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Atlanta Season 3 Cast, Release Date, News, and More

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Atlanta Season 3 will be bringing more Southern Gothic goodness to FX but not for awhile.

We'll be getting an Atlanta Season 3. It's just going to take awhile.

Donald and Stephen Glover's brilliant, Faulkner-esque series Atlantahas been a big hit for FX in some untraditional ways. Anecdotally speaking, it feels like few shows on television drive online conversation or rile up the blogosphere like Atlanta.

read more: Best TV Comedies of 2018

FX, as run by CEO John Landgraf, is a network that thrives on non-traditional attention. It likes its shows to drive conversation, generate thinkpieces, and win awards. Atlanta has proven adept at all three of those things. So Atlanta only drew less than a million viewers on the night it airs, but FX is confident in its product. It likely helped that FX just inked Atlanta director and long-time Glover collaborator Hiro Murai to a big overall deal.

Atlanta is phenomenal, achieving and exceeding what few television series have done,” said president of original programming for FX Nick Grad in a statement. “With Atlanta Robbin’ Season, Donald and his collaborators elevated the series to even greater heights, building on the enormous success of their award-winning first season. We’re grateful to the producers and our extraordinary cast and crew for achieving this level of excellence, and we share the excitement with our audience about the third season knowing they will continue to take us to unexpected and thrilling places.”

read more: The Many Genres of Atlanta

At an FYC Emmy screening this summer, Glover said that Atlanta Season 3 will be the most "accessible" season yet.

“I align the seasons I think, to me, like Kanye records,” Glover said. “I feel like this is our ‘Graduation.’ This is probably our most accessible but also the realest — an honest version of it — and I feel like the most enjoyable, like the third album.

Atlanta Season 3 Cast

The main players are all sure to be back: Donald Glover, Zazie Beets, Brian Tyree Henry, and Lakeith Stanfield. There may, however, come a day when this cast is simply too famous and has too many other opportunities to stay locked down. Beetz and Stanfield had a busy schedule of late with the likes of Deadpool 2 and Sorry to Bother You. That day is not here yet though.

Atlanta Season 3 Release Date

Atlanta star Zazie Beetz told IndieWire that due to some delays, Atlanta won't begin production until the spring. Clear some space in your 2020 schedule. FX CEO John Landgraf confirmed as much during his appearance at the 2019 TCA winter press tour. Atlanta Season 3 likely won't arrive until late 2020, with production beginning in the spring of that year.

Glover also likes to work at his own pace, telling Entertainment Tonight before the debut of Atlanta Season 2: “I don’t rush my work. I’d hate to be like, ‘It was worth the wait.’ You’ll decide that." Whenever Atlanta Season 3 arrives, it will likely be worth the wait. We can't wait to see where Paper Boi's career goes next or at least what haunted woods he gets lost in.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Alec Bojalad is TV Editor at Den of Geek and TCA member. Read more of his stuff here. Follow him at his creatively-named Twitter handle @alecbojalad

Atlanta Season 3 Release Date, Cast, News
NewsAlec Bojalad
Dec 26, 2019

Vikings Season 6 Episode 5 Air Date, Trailer, Cast, Episode Guide, and News

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Vikings season 6 has returned to the History Channel, and will serve as a conclusion to the long and bloody saga.

History confirmed Vikings season 6 to the surprise of no one back in September of 2017, which was about two full years before it was expected to arrive. While the guarantee of another season of the action-packed drama for a 20-episode sixth season remains true in 2019, an unfortunate addendum has been added: Vikings season 6 will serve as the show’s final outing.

However, don’t expect History’s Vikings continuity to fade into, well, history, just yet. Creator Michael Hirst has revealed his intent to craft a spinoff series. He’ll be joined on this endeavor by writer Jeb Stuart (Die Hard, The Fugitive). No details have been revealed about the project as of yet.

Vikings Season 6 Return Date

Vikings season 6 episode 5 is called "The Key" and it airs on Jan. 1. Check out the promo.

Vikings Season 6 Episodes

We're keeping track of everything we know about the new season right here! We'll update this with new details as they become available.

Vikings Season 6 Episode 1: New Beginnings

Bjorn struggles with the responsibilities of kingship and finds he can't rely on his mother, Lagertha; she has other plans. Ivar falls into the hands of Kievan Rus, and in their ruthless and unpredictable ruler, Prince Oleg, he may finally have met his match.

air date: 12/4/19

read our review of "New Beginnings" here

Vikings Season 6 Episode 2: The Prophet

Messengers arrive in Kattegat with news that presents Bjorn with a dilemma. As Bjorn attempts to do the right thing as ruler of Kattegat, Prince Oleg of Kiev seems untroubled by his conscience.

air date: 12/4/19

read our review of "The Prophet" here

Vikings Season 6 Episode 3: Ghosts, Gods and Running Dogs

Lagertha is forced to take action; In Kiev, although Oleg continues to be friendly, Ivar is aware of the threat which Oleg poses to the vulnerable young heir to the throne; Bjorn has answered the call and come to the aid of an old enemy.

air date: 12/11/19

read our review of "Ghosts, Gods and Running Dogs" here

Vikings Season 6 Episode 4: All the Prisoners

Lagertha leads her village's response to the recent attacks, but despite her best efforts, the consequences are tragic; Olaf has a bold new plan for the future of Norway; Ivar discusses Oleg's ambitions for Scandinavia.

air date: 12/18/19

read our review of "All the Prisoners" here

Vikings Season 6 Trailer

The trailer for the sixth season of Vikings has arrived!

Vikings Season 6 Cast

Of course, the September 2017 surprise of the preemptive Vikings season 6 was probably mitigated by the fact that open casting calls for – unambiguously enough – season 6 were held in late-August. The list called for:

"Fishermen, carpenters, craftspeople, farmworkers, axe men/women, skilled swords people, M&F archers, bowmen & women, M&F rowers, M&F sailors, ship hands & deckhands, calligraphers, Latin speakers, Arab speakers, musicians, midwives, nurses, animal handlers, hunters, blacksmiths, lumberjacks, magicians, jugglers, tree surgeons, whittlers, males with all types of haircuts especially, long hair and beards, all sporty types, martial artists, boxers, no visible tattoos, women with all lengths of naturally coloured hair, all men prepared to grow hair and beards and men and women with punk style haircuts."

Further Reading: Vikings: The Ingredients of a Compelling TV Drama

Vikings Season 6 Story Details

The Vikings season 5 finale left a lot of possibilities up in the air, but we're clearly in for a change of leadership. Although Ivar is still alive, he will likely find it difficult to assemble an army large enough to retake Kattegat and oust his half brother Bjorn from the throne. Recognizing that Bjorn's words are true, the people of Kattegat have abandoned Ivar and his tyrannical rule to support Bjorn, who like his father Ragnar, is a man of the people.

But what about the others? In Vikings season 6, will Ubbe and Torvi, whose appearance in Kattegat left Wessex without their leadership, return and farm the land with other Vikings and the English, or will their absence leave a void that could lead to conflict? And will the new season bring a resolution to the fate of Floki, who as far as we know is still trapped and perhaps dead in that cave?

All is speculation until a Vikings season 6 official synopsis comes down the pike. We'll keep you apprised.

Vikings Season 6 News

Contextually, the Vikings season 6 renewal, which arrived before the aforementioned launch of the long-running season 5, came with an intriguing angle, since season 4 made the monumental move of killing its protagonist and patriarch Ragnar Lothbrok (Travis Fimmel). Thus, even without seeing how the show's ratings would fare in season 5 (which we now know to be steady), History did not hesitate with the renewal decision as the show headed into uncharted waters in the first full frame without its main character. As Eli Lehrer, History’s EVP Programming expressed in the 2017 statement:

Vikings has creatively sailed to monumental lengths. The series has evolved from early raids in England, to the heart-stopping death of Ragnar Lothbrok, to the fierce battles of the Great Heathen Army, and now we’ll see the sons of Ragnar exploring and conquering the known world.”

He further added:

“[Creator/writer] Michael Hirst has only scratched the surface of his epic saga. We look forward to continuing our partnership with one of the greatest writers in this era of Peak TV and entertaining our viewers with 40 new episodes over the next two seasons.”

More: Vikings: Paganism and Organized Religion

Interestingly, the promising debut of Jonathan Rhys Meyers’s season 5 main cast character, warrior bishop Heahmund, recently came to an early conclusion with his demise in an epic battle in December 26, 2018 episode, “Hell.” Yet the Vikings season 6 landscape still looks good for inaugural cast member Katheryn Winnick, who plays celebrated warrior woman Lagertha. The actress, whose star is surging – notably appearing in the big screen rendition of Stephen King’s The Dark Tower and the upcoming Netflix martial arts action series, Wu Assassins– will not only step further into the spotlight in the post-Ragnar era, but will reportedly direct one of the season 6 episodes.

Read and download the Den of Geek NYCC 2019 Special Edition Magazine right here!

Joseph Baxter is a contributor for Den of Geek and Syfy Wire. You can find his work here. Follow him on Twitter @josbaxter.

Michael Ahr is a writer, reviewer, and podcaster here at Den of Geek; you can check out his work here or follow him on Twitter (@mikescifi).

Alexander Ludwig on Vikings Season 6; History
NewsJoseph BaxterMichael Ahr
Dec 26, 2019

Star Wars Movies Disney+ Streaming Guide

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Disney+ is the new streaming home for all things Star Wars. Here is what you can expect when you log on.

A galaxy far, far away is about to become a lot closer. One of the chief benefits of Disney launching their own streaming service in Disney+, is that a lot of their premier franchises will all soon share the same home. The Star Wars and Lucasfilm collection is one of the series that will benefit the most when Disney+ premieres on Nov. 12.

Star Wars is a series of films that demands to be watched sequentially (or in whatever order you choose regarding the originals and the prequels). Now Disney+ represents and opportunity for the streaming world to present Star Wars the right way. Disney+ doesn't have the rights to every single bit of Star Wars content just yet, but on the movie side of things, it's pretty close. Both the original trilogy and prequels are present here with more movies from the new Star Wars era set to be arrive soon. 

Stream everything Star Warswith a FREE TRIAL of Disney+, on us!

Here are all the Star Wars movies you can find on Disney+Just a note: Den of Geek may receive a commission from links on this page.

Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace

The Phantom Menace is rightfully considered the bottom of the barrel of Star Warsmovies. Sure, it's nice to begin your marathon with the story of Anakin Skywalker but be warned that little Ani might ruin Darth Vader for you...And then there are the trade blockades, votes of no confidence, what feels like six hours of underwater chase scenes, and the dreaded Jar Jar Binks, who might have seemed like a good idea at the time but is perhaps the most despised supporting character in the entire saga.

At least we get that excellent climactic duel between Qui-Gon Jinn, Obi-Wan Kenobi, and Darth Maul. That epic fight almost makes the first hour and change worth it. Almost.

Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones

Do you hate sand? Then, boy, do we have a protagonist for you. Attack of the Clones is a marked improvement over The Phantom Menace and introduces one of the more fascinating galactic conflicts in Star Wars history with the Clone Wars. The movie doesn't exploit the Clone Wars concept enough to save a pretty lackluster film but at least there's less Jar Jar.

What we do get are the first hints of Anakin's eventual fall to the dark side, from his disagreements with Obi-Wan to his confused feelings about Padme. Then there's the whole bit with his mother, which really marks Darth Vader's first evil act in the saga. Anakin starts to get a taste for massacres here. You could do much worse than Attack of the Clones, although your mileage will definitely vary. Some fans really hate this movie. 

Star Wars: The Clone Wars

Besides all of the adventures starring your favorite prequel Jedi like Obi-Wan, Anakin, Yoda, and Mace Windu, The Clone Wars is also the story of Ahsoka Tano, Anakin's young Jedi Padawan. Watch a couple of episodes and you'll quickly discover why Ahsoka is one of the best characters in Star Wars

Along the way, fans will also be reunited with Darth Maul! You're probably asking how that's possible. The Clone Wars explains all that while also expanding Maul's story beyond his quest to destroy the Jedi. Now, he wants to kill his former Sith master, too!

Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith

Now, this is more like it. Revenge of the Sith features many of the same drawbacks as the other prequels. Its dialogue is rough and there's an overreliance on CGI. It does, however, have something that no other prequel does: a fitting climax. The movie covers much of the end of the Clone Wars, including a battle on the planet Utapau (a location George Lucas meant to use in A New Hope, but didn't) and the Wookiee homeworld of Kashyyyk, where a young Han Solo would have made a cameo had Lucas not come to his senses. 

It also features Anakin turning against the Jedi, joining the Sith, killing a bunch of kids at the Jedi Temple, and all-around being a bad dude. This forces Obi-Wan's hand, and he travels to the volcano planet Mustafar to confront his former apprentice once and for all. The result of this duel leaves Anakin horribly scarred and mutilated. At last, he is reborn as Darth Vader.

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Star Wars standalone films seemed like a dicey proposition in the early days of Disney's takeover. Would audiences still care about one-off movies set outside the structure of a trilogy? Well, if they're as good as Rogue One, then yes, absolutely. Rogue One reveals the endless possibilities of non-trilogy films set in a galaxy far, far away. More importantly, it finally gets the concept of a Star Wars prequel right. 

Rogue One tells the story of Jyn Erso, the criminal-turned-rebel-spy who led a mission into the belly of the beast to steal the Death Star plans that would become the McGuffin of the first Star Wars film. But in Rogue One, those plans are actually front and center. Jyn, secret agent Cassian Andor, Force devotees Chirrut Imwe and Baze Malbus, Imperial defector Bodhi Rook, and the hilarious droid K-2SO risk it all to acquire the plans that will lead to the destruction of the Empire's ultimate weapon. 

Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope

The original Star Wars. The only movie in the saga that was once officially only called Star Wars with no subtitle or episode title after it. Even after all these years, it remains a stunning storytelling and technical achievement. This is the space opera you're looking for.

A New Hope is the story of a band of Rebels who must stand up against an evil and oppressive Empire. We meet Princess Leia, a diplomat-turned-soldier willing to die for the Rebel cause; R2-D2 and C-3PO, the robotic chorus of this grand adventure; Han Solo, a smuggler who says he's only in it for the money but actually has a heart of gold; Chewbacca, Solo's faithful companion and walking carpet; Obi-Wan Kenobi, an old hermit living on a desert world who harbors a mysterious and epic past; and, of course, Luke Skywalker, the farm boy who is destined to defeat the Empire and bring about the end of the Sith. 

Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back

The Empire Strikes Back is many fans and critics' choice for best Star Wars film ever. It's not hard to see why. The Empire Strikes Back is a remarkable middle chapter for the franchise and makes the absolute most of its extended cast of characters and nails the concept of a mid-series climax.

By the time we rejoin our heroes on the ice planet Hoth, the victory at Yavin is a distant memory. The Rebels are in hiding and the resurgent Empire is out for blood. Darth Vader has a personal mission, too: to find Luke Skywalker, the young Rebel hero who destroyed the Death Star. But how to lure the boy into a trap? By using Han and Leia as bait. The Empire Strikes Back is one of the greatest sequels in history and arguably the best science fiction movie ever made. To miss this one is to miss what makes Star Wars a truly great franchise. 

Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi

Return of the Jedi faces a huge burden as it attempts to wrap up a story beautifully told in the previous two films. It's not a perfect movie but it is a near perfect conclusion to the initial trilogy. Fittingly, this threequel opens right where the entire saga began: with two droids walking through Tatooine. This time, it's as part of a plan to spring Han from Jabba the Hutt's palace in the desert. Tons of undercover hijinks ensue for the first hour of the movie.

Once Han is back on the Falcon, it's time to focus on the Empire, which is building a second Death Star in an effort to finally obliterate the Rebellion. To ensure that everything goes as planned, the Emperor himself arrives on the space station to oversee construction. It's on this giant moon-sized weapon where Luke will face Darth Vader for the last time as well as make the ultimate choice: become a Jedi or allow himself to fall to the dark side. 

Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens

J.J. Abrams' next chapter in the Star Wars story came out more than 30 years after the conclusion of Return of the Jedi and in many ways feels like it could have been released 20 minutes after. It's remarkable how well The Force Awakens fits in with the Original Trilogy and the Star Warsmythos. The movie may feel a bit too close to the original Star Wars for some but it's hard to argue that it doesn't absolutely nail the spirit of the movies fans fell in love with in the first place. 

The Force Awakens deals with a whole new cast of characters: Rey, an orphan living on the wasteland of Jakku; Finn, a Stormtrooper who never had a choice but to join the First Order; and Poe Dameron, the greatest starfighter pilot in the galaxy. Their stories converge as the First Order begins its attack on the New Republic.

FREE TRIAL of Disney+: Stream Star Warsfree, right here!

Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi

Rian Johnson's The Last Jedi is a classic middle chapter of the series. It changes the tone and perspective of everything that came before it. "Let the past die, kill it if you have to," Kylo Ren says. And Johnson happily obliges.

further reading: The Last Jedi Easter Eggs and Reference Guide

There are plenty of twists and turns in The Last Jedi, none of them worth spoiling. What we will say is that this is a very bold chapter of the Star Warssaga. It does more to move the story forward than any other Disney-produced Star Wars films and is arguably the best of the new movies.

