for a second broadcast. Will it be mandatory to save you the detour of a bus this time?A train? A boat? Who knows!It’s a bit unlikely that Hijack season 2 will hit our screens this year, but let’s remain hopeful that this flight will reach its destination faster than expected.

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