Optus Mobile Review ALDI Mobile Review Amaysim Mobile Review Belong Mobile Review Circles.Life Review Vodafone Mobile Review Woolworths Mobile Review Felix Mobile Review Best iPhone Plans Best Family Mobile Plans Best Budget Smartphones Best Prepaid Plans Best SIM-Only Plans Best Plans For Kids And Teens Best Cheap Mobile Plans Telstra vs Optus Mobile Optus NBN Review Belong NBN Review Vodafone NBN Review Superloop NBN Review Aussie BB NBN Review iiNet NBN Review MyRepublic NBN Review TPG NBN Review Best NBN Satellite Plans Best NBN Alternatives Best NBN Providers Best Home Wireless Plans What is a Good NBN Speed? Test NBN Speed How to speed up your internet Optus vs Telstra Broadband ExpressVPN Review CyberGhost VPN Review NordVPN Review PureVPN Review Norton Secure VPN Review IPVanish VPN Review Windscribe VPN Review Hotspot Shield VPN Review Best cheap VPN services Best VPN for streaming Best VPNs for gaming What is a VPN? VPNs for ad-blocking At just three episodes long, you can easily binge this miniseries in a weekend - and you should, if not for the killer soundtrack alone. The series follows 28-year old Alma who finds she can see through time after she gets into a car accident. What’s more, she can now see her dead father…who wants her to solve his murder. Cool and Normal.  Couple this genre-bending setup with surreal rotoscoped animation, and the series starts to feel like the stuff of dreams. While the premise may sound off-the-wall wacky, Undone mostly plays it straight to tell a tender, heartfelt story. It’s not one of the biggest shows on Prime Video, but it is one of the most unique. If the story alone isn’t grabbing you, just wait till you hear the voice cast. Yeun is joined by several Walking Dead veterans (including Lauren Cohan and Lennie James), along with the always great J. K. Simmons and Sandra Oh, plus Zachary Quinto, Seth Rogen, Mark Hamill, Jon Hamm and even Reginald VelJohnson. Now that’s what we call star-studded. Starring Lily Rabe, Tell Me Your Secrets follows three characters, each with their own set of skeletons in the closet: Emma (Rabe) is the former girlfriend of a serial killer, placed into witness protection in Louisiana. Mary (played by Amy Brenneman) is a grieving mother desperately searching for her missing daughter, believed to have been kidnapped by Emma’s ex. Finally, we have John (Hamish Linklater), a former serial rapist obsessed with redeeming himself. As each one reaches their breaking point, the line between victim and assailant become increasingly blurry.

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The Wilds has received rave reviews and has already been renewed for a second season, so watch this space. It’s a thrilling puzzle to piece together that’s made all the more watchable thanks to its magnetic main cast: Julia Roberts, Bobby Cannavale, Stephan James, Shea Wigham and Sissy Spacek. Season 2 of Homecoming released in 2020, with an all-new mystery starring Janelle Monáe . Hosted by US skiing champ Lindsey Vonn (and her pooch Lucy), The Pack pits 12 doggo-human duos against one another in a series of challenges all over the world, from Mexico City to Paris. Basically, it’s The Amazing Race but with dogs, which means it’s 10,000 times better than The Amazing Race. Set in the Cleveland, Ohio suburb of Shaker Heights in the 1990s, this character-driven drama is one of those shows that’s so addicting, you’ll probably binge it in a single weekend just to find out what happens next. In the first episode alone Fleabag accidentally flashes a bank employee she’s trying to secure a loan from, steals a sculpture from her wicked step-mum, and gets dumped by a boyfriend after she’s caught masturbating to newsreel footage of Barack Obama. It’s a wild ride. In 2033, humans have the ability to ‘upload’ their consciousness into the virtual afterlife of their choosing. When computer programmer Nathan dies at the age of 27, he’s uploaded to the ultra-expensive utopian Lake View resort, but quickly realises ‘heaven’ isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. Still under the thumb of his still-alive girlfriend, Nathan is torn as he starts becoming close to his living customer service rep, Nora. Framed as a noir tale that follows a detective searching for a runaway child, this smaller mystery serves as our way into the larger conflict. Essential viewing for space opera buffs. Set in a world where superpowers are common but dying uncles imparting wisdom like “with great power comes great responsibility” are all too rare, fame, sex, and money motivates the caped crusaders of this world. The Grand Tour is the result. It’s essentially Top Gear just without the legal right to call itself that (I would have called it Not Gear). Either way, petrol heads will guzzle it up. Expect fast cars, beautiful scenery from all across the globe, and an abundance of natural chemistry between the long-time co-hosts. Based (loosely, we might add) on the classic novel by Phillip K Dick, proceedings get interesting when mysterious footage emerges of what appears to be an alternative reality – one in which the Allies were victorious in WWII. Tense, well characterised, and beautifully shot. Beginning on the day of his release from jail, it follows ex-con Shadow Moon and his gradual entanglement in a supernatural power struggle between the Old Gods and the upstart New Gods. Though the second and third seasons don’t reach the same heights as the first, it’s uniformly gorgeous, with some of the most creative imagery on TV, and Ian McShane is magnetic as the meddling Mr. Wednesday. Rachel Brosnahan (House of Cards) is a revelation as Miriam “Midge” Maisel, the quick-witted, sassy, strong, mesmerising woman at the show’s heart – someone who never lets a 1950s America steeped in patriarchal tradition extinguish her spark. Against the orders of their respective bosses, the demon Crowley (David Tennant) and angel Aziraphale (Michael Sheen) have become rather attached to life on Earth – so much so they set about sabotaging the apocalypse, delaying the inevitable by, among other things, trying to raise the Antichrist to be a decent fellow. The banter between the two leads is worth the price of admission alone, and a great supporting cast including John Hamm, Frances McDormand, and Daniel Mays seals the deal. Based on Michael Connolly’s pulpy novels, it’s a slow burn carried by its noire tinges and Titus Welliver’s portrayal of Harry Bosch, an LAPD detective that doesn’t always play by the rules. It sounds clichéd, and in many ways it is, but by god, it gets results, chief! It’s not brilliant by any means, but if you let it get its hooks in you’ll want to see how it all unravels.

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