Star Wars Movies Yet to Arrive to Disney+

Solo: A Star Wars Story - arrives on July 9, 2020

Listen to the latest Star Wars Blaster Canon podcast:

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Alec Bojalad is TV Editor at Den of Geek and TCA member. Read more of his stuff here. Follow him at his creatively-named Twitter handle @alecbojalad

Star Wars Movies Disney+
FeatureAlec Bojalad
Dec 26, 2019

Star Wars: The Mandalorians and Their Symbol Explained

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Who are the Mandalorians? Here's a guide to what you need to know about the Star Wars universe's toughest warrior race!

This Star Wars article contains mild spoilers for The Mandalorian.

In the first Star Wars live-action series, The Mandalorian, a lone gunslinger becomes the latest legend of the galaxy far, far away and a nightmare for fugitives in the Outer Rim planets. Pedro Pascal plays the titular Mandalorian, a masked bounty hunter with a mysterious identity we've yet to discover. As we learn early on in the show, the legacy of his people follows him on his mission.

Mando is part of a Mandalorian tribe, which includes an Armorer who coincidentally looks a lot like a Mand'alor, traditionally the leader and toughest warrior of the clan. Their rallying symbol is the skull of a mythosaur, a giant sea creature that once served as a mount for the ancient Mandalorians (perhaps a reference to the dinosaur Boba Fett rode in his first appearance in The Star Wars Holiday Special), and a symbol of just how far back the history of this iconic people goes.

With The Mandalorian exploring the many facets of Mandalorian history, we thought it would be a good time to talk about the basics of who these people are in Star Wars canon and how they're connected to Boba Fett and Mando. 

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Origins and the Mandalorian Wars

As one might guess from their formidable armor, the Mandalorians began as a group built around conquering others. From their homeworld of Mandalore near the outer reaches of the galaxy, they expanded to many other star systems. One of the most famous of these is Concord Dawn, a name which has survived several different continuity shuffles. These conquered planets became the Mandalore sector. While the Mandalorians also took over other worlds outside of it, this sector was their base of power for most of galactic history. 

Among their enemies were the Jedi, whose Force abilities were a match for the Mandalorians’ specialized armor. In response, the Mandalorians modified their standard armor to include beskar steel, which can deflect blows from a lightsaber, and diversified their arsenal away from blasters. Since Jedi are trained to deflect blaster shots, other weapons were more likely to take them by surprise. 

Read More: Star Wars TV Series Disney+ Streaming Guide

Mandalorians had a code of honor unique to themselves, mostly based around martial traditions. Single combat could be used to settle disputes, and facing strong opponents was considered the most noble possible path in life. They were as comfortable with hand-to-hand combat as with blasters. The Darksaber, a custom lightsaber created by Mand'alor Tarre Vizsla, a Mandalorian Jedi, would later become a signature weapon in the hands of the planet’s leadership in the time of the Empire. 

Jango Fett, Boba's father, claimed to have been born on Concord Dawn, but even in canon, this is considered a possible lie from an untrustworthy man. We know Boba Fett was a clone created on Kamino, so his Mandalorian lineage is even more questionable since the Prequels.

The Clone Wars

Mandalorian aggression grew so perilous that their war against the Jedi and other rivals devastated their planet. Mandalore became an apocalyptic wasteland, with some of the most powerful Mandalorian clans scattering to other planets. A new faction, the New Mandalorians, arose with the specific goal of pivoting their society to total pacifism to prevent further damage. This faction, lead by Duchess Satine Kryse and supported by the Republic via Jedi Knights Obi-Wan Kenobi and Qui-Gon Jinn, eventually took control of planet. 

Kryze transformed the dead wastes of Mandalore into shining, homogenous cities. Meanwhile, under cover of the Clone Wars, another Mandalorian faction was rising. Death Watch, founded by Pre Vizsla, descendant of the old Mand'alor, was intent on returning to the more violent practices of the previous Mandalorians. At the end of a messy conflict involving both the Jedi and the Sith, ex-Death Watch soldier Bo-Katan Kryze took the throne. Mandalore was, again, destabilized. 

Read More: Star Wars Movies Disney+ Streaming Guide

This era of Mandalorian history was completely rewritten for The Clone Wars animated series. Although both were ostensibly part of the pre-Disney canon, the television show took priority over what had been previously established in the Legends timeline -- primarily that the Mandalorians had fought alongside the Separatists against the Republic during the Clone Wars. Unsurprisingly, the retconned pacifist New Mandalorians established in The Clone Wars were, for a short time, a new and controversial idea in Star Wars fandom. 

The Dark Times

When the Empire rose to power, they found a willing ally and puppet leader in Mandalorian super commando Gar Saxon, who was named Imperial Viceroy of Mandalore. For a time, the planet was totally under Imperial control.

Fortunately, Rebel weapons expert Sabine Wren, an estranged member of a Mandalorian clan who hadn’t bowed to the Empire, defeated Saxon in combat. Doing so wasn’t just a personal victory, but a symbolic claiming of the Mandalorian legacy. 

In the same year the Rebels destroyed the first Death Star, another Mandalorian civil war began. In part due to Sabine, the Imperial-allied leaders were overthrown and Bo-Katan Kryze, the late Duchess Satine's sister, returned to power. 

Boba Fett

During the Galactic Civil War, the most famous Mandalorian was undoubtedly Boba Fett. A high-profile bounty hunter, he was set on the trail of Luke Skywalker and other Rebel heroes several times during the war, including one explosive confrontation with the young Rebel and future Jedi in Obi-Wan's hut on Tatooine. 

Boba Fett's clone upbringing didn’t have much of a connection with the culture of the Mandalore system. In fact, since the earliest days of the Expanded Universe, Boba's Mandalorian background was called into question. At one point in the Legends timeline, it was suggested that "Boba Fett" was the new identity of an exiled Mandalorian named Jaster Mereel, who had committed treason against his people.

Read More: Everything You Need to Know About Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker

This second identity was later retconned in Attack of the Clones, of course. No matter his origin, the effectiveness and striking silhouette of Boba Fett's armor made him synonymous with the Mandalorian tradition of warriors equipped to face down Jedi. That armor might also be strong enough to help Boba survive in the sarlacc pit...

The Mandalorian

The Mandaloriantakes place five years after Return of the Jedi. The Rebel Alliance has become the New Republic and has ousted the remnants of the Empire from most of the galaxy. Only Imperial warlords and smaller cells of the Emperor's forces remain, and mostly in the Outer Rim where the New Republic doesn't yet have enough pull.

In episode 3, we learn that the Empire has “shattered” Mandalore and its people fell victim to a "Great Purge" just like the Jedi did. This is why the Mandalorians on the show are forced to live underground, and only one of their members ever leave their lair at a time, so as to not draw attention to the larger group.

Like in the Star Wars Expanded Universe, these underground Mandalorians have their own ideas of right and wrong. In this case, it's codified as the Way of the Mand'alor. While the status of their Manda’lor is unknown, the Armorer has authority over the other Mandalorians, and at one point reminds them of one of the tenets of their culture: it's critical to never remove the helmet or have it removed by others. "This is the Way," she reminds them. 

Mandalorians are mostly -- but not always -- human. People of any species can technically be part of the culture if they follow its tenets. We’ve seen only human Mandalorians so far, but in the Legends timeline, they varied greatly. Since she has horns on her helmet, it’s possible the Armorer is a Zabrak -- or just likes the intimidation factor of the horns. 

It remains to be seen if this warrior race will ever be able to regroup and grow its numbers -- the foundlings they protect and raise as Mandalorians may be their last hope -- but now that this tribe is out in the open after the climax of episode 3, who knows what might be next for the group. Hopefully, the show will continue to explore more about this culture and perhaps even open a path for them to return to Mandalore.

Listen to the latest Star Wars Blaster Canon podcast:

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Megan Crouse writes about Star Wars and pop culture for StarWars.com, Star Wars Insider, and Den of Geek. Read more of her work here. Find her on Twitter @blogfullofwords.

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Star Wars: The Mandalorian
FeatureMegan Crouse
Dec 26, 2019

Star Wars: The Mandalorian Timeline Explained

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The Mandalorian, the new Star Wars live-action series, is set during a generally unexplored era of the canon timeline. Let's discuss.

This Star Wars article contains spoilers for The Mandalorian.

The first live-action Star Wars series has hit Disney+ with some unexpected turns and new mysteries about the galaxy far, far away that should keep viewers buzzing throughout the season. One thing fans are wondering about The Mandalorian is when exactly it takes place. The show hasn't addressed its place in the timeline directly, but we're here to help guide you through when the Mandalorian's adventures are happening. 

The Mandalorian is set approximately five years after the fall of the Empire in Return of the Jedi but before the rise of the First Order in The Force Awakens, bridging the gap betwen the two trilogies. While this time period was heavily explored in the Legends (old canon) timeline, it remains a bit hazy in the current continuity. 

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Here's what we do know: the Rebel Alliance has reorganized itself into the New Republic, operating out of its new capital on the planet Chandrila, the home of Mon Mothma, Rebel leader and first Chancellor of the new galactic government. As you can imagine, in a galaxy as vast as the setting of Star Wars, the rise of the New Republic has been great for some planets but not for all.

While many systems have been freed from the Emperor's tyranny, a remnant of the Empire still remains outside of the New Republic's influence, even after the Battle of Jakku. This means that the faraway planets the Mandalorian frequents are still either under the control of surviving Imperial warlords, have been left to fend for themselves, or have been plunged into lawlessness after the Battle of Endor. 

Most of the context we have for this time period comes from other parts of the Expanded Universe, namely the books and comics. The Battle of Jakku -- which took place in Chuck Wendig's Aftermath novels -- was the final conflict of the Galactic Civil War, after which the Empire finally surrendered, vanishing from the Republic and into the Unknown Regions, where they rebuilt their war machine and reorganized as the First Order. 

Read More: A Guide to the Mandalorians and Their History

As far as The Mandalorian's Imperials go, in the first three episodes, we get a look at one Imperial enclave, the headquarters of the mysterious Client (Werner Herzog), which is guarded by grimy and dusty stormtroopers. The client wears the Empire's sigil. He's an Imperial officer but not the one in charge of the planet Nevarro, where much of the show is set. The Client's boss is, in fact, Moff Gideon (Giancarlo Esposito), who commands -- at the very least -- a platoon of stormtroopers and high-tech Death Troopers. He reveals himself as the big bad of the piece late into the first season, an intimidating villain clad in black who doesn't hesitate to shoot down all who oppose or fail him (as the Client learns). After all, it's only through fear that the remaning Imperial warlords can keep their hold on the Outer Rim.

Fortunately, it's a time of relative peace for the rest of the galaxy. The New Republic is in control, but chaos still reigns in the farthest reaches of space. This is both good and bad news for the Mandalorian. 

John Saavedra is an associate editor at Den of Geek. Read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @johnsjr9.

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Star Wars Mandalorian Timeline
FeatureJohn Saavedra
Dec 26, 2019

Arrow Season 8 Episode 8 Return Date, Trailer, Cast, Episodes, News, and Story Details

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Oliver Queen and his crime-fighting crew return for one final season with Arrow season 8! Here's everything you need to know.

It's been a rough year for Oliver, Felicity, John, and the rest of Team Arrow (what's left of it, anyway), but the crime-fighting crew will push forward for Arrow season 8. And with a new season comes new challenges, certainly the biggest ones of all for Oliver Queen. With Crisis on Infinite Earths looming for the entire Arrowverse, might the life of Green Arrow be on the chopping block? It's very possible, especially considering that Arrow Season 8 is the show's final season. 

Arrow Season 8 Return Date

The next episode of Arrow is called "Crisis on Infinite Earths: Part Four" and it airs on Jan. 14. Here's what we know about it...

"Stuck in the Vanishing Point, the Paragons search for a way to escape. The futility of the situation is compounded by The Flash’s (guest star Grant Gustin) disappearance.  However, hope appears in the form of Oliver (Stephen Amell), who reveals that he has become something else. Meanwhile, the origin stories for The Monitor (guest star LaMonica Garrett) and Anti-Monitor are revealed."

Check out the promo...

Arrow Season 8 Episodes

Arrow Season 8 will consist of 10 episodes. Here's the confirmed information we have about them so far, and we'll continue to update this as more information about each episode becomes available.

Arrow Season 8 Episode 1: Starling City

"While trying to decipher The Monitor’s (guest star LaMonica Garrett) mission, Oliver (Stephen Amell) returns to Starling City where he encounters familiar faces. Meanwhile, Mia (Katherine McNamara) and William’s (Ben Lewis) team clash with a new foe."

air date: 10/15/19

Read our review of "Starling City" here.

Arrow Season 8 Episode 2: Welcome to Hong Kong

"Oliver (Stephen Amell), John (David Ramsey), Laurel (Katie Cassidy Rogers), and Tatsu (guest star Rila Fukushima) seek out an important person within The Monitor’s (guest star LaMonica Garrett) plan. Connor (Joseph David Jones) has a heart to heart with his brother (guest star Charlie Barnett)."

air date: 10/22/19

Read our review of "Welcome to Hong Kong" here.

Arrow Season 8 Episode 3: Leap of Faith

"Reunited with his sister, Oliver (Stephen Amell) and Thea (guest star Willa Holland) find themselves searching through a familiar maze of catacombs.  Meanwhile, John (David Ramsey) and Lyla (guest star Audrey Marie Anderson) partner on a special ops mission."

Katie Cassidy will make her directorial debut for this episode.

air date: 10/29/19

Read our review of "Leap of Faith" here.

Arrow Season 8 Episode 4: Present Tense

"When a mysterious new Deathstroke appears in Star City, Oliver (Stephen Amell) and Team Arrow insist on taking down this villain themselves.  Meanwhile reeling from the loss of one of their own, the future Team Arrow figures out a new way to try and stop JJ."

air date: 11/5/19

read our review of "Present Tense" here.

Arrow Season 8 Episode 5: Prochnost

"Upon learning the key to oppose The Monitor (guest star LaMonica Garrett), Oliver (Stephen Amell) and team return to Russia on a mission to gather the necessary materials. Connor (Joseph David-Jones) reunites with a figure from his past."

air date: 11/19/19

read our review of "Prochnost" right here.

Arrow Season 8 Episode 6: Reset

"After being double-crossed by Lyla (guest star Audrey Marie Anderson), Oliver (Stephen Amell) finds himself facing a life or death situation that seems very familiar.  Laurel (Katie Cassidy) has the opportunity to make amends with the past."

David Ramsey will make his sophomore directorial outting with this episode, following up on last season's successful Past Sins. We spoke to him about his experiences directing right here.

air date: 11/26/19

read our review of "Reset" here.

Arrow Season 8 Episode 7: Purgatory

"Oliver’s (Stephen Amell) mission takes him to Lian Yu where he tries to ignore the repercussions of the looming Crisis until he receives help from an old friend. Meanwhile, a united Team Arrow faces a recognizable villain."

air date: 12/3/19

read our review of "Purgatory" here.

Arrow Season 8 Episode 8: Crisis on Infinite Earths

"Stuck in the Vanishing Point, the Paragons search for a way to escape. The futility of the situation is compounded by The Flash’s (guest star Grant Gustin) disappearance.  However, hope appears in the form of Oliver (Stephen Amell), who reveals that he has become something else. Meanwhile, the origin stories for The Monitor (guest star LaMonica Garrett) and Anti-Monitor are revealed."

air date: 1/14/20

Beloved comics writer and Crisis on Infinite Earths mastermind Marv Wolfman will co-write this episode with Marc Guggenheim. This should be pretty momentous, to say the least.

Arrow Season 8 Episode 9: Green Arrow and the Canaries

This episode will serve as the backdoor pilot for the Green Arrow and the Canaries spinoff series.

air date: 1/21/20

Arrow Season 8 Episode 10: Fadeout

Arrow’s final episode has revealed its rather ominous title, “Fadeout.”

air date: 1/28/20

Marc Guggenheim, the show’s consulting producer, who co-wrote the fletchings-filled finale with Beth Schwartz, has posted the script cover for Season 8, Episode 10, and, in a cheeky tease, the last page of said script – even if it’s just a single sentence that’s completely redacted, save for the final line, “Of possibility.” It's certainly more auspicious than the title, which (at the current point of a few episodes into the run,) feels like a play on Oliver Queen's seemingly-inevitable Crisis-centric demise.

air date: 1/28/20

Arrow Season 8 Cast

Paul Blackthorne will reprise his former series-regular role as Quentin Lance for multiple Season 8 episodes, reports TV Line. The police detective character, the father of embattled sisters Laurel and Sara, was initially an adversary to Oliver Queen’s vigilante exploits, eventually becoming a key ally to Team Arrow until he was killed by Ricardo Diaz in the Season 6 finale. Blackthorne, an English actor, subsequently moved on to NBC’s ghostly crime procedural series, The InBetween, which ran earlier this year, but was recently cancelled. However, he’ll soon be seen as part of a sci-fi series titled Home Invasion, joined by names like Morena Baccarin and John Noble.

Emily Bett Rickards will be back for the series finale, which is big news for Team Arrow.

Colton Haynes will be reprising his role as Roy for the show's final season, as EW confirmed. Roy was previously a series regular in season 7 before getting bumped from regular status in season 8. Thankfully, he won't disappear altogether as Roy will be a recurring character throughout the season. 

