Coroner is a character-driven one-hour drama about Dr. Jenny Cooper (SERINDA SWAN), a recently widowed new coroner who investigates suspicious, unnatural or sudden deaths in Toronto.
who was found in the car park of a south London pub with an axe lodged in his skull and £1,000 left poking out of his trouser pocket. The subsequent inquiry has lasted 33 years, and cost £30 million, but has failed to convict anyone of Morgan's murder. For the first time, those that were alleged to have committed the crime, the police officers who investigated, and the grieving brother of the victim all tell their story
Everyone is guilty of something. The new original series Perry Mason, starring Emmy winner Matthew Rhys, premieres June 21 at 9PM on HBO. Based on characters created by Erle Stanley Gardner, this drama series follows the origins of American Fiction’s most legendary criminal defense lawyer, Perry Mason. When the case of the decade breaks down his door, Mason’s relentless pursuit of the truth reveals a fractured city and just maybe, a pathway to redemption for himself. #HBO #PerryMasonHBO Subscribe to HBO on YouTube: https://goo.gl/wtFYd7
The new Netflix movies and shows to binge-watch right now
Welcome to GamesRadar's picks for the new Netflix movies and shows you should binge-watch right now. Every week, we go through the complete catalogue of what's new on Netflix and bring you the creme de la creme of what you should be adding to your watchlist. We mainly include Netflix originals – as these are the most widely available – but also have some US and UK-only movies and shows. From serial killer dramas to fantasy epics to true-crime epics to coming-of-age stories that will make your inner-teen weep, these are the new Netflix movies and shows to watch right now. Now, let's get streaming! Advertisement Read more: Best Netflix movies | Best Netflix shows | Best Netflix documentaries | Best Netflix VPN Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga (June 26th) Available: Worldwide Written by Will Ferrell and SNL scribe Adam Steele (with the full cooperation of Eurovision), Eurovision centres on Lars (Ferrell) and Sigrit (Rachel McAdams), an Icelandic pop duo known as Fire Saga who’ve long dreamed of winning the Song Contest and escaping the fjords and mismatched knitwear of their tiny village. Seemingly destined to only play gigs at the local hostelry – much to the embarrassment of Lars’ sea-dog pa (Pierce Brosnan) – the couple get their wish when Iceland’s official entrant is blown up. Can they fulfil their destiny when Sigrit nurses a deep love for Lars, while he suffers from imposter syndrome? Let's hope so. Nobody Knows I'm Here Available: Worldwide Lost actor Jorge Garcia gives a career best performance in Nobody Knows I'm Here, a movie that revolves around a singer who never performed on stage. As a child, Memo's voice was a phenomenon, yet a different young performer was the public face of Memo. He's now a recluse, yet the world comes knocking. This one carries an emotional punch or two. The Politician season 2 (June 19th) Available: Worldwide Ryan Murphy's satirical take on American politics returns, and this time, Ben Platt's Payton Hobart has progressed from trying to become president of his school's student body to running for a seat in the New York State Senate. This time around, he's up against Judith Light's Majority Leader Dede Standish. The new series has already won rave reviews, and at just seven episodes long, is one to get through this weekend. Rick and Morty season 4A (June 19th) Available: Netflix UK It may not be the entire batch of season 4 episodes, but you can now watch the opening half of the latest Rick and Morty season – which include some of the best Rick and Morty episodes yet. The Adult Swim series continues its inimitable brand of high-concept, shock-factor comedy with episodes that spoof parallel universes (did somebody say ‘fascist wasps’?), heist movies, time travel, and more snakes than you can shake a Glootie at. It all adds up to a quick slice of sci-fi that’ll keep you consistently laughing through all five episodes. Da 5 Bloods (June 12th) Available: Worldwide Spike Lee returns with a blistering new movie that shines a spotlight on the war in Vietnam to make a point about inequality that persists until this day. There's never been a more apt time for a Spike Joint to drop, and Total Film's glowing Da 5 Bloods review shows that there's nothing better worth watching right