Charlie Barnett (Russian Doll) has joined the cast for Arrow's final season as John Diggle Jr., the leader of the Deathstroke Gang in the future timeline, which means he'll face off against Mia and Connor Hawke at some point. We have more info on Diggle's sons right here.

Other new series regulars include Katherine McNamara, Joseph David-Jones, and Ben Lewis as Mia Smoak, Connor Hawke, and Oliver Queen’s adopted son, William Clayton, respectively.

The season premiere saw Colin Donnell guest star as Tommy Merlyn, joined by, Josh Segarra, who returned as Adrian Chase.

“Adrian Chase comes back in a different way than expected,” showrunner/executive producer Beth Schwartz told EW, who first broke the news of the unexpected guest stars. “We’re really excited about that because obviously he’s one of our favorite villains.” 

Arrow executive producer Marc Guggenheim added that while Donnell is indeed back as Tommy Merlyn, he  is “not coming back as the Tommy we know.”

Willa Holland (aka Thea Queen) will be returning in more than one episode, as well!

As for everyone else and any potential new additions? We'll have to wait and see! 

Arrow Season 8 Trailer

Arrow Season 8 Release Date

Arrowseason 8 will premiere on Tuesday, Oct. 15 at 9 pm.

Arrow Season 8 Story

Here's the official synopsis for Arrow season 8.

After a violent shipwreck, billionaire playboy Oliver Queen (Stephen Amell) was missing and presumed dead for five years before being discovered alive on a remote island in the North China Sea. He returned home to Star City, bent on righting the wrongs done by his family and fighting injustice. As the Green Arrow, Oliver successfully saved his city with the help of his team including former soldier John Diggle (David Ramsey), computer-science expert Felicity Smoak (Emily Bett Rickards), former protégé Roy Harper (Colton Haynes), street-savvy Rene Ramirez (Rick Gonzalez), metahuman Dinah Drake (Juliana Harkavy), brilliant inventor Curtis Holt (Echo Kellum) and Earth-2 Laurel Lance (Katie Cassidy). In the wake of discovering what his future holds, Oliver will find himself pit against his most challenging battle yet, one that will leave the multiverse hanging in the balance. In Arrow’s final season, Oliver Queen is forced to confront the reality of what it means to be a hero.

At Arrow's 2019 Summer TCA press tour appearance, producer Marc Guggenheim revealed two important things about the timeline of Arrow season 8. The season will open about a week after the end of season 7. That's a bit of a departure from years' past which have opened up months after. We spoke to David Ramsey about some other details, too.

What Arrow season 8 will have in store for its heroes is anybody's guess at the moment, but we do know that, at the very least, the show will feature some sort of lead up to and deal with the aftershocks of this year's Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover event, which promises to shake the Arrowverse to its very core. Life is sure to change for Ollie, especially for an event as famous as DC's very first Crisis. As some of you know, these sorts of multiverse-spanning crossovers are known to claim lives. We do know that Arrow's Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover event will take place during episode 8.

We'll keep you updated as we hear more about Arrow season 8. In the meantime, check out our primer on what exactly Crisis on Infinite Earths means for the Arrowverse!

Mike Cecchini is the Editor in Chief of Den of Geek. You can read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @wayoutstuff.

Read and download the Den of Geek NYCC 2019 Special Edition Magazine right here!

Arrow Season 8 News
NewsMike CecchiniJoseph Baxter
Dec 26, 2019

Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7 Release Date, Trailers, Story, and News

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Everything you need to know about Star Wars: The Clone Wars season 7, including latest news, trailers, release date, and much more!

Dave Filoni took to the stage during the Star Wars: The Clone Wars 10th Anniversary panel at SDCC 2018 to announce that the beloved animated series is returning to our television sets! The Clone Wars season 7 will consist of 12 new episodes on Disney+, which is now the exclusive home for Star Wars TV shows

Created by George Lucas, the show first aired in 2008. It followed the adventures of Anakin Skywalker, Obi-Wan Kenobi, and Padmé Amidala while introducing major new characters like Jedi Padawan Ahsoka Tano and Captain Rex. The Clone Wars also brought fan-favorite Darth Maul back from the dead. The series was loved by many fans to say the least.

Stream Star Wars shows with a FREE TRIAL of Disney+, right here!

But it was never finished. The Clone Wars ended after five seasons — just as Ahsoka left the Jedi Order. A few post-season five episodes were later released as “The Lost Missions,” but the story wasn’t over. Now, Filoni, who worked helmed the original series, will get a chance to complete that story.

"I’m happy for the opportunity to define these things and the end of this part of the Clone War," said Filoni to StarWars.com. "It also makes me reflect on all the people that I got to work with over the years. It reinforces the things I learned from George. It reminds me of the important elements that go into making Star Wars. So, it’s nice on several levels, and I think for the crew that’s still here that worked on Clone Wars, they feel that, as well."

Here's everything you need to know about the new season:

Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7 Release Date

As revealed during D23 2019, Star Wars: The Clone Wars season 7 will arrive on Disney+ in February 2020!

Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7 Trailer

The Clone Wars panel at Star Wars Celebration revealed three new clips as well as a brand new trailer. Check out all of the footage below:

The first trailer premiered at SDCC 2018. Check it out below:

Here's a complete release calendar of upcoming Star Wars movies and TV series.

Listen to the latest Star Wars Blaster Canon podcast:

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Acast | RSS

Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7 Story

During the Star Wars: The Clone Wars season 7 panel at Star Wars Celebration Chicago, exec producer Dave Filoni revealed some plot details for the upcoming season.

read more: The Best Episodes of The Clone Wars

Season 7 comes from several storylines that have gone unfulfilled in the Star Warsexpanded universe history. One of the central storylines comes from the "Bad Batch" concept teased a few years ago after the show was canceled. Also included in the 12-episode The Clone Wars season 7 will be a concept from a scrapped LucasArts Star Wars game, as Ahsoka learns to live in Coruscant's seedy Level 1313.

The new season will also cover the Siege of Mandalore, one of the final battles of the Clone Wars in which the Republic liberated Mandalore from Maul. 

At Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019, producers showed three clips of the upcoming season. The first was a standard, yet inventive clip in which a squadron of clones advanced on some droids, taking many out with little EMP bombs. The second featured Ahsoka riding a hover-cycle vehicle through Coruscant before it mysteriously malfunctions.

Finally, the most significant clip was the reunion between Anakin Skywalker and Ahsoka for the first time since the latter left the Jedi Order. Ahsoka is touched to see how the clone soldiers still respect her as a commander.

Read More: How Star Wars: The Clone Wars Can Be a Better Show

Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7 Poster

Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7

More news on the return of Star Wars: The Clone Wars as we hear it!

John Saavedra is an associate editor at Den of Geek. Read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @johnsjr9

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Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7 Trailer, Release Date, News
NewsJohn Saavedra
Dec 26, 2019

Crisis on Infinite Earths: Trailer, Release Date, Cast, Characters, and News

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This year's Arrowverse crossover is none other than DC Comics classic, Crisis on Infinite Earths. Here's everything you need to know.

Crisis on Infinite Earths is here. And it's not just here, it's here with a vengeance. The 2019 Arrowverse crossover has delivered on every single promise from its famed comic book source material, as well as all the heavy dramatic beats that the TV shows have been promising since the first ever episode of The Flash. We're now more than halfway through, and the stakes have never been higher. Not just on superhero TV, but perhaps in TV of any kind!

Here's everything you need to know about how to watch Crisis on Infinite Earths, and all the ways you can keep up with our coverage.

Crisis on Infinite Earths Release Date

Here's the full Crisis on Infinite Earths schedule. Those first three episodes have already aired, but you can watch them for free on the CW Seed app.

SUPERGIRL – Sunday, December 8, 2019 (8:00-9:00pm ET/PT). Read our review of Part One here.

BATWOMAN – Monday, December 9, 2019 (8:00-9:00pm ET/PT). Read our review of Part Two here!

THE FLASH – Tuesday, December 10, 2019 (8:00-9:00pm ET/PT). Read our review of Part Three here!

Crisis on Infinite Earths Return Date

Ah, but there are still two episodes to come, and they'll both air in January to kick off a season of winter TV unlike any other. Here's when Crisis on Infinite Earths comes back to finish its epic, cosmic story. Here are the dates, along with the summaries of the episodes!

ARROW – Tuesday, January 14, 2020 (8:00-9:00pm ET/PT)

"Stuck in the Vanishing Point, the Paragons search for a way to escape. The futility of the situation is compounded by The Flash’s (guest star Grant Gustin) disappearance.  However, hope appears in the form of Oliver (Stephen Amell), who reveals that he has become something else. Meanwhile, the origin stories for The Monitor (guest star LaMonica Garrett) and Anti-Monitor are revealed."

DC’S LEGENDS OF TOMORROW – Tuesday, January 14, 2020 (9:00-10:00pm ET/PT)

“Worlds lived, worlds died.  Nothing will ever be the same.” 

Crisis on Infinite Earths Trailer

Need a preview of what's coming next? Here's a sneak peek of the return of Crisis on Infinite Earthsin January.

Here's the original Crisis on Infinite Earths trailer, which contains lots of footage from those first three episodes.

Crisis on Infinite Earths Story

Without getting into TOO many spoilers, here are the official episode synopses courtesy of the CW, with links to some of our stories that help explain all of the world ending craziness of the Arrowverse Crisis!

Supergirl: Crisis on Infinite Earths - Part One

"The Monitor (guest star LaMonica Garrett) sends Harbinger (guest star Audrey Marie Anderson) to gather the worlds’ greatest heroes - Supergirl (Melissa Benoist), The Flash (guest star Grant Gustin), Green Arrow (guest star Stephen Amell), Batwoman (guest star Ruby Rose), White Canary (guest star Caity Lotz), The Atom (guest star Brandon Routh) and Superman (guest star Tyler Hoechlin) - in preparation for the impending Crisis.  With their worlds in imminent danger, the superheroes suit up for battle while J’onn (David Harewood) and Alex (Chyler Leigh) recruit Lena (Katie McGrath) to help them find a way to save the people of Earth-38."

We discuss that major spoiler death right here.

And check out our breakdown of all the DC Comics Easter eggs in the first part right here!

Batwoman: Crisis on Infinite Earths - Part Two

"The group uses Ray’s (guest star Brandon Routh) invention to track new recruits to help save the universe. The Monitor (guest star LaMonica Garrett) sends Iris (guest star Candice Patton), Clark (guest star Tyler Hoechlin) and Lois (guest star Elizabeth Tulloch) in search of a mysterious Kryptonian, while Kate (Ruby Rose) and Kara (guest star Melissa Benoist) head out to find Bruce Wayne (guest star Kevin Conroy). In addition, Mia (guest star Katherine McNamara) challenges Sara (guest star Caity Lotz), Rory (guest star Dominic Purcell) discovers a hidden talent, and Lex Luthor (guest star Jon Cryer) returns."

Check out every Easter egg in part two right here!

Why did Kate hold on to that piece of Kryptonite, anyway?

The Flash: Crisis on Infinite Earths - Part Three

"Pariah (Tom Cavanagh) enlists Black Lightning (guest star Cress Williams) to help stop the Anti-Monitor (guest star LaMonica Garrett) after Flash-90 (guest star John Wesley Shipp) shares what he learned from his battle in Elseworlds. With the help of Black Lightning, Barry (Grant Gustin), Cisco (Carlos Valdes), and Killer Frost (Danielle Panabaker) come up with a plan that could save them all. Meanwhile, Iris (Candice Patton) has a heart-to-heart with Ryan Choi (guest star Osric Chau), while Oliver (guest star Stephen Amell) and Diggle (guest star David Ramsey) return to an old familiar stomping ground."

This episode contained so much in its final moments that we had to write an article just to get through all of that.

We broke down all of the DC Comics Easter Eggs in Part Three here!

Who is Jim Corrigan and what does he want with Oliver Queen?

And that's only for the first three chapters! Two more will air in January, which will likely have even greater repercussions. The possibilities, of course, are infinite, but there are a few things we can glean from this. It's possible that the Arrowverse Crisis on Infinite Earths story will probably do a little bit of housekeeping and finally tidy up a few things that have been annoying fans, namely that Supergirl takes place on a different Earth from The FlashArrow, and Legends of Tomorrow (a necessity since Kara's show started on another network), and perhaps Black Lightning will probably follow suit (because that show was initially conceived for another network before moving to the CW). It's possible that all those realities to be merged by the end of this, but at the very least, it will probably apply to Supergirl.

LaMonica Garrett, who plays both the Monitor and the Anti-Monitor on the crossover, says that they're sticking as close to the classic comic as they can. "It's hard to bring everything that's on the page and adapt it to the screen, but they're doing a really good job of that," he tells us in an interview. "Without going too far into details, but they're trying to stick as close to the comic book as possible."

We also went into considerable detail about what Crisis on Infinite Earths might mean for the future of the Arrowverse here.

Crisis on Infinite Earths Characters and Cast

Here's a poster that should give you a pretty good idea of the major players, but then we'll get into more detail down below!

In addition to all the regulars on every CW DC Arrowverse show involved in the crossover, there will be some pretty big guest stars.

As expected, LaMonica Garrett reprises his role as the Monitor, but he'll also take on the dual role of the Anti-Monitor! And to add another very Crisis-specific character to the proceedings, Tom Cavanagh takes on the pivotal role of Pariah.

Beloved 1960s TV Robin Burt Ward appears!

Brandon Routh once again dons the blue tights and red cape as the Superman of Kingdom Come! In other Superman-related news, Elizabeth Tulloch will return as Lois Lane. Check out that suit!

Kevin Conroy of Batman: The Animated Series appears as a version of Bruce Wayne from the future. We have more details on that right here.

Smallville favorites Tom Welling and Erica Durance reprise their roles as Clark Kent and Lois Lane! We have more details on their triumphant return to TV right here.

Supernatural's Osric Chau will be introduced as a new Atom, Ryan Choi. Ashley Scott will reprise her role of Helena Kyle, the Huntress, from the WB's 2002 Birds of Prey TV series. We have more details on their arrival here.

Audrey Marie Anderson will reprise her important Arrow role as Lyla Michaels, but as the character's name has long suggested, she's the Arrowverse version of Harbinger. Check out this very cool look at her costume!

Robert Wuhl (Alexander Knox from Tim Burton's 1989 Batman movie) appeared in a fun cameo, which we wrote about here.

Tom Ellis had a surprise appearance as Lucifer Morningstar!

Supernatural's Stephen Lobo will play Jim Corrigan, the alter ego of the Spectre. Hopefully he gets to go "full Spectre" at some point, too.

Cress Williams from Black Lightning appeared as Jefferson Pierce.

We expect LOTS more announcements like this in the coming weeks, and we'll update this as updates become available.

Mike Cecchini is the Editor in Chief of Den of Geek. You can read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @wayoutstuff.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost in Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Crisis on Infinite Earths: Arrowverse Crossover Details
NewsMike Cecchini
Dec 26, 2019

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Trailer, Release Date, Cast, Episodes, and News

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Here's everything you need to know about Legends of Tomorrow season 5.

Legends of Tomorrow, arguably the best superhero show on The CW (yep, I said it), has been renewed for another season. Yes, friends, Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 will be in your eyeballs during the early 2020 TV season.

The news was announced at the Winter Television Critics Association Tour in 2019, along with the renewal of nine other shows, including The FlashArrow, and Black Lightning. (Hopefully, this means we'll be getting even more crossover events past Crisis on Infinite Earths!) And, yes, we know what you're wondering: Supernatural was renewed for a Season 15.

“This season, we expanded our primetime schedule to six nights with the addition of Sunday -- which has been an unqualified success for the network, our affiliates and our advertisers," said CW president Mark Pedowitz. 

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Trailer

Welcome to Mr. Parker's Cul-de-Sac. Wait...what?

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Release Date

The Legends of Tomorrow season 5 premiere date is Jan. 21, 2020. But wait...you'll actually get an episode of Legends of Tomorrow BEFORE that as part of Crisis on Infinite Earths! That episode will arrive on Jan. 14, and then the "real" (is anything real?) season premiere is the following week.

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Cast

Departures are never something we want to see on this show, but here are a couple of big ones. Both Brandon Routh and Courtney Ford will be leaving the show as series regulars on Legends of Tomorrow season 5.

“Brandon and Courtney have been invaluable members of the Legends family,” executive producers Phil Klemmer, Grianne Godfree and Keto Shimizu said in a statement via Deadline. “They have always brought a level passion and collaboration to their characters and to the show — both on and off the screen – that we deeply admire and for which we are eternally grateful.”

read more: Crisis On Infinite Earths — What to Expect From the Crossover

Apparently the decision has been made to "wrap up their storyline." Routh offered a farewell statement to fans that perhaps hints that he doesn't agree with the decision entirely...

Routh will also be seen as a version of Superman on the upcoming Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover.

We wrote more about why we're not ready to see Nora Darhk go here.

EW has confirmed that Olivia Swann, who played Astra Logue, one of John Constantine's major foes, is being promoted to series regular for Legends of Tomorrow season 5. Astra first appeared last season as a figure from Constantine's past bent on giving the Legends all kinds of trouble, including releasing the spirits of Charles Manson and Genghis Khan back into the timeline. 

“A lot of what Constantine is going to be dealing with this is season is his very complicated relationship with [Astra] and a desire to save her despite all the pain and trouble she’s putting us through,” executive producer Keto Shimizu told EW.

Astra was created by Jaime Delano and John Ridgway in Hellblazer #8 (1988).

Jes Macallan will also return as a series regular for Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 (via Deadline), so expect Ava Sharpe to spend a LOT more time on the Waverider. We're okay with that!

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Story

This season will apparently delve into elements of "how fame affects people" according to some recent interviews from the showrunners. We have more details on this right here.

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episodes

We're tracking all the info we know about individual Legends of TomorrowSeason 5 episodes right here. We'll keep updating this as more information becomes available!

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 0: Crisis on Infinite Earths Part Five

"Worlds lived, worlds died.  Nothing will ever be the same.”

air date: 1/14/20

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 1: Meet the Legends

air date: 1/21/20

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 2: Miss Me, Kiss Me, Love Me

air date: 1/28/20

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 3: Slay Anything

air date: TBA

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 4: A Head of Her Time

air date: TBA

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 5: Mortal Khanbat

air date: TBA

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 6: Mr. Parker's Cul-de-Sac

air date: TBA

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 7 - Romeo v. Juliet: Dawn of Justness

air date: TBA

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 8: Zari, not Zari

air date: TBA

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 9: The Great British Fake Off

air date: TBA

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 10:  Ship Broken

air date: TBA

Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Episode 11: TBA

air date: TBA

Kayti Burt is a staff editor covering books, TV, movies, and fan culture at Den of Geek. Read more of her work here or follow her on Twitter @kaytiburt.

Read and download the Den of Geek NYCC 2019 Special Edition Magazine right here!

DC's Legends of Tomorrow Season 5 Release Date, Cast, Episodes, and News
NewsKayti Burt
Dec 26, 2019

Star Wars: Obi-Wan Kenobi TV Series - Everything You Need to Know

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It's official! Ewan McGregor will reprise his role as Obi-Wan Kenobi for a Star Wars TV series on Disney+.

"Who's more foolish, the fool...or the fool who follows him?"

While the Skywalker saga is wrapping up on the big screen with The Rise of Skywalker, Disney is getting more aggressive about expanding the small screen Star Wars universe on the Disney+ streaming service. But the latest addition to the Star Wars live action TV lineup is perhaps the most anticipated of all, as it involves the return of one of the most beloved figures in franchise history: Ewan McGregor as Obi-Wan Kenobi.

Stream your Star Wars favorites on Disney+ with a FREE TRIAL, on us!

McGregor will reprise his role as the legendary Jedi and General in a Disney+ TV series, marking the first time he's donned the robe and lightsaber since 2005's Revenge of the Sith. While the Star Wars prequels remain a divisive issue among fans, nobody ever questioned the casting of McGregor as Obi-Wan, who brought the same calm intensity to the role as its originator, Sir Alec Guinness (not to mention a dead-on approximation of Guinness' delivery). 

Debora Chow, who directed three episodes of the upcoming Disney+ series The Mandalorian, is set to direct the Obi-Wan spinoff. Chow has also directed episodes of Better Call SaulLost in Spaceand Jessica JonesTHR first broke the news.

In a statement, Lucasfilm President Kathleen Kennedy said, “We really wanted to select a director who is able to explore both the quiet determination and rich mystique of Obi-Wan in a way that folds seamlessly into the Star Wars saga. Based on her phenomenal work developing our characters in The Mandalorian, I’m absolutely confident Deborah is the right director to tell this story.”

The Obi-Wan series will be written by Hossein Amini (The Alienist). Chow, Amini, and McGregor will serve as Executive Producers alongside Kathleen Kennedy, Tracey Seaward (The Queen) and John Swartz (Rogue One: A Star Wars Story). Jason McGatlin, Lucasfilm’s Executive Vice President Production, will serve as co-producer.

Obi-Wan Story

Ewan McGregor is obviously not yet in a position to drop substantive details on the Obi-Wan TV series, but he did dish a little, in a cover story for Men's Journal, about the arc of his hermit Jedi, specifically the character's psychological state, which is undoubtedly still scarred from the massacres of Revenge of the Sith's Order 66. As McGregor states, carefully avoiding specifics:

“The storyline sits between Episode III and Episode IV.” He further explains of what's happened since the last time we saw his Obi-Wan in the former film, “the Jedi Order was falling apart. It will be interesting to take a character we know in a way and show him—Well, his arc will be quite interesting, I think, dealing with that the fact that all the Jedi were slaughtered with the end of Episode III. It’s quite something to get over.”

At Disney's D23 Expo, Kathy Kennedy of Lucasfilm officially announced the project alongside McGregor, and also provided some more details. The Kenobi series, which doesn't have an official title yet, does have scripts for all installments written. The project is set to begin filming next year.

There has long been an appetite for McGregor to return as Obi-Wan, with rumors swirling for years of a movie in development, rumors that were finally confirmed in 2017 with the news of a standalone Obi-Wan movie with Stephen Daldry directing. That project, along with several others, was quietly reshuffled following the underperformance of Solo: A Star Wars Story at the box office in 2018. Disney has since played their big screen plans for Star Wars close to the vest, choosing instead to put all the public focus on the closing chapter of the Skywalker saga with The Rise of Skywalker, presumably to deflect perceptions that the franchise was getting watered down with frequent movie releases. They've meanwhile pivoted to live action TV, with The Mandalorian looking to launch along with the Disney+ streaming service, to be followed by an untitled series that will focus on Diego Luna's Cassian Andor from Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

While details for the new show remain scarce, it's easy to imagine an ongoing story that fills in the gaps between Kenobi's self-imposed exile (and adopting the name "Ben") in the wastelands of Tattooine. And while Solo: A Star Wars Story may be the reason we didn't get the Obi-Wan movie, it coincidentally featured a cameo from one of his mortal enemies in the form of Darth Maul, essentially bridging the gap between the prequels and their rematch on an episode of Star Wars: Rebels. Guinness was 64 at the time of the original Star Wars release, while McGregor is currently 48 years of age, so they can run this one for as many seasons as they want. 

We'll update this as more details become available. The complete schedule of upcoming Star Wars movie and TV releases can be found here.

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Mike Cecchini is the Editor in Chief of Den of Geek. You can read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @wayoutstuff.

Ewan McGregor as Obi-Wan Kenobi in Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith
NewsMike Cecchini
Dec 26, 2019

Marvel's She-Hulk TV Series on Disney+: Everything You Need to Know

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Jennifer Walters, the biggest, greenest lawyer in the Marvel Universe is getting a Disney+ TV series as She-Hulk!

You'll just have to trust us on this one. Goofy name. Fun as hell character. You'll see for yourself when Marvel Studios eventually gets around to unveiling the She-Hulk TV series on Disney+. The series was announced by Kevin Feige alongside other new Marvel Disney+ shows like Ms. Marvel and Moon Knight (we also have a list of all upcoming Marvel shows here). The series was first announced at D23 back in August, but now The Hollywood Reporter has word that Jessica Gao (of Rick and Morty fame) will lead the writing team (a team which will also include Choose Your Own Disaster and The White Man's Guide to Male Writers of the Western Canon author Dana Schwartz) for the new series. If that's an indication of the kind of humor we can expect on this show, it's a perfect choice. 

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She-Hulk was created by Stan Lee and John Buscema in 1980 in the pages of (what else?) The Savage She Hulk. The recipient of a blood transfusion from her cousin, Bruce Banner, Jennifer Walters ends up with a certain green skin condition after receiving a batch of gamma-irradiated blood. But unlike Bruce at that point in his life, Jennifer can control her transformations. Well, she could...until she decided she just liked being She-Hulk better and spends all her time that way. And that includes when she's practicing law. The character has done time as a member of the Fantastic Four, the Defenders, and the Avengers, so there are plenty of opportunities for this series to play within the wider Marvel Universe. 

But what made She-Hulk evolved even further when writer and artist John Byrne took on the relaunched The Sensational She-Hulk book for Marvel, this time with a decidedly humorous edge. Seemingly patterning the book's rhythm after shows like Moonlighting, whose sharp-tongued main characters would often break the fourth wall, complain about the network, and address the audience about their plight, and adding a little touch of classic Looney Tunes, where characters would address the writer and artist directly about the action of the book, problems with the story, and conventions of the comic book form, She-Hulk was certainly...different. But just in case you thought it was a big deal that Deadpool pulls this kind of stuff, just know that Jen Walters was doing it years before Wade Wilson was even a twinkle in Rob Liefeld's eye.

read more: Hulk Movies Marvel Should Make

Fun fact: at one point, following the success of The Incredible Hulk TV series and its follow-up TV movies, the character was expected to be introduced in a TV movie alongside her more famous cousin. It never happened. But a big screen version directed by Larry Cohen (he of the glorious Maniac Cop trilogy) nearly did around 1990, with Brigitte Nielsen tapped for the title role. Nielsen even put on the green makeup and posed in costume, but the movie never happened.

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Will the She-Hulk TV series follow in the footsteps of that book and just lean as hard as possible into the utter ridiculousness of a 7 foot tall green lawyer in Los Angeles cracking wise at the camera the entire time and dealing with the more mundane side of the MCU? And does this mean maybe we'll get Mark Ruffalo's endlessly fun and gentle Professor Hulk to make an appearance at some point? Please make all of these things happen, Mr. Feige. The world is watching. 

We have a more thorough history of She Hulk and why she's perfect for TV right here.

Mike Cecchini is the Editor in Chief of Den of Geek. You can read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @wayoutstuff.

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Marvel's She Hulk
NewsMike Cecchini
Dec 26, 2019

Marvel's What If? Animated Series on Disney+: Everything You Need to Know

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Marvel's What If? will feature animated explorations of the MCU on Disney+.

Among its many live action Marvel TV shows in development, Disney+ will also bring fans a new animated series, What If?The show's lead actor will be Jeffrey Wright (Westworld), playing Uatu, the Watcher who lives on the moon and observes all happenings in the entire multiverse. And he occasionally gets involved...

The show is based on a 1977 comic series that has always been a chance for Marvel to explore how its most famous stories would have progressed differently had slight changes been made. Stories like "What If...Magik had been Doctor Strange's apprentice?" or "What If...The Phoenix hadn't died?" put a tiny spin on existing comics continuity and came up with interesting answers. Also, most of the time the Earth exploded. These books are tons of fun.

Marvel's What If? Cast

The show appears to be following in the comic book's footsteps. Cast members for different stories were also announced, and among the MCU veterans lending their voices to the show are Chadwick Boseman (Black Panther), Michael B. Jordan (Killmonger), Neal McDonough (Dum Dum Dugan), Sebastian Stan (Bucky), Toby Jones (Arnim Zola), Josh Brolin (Thanos), Michael Rooker (Yondu), Karen Gillan (Nebula), Chris Hemsworth (Thor), Tom Hiddleston (Loki), Jeff Goldblum (The Collector), and several others.

Marvel's What If? Story

Based on the cast, it looks like we're getting at least four different stories. We've seen some footage, and what we saw included Bucky Barnes confronting a zombified Captain America and another where Agent Carter has taken the super soldier serum!

If I had to guess some other options (and please keep in mind, these are only guesses)...

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- What If...Bucky hadn't died in the train accident (from Captain America: The First Avenger)? This has him surviving World War II with Cap and fighting with the Howling Commandos, never becoming the Winter Soldier.

- What If...Nebula joined the Ravagers? It takes her out of Thanos's orbit early.

- What If...Killmonger won? We see a world conquered by Wakanda.

- What If...Thor worked for the Collector? It basically cuts Thor: Ragnarokoff midway through and massively changes Infinity War.

Wright also teased that the Watcher first appeared in the pages of The Fantastic Four.With all the other multiversal mentions in the panel, it's hard not to see that as a deliberate callout for how the first family of Marvel might be introduced.

Marvel's What If? Release Date

Marvel's What If will arrive in Summer 2021.

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Marvel What If? Animated Series
NewsJim Dandy
Dec 26, 2019

Titans Season 3: Everything You Need to Know

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Titans Season 3 is happening! DC Universe has announced the good news ahead of the end of Season 2 streaming on DC Universe.

TitansSeason 3 is a go! DC Universe and Warner Bros. Television have renewed Titans for a third season, before Season 2 has even finished airing on the subscription streaming service.

The original live-action superhero show premiered in 2018, as one of the first original offerings from DC Universe. It follows Dick Grayson, Rachel Roth aka Raven, Kory Anders aka Starfire, Gar Logan aka Beast Boy, Hank Hall and Dawn Granger aka Hawk and Dove, Donna Troy aka Wonder Girl and Jason Todd aka Robin. In the first season, the story begins with the team disbanded. The Titans "officially" reformed in season two, with both original and new members, to fight crime across various locations, with their base of operations in San Francisco.

Titans Season 3 Cast

There are no surprises so far with the cast, but the first big move has already been made. Damaris Lewis, who appeared in several season two episodes as Blackfire, will be a series regular for the third season (via TV Line). So it's a safe bet that we know who the big bad of the year will be, with Kory's story clearly getting ready to take the spotlight now that Dick Grayson seems to have made peace with many of the issues that drove the first two seasons now that he's Nightwing.

Other than that, expect Brenton Thwaites, Anna Diop, Teagan Croft, Ryan Potter, Curran Walters, Minka Kelly, Alan Ritchson, Chelsea Zhang, and Joshua Orpin to return. Oh, and Krypto. We had better get lots more Krypto.

Titans Season 3 Release Date

Titans season 3 will drop sometime in 2020. The first two seasons both arrived in the early fall, so that seems like a safe bet for this one.

Titans is produced by Weed Road Pictures and Berlanti Productions in association with Warner Bros. Television. The series was developed by Akiva Goldsman & Geoff Johns & Greg Berlanti, based on characters from DC. Akiva Goldsman, Geoff Johns, Greg Berlanti, Greg Walker and Sarah Schechter are the executive producers. 

Kayti Burt is a staff editor covering books, TV, movies, and fan culture at Den of Geek. Read more of her work here or follow her on Twitter @kaytiburt.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost in Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

The Cast of Titans on DC Universe
NewsKayti BurtMike Cecchini
Dec 26, 2019

Best TV Comedy Shows on Amazon Prime Right Now

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There's never a bad time for a half-hour comedy. Here are the best comedy shows on Amazon Prime for your giggling pleasure.

Editor's Note: This post is updated monthly. Bookmark this page and come back to see what other excellent TV comedies get added to Amazon Prime.

Updated for January 2020. 

You can see a complete list of Amazon new releases here.

When Amazon decided to kick its original programming into high gear, they first turned to comedies. Transparent is the elder statesmen of comedy shows on Amazon and really in all of streaming. It's set the tone for the streaming service to be truly invested in some good TV comedy. The other streaming services have since followed suit but Amazon is always a good choice for good comedy. Whether it be through one of their originals, or something completely out of leftfield, Jeff Bezos' boys know you need to laugh.

What follows are the absolute best comedy shows on Amazon Prime we could find, with links to each one on the site for your convenience. 

Veep

Current events have conspired to make HBO's show about the inner workings of the White House more of a sobering documentary than a half-hour comedy, but that doesn't mean the jokes are any less funny. As a matter of fact, we tend to think Veep's Jokes Per Minute ratio is pretty impressive.

further reading: The Best Romance Movies on Amazon

Veep is a truly funny show and is somehow getting even better as seasons go along. Julia Louis Dreyfuss rightfully picks up every comedy acting award in existence but the rest of the ensemble is equally impressive. It takes a lot of wit and work to execute Sorkin-ian fast-paced dialogue including dick jokes and the folks at Veep make it sound like Shakespeare.

Watch Veep

Transparent

Transparent is one of TV best comedies full stop. It's also secretly one of the best "punned" titles on TV. Not only is Transparent about a parent, in this case Maura Pfefferman (Jeffrey Tambor), coming out as a trans woman but also a family itself struggling to be more transparent with one another.

further reading: The Best Comedy Movies on Hulu

Tambor is another worthy awards target as his performance flashy, respectful and authentic. That doesn't distract from the rest of the show, however. Transparent is an authentic, emotional experience that still doesn't skimp on laughter. By any metric it's one of Amazon's best original comedy shows.

Watch Transparent

Girls

Girls is one of pop culture's strangest lightning rods. It's a seemingly inoffensive show about mostly self-involved young women living in Brooklyn that makes everyone very Mad Online (TM). Sure, the ensemble led by creator Lena Dunham's Hannah Horvath is unlikeable much of the time but the whole point of being young and living in New York is to be absolutely unbearable.

further reading: 17 Movies and TV Shows That Were Refused Rights to Songs

Girls finds plenty of humor and drama in its protagonists limited worldview but is also never outwardly mocking them. It's a solid, humorous balance that is funny most of the time and hilarious when it wants to be: mostly when Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) is involved.

Watch Girls

Enlightened

Enlightened is the very rare half-hour HBO comedy that didn't quite catch on with viewers. Writer Mike White's (of School of Rock fame) show lasted for only two seasons, but at least they were largely excellent. Enlightened stars Laura Dern as Amy Jellicoe, a high-powered executive who experiences a meltdown and then must pull herself back together at a holistic retreat.

further reading: The Best Comedy Movies on Amazon Prime

Once she's properly "woke" she returns to her job with every intention of saving the world as a whistleblower. Laura Dern is excellent and the show can safely be marked as ahead of its time despite debuting in 2011.