now. V for Vendetta (June 9th) Available: US The adaptation of Alan Moore and David Lloyd’s graphic novel helped spark a real-world revolution with its infamous Guy Fawkes get-ups. Look beyond the mask, however, and you’re met with a surprisingly tense thriller that wears its politics on its sleeve and still has something to say about today’s current climate. It helps, too, that it’s backed by a stellar cast, including Hugo Weaving as the titular V, that’ll make your heart swell and squirm in equal measure. Dystopias have never been quite so dangerously entertaining. **** Eye season 5 (June 5) Available: Worldwide The Fab Five are back! Everyone's favourite group of fairy godmothers are here to transform the lives of another bunch of "heroes" around. Expect tears! Emotion! Laughs! And everything in-between. We all need some feels in our lives right now, and **** Eye is the perfect thing for that. 13 Reasons Why season 4 (June 5) Available: Worldwide 13 Reasons Why has come to end. What started as a series about one girl's death transformed into a teen drama dealing with the multitudes of life at high school. Despite the show being embroiled in many controversies, the streaming service has persevered and continued to release new episodes, the final 10 available now. The finale is feature-length and apparently a "proper sendoff" for the series. Lady Bird (June 3) Available: UK Greta Gerwig's coming of age tale was rightly nominated for multiple Oscars. This is one nostalgia-filled story of a young woman trying to find her place in the world. Nicknamed "Lady Bird" and dying her hair red, she struggles with leaving home and falling in love. Expect to shed a few tears. Space Force (May 29) Available: Worldwide From the team that brought you The Office US... wait, you need more convincing? Okay, okay. Starring Steve Carell, John Malkovich, and Ben Schwartz, Space Force is the latest comedy series from Netflix that centres on a group of people tasked with establishing a new United States Armed Force – in space. Steve Carell's character General Mark Naird is in charge, so prepare for hilarious hijinks as they attempt to get boots on the moon! The Notebook (May 29) Available: UK Torn apart by class in 1940s America, this adaptation of Nicholas Spark's best-selling novel is a guaranteed tear-jerker. Starring Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams, The Notebook has finally been added back to UK Netflix after some fans were left confused at an edited ending that altered the story's conclusion. Not to fear, the original theatrical cut is now available in all its glory. The Lovebirds (May 22) Available: Worldwide The Lovebirds was originally meant for cinemas. But then, the coronavirus scuppered all our cinema plans. Now, the movie – which centres on Issa Rae and Kumail Nanjiani as a couple who get embroiled in a murder mystery – is coming to Netflix, and is well worth a watch for anyone after a light romantic comedy. White Lines (May 15th) Available: Worldwide From the creators of Money Heist – that show everyone else seems to watch but nobody you actually know – comes White Lines. The show takes place on a paradise island filled with drugs, sex, and murder. Watch yourself. Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. the Reverend (May 13th) Available: Worldwide Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt returns – but this time with an interactive episode that lets you control what happens to Kimmy. The episode starts with the eponymous d0-gooder preparing to get married to an English prince (Daniel Radcliffe) before discovering that The Reverend may have another bunker of women. Does she save the day or continue her wedding plans? You decide! Read more: Every Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt interactive episode ending explained The Eddy (May 8th) Available: Worldwide Jazz hands at the read. Damien Chazelle's first series lands at Netflix and – as you would expect from the mastermind behind Whiplash and La La Land – there's going to be lots of music. The show follows Elliot Udo (Andre Holland) who's running a jazz club called The Eddy in modern-day Paris. However, he struggles to keep the place open and get involved with some questionable practices. Cue drama. Hollywood (May 1st) Available: Worldwide American Horror Story's Ryan Murphy helps bring the Golden Age of Tinseltown to life with this miniseries depicting the sun, sex, and scandals that permeated the period.