Watch Enlightened

Entourage

If you let most comedies run long enough, they'll eventually resemble self-parody. In its later years, Entourage became one of those shows. Late year Entourage episodes follow the same general model: impossibly inconsequential Hollywood problem pops up, it's handled by high-powered agent Ari Gold (Jeremy Piven) or manager "E" (Kevin Connolly) and movie star Vince (Adrian Grenier) bangs a model to celebrate.

further reading: The Best Action Movies on Amazon Prime

Thing is though: that same formula in earlier seasons is awesomeEntourage for much of its running time with the rarest of breeds: a comedy that remained funny and exciting despite little to no meaningful conflict. 

Watch Entourage

Fleabag

Fleabag came out of absolutely nowhere in 2016 to become perhaps the best of all of Amazon Prime's original shows. It stars show creator Phoebe Waller-Bridge as the unnamed protagonist, who is incredibly honest to the audience in her fourth-wall breaking monologues and incredibly dishonest to everyone else.

further reading: The Best Comedy Movies on Netflix

Fleabag is fearless and profanely funny from its very first reality-breaking moment but it's the growth of its main character and the reveal of what's fractured her psyche so much that makes Fleabag an excellent show.

Watch Fleabag

Sex and the City

Along with The Sopranos back in the late '90s, Sex and the City helped put HBO on the map as a creative force to be reckoned with. It stars Sarah Jessica Parker as love advice columnist Carrie Bradshaw and her many adventures, romantic and otherwise in New York City.

further reading: The Best Horror Movies on Amazon Prime

Sex and the City is worth watching because it's just flat-out funny and is also juggling 1-3 exciting "will they or won't they" relationships at any given time. Plus, don't you want to figure out if you're a Carrie, Samantha, Charlotte or Miranda? Literally everyone of us at Den of Geek is a Charlotte.

Watch Sex and the City

Frasier

Twenty years. That's how long Kelsey Grammar played the character of Frasier Crane over three shows: Cheers, Frasier and one episode of Wings. Psychologist Dr. Frasier Crane first stopped by the Boston bar on Cheers and then in 1993 he returned to his practice in Seattle and was spun-off onto his own show: Frasier. Frasier, the show, is one of the better comedies from NBC's Must See TV programming block and that's saying a lot.

further reading: The Best Comedy TV Shows on Netflix

Grammar obviously has a perfect understanding of his uptight, linguistically-obsessed character and the rest of the cast complements him perfectly, from his equally uptight brother Niles (David Hyde Pierce) to his radio-show producing love interest Roz (Peri Gilpin). Frasier is the kind of sophisticated comedy that seems like it should have come after the laughtrack era but still perfectly fits within the joke-heavy format.

Watch Frasier

Curb Your Enthusiasm

Larry David is a comedy genius. That much is obvious. Who else could have produced Seinfeld other than a person of superior comic skill? But he's also a remarkably consistent comedic actor. Curb Your Enthusiasm is the perfect vehicle for David's talents. He stars as himself: the most needlessly miserable man in the world.

further reading: Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 10 Confirmed

The Larry David in Curb Your Enthusiasm has a career in a field he loves, more money than he knows what to do with and a beautiful, patient wife. Still, he views life itself as more of an affliction than a gift. It's wonderful, dark, pessimistic humor that never once grows stale even after eight seasons.

Watch Curb Your Enthusiasm

The Tick

The Tick is the kind of absurdist, hilarious superhero deconstruction myth that just practically cries out to be on television. That's why it has been on TV...no fewer than three times. The first effort was an animated show in 1994, then a live-action effort starring Patrick Warburton in 2001.

further reading: The Tick Season 1 Review

Both were good but it's Amazon's newest effort starring Peter Serafinowicz, The Tick, that might be the best yet. The Tick never ignores the violent absurdity that made Ben Edlund's original comic so viable. 

Watch The Tick

One Mississippi

One of the most exciting aspects of the streaming revolution is that truly talented comedians are getting a shot at creating their own highly personal, highly funny TV series. It's like the late '80s/early '90s all over again, albeit with much smaller budgets. Tig Notaro's entry into the comedian TV show, One Mississippi, is among the more overtly autobiographical of these new shows.

further reading: The Best Vintage Sci-Fi, Horror, and Fantasy TV Shows on Amazon Prime

Notaro has been a comedy staple for years but One Mississippi is about the most turbulent time in her life and career: the present. Tig stars as a fictional version of herself who must return home to Mississippi as her mother is taken off life support. Oh she's also recovering from a double mastectomy. Oh, and this all actually happened to the real Tig. It's heavy stuff, but also funny, heartfelt stuff.

Watch One Mississippi

Eastbound and Down

Can one larger-than-life character carry a comedy for four seasons? If that character is Eastbound and Down's Kenny Powers then the answer is a resounding "yes." Danny McBride and Jody Hill's half-hour HBO comedy isn't so much a TV show but an ongoing chronicling of the rise of a legend.

further reading: The Best Sci-Fi Movies on Amazon Prime

Flamethrowing ex-baseball pitcher Kenny Powers has a lot of thoughts and opinions, most of them abhorrent but he also has all the bluster of a mediocre white male to share them. Eastbound and Down is the perfect vehicle for McBride's bizarre, let's say "confrontational" form of comedy. Over four seasons, Kenny Powers tries to break back in to baseball but only as an excuse to keep the spotlight on him. Kenny Powers truly is a man for all seasons. 

Watch Eastbound and Down

House of Lies

House of Lies is one of Showtime's best half-hour comedies thanks mostly to a superb cast. Don Cheadle, Kirsten Bell and Ben Schwartz all star as high-powered management consultants for clients trying to rehabilitate their image. Are there hinjinx? Your bet your sweet-ass there are.

further reading: The Best Comic Book, Sci-Fi, and Fantasy TV Shows on Amazon Prime

Don Cheadle breaking the fourth wall? Definitely. House full of pies? Depends on whether you listen to Scott Aukerman or not. The premise is not entirely fresh but the sheer talent of everyone involved makes for a very funny five-season show.

Watch House of Lies

Catastrophe

Catastrophe is one of Amazon Prime's first original comedies and it is an unqualified success for the streaming service. Catastrophe comes from Twitter-maestro Rob Delaney and superb English-Irish actress Sharon Hogan. The story could not be simpler: an American ad executive inadvertently knocks up a British teacher during a business trip in London. Should they try to make things work?

further reading: The Best Documentaries on Amazon Prime

Don't necessarily believe the title of the show. The execution of this simple premise is flawless. Delaney and Hogan are remarkably empathetic, human and routinely laugh at each other's jokes onscreen, which is truly one of the most charming creative decisions on TV right now. It's one of the more richly-realized relationship dramas on television and also happens to be terrifically funny.

Watch Catastrophe

Cheers

According to Parks and Recreation/Brooklyn Nine-Nine/The Good Place creator Michael Schur, Cheers is the best TV comedy of all time. It's really hard to argue with him. Cheers helped to establish almost everything we currently admire about the modern TV sitcom: loveable characters, familiar environments and a deep, real sense of belonging. If that sounds too heavy or serious for a situation comedy, it's not.

further reading: The Best TV Dramas on Amazon Prime

Good comedy can be about finding a happy place "where everybody knows your name." But just as importantly: Cheers is hilariously funny. Cheers has a deep, diverse ensemble where the 11th actor on the call sheet is just as funny as the first. 

Watch Cheers

Bored to Death

Author Jonathan Ames has had a long, successful career writing hilarious, self-deprecating novels and comics. But he wasn't that well known among TV enthusiasts until his first TV effort, Bored to Death, in 2009. Bored to Death was a fascinating, funny beast over three seasons.

further reading: The Best Horror Movies to Stream

It was a modern film noir detective comedy with a superb cast. Jason Schwartzman stars as novelist-turned-P.I. Jonathan Ames (Hey! Where have we heard that name before?) and Ted Danson and Zach Galifianakis appear as his friends. Bored to Death is equal parts atmosphere and slapstick and a worthwhile entrant into the HBO comedy canon

Watch Bored to Death

Forever

Forever is an Amazon original comedy starring SNL beloveds Fred Armisen and Maya Rudolph. At the time of its release, Amazon and show creator Alan Yang were suspiciously cagey about specific plot details. All they would offer is that Armisen and Rudolph play a dissatisifed married couple looking for more and a fateful ski trip would change all of that.

further reading: The Best Children's TV Shows on Amazon Prime

Suffice it to say, Forever offers a lot more than that initial premise, incorporating a mystical element that justifies its one-word title. Forever joins a growing list of comedies that seek to both make us laugh and consider some heavier topics.

Watch Forever

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel comes from Gilmore Girls creator Amy Sherman-Palladino and is one of the most joyously fun shows on Amazon Prime or any other streaming service.

further reading: The Marevlous Mrs. Maisel Season 2: Pregnancy, Women Comics, and Censorship 

Rachel Brosnahan stars as Miriam "Midge" Maisel, an upper class Jewish housewife in 1950s Manhattan. After her husband unsuccessfully dabbles in the burgeoning stand up comedy scene, Midge decides to give it a go herself. She's a natural as it turns out. The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel follows Midge as she hones her craft, meets up with a new manager (played by Alex Borstein), and deals with her own crumbling marriage. 

Like all Sherman-Palladino properties, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel is refreshingly real but also somehow an escapist romp.

Watch The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Best TV Comedy on Amazon Prime Video - The Tick
The ListsAlec Bojalad
Dec 26, 2019

Best TV Shows Hidden on Amazon Prime Video

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Everyone knows the classics and the trending new shows, but take a look at some deep cut TV shows you could enjoy on Amazon Prime.

Editor's Note: This post is updated monthly. Bookmark this page and come back to see what other little-seen classics get added to Amazon Prime.

Updated for January 2020. 

You can see a complete list of Amazon new releases here.

Streaming services like Amazon Prime have changed how we watch television forever. Thanks to Amazon and its peers we now have access to whatever shows we want, when we want.

That's fantastic news for the TV fan but it also jeopardizes that some perfectly fine-to-great TV shows might get lost in the shuffle among all the new quality.

With that in mind we've compiled a list of the best TV Amazon has to offer...that you didn't know were on Amazon. There is plenty to love here thanks to Amazon's relationships with heavy-hitters like FX and HBO but even beyond that there is much virgin land to be discovered. Wade out into the undiscovered country, brave explorer!

Sabrina: The Teenage Witch

ABC's TGIF tween programming block on Friday nights was awesome. From 1989 through 2000, Fridays nights on ABC were home to classic fare such as Boy Meets WorldTeen Angel (ok, this one wasn't a hit but I loved it) and Family MattersSabrina: The Teenage Witch belongs in the conversation for best TGIF show as much as anything else.

further reading: Best TV Shows Hidden on Netflix

Based on the Archie comic of the same name, Sabrina: The Teenage Witch stars Melissa Joan Hart as Sabrina Spellman (heh) as she goes through all the various crises of youth... and is also a witch. Look, the premise isn't bulletproof but the show is really fun.

Watch Sabrina: The Teenage Witch

Penn & Teller: BS!

Technically, the title is Penn & Teller: Bullshit! but apparently Amazon Prime has an aversion to profanity. Penn & Teller: BS! was a documentary series that ran on Showtime for seven seasons in which magician/entertainers Penn & Teller examine, well, bullshit.

further reading: Best Hulu TV Shows You Haven't Streamed Yet

These bullshitty topics include PETA, cryptozoology and sex and all of the incorrect traditional thinking that surrounds each. Penn & Teller's libertarian perspective may annoy people with differing political or philosophical viewpoints but the research is solid and the duo is plenty entertaining.

Watch Penn & Teller: BS! 

Andy Griffith Show

Television fulfills many roles within our society. Good television can challenge us and intrigue us. But sometimes television is just supposed to be a happy place. There may be no better example of happy place TV than the Mayberry, North Carolina setting of Andy Griffith Show.

further reading: The Best Christmas Movies to Stream on Amazon

The show ran for eight years and close to 250 episodes (woah), with Andy Griffith playing the sheriff main character of a small fictional town and Don Knotts and Ron Howard launching themselves into television history.

Watch Andy Griffith Show

Mr. Show with Bob and David

Mr. Show is one of the best comedy sketch shows of the '90's, if not ever. It's the show that introduced us to the onscreen and offscreen talents of Bob Odenkirk (Better Call Saul) and David Cross (Arrested Development), not to mention the talents of writers Sarah Silverman, Scott Aukerman, Jack Black, Tom Kenny, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Paul F. Tompkins and Brian Posehn.

further reading: Best Comedy TV Shows Available on Amazon Prime

It's not just some stale artifact of comedy writing history, however, it's also very funny and unexpectedly so at times.

Watch Mr. Show with Bob and David

Grimm

There may be more "cop drama...with a twist" shows than there are actually cop drama shows. Thankfully, Grimm is one of the better cop drama... with a twist shows out there. The twist in this instance is that the characters and crimes are based off of Grimm's Fairy Tales.

further reading: Best Vintage Sci-Fi, Horror, and Fasty TV Shows Available on Amazon Prime

Homicide investigator Nick Burkhardt (David Giuntoli) is charged with keeping the balance between humanity and Wessen, the mythological creatures of the world. It rarely goes well. Watch Grimm if for no other reason than to understand what 40 percent of the .gifs on Tumblr mean.

Watch Grimm

Justified

Justified is one of the very few TV shows that can be categorized as a Western. The only other that comes to mind is Deadwoo....oh my God it's Timothy Olyphant again! Basically, one of TV's surest formula's is Timothy Olyphant + cowboy hat. I have no idea why they keep ignoring this.

further reading: Blumhouse Partners with Amazon

Justified is based on a short story and character by Elmore Leonard and it fits into Leonard's voice and world perfectly. Olyphant as Raylan Givens, a U.S. Marshall displaced from Miami back to his hometown in Kentucky, is superb but Walton Goggins as his nemesis Boyd Crowder might be even better. Justified is funny, exciting and a wonderfully accurate and creepy slice of Appalachia. It rules.

Watch Justified

Humans

You can't throw a stone without hitting a movie or TV show about robots achieving sentience or a thinkpiece that argues "DAE artificial intelligence bad?" these days. AMC's collaboration with the British Channel 4, Humans, somewhat tragically never stood out amongst a sea of Ex Machinas and Black Mirrors.

further reading: Best Comic Book, Sci-Fi, and Fantasy TV Shows on Amazon Prime

This is a shame because Humans is quite good and even spectacular in a handful of episodes. Humans is set in a near future in which average middle class families are turning more and more to human-like robots called "synths" to help with household tasks. And you're not going to believe this, but it doesn't quite go well. 

Watch Humans

Hannibal

Perhaps one of the most visually-striking series in recent memory, Hannibal is an assault on the senses. The show comes from TV wunderkind Bryan Fuller (you may know him by his show Pushing Daisies or as the guy who is helping bring Star Trek back to TV) and it's absolutely decadent. 

further reading: David Tennant Was Almost Hannibal Lecter

Mads Mikkelsen portrays classic film and literature cannibal Hannibal Lector while Hugh Dancy plays Will Graham, a forensic psychiatrist destined to become Hannibal's main foe. Hannibal is both unspeakably violent and pretty. It's amazing that this show got on network television at all, let alone for three seasons. Watch all three and be happy it did.

Watch Hannibal

Tell Me You Love Me

When people derisively refer to HBO as the "T&A" network, Tell Me You Love Me is probably what they have in mind. Tell Me You Love Me is a one-season wonder about three different couples seeking out a therapist for intimacy problems within their relationships. It is perhaps better known, however, for its incredibly realistic depiction of sex.

further reading: Great TV Dramas Available on Amazon Prime

Tell Me You Love Me is one of those shows in which actors continuously have to clarify that they weren't actually having sex onscreen. It's a shame that the show's reputation doesn't extend much further out than that because it's very, very good. Tell Me You Love Me is a forgotten HBO classic.

Watch Tell Me You Love Me

Mission: Impossible

Before Tom Cruise spun it off into six bad-to-good-to-great action movies, Mission: Impossible was best known as a TV show from the late '60s and early '70s.

further reading: Mission: Impossible and the Importance of Spy Movies

It follows the secret mission of a government agency known as the "Impossible Missions Force (IMF)." That enough should sound familiar to fans of the film franchise but the show is decidedly hokier  but still a fun watch.

Watch Mission: Impossible

Carnivale

It feels like there is a really good, really creepy TV show out there floating in the ether about old-timey carnivals. Shows like Heroes and American Horror Story tried to capture that vision with one-off seasons following carnies but it's HBO's Carnivale that comes closest to capturing that idea.

further reading: Great Children's TV Shows on Amazon Prime

Carnivale is set during the Great Depression and Dust Bowl and is really the story of good vs. evil set among a backdrop of a traveling carnival. It's equally ambitious and atmospheric but audiences began turning on it two seasons in. Still it's more than worth a watch.

Watch Carinvale

Brotherhood

Showtime is fairly well-represented on this list. The otherwise excellent network has a tendency to let its most popular shows drag on a bit too long. Brotherhood is not one of those shows. Brotherhood is the story of two brothers from Providence, Rhode Island - one's a gangster (Jason Isaacs) and one's a politician (Jason Clarke).

further reading: Russo Brothers to Produce Eent Series at Amazon

The show never really found an audience and is all the better for it. It exists over only three relatively short but undeniably excellent seasons.

Watch Brotherhood

Medium

Crime procedurals can be a real drag. Medium is not thanks to excellent performances from Patricia Arquette and Jake Weber, some good writing and directing and a seriously bizarre concept. Arquette plays the real-life psychic Allison DuBois (inasmuch as there is such a thing as a real-life psychic) as she works with her local Arizona police department to solve murders.

further reading: Best Comedy Movies on Amazon Prime

That may sound corny...and it is, but the show happens to be quite good. Allison and her husband's home life is lovingly and realistically depicted and the gonzo premise allows the writers to be as creative or weird as they want to be in a genre that could use a lot of weirdness and creativity.

Watch Medium

John from Cincinnati

John from Cincinnati is one of TV's strangest case studies on a famous showrunner's sophomore efforts. The show comes from David Milch, beloved and mercurial creator of DeadwoodJohn from Cincinnati was his followup to Deadwood and it could not have been more different.

further reading: Can David Milch Fix True Detective?

It's set in present day surfing community in California and tries to capture a tone of "surf noir" with some supernatural mixed in. Approximately no one watched it. But it's quite good, in a Twin Peaks/Carnivale kind of way.

Watch John from Cincinnati

Unsolved Mysteries

If our recent cultural obsessions with Serial and Making a Murderer prove anything, it's that we love us some unsolved mysteries. So why not watch the show actually called Unsolved Mysteries? Amazon Prime offers both the original hosted by Robert Stack from 1987-2002 (the first season) and then the new ones hosted by Dennis Farina.

further reading: Best Action Movies on Amazon Prime

Stack in particular is an impeccable host for such macabre topics. Watch Unsolved Mysteries and you'll see the DNA of every single true crime property that's come after.

Watch Unsolved Mysteries

Reading Rainbow

"Butterfly in the sky, I can go twice as high./ Take a look, it's in a book, a Reading Rainbow!/I can go anywhere/Friends to know,/And ways to grow./It's Reading Rainbow!"

Watch Reading Rainbow

The Night Manager

Despite making its debut just last year, The Night Manager seems destined to abscond to TV history obscurity. The six-episode adaptation of John Le Carre's spy novel didn't exactly set the world on fire. And that's a shame.

further reading: Best Horror Movies on Amazon Prime 

So we're just going to skip the years in-between The Night Manager's airing and it's rediscovery and just advise that you watch it now if you haven't already. Tom Hiddleston and Hugh Laurie turn in excellent performances and the show depicts the real nuts and bolts of spy work better than anything ever on television.

Watch The Night Manager

Poldark

For whatever reason PBS has a reputation for being a stodgy daytime TV bore. I guess airing shows about auctions for 30 years will do that to you. But every now and again, PBS can turn out a TV drama that's just absolutely rad.

further reading: Poldark: A Beginner's Guide 

Poldark is a period piece about Ross Poldark, a Revolutionary War soldier who returns home after the war to find that things are not going well to say the least. Poldark is actually a remake of a PBS show of the same name in the '70s and continues the network's tradition of doing period pieces right.

Watch Poldark

The Living and the Dead

The BBC's The Living and the Dead is an aesthetically beautiful show. It's not entirely dissimilar to a British-ized The Returned. It stars Colin Moran as Nathan Appleby, a psychology who inherits a beautiful, if creepy manor.

further reading: Best Sci-Fi Movies on Amazon Prime 

Sure, the property is a touch isolated but that doesn't concern Nathan and his wife. It should because what comes next is a bit more Amityville Horror than The Returned. 

Watch The Living and the Dead

The Expanse

While we were sleeping, SyFy Channel went through a name change and started producing its best original content since Battlestar GalacticaThe Expanse is among the best. The Expanse is based on a series of novels and imagines a future in which humanity has colonized the solar system.

further reading: Best Documentaries on Amazon Prime 

The citizens of Earth and Mars try to keep a loose confederation of planets together while citizens of the asteroid belt battle back. The Expanse features a top cast including Shohreh Aghdashloo and Thomas Jane and tells a simple story of humanity and all corrupt bullshit out in the stars. 

Watch The Expanse

The Tunnel

Not since The Office has a European TV show offered an easier template to replicate for the world than Denmark and Sweden's The BridgeThe Bridge (or Broen in Danish and Bron in Swedish) told the story of a murder that took place between the Swedish and Danish border. It was adapted into a semi-successful American show on FX that covered the bridge between El Paso, Texas and Juarez, Mexico. 

further reading: Exploring the Weird Recesses of Amazon Prime Video 

Now the British and French are trying their own hand at a cooperative adaptation. The Tunnel features a similar premise to its Bridge-cousins. When a prominent French politician is found dead on the border of the U.K. and France, British detective Karl Roebuck (Stephen Dillane) and French detective Elise Wassermann (Clemence Posey) must join together to solve it.

The Tunnel is entertaining enough on its own but it's also fun to watch and pretend that Fleur Delacour and Stannis Baratheon are a crime-solving team.

Watch The Tunnel

Merlin

Smallville sent off a chain reaction of TV properties that sought to show the early years of popular fictional icons. In some ways, current CW shows like The Flash represent the natural conclusion to the phenomenon.

further reading: The King Arthur Guide 

But of all the post-Smallville properties, the BBC’s Merlin is undoubtedly among the best. For some fans, Colin Morgan’s depiction of the legendary Merlin is the definitive one.

Watch Merlin

Babylon 5

Babylon 5 is a modest TV science fiction classic from the '90s. The show, which creator J. Michael Straczynski described as a "novel for television," took place in a distant future in which Earth has unified under one government and has made contact with other spacefaring alien species.

further reading: Bablyon 5 Creator to Pen Memoir

If that all sounds like Star Trek, you wouldn't be wrong for thinking so. Babylon 5 brings much of the utopian future that Star Trek did to the table. The difference lies in its complex depiction of intergalactic trade and a surprisingly deep show mythology centered on religious and social differences. 

Watch Babylon 5

Best TV Shows The Expanse
The ListsAlec Bojalad
Dec 26, 2019

The Best Anime to Stream and Where to Find Them

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We outline the top anime available to stream at your fingertips as well as the best places to find it all!

Updated for January 2020.

There have never been more anime titles readily available to audiences, which is certainly exciting, but it can also be overwhelming. Not only are more legacy titles being added to streaming services every month, but there is also a steady stream of new series that are being added.

To guarantee that the various libraries of content at your disposal don’t swallow you whole, we’ve done the hard work and narrowed it down to just the top and most important titles! For both the obsessive anime fan and those entirely new to the form, here’s a whopping list of the 50 best anime that are currently streaming and exactly where to find them!

Aggretsuko

Available on: Netflix

Retsuko the Red Panda is all of us and we are all Retsuko. Aggretsuko is one of Sanrio’s most popular creations in recent years and while other mascots for the company like Hello Kitty or Keroppi capitalize on the sugary sweet demeanor of their cutesy characters, Aggretsuko instead taps into the inner rage that fills us all. Each vignette in Aggretsuko sees the mild-mannered red panda attempt to do her job, hang out with friends, or just get through some mundane aspect of her day.

read more: Aggretsuko: A Must-See Netflix Anime

Retsuko does a fairly good job at keeping her cool around the constant frustrations that pop up around her, but it’s only a matter of time until something pushes the red panda over the edge and Retsuko explodes in a rage of unfiltered honesty and banging death metalAggretsuko is simple, low stakes anime, but there’s something endlessly relatable about these stories of a person being pushed to their limit. Everyone has the kind of days that Retsuko does, so why not commiserate with this character’s deeply cute temper tantrums? With a second season also on the way, thankfully the red panda freakouts are far from over!

Ajin: Demi-Human

Available on: Netflix

Ajin: Demi-Humanmight actually happen to be on your radar due to it being one of limited anime that Netflix has chosen to embrace and co-produce. The series is your basic demon-out-of-water story where a boy named Kei gets hit by a truck and ends learning that he’s actually an ajin (basically a demon) and incapable of dying. That’s all cool and dandy for Kei, only for the fact that ajin aren’t looked at too fondly in the community with the creatures being hunted and kept in camps. This naturally has a rough schism form between the humans and ajin that has revenge at its core and Kei getting caught up in the middle as he tries to mediate and find peace between everyone.

read more: The Best Action Movies on Netflix

There are a number of series out there where some member of the “outcast race” tries to bridge things between their kind and humanity (I mean, look no further than Tokyo Ghoul,which is also listed here), but Ajin stands out by offering complex characters that take time to define, as well as some super impressive monster designs that won’t soon leave your mind. With a recent live-action film adaptation making this property hot again, Ajin is one that you want to put on your radar!

Assassination Classroom

Available on: Funimation, Hulu

In what’s one of the best concepts that I’ve ever come across,Assassination Classroomdeals with an octopus-esque alien that declares that he’s going to destroy the planet in one year unless he can be killed. Oh, and if you don’t think he’s serious, he just blew up three quarters of the moon. The measures that have been set in place here is that a class of students—the bottom of the barrel, at that—are given the task of being trained as assassins to take him down, garnering one billion dollars in the process. The conditions however are that this alien is their teacher, and he’s unable to hurt any of his students, with them having a year to pull off their task, lest the planet be destroyed yada yada yada.

read more: What the Hulu/Funimation Deal Means for Anime

What’s kind of amazing is the symbiotic relationship between this alien, Korosensai, and his students/would-be assassins. Each episode has him genuinely bettering them and helping them grow, and it’s this bittersweet arrangement of them deeply caring for each other, yet this terrible asterisk hanging over it all. Now in the middle of wrapping up its second season, I legitimately don’t know how this show will conclude and I couldn’t be more excited about that.

Attack on Titan

Available on: Adult Swim, FunimationNow, Hulu, Yahoo View!

Look, you probably don’t need me to tell you about or push Attack on Titan on you. It’s a series that has grown into an institution and has slowly become one of the most successful cross-pond anime in recent years. The sheer fact that this selection is also on Netflix is a testament to the growth in demand. If you have been unaware of Attack on Titan though, now’s the perfect time to make the jump with the series’ third season nearing some sort of release, and the production of two live-action movies having gone on in the interim time.

read more: Attack on Titan Makes Giant Monsters Scary Again

The series is set in an alternate world where humanity has caged itself in through a series of giant successive walls as a result of the threat of Titans. These monsters are huge human-like monsters with an unstoppable hunger for humans. The series begins with the breach of one of these walls and the discovery of more powerful Titans behind it.

There’s real art going on here as the series jumps in stretches of the time and chooses to selectively focus on certain characters, building a real full mosaic in the process. There’s also just some stunning animation going on at these fighters zip through the air in their gear to take down these behemoths. The story only becomes deeper and deeper too, with fantastic twists that litter the end of both seasons. Year two takes some risks by banking more on characters than action, but there’s still a story that’s unbelievable to watch unfold. This is how you effectively build a world and tell a full, nuanced story. Plus, monsters and the biggest daddy issues this side of Neon Genesis Evangelion!

Cowboy Bebop

Available on: Adult Swim (Random Episodes), FunimationNow, Hulu

Certainly one of the older shows on this list, but one that’s earned its place as legacy anime. Long before he was blowing people’s minds on Space DandyShinichiro Watanabe was setting the standard with his planet-hopping space western, Cowboy BebopWhile again focusing on a ragtag group of bounty hunters and outlaws jumping around in space, there is a certain sense of tone and atmosphere conjured up by this series.

read more: Cowboy Bebop Live-Action Series Coming to Netflix

Even though it’s a mostly episodic program, there is still such a connection to it among fans due to how well each story sees execution. It’s also responsible for those countless people you see cosplaying with big hair and a navy blue suit.Additionally, the score and music is done by Yoko Kanno, and it’s just pure bliss across the board. Bebopreally makes its music a priority and the quality is undeniable. Can you think of a theme song that gets you pumped up more than “TANK”? No, no you cannot.

Dagashi Kashi

Available on: Crunchyroll, FunimationNow, Hulu

Dagashi Kashilooks at an inspiring manga artist, Kokonutsu. Kokonutsu is shackled to his family’s candy store, destined to take over the business. Then, with the arrival of Hotaru Shidare of the Shidare Candy Corporation who is looking to poach the owner, “Coconuts” is hurled towards the candy lifestyle more than ever before. Dagashi Kashi’s biggest draw is that it is absolutely in love with candy. It views the subject as if it’s the most magical thing in the world, and that viewpoint makes the show endlessly entertaining in its innocence. You can’t help but get equally excited about the subject matter.

read more: The Best TV Comedies on Netflix

It doesn’t feel like a show like this should work—a pseudo-educational program that educates you about the wonder that is Japanese candy—but it’s crazy how infectious this formula is. It’s at a point now where I can’t wait to see what sort of random, unheard of sweet will be delved into each week. Also, why is our candy just candy, and not a fraction as cool as Japan’s multipurpose sweets? They have fake beer for kids, candies that imbue you with energy to run, stuff that turn into whistles. Even candies that double as marbles/trading cards. #FirstWorldCandyProblems

It’s also extremely indulgent towards the “fan service” area, and what’s a better pairing to candy than anatomy? Granted, the second season of the series loses some of its magic, but it’s still full of plenty of charm.

Death Note

Available on: Hulu, Netflix

It’s hard not to fall in love with this concept right away: Death Note is about Light, a high school student who finds a notebook that whenever he writes a name inside it, that person dies. Pretty nuts, right? It’s not long before Light is trying to cleanse the world of evil by using this notebook to play God and create a better world. That’s some deep subject matter to get into and Death Note handles this rise to corruption beautifully.

read more: The Best Horror Movies on Netflix

As Light’s carnage begins to grow, a detective, L, tries to take him down. So add to that one of the best subversions to the cat-and-mouse detective genre that I’ve seen, and you’ve got an even more infectious hit on your hands. Waiting for these two to come across each other is such satisfying stuff, especially when even more death notebooks and Shinigami (demons) are thrown into play. The strong energy that the series gives off explains why there have been a& number of movies and off-shoots to crop up in Japan over the years. People just need more of this.

Death Parade

Available on: Crunchyroll, FunimationNow, Hulu

Death Paradeis a perfect mix of the playful and the macabre, resulting in a surprisingly profound series. The anime is set at a way station of sorts, and when two people die at the exact same time, they’re sent to this location to play a game against each other. Scrubbed of their memories, these two people must compete in some sort of parlor game in order to determine their future—which of them gets to have an afterlife, and which is just gone, essentially.

read more: The Best Horror Anime to Watch on Crunchyroll

There’s something intrinsically compelling about watching people play a game of air hockey, billiards, or even Twister, for the highest stakes imaginable. Each game also has twisted tricks incorporated into them, such as the balls in billiards each corresponding to a different body part that will experience pain upon being sunk.The competition at work in each episode already makes this a suspenseful show, but it gains even more poignancy with what each episode is trying to say about life and death while these games are going on. Every installment is more or less a fresh story, and yet a great deal of pathos is created each time for these new people you encounter. Endlessly compelling and always having something to say,Death Parade is a great subversion of the afterlife.

Devilman Crybaby

Available on: Netflix

The Devilmanfranchise has been going strong in Japan since the 1970s. It tells a typical story of corruption and lost identity when an unsuspecting soul has his spirit mixed up with that of a demon. As a result, Akira has access to the extreme powers of Devilman, but he still retains his humanity. As Akira tries to come to terms with his transformation, this tug of war between good and evil wages on inside of him while he attempts to use the darkness to defeat demons, but not let it consume him in the process.

read more: Blade Runner Anime Series Set for Adult Swim

There’s nothing too special about Devilman at its surface level, butDevilman Crybaby is such a worthwhile reboot of the property entirely because the legendary Masaaki Yuasa is in the one in charge. Yuasa injects the Devilman narrative with his typical eye-popping animation and art direction and helps this story ascend to something special. Yuasa has no limits when it comes to the series’ level of gore or how ridiculous the animation will become. You won’t want to take your eyes off of a single frame of Devilman Crybabybut the rave scene at the Sabbath party from the first episode is an excellent primer for just how much this anime is a batshit, psychedelic fever dream. Nowhere else will you find nipples mutating into big, hungry mouths.

The Disastrous Life of Saiki K.

Available on:FunimationNow, Netflix

The Disastrous Life of Saiki Khas been one of my greatest anime pleasures over the past year and it’s partly due to how recklessly random the style of this show is. To begin with,Disastrous Life of Saiki Kbegan airing as daily bite-sized four-minute anime installments that offered up glimpses into the chaotic life of secret psychic, Saiki. Then, after enough time had passed the series began to be packaged as a conventional 24-minute series that would bundle up five of these short-form episodes into one full-length episode. As a result of this, a weird schism in the community has formed regarding whether Saiki should be consumed in small doses or full-sized endeavors, but the show absolutely works regardless of which style you prefer.

read more: Ghost in the Shell Series Coming to Netflix

There are a number of series to come along about psychics and everyday school life, but what makesSaikistand apart from the rest is how invested it is in its own rules and mythology. The series builds up a truly unique set of rules for Saiki’s many abilities that you get acclimated with at a surprisingly fast rate. There’s such a clear joy for the world that’s been built here as Saiki simultaneously tries to get through the day drawing as little attention to himself as possible. Unpredictable psychic powers, constant cliffhangers, and an impressive list of side characters that you won’t want to leave anytime soon all point towardsThe Disastrous Life of Saiki K being one of the most fun and creative shows to come out of the season.