Comments
Coroner is a character-driven one-hour drama about Dr. Jenny Cooper (SERINDA SWAN), a recently widowed new coroner who investigates suspicious, unnatural or sudden deaths in Toronto.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrbcI2DcupM
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/entertainment/movies/12-of-the-best-movies-on-netflix-right-now/ar-BB15oZBh?ocid=spartan-dhp-feeds
https://www.whathifi.com/features/10-of-the-best-documentaries-on-netflix
https://www.whathifi.com/features/new-on-netflix-best-new-movies-and-tv-shows-on-netflix-uk
The Salisbury Poisonings: Trailer - BBC
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ekoW6g_wg7A
WALTER INTRO - CODE 37: SEX CRIMES
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UP0KQkPEUTE
Murder in the Car Park
who was found in the car park of a south London pub with an axe lodged in his skull and £1,000 left poking out of his trouser pocket. The subsequent inquiry has lasted 33 years, and cost £30 million, but has failed to convict anyone of Morgan's murder. For the first time, those that were alleged to have committed the crime, the police officers who investigated, and the grieving brother of the victim all tell their story
https://www.tvguide.co.uk/detail/3712827/27832679/murder-in-the-car-park
Perry Mason: Official Trailer | HBO
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNATvJMPZaA
Everyone is guilty of something. The new original series Perry Mason, starring Emmy winner Matthew Rhys, premieres June 21 at 9PM on HBO.
Based on characters created by Erle Stanley Gardner, this drama series follows the origins of American Fiction’s most legendary criminal defense lawyer, Perry Mason. When the case of the decade breaks down his door, Mason’s relentless pursuit of the truth reveals a fractured city and just maybe, a pathway to redemption for himself. #HBO #PerryMasonHBO
Subscribe to HBO on YouTube: https://goo.gl/wtFYd7
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyaPeTDIFcg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0G7U-A8Qh8
Welcome to GamesRadar's picks for the new Netflix movies and shows you should binge-watch right now. Every week, we go through the complete catalogue of what's new on Netflix and bring you the creme de la creme of what you should be adding to your watchlist. We mainly include Netflix originals – as these are the most widely available – but also have some US and UK-only movies and shows.
From serial killer dramas to fantasy epics to true-crime epics to coming-of-age stories that will make your inner-teen weep, these are the new Netflix movies and shows to watch right now. Now, let's get streaming!
Advertisement
Read more: Best Netflix movies | Best Netflix shows | Best Netflix documentaries | Best Netflix VPN
Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga (June 26th)
Available: Worldwide
Written by Will Ferrell and SNL scribe Adam Steele (with the full cooperation of Eurovision), Eurovision centres on Lars (Ferrell) and Sigrit (Rachel McAdams), an Icelandic pop duo known as Fire Saga who’ve long dreamed of winning the Song Contest and escaping the fjords and mismatched knitwear of their tiny village. Seemingly destined to only play gigs at the local hostelry – much to the embarrassment of Lars’ sea-dog pa (Pierce Brosnan) – the couple get their wish when Iceland’s official entrant is blown up. Can they fulfil their destiny when Sigrit nurses a deep love for Lars, while he suffers from imposter syndrome? Let's hope so.
Nobody Knows I'm Here
Available: Worldwide
Lost actor Jorge Garcia gives a career best performance in Nobody Knows I'm Here, a movie that revolves around a singer who never performed on stage. As a child, Memo's voice was a phenomenon, yet a different young performer was the public face of Memo. He's now a recluse, yet the world comes knocking. This one carries an emotional punch or two.
The Politician season 2 (June 19th)
Available: Worldwide
Ryan Murphy's satirical take on American politics returns, and this time, Ben Platt's Payton Hobart has progressed from trying to become president of his school's student body to running for a seat in the New York State Senate. This time around, he's up against Judith Light's Majority Leader Dede Standish. The new series has already won rave reviews, and at just seven episodes long, is one to get through this weekend.
Rick and Morty season 4A (June 19th)
Available: Netflix UK
It may not be the entire batch of season 4 episodes, but you can now watch the opening half of the latest Rick and Morty season – which include some of the best Rick and Morty episodes yet. The Adult Swim series continues its inimitable brand of high-concept, shock-factor comedy with episodes that spoof parallel universes (did somebody say ‘fascist wasps’?), heist movies, time travel, and more snakes than you can shake a Glootie at. It all adds up to a quick slice of sci-fi that’ll keep you consistently laughing through all five episodes.
Da 5 Bloods (June 12th)
Available: Worldwide
Spike Lee returns with a blistering new movie that shines a spotlight on the war in Vietnam to make a point about inequality that persists until this day. There's never been a more apt time for a Spike Joint to drop, and Total Film's glowing Da 5 Bloods review shows that there's nothing better worth watching right now.