Dragon Ball/Z/GT/Super

Available on: Adult Swim, FunimationNow, Hulu

Dragon Ballis one of the biggest, most successful anime franchises of all-time. Even before there were mainstream blocks like Adult Swim’s Toonami to cater to anime, Dragon Ball was one of the series that made it over and help break barriers for other series. Even if you’ve never seen Dragon Ball then you’ve at least heard of the anime series, which looks at the world/universe-saving exploits of Goku’s family and friends as they face increasingly dangerous threats. The long-running shonen series is far from perfect, but whether you’re a fan of tournaments, crazy abilities and even crazier transformations, or unique, lovable characters that actually grow, there’s a lot to enjoy through the various Dragon Ballseries.

read more: Ranking the Dragon Ball Z Movies

The anime was long dormant, but with the debut of Dragon Ball Super a few years back, it seems like the property has never been more popular or alive. Dragon Ball isn’t the most important anime to watch from this list, but it’s nice to know that it’s available for whenever the show’s comforting energy is needed.

Erased

Available on: Crunchyroll, Hulu

If there is any show on this list that demands a binge-worthy approach to viewing, it is Erased. Think of Zodiac and all of the best engrossing serial killer stories mixed with the best sort of supernatural weirdness and you’ve got Erased in a nutshell.

read more: Best Anime on Netflix to Stream

The series looks at a character that experiences “revivals” when disasters strike, allowing him to go back in time a few minutes and prevent this wrong from happening. However, one such incident sees him flinging back in time twenty years to when he’s eight years old, stuck in his childhood trying to prevent a much bigger crime from happening that has its roots in the past. Erased builds such suspense (especially since the stakes are the lives of children) and you really just want to watch the next episode immediately after finishing one. It’s a slow burn, but telling a really nuanced, emotional story with unusual elements that it doesn’t lose itself in.

Eromanga Sensei

Available on: Amazon Prime, Crunchyroll

Eromanga Sensei operates with a very Three’s Company degree of logic to it, but there’s such a sweet story at its core. Masamune Izumi is a budding writer, but he can’t draw to save his life. An illustrator who goes by the name “Eromanga Sensei” communicates with Masamune online and illustrates his novels. Together they build a popular manga series through their odd relationship. Masamune also has a 12-year old sister, Sagiri, who’s a shut-in and stays in her room 24/7. What’s the big deal? Masamune’s little sister is actually Eromanga Sensei, his manga collaborator!

read more: Best TV Comedies on Amazon Prime

Eromanga Sensei finds its sweet spot with the unusual but endearing relationship between Masamune and his sister. What also makes this series so much fun is that it’s all about writing and drawing. It’s an anime that gets to be about manga and anime.

FLCL

Available on: Adult Swim, FunimationNow, Hulu

FLCLis a coming-of-age story as if told by William Burroughs or Alejandro Jodorowsky. Each iteration of the series looks at a complacent pre-teen or teenager who’s lost over the future and the hurdles of adulthood. FLCL puts such relatable themes in a blender with absurdist plotting and surrealist animation and the result is one of the most unique, infamous anime series to hit the market. FLCL is a vespa-riding, alien invading, sentient guitar-playing take on adolescence and even if certain aspects of the series go over your head, it’s always a delight to watch.

read more: The Best Romance Movies on Hulu

FLCL plays things fast and loose with it animation style and it incorporates many different aesthetics to illustrate its lost mental state. You may not always understand the show, but you’ll always be in awe of it. FLCL never slows down and even when the show doesn’t quite work, it’s still an astounding experiment that taps into deep pockets of humanity.

Adult Swim recently co-produced two sequel series, FLCL: Progressive and FLCL: Alternative that don’t quite carry the same manic magic as the original series, but they remain faithful to the show’s unique perspective. If you ever feel lost in life, pop on some FLCL to feel better (although be careful of the show’s dangerously addictive soundtrack).

Gurren Lagann

Available on: Netflix

Gurren Lagann is set in a future dystopian take on Earth where most of humanity is forced to live underground in remote villages. Two teenagers who are eager for more out of life and desperate to venture out to the surface come in contact with a powerful mech, the Lagann, and use it to brave the dangers above ground and challenge the evil Spiral King, Lordgenome's, tyrannical rule.

read more: The Many Influences of Voltron: Legendary Defender

Here's the thing about Gurren Lagann, it starts off very slow and definitely takes some time to get going, but once it does there's nothing holding back its awesomeness. The whole point of the series is that events build and domino into each other, so although the series starts at a small place in scope, it's absolutely ridiculous to see the level that everything's at by the end of the series. Hang through the opening chunk of the show and the rewards that follow will be well worth it. There are many great mecha series out there, but Gurren Lagann deserves respect for its slow build and how out of control the series gets before you even realize what's going on.

GTO: Great Teacher Onizuka

Available on: Amazon Prime Video

Great Teacher Onizuka is such a twisted morality story that it sneaks up on you slow subtly that you don’t even realize what’s happened. Eikichi Onizuka enters the series as slacker ex-gang member with few prospects. After an unattractive teacher steals Onizuka’s date, he determines that teachers must hold a strong sexual power over their students. This random event reshapes Onizuka’s entire life and he becomes a teacher! However, through the process he inadvertently develops a strong sense of morals and is no longer interested in doing something as depraved as hooking up with students.

read more: 13 Great Fantasy Anime Movies That Aren't from Studio Ghibli

As Onizuka’s quest goes on, he finds himself hungry to become the best teacher of all-time and happy to dispense his unique outlooks on life to help his class. Onizuka turns into an inspiring mentor to dozens and it’s amazing to see how this “bad guy” finally figures out what his passion is in life. Great Teacher Onizuka will make you feel warm inside, but it’s also funny as hell. Onizuka’s embarrassing antics never disappoint and the show finds the perfect rhythm for its comedy. With 43 episodes available, Great Teacher Onizuka is the kind of comforting comedy that’s there for you to binge watch and relax. Live your best life.

Happy Sugar Life

Available on: Amazon Prime Video

Happy Sugar Life is one of the darkest series that you’ll ever come across, anime or otherwise. It may even cause some viewers to tap out due to its extreme subject matter, but those that stick around will see a gripping character study that chronicles cyclical abuse and the worst versions of Stockholm Syndrome.

read more: Blade Runner Anime Series Set for Adult Swim

Happy Sugar Life looks at Sato Matsuzaka, a high school girl who kidnaps a small child named Shio because she’s madly in love with her. Now this isn’t a sexual love, but purely romantic and this child is just so innocent and pure that she tunes out all of the darkness in Sato’s life. Sato goes to any lengths necessary (like murder, for instance) to keep Shio locked in her home and a secret to the public. The series follows the very worst of deviants, but its dark perspective and Sato’s sugary sweet fantasies make for a strangely addictive curiosity.

Haven’t You Heard? I’m Sakamoto

Available on: Crunchyroll, Hulu

Sometimes overpowered characters in an anime can be exhausting because they suck all of the tension out of a scene. However, Haven’t You Heard? I’m Sakamoto harnesses this energy and makes it the entire point of its series. The premise of Haven’t You Heard? I’m Sakamoto is incredibly thin: Sakamoto is a high school student who’s incredibly popular and excels at every little thing that he does (the show’s banging opening credits song does a great job at how Sakamoto effortlessly becomes the king of everything). That might seem like a limited angle for a show, but the anime makes Sakamoto’s God-tier skills a constant delight. Rather than get annoyed at how Sakamoto is always at the top, the anime turns it into a brilliant game of tension.

read more: The Best Shows on Hulu You Haven't Streamed Yet

The bullies and other jealous students around Sakamoto continually try to get the better of him and knock him down a peg, but it never happens. Sakamoto always has the perfect solution and his increasingly ridiculous escape plans are part of why the show’s so fun. It’s like Sakamoto is a magnet for good luck, and he can’t help it if things like his friend’s mom falling in love with him happen. Haven’t You Heard? I’m Sakamoto finds the perfect kind of energy for its comedy and it’s hard to not fall in love with Sakamoto, just like every else.

High Score Girl

Available on: Netflix

High Score Girl is likely the only “Arcade Love Story” out there on the market, but it should be mandatory viewing for any fans of retro video games or sweet love stories. The series is set during the height of arcade culture in the 1990s and looks at Haruo Yaguchi, a boy who doesn’t care about anything other than video games. He suddenly meets his match at the arcade in the form of Akira Oono and the two are immediately in each other’s orbits in this unconventional love story.

read more: The Best Romance Movies on Netflix

One of the best things about High Score Girl is the very real passion that the series and Yaguchi have towards video games. The love here is very addictive and the series highlights plenty of formative titles like Mortal KombatSplatterhouselots of Street Fighter IIthe release of the PlayStation and Sega Saturn, and the general transition from video games in arcades to the console market at home becoming more feasible. It also makes such a difference that these are all real video games that High Score Girl uses for its examples (and it often shows actual footage from the titles). This anime is such a goldmine for fun history and nostalgia towards '90s video games—especially if you grew up through that era—but it also tells a sweet, humble love story between two kids. Plus, it’s impressive that Oono doesn't say a word throughout the entire series, yet you still completely empathize with her and want to see her be happy.

Inuyashiki: The Last Hero

Available on: Amazon Prime

Inuyashiki is easily one of the best anime to come out in the past few years. Its storytelling even rivals that of great American serialized television. It’s just that good. Right from the start it presents the sort of story that immediately gets your attention and lets you know that you’re watching something special. Inuyashiki is an elderly man whose family seems to hate him and are totally unappreciative of his existence. One night he goes for a walk in the park and some sort of alien explosion rocks the area. When Inuyashiki comes to, he appears to be a super powered robot with insane abilities. He uses these new powers to help those in need and even learns that he can heal and bring people back to life. Suddenly Inuyashiki has a purpose in life and watching him reawaken straight up made me cry on multiple occasions.

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A bratty teenager is also at the park when the explosion happens and he turns into the same robot that Inuyahsiki becomes. This kid, however, is a psychopath and begins mass murdering individuals at an alarming rate. It’s terrifying how callous he is and what this power brings out in him. Some scenes are genuinely hard to watch and it doesn’t take long for him to become one of the most dangerous murderers that the country has ever seen. Suddenly Inuyashiki has a “rival” and the two are pit against each other in a bizarre, infinitely interesting way. This series is a thrilling examination of what people do with power and it balances humble moments of humanity with disturbing violence and insane action. Everything it does hits hard and its ending is perfect in its precision and poignancy. The animation is also stunning in its depiction of these human/robot hybrids and the “minimalist” (ie. finger guns) approach to the violence.

Inuyashiki is a series that I will be absolutely shocked if some savvy American director doesn’t opt to turn into a movie within the next few years. It’s an absolutely beautiful story that boils down to the universal concepts of good and evil. Catch it now and get ahead of the game. At eleven episodes it’s an extremely easy commitment that you’ll wish was longer.

Junji Ito Collection

Available on: Crunchyroll, FunimationNow

If Yamishibaiis the tame horror anthology that you can watch before going to bed, then Junji Ito Collection is pure nightmare fuel. This is not a series that should be watched with the lights turned off or even with a large amount of shade in the room. The series adapts some of the most disturbing stories from renowned horror manga artist, Junji Ito.

Junji Ito Collection packs two sordid stories into each episode and the subject matter ranges from supernatural curses, to deranged killers, to some of the most extreme body horror you’ll ever see in an anime (can David Cronenberg please take on a live-action adaptation of “Honored Ancestors”?). Ito conjures up unbelievable ideas that are truly a rarity for horror and stories like "Greased,""Long Dreams,"“Slug Girl,” and “Blood-Bubble Bushes” are all behemoths of horror.

Unfortunately, not all of the Ito stories that the anime chooses to adapt are winners, but the series’ unsettling art design still helps the weaker tales carry a strong punch. With any justice a second season of this will soon be announced to terrify anime fans well into 2019.

Jojo's Bizarre Adventure

Available on: Adult Swim, Crunchyroll, Hulu, Yahoo View!

Hirohiko Araki’s Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure is one of Japan’s most prestigious and beloved franchises. Araki began work on the Jojo series back in the ‘80s, but it’s only been in more recent years that Jojo fever has caught on in North America. The series spans the multi-generational saga of the Joestar family, with each new series/saga in the franchise tackling a new “Jojo” throughout the lineage. This allows Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure to span a huge amount of content and the series can change its goal, location, and protagonists with each new series.

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The third and fourth chapters in the series, Stardust Crusaders and Diamond is Unbreakable have been the most successful and compelling stories in the ongoing Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure saga. The series all feature unforgettable characters (with even more unforgettable outfits), but also some of the most creative fight sequences you’ll come across thanks to the spirit-like “Stands” that dominate the series.

Magic powers are one thing, but the way in which some of these Stands operate will truly leave you surprised. Jojo has an uncanny ability to mix slice of life anime with breakneck action sequences and inspired serialized storytelling. The entirety of the series may be too long and intimidating for newcomers to jump in, but Diamond is Unbreakable is easily the most accessible of the seasons and an easy place to jump in for the uninitiated Jojofans.

Kakegurui – Compulsive Gambler

Available on: Netflix

Kakegurui – Compulsive Gambler is the best anime about gambling that you’ll ever watch, but it’s also so much more than that. Yumeko Jabami transfers to Hyakkaou Private Academy, an institution that's full of the children of Japan's wealthiest and most influential. Accordingly, it's also become a hotbed for extreme gambling that runs a toxic underground culture at the school. The losers are turned into slaves and “house pets” of the winners and that’s just the beginning. Yumeko is special because she simply wants to gamble for the thrill and rush that it provides her, not because she seeks any financial gain or to dominate the student campus. Her unique fascination with how the school's culture works catapults her to the top of the campus, but Yumeko's proficiency at gambling isn't why this show it's great, but rather it’s how exaggerated her excitement and love for the act becomes.

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Each episode sees a character gamble their entire savings and livelihood for some spontaneous wager. Yumeko is an incredibly meek and reserved girl, but she does a complete 180 whenever she gets in the vicinity of gambling and experiences tantric full body orgasms. It's not just that her entire attitude changes, but it's like she becomes a demon. Her eyes take on an evil glow, the pitch of her voice drops, and she becomes otherworldly. Yumeko’s behavior is incredible, but the way in which the show’s animation and style also loses control during these moments is incredible. Kakegurui handles something as basic as rock, paper, scissors, or a hand of poker, but also covers more extreme games, like Russian Roulette, where actual lives are on the line.

This anime turns something normal into something insane and treats gambling like it's a fight between superheroes. It embraces an absolutely demented point of view that elevates this madness to something mandatory for fans of the extreme. Just watch the show’s opening credits and tell yourself that you don’t want to see more. With a second season on the way soon, now’s the perfect time to check out this insane anime.

Kill la Kill

Available on: Netflix, Hulu

Mashing together a bunch of things that shouldn’t work, but do, based on sheer will alone, Kill la Kill is the best sort of crazy. Pulling from a lot of different anime, the series follows Ryuko, who has just transferred to the Honnouji Academy after the death of her father. At this Academy, everyone wears certain quasi-sentient uniforms that imbue them with superpowers due to the “Life Fibers” that they’re made from. Ryuko seeks to take down the Academy’s villainous headmistress, while getting vengeance for her father and finding the owner of the other half of the Scissor Blade that she wields.

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That’s a lot to juggle but Kill la Kill balances it all well while also building real excitement as Ryuko slowly gets close to her end goal. The series’ animation may not be the most elegant, but that doesn’t stop it from attempting some really ambitious battle set pieces, not to mention some of the transformations that go on in this show are just bonkers. You wouldn’t think that clothing and fighting would go together so well but after Kill la Kill you’ll never want to separate the two.

Kokkoku: Moment by Moment

Available on: Amazon Prime

Kokkoku: Moment by Moment is a bleak, surreal mystery that plays with time and space in a way that feels fresh and exciting. Juri Yukawa is your typical underachieving teenager who’s failed to find her calling. Kokkoku quickly pulls the rug out from under the viewer and transforms this slice of life anime into something substantially trippier. Juri’s brother and nephew get kidnapped by a cult and Juri’s uncle reveals that their family has the power to stop time, which is exactly what they’re going to do to save them.

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It’s fascinating to watch Juri learn more of the secrets about her lineage as well as her own unique powers. When Juri and her grandfather freeze time, this frozen world is called Stasis, but there are also terrible monsters that lurk in Stasis that prey on those who stay in there for too long. Kokkokucreates such a rich, fully formed story with a deep history to it, but it also initially keeps the audience in the dark to simulate the same overwhelming experience that Juri is going through. Kokkoku slowly parses out answers as Juri and her grandfather become more entwined in the world of Stasis. It’s such an engrossing story that’s so much bigger than the characters and what they’re caught up in.