V for Vendetta (June 9th)
Available: US
The adaptation of Alan Moore and David Lloyd’s graphic novel helped spark a real-world revolution with its infamous Guy Fawkes get-ups. Look beyond the mask, however, and you’re met with a surprisingly tense thriller that wears its politics on its sleeve and still has something to say about today’s current climate. It helps, too, that it’s backed by a stellar cast, including Hugo Weaving as the titular V, that’ll make your heart swell and squirm in equal measure. Dystopias have never been quite so dangerously entertaining.
**** Eye season 5 (June 5)
Available: Worldwide
The Fab Five are back! Everyone's favourite group of fairy godmothers are here to transform the lives of another bunch of "heroes" around. Expect tears! Emotion! Laughs! And everything in-between. We all need some feels in our lives right now, and **** Eye is the perfect thing for that.
13 Reasons Why season 4 (June 5)
Available: Worldwide
13 Reasons Why has come to end. What started as a series about one girl's death transformed into a teen drama dealing with the multitudes of life at high school. Despite the show being embroiled in many controversies, the streaming service has persevered and continued to release new episodes, the final 10 available now. The finale is feature-length and apparently a "proper sendoff" for the series.
Lady Bird (June 3)
Available: UK
Greta Gerwig's coming of age tale was rightly nominated for multiple Oscars. This is one nostalgia-filled story of a young woman trying to find her place in the world. Nicknamed "Lady Bird" and dying her hair red, she struggles with leaving home and falling in love. Expect to shed a few tears.
Space Force (May 29)
Available: Worldwide
From the team that brought you The Office US... wait, you need more convincing? Okay, okay. Starring Steve Carell, John Malkovich, and Ben Schwartz, Space Force is the latest comedy series from Netflix that centres on a group of people tasked with establishing a new United States Armed Force – in space. Steve Carell's character General Mark Naird is in charge, so prepare for hilarious hijinks as they attempt to get boots on the moon!
The Notebook (May 29)
Available: UK
Torn apart by class in 1940s America, this adaptation of Nicholas Spark's best-selling novel is a guaranteed tear-jerker. Starring Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams, The Notebook has finally been added back to UK Netflix after some fans were left confused at an edited ending that altered the story's conclusion. Not to fear, the original theatrical cut is now available in all its glory.
The Lovebirds (May 22)
Available: Worldwide
The Lovebirds was originally meant for cinemas. But then, the coronavirus scuppered all our cinema plans. Now, the movie – which centres on Issa Rae and Kumail Nanjiani as a couple who get embroiled in a murder mystery – is coming to Netflix, and is well worth a watch for anyone after a light romantic comedy.
White Lines (May 15th)
Available: Worldwide
From the creators of Money Heist – that show everyone else seems to watch but nobody you actually know – comes White Lines. The show takes place on a paradise island filled with drugs, sex, and murder. Watch yourself.
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. the Reverend (May 13th)
Available: Worldwide
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt returns – but this time with an interactive episode that lets you control what happens to Kimmy. The episode starts with the eponymous d0-gooder preparing to get married to an English prince (Daniel Radcliffe) before discovering that The Reverend may have another bunker of women. Does she save the day or continue her wedding plans? You decide!
Read more: Every Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt interactive episode ending explained
The Eddy (May 8th)
Available: Worldwide
Jazz hands at the read. Damien Chazelle's first series lands at Netflix and – as you would expect from the mastermind behind Whiplash and La La Land – there's going to be lots of music. The show follows Elliot Udo (Andre Holland) who's running a jazz club called The Eddy in modern-day Paris. However, he struggles to keep the place open and get involved with some questionable practices. Cue drama.
Hollywood (May 1st)
Available: Worldwide
American Horror Story's Ryan Murphy helps bring the Golden Age of Tinseltown to life with this miniseries depicting the sun, sex, and scandals that permeated the period.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/entertainment/news/the-new-netflix-movies-and-shows-to-binge-watch-right-now/ar-BB160aQZ?ocid=spartan-dhp-feeds
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fONspoMVO6Y
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYIKojkr9_U