Laughing Salesman

Available on: Crunchyroll

Fozuko Moguro is a traveling salesman, but not just any type of ordinary salesman. He deals in human souls. Mr. Moguro views the world's population is sad, lonely individuals and he's more than willing to give them a helping hand—for a price. Mr. Moguro promises solutions to all of the problems and shortcomings of the people that he encounters, but there's always some sort of major caveat involved and there's a situation where anyone actually gets out on top. Moguro is a monkey's paw personified or he might even be Satan himself.

Even though it's obvious that every story will end in doom, the show is incredibly addictive and works as a bizarre, unusual take on the typical anthology format. It's like if The Twilight Zone was done purely as character studies and driven by ego. It's a damning portrait of humanity just as much as it is an entertaining piece of storytelling. Each episode packs two stories into one installment and this show is much more effective when it can quickly fire off morality plays. Unfortunately the original Laughing Salesman from the '90s, which has over 100 episodes, isn't streaming anywhere, but hopefully Mr. Moguro will show up at some streaming services door and make them an enticing deal that they can't refuse...

Little Witch Academia

Available on: Netflix, Adult Swim, Crunchyroll, FunimationNow, Hulu

Trigger is one of those animation studios that whenever they take on a new project, it’s something that you want to put on your radar, regardless of its topic, because it’s going to end up being one of the most beautifully animated anime of the year. Little Witch Academia started off as a film (and a sequel), but the property has seen such popularity that a television series exploring the world of Luna Nova was made a priority. Little Witch Academia follows Akko Kagari, a witch superfan who is excited to be enrolling in the esteemed Luna Nova Magical Academy. Not only that, but Akko comes from a non-magical background making her enrollment at Luna Nova a bit of a double-edged sword.

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A lot of this show is about celebrating the beauty (and responsibility) of magic, but there’s also much charm in the fact that Akko is not good at magic. You’re following a character that struggles to even ride a broom properly, not some pro. Akko also has a good group of varied witch friends to bounce off of with their banter being a fun aspect to the series as well. Little Witch Academia tends to avoid serialization and larger story arcs, which gives the show a nice boost of freedom where every episode is something completely different. One week can be about a dragon. Another about a renegade skeleton looking for his lost love. There’s much less urgency with this show, but it’s such a pleasant, beautiful looking anime that will sneak up on you in other ways.

Lupin the Third

Available on: Adult Swim, Crunchyroll, FunimationNow, Hulu

Imagine if James Bond decided to become a master thief and you’ve got Lupin the Third in a nutshell. Lupin III is notorious for being the world’s best thief and whether he’s working a solo mission, or has help from his distinctly talented allies, Jigen, Goemon, and Fujiko, they’re always brilliantly evading capture and blowing the minds of the authorities in the process. Lupin and his gang travel all across the world for their heists across the course of the series and Interpol Inspector Zenigata is always hot on their heels. 

Lupin the Third knows how to expertly blend action, suspense, and comedy to turn each episode into a self-contained mystery while a broader storyline typically plays out in the background of each season.Lupin the Third is an anime that’s actually been running strong since the ‘70s, but Part II and Part IV have aired on Adult Swim and picked up a greater following. The same thing will likely happen with the show’s most recent addition, Part V, which takes its most modern inspiration and sees Lupin deal with many tech- and Internet-based crimes.

Megalo Box

Available on: Adult Swim, Crunchyroll, Hulu

There need to be more boxing anime out there—plain and simple. Sports anime are a dime a dozen and they can even manage to find a way to make niche activities like fencing, ping pong, and diving exciting (although I’m still waiting for an all-out insane marbles anime). Boxing seems like an area that seems tailor-made for anime when there are so many action series that capitalize on super powered people trading blows. It’s just boxing without the ring. 

Megalo Box is actually an update of the classic anime,Ashita no Joe, in honor of the series’ 50thanniversary.Megalo Box updates the ordinary boxing series with a futuristic setting and the advent that boxers fight with metallic grid-like gear on their shoulders that intensifies the battles. In true badass fashion, the series’ hero, Junk Dog (Joe), fights gear-less. The anime tells the rags to riches story as Junk Dog rises above his nobody status and slows climbs the ranks of the Megalo Boxing rankings. The boxing matches all look incredible and at thirteen episodes, this is an easy series to give a shot.

Mob Psycho 100

Available on: Adult Swim, Amazon Prime, Crunchyroll, FunimationNow, STARZ

Coming hot off the heels of his latest hit series, One-Punch Man, Mob Psycho 100 is also a strong blast of creativity courtesy of the brilliant mind of “One” (if the character animations weren’t also a dead giveaway). Operating much like his other series, Mob Psycho 100 is a frenzy of an anime that is all about shattering expectations and taking an overdone genre and making it feel fresh. Here, a totally normal boy named Mob learns that he’s an incredibly powerful Esper, meaning he wields a great deal of psychic power. Rather than doing something about these powers, Mob lives in fear of them getting out of control and instead tries to suppress his abilities and avoid the spotlight, however, trouble has a certain way of finding him and eking out his potential.

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Mob Psycho 100 is a triumph for its unconventional storytelling and great cast of characters, all of which fit somewhere different on the psychic spectrum. Part of the fun here is just determining who actually has psychic powers and who is just full of themselves (and who’s just an evil ghost), but everyone is still painted in an incredibly entertaining light. Plus, much like One-Punch Man, this series offers up some of most gorgeous animation that you’re going to come across. If you’re not marveling at the action scenes or laughing your ass off at its sense of humor, then you’re for sure going to be lost in the hypnotic look of this series. This one will sneak under your skin until you don’t even realize how obsessed you are with it, plus there’s an impressive dub for the series, too.

My Hero Academia

Available on: Adult Swim, Crunchyroll, FunimationNow, Hulu, Yahoo View!

My Hero Academia is set within a well-defined universe where a good deal of people are born with latent superpowers known as “Quirks” that become activated after a matter of time. The series follows Izuku Midoriya, a quirk-less child who is more obsessed with superheroes than anyone else, in spite of his own normal status. However, everything changes for Izuku when the world’s greatest superhero, All Might, gives his own quirk over to Izuku in a rare act that forever ties the two together.

With Izuku still trying to understand and master the abilities of his new quirk, he finds himself enrolled in U.A. High School which becomes a training ground for all of the newest superheroes in training. My Hero Academia might skew younger a little in its tone, but it has an infectious energy that’s built upon having a strong (huge) cast of characters and an addictive narrative that sees these heroes-in-training trying to brave the trials of school.

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There’s something so soothing about clearly established battles of Good Vs. Evil and My Hero Academia excels at painting these extremes in such exciting, new lights. The fight scenes are also on a whole other level. Just taking a glimpse of the superpowers on display in this show should give you an indication that this is far from some X-Men rip-off. This series isn’t going anywhere though and if Funimation didn’t have Dragon Ball Super on their hands, My Hero Academia would be the other big hit that they’d be banking on. They’ve only scratched the surface with the superpowers of this one.

Onara Gorou

Available on: Amazon Prime

Okay you guys, Onara Gorou isn’t freaking Shakespeare, but it’s a supremely weird series that looks at the antics of Gorou, “the most admirable of farts.” Gorou attempts to help out individuals (all while connected to the human that’s producing him) and every moment of this show elicits questions that you’re not even sure that you want the answers.

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Onara Gorou almost feels like the early seasons of South Park where this crudely presented idea looks juvenile at its surface layer, but there’s something more intelligent going on underneath. Make no mistake, Onara Gorou isn’t a smart series, but it’s unrepentantly silly and it will make you laugh and question the laws of nature in a way that more shows should. How did you live your life without having this show and its nightmarish ending themein your world!?

One-Punch Man

Available on: Adult Swim, Hulu, Netflix, Yahoo View!

One-Punch Man is overblown action in the best possible way. The series is about Saitama, the eponymous "One-Punch Man", a superhero that is so powerful that he kills all of his enemies in one punch. Because of this lack of a challenge, Saitama has developed a blasé look on life as he searches for someone stronger than him. The fact that this extremely overpowered person looks like this is the perfect unassuming icing on the cake.

It's encouraging to see how well One-Punch Man nails the action and humor that it goes for, and it's funny that in a year that has seen people clamoring for (and receiving) more Dragon Ball, this is the series that seems to be satisfying most of these people's desires for overblown, God-level battles (the work done in the first season finale is truly a sight to behold in both animation and fighting).

 On the other extreme of this, the series is also very interested in the hierarchy of these superheroes, designating them classes, rules and restrictions, and through this we get a number of delightful ancillary low-level heroes that kind of out-Venture Bros the Venture Bros. Here you're getting such absurd fighters like Tank Top Vegetarian, Superalloy Darkshine, Handsomely Masked Sweet Mask, Metal Bat, Pri-Pri-Prisoner, Spring Mustache, and License-less Rider, who is simply a cyclist who uses his bike as a weapon. I dare you to watch that theme song and not want to give this adrenaline shot a peak.

Overlord

Available on: Crunchyroll, FunimationNow, Hulu

Overlord is the very best kind of wish fulfillment series where a slacker loser suddenly becomes the all-powerful ruler of a magical land. This isn’t exactly an original premise, but Overlord puts so much detail and love into its universe. In the year 2126, the most popular MMORPG is a title called “YGGDRASIL.” But when the game announces that it’s shutting down its servers, one stubborn player named Momonga decides to stay in the game. After “YGGDRASIL” shuts down, Momonga learns that the virtual world has rebuilt itself into something new and because he didn’t log out, he’s actually entered this world and turned into his avatar, a skeleton wizard.

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Rather than panic over this turn of events, Momonga decides to take advantage of his fate and pledges to become the ruler of this new world. Momonga’s journey and development through this new universe is incredible, but the non-playable characters that inhabit this world slowly gain emotions and learn to evolve, too. Overlord has had three seasons to grow and deepen its mythology and it’s turned into the home for some of the most realistic characters in an anime as well. The way in which the series incorporates rules from video games, but also subverts them and strives for something deeper, is another reason why this show is such a treat. It consistently wants to defy expectations and surprise its audience with where Momonga is headed.

Parasyte –The Maxim-

Available on: Crunchyroll, Hulu

Parasyte: The Maxim hits the ground running and is bonkers from its very first frame. The series revolves around a number of alien parasites that have landed on Earth and start possessing hosts. Shinichi Izumi is a mild-mannered high school student whose life drastically changes when one of these parasites possesses his right hand. This sets Shinichi on a dangerous journey to wipe out the other parasites that have landed on Earth, as well as figure out how to work alongside his new alien host, and if there's a way to rid himself of this threat. 

Parasyte: The Maxim operates like a superhero series at times as Shinichi acclimates to the new strength and powers that his parasite gives him. The series also navigates tricky moral territory as Shinichi, who's now a human-alien hybrid, must fight against the aliens that are now part of his biology (think Tokyo Ghoul, but with aliens instead of vampire demons).

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The path that Shinichi finds himself on gives the anime a strong narrative drive, but honestly, this is just a beautiful show to watch in motion. The fluid, bewildering effects that Shinichi's parasitic hand puts to use are ridiculous and it's just crazy to watch a boy partner up with an alien version of his hand for an entire series. H.P. Lovecraft would give this madness his full stamp of approval.

Ping Pong the Animation

Available on Amazon Prime, Crunchyroll, FunimationNow

Ping Pong the Animation is perhaps the best example of Masaaki Yuasa’s magic because he’s able to turn table tennis into one of the most gripping, eye-popping animated series that you will ever watch. There is absolutely nothing remarkable about the show’s premise—a high school table tennis player named Smile discovers his potential in the sport and attempts to rise through the ranks—but Ping Pong the Animation would make you think that the fate of the world is at stake.

The anime squeezes an insane amount into its scant eleven episodes, but it makes every one count and you’ll eagerly anticipate each new match. You’ll swear that you didn’t know how the human body moved until you see how Yuasa puts people in motion. It’s proof that he can elevate anything into gold and just how much of a difference animation style makes. Story is always going to be important, but it’s a lot easier to be forgiving of downfalls when insane animation is breaking your brain. Watch this and awaken.

Pop Team Epic

Available on: Adult Swim, Amazon Prime Video, Crunchyroll, FunimationNow

Pop Team Epic doesn’t give a fuck if you like it or not—in fact it probably hopes that you don’t—and it’s why this manic, insane series is so special. The show is a parody sketch anime that operates with unpredictable, frenetic pacing. Any topic is fair game, but the animation style also radically changes without notice and the series tries to break itself down more than it presents a polished anime. Hell, the end of every episode even presents a “Next Time On…” preview for Hoshiri Girldrop, a fake series that they made up. Just watch the show’s legendary “Hellshake Yano” sequence to get a glimpse of its crazy style and fall in love with it.

read more: Pop Team Epic Brings Its Madness to Adult Swim

If the show’s unleashed attitude wasn’t enough, each episode is basically eleven minutes long and then the following eleven minutes is the same footage that preceded it, but with minor differences. The voice actors will be changed the second time around, animation touches will contrast, but it’s an incredibly bold experiment to play with the audience and their patience. There seems to be an equal split on the people that love and hate the show’s “Bob Team Epic” halves, but they have people’s attention. With Pop Team Epic recently joining the irreverent Adult Swim’s Toonami lineup, the cult series has become more popular than ever.

RahXephon

Available on: Amazon Prime

In many ways RahXephon may seem like the poor man’s Neon Genesis Evangelion, and while there are ample similarities between the two, RahXephon tells a distinct story that is crazy, contemplative, and awesome in its own way. RahXephon starts as the “boy meets mecha, boy pilots mecha to save the world” start of narrative, but it turns into such a perplexing mash-up of themes and sensibilities. There’s also a delicious ‘70s flavor to the show’s aesthetics that keep it in this weird displaced time that doesn’t feel quite like the past or the future.

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Where Evangelion finds its fuel from depression and nihilism, RahXephon turns to the power of music and folklore. The series still operates with all of the staples of a giant mecha action series, but RahXephon strives for more and tries to redefine what the mecha genre can do. The stylized, methodical series is not for everyone, but it should still resonate in a way that’s deeper than the standard robot brawler.

Re: Creators

Available on: Amazon Prime

Re: Creators is extremely awesome in the sense that it delivers sprawling, insane battle sequences, but is also all about the struggles of creation and failing expectations. Sota Mizushino is an avid manga and anime fan and hopes to one day create his own series that finds an audience. Suddenly, characters from all across media—manga, anime, video games— get brought to the real world and Sota somehow becomes the middleman between two factions of creations where the fate of the Earth is at stake.

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Re: Creators is far from the typical “lost characters need to get home” narrative and it manages to continually add surprises throughout the season (it also features one of the more creative takes on the “recap episode” that you’ll ever find). The series mixes existentialism with flashy fight scenes and Re: Creators creates something very bold and memorable in the process. It’s a great deconstruction of the medium in general.

Saga of Tanya the Evil

Available on: Crunchyroll, FunimationNow

Saga of Tanya the Evil is basically one long grudge match between an Atheist and God. In present time, a selfish Atheist Japanese businessman is pushed in front of a passing subway. Before his death, time is stopped by an omnipotent force known as “Being X.” When the businessman refuses to acknowledge Being X as God, he not only transports the man into an alternate magic-friendly version of World War I Europe, he also puts him in the body of a young girl, Tanya Degurechaff. Being X informs Tanya that if she dies of an unnatural death or fails to believe in him, her soul will go to hell for all of the crimes from her previous life. Stuck in this war-torn territory, Tanya joins the military with career advancement on her mind, planning to avoid the front lines of battle as much as possible. In the process, Tanya ends up becoming one of the most enviable, ruthless members of the military and begins changing the shape of history in the process.

The spiritual struggle that Tanya finds herself in as Being X continually tries to manipulate her (he makes it so her gun won’t fire unless she prays to him first) is one thing to love about the show, but the other is the action that goes down in this bizarre world. The military is headed up by mages that basically fly through the air and fire super-powered weapons with the aid of magic. The result of all of this are dazzling aerial battles that give Attack on Titan a run for its money, while mixing magic with history in the most bad-ass way.

Sagrada Reset

Available on: Amazon Prime

Sagrada Reset is set within the town of Sakurada, a special community where everyone that lives there possesses some kind of special ability. Kei Asai, for instance, has an exceptional case of photographic memory to the point that he hasn’t forgotten a single thing that’s happened to him in Sakurada. Kei eventually comes in contact with Misora Haruki, who has the ability to reset time for as far back as three days. This is an exceptional power, but through these resets Kei still retains his memory of the now-deleted time. Accordingly, Kei and Misora team up and use their powers in tandem to help out individuals and solve a much larger mystery that’s afoot in Sakurada.

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The dynamic here between Kei and Misora is so loving and beautiful, but the show also creates an interesting world where special abilities are not only common, but monitored by a shady corporate board. One of the biggest joys of the series is watching how various abilities overpower and cancel each other out. Kei and Misora have to put some real quick thinking into play to get out of their problems and this thoughtfulness to the stories is why the idea works so well.

Samurai Champloo

Available on: Adult Swim (Random Episodes), FunimationNow, Hulu

If you’re sifting through anime, you’re likely going to come across some samurai titles. They’re a staple of the form. Samurai Champloo, unsurprisingly, is exactly that, but also so, so much more. While at its core a simple quest story involving a mysterious beauty, Watanabe’s series is an anachronistic mash-up that reimagines Edo-era Japan into a post-modern hip hop wonderland. Watanabe continues to remix these ideas by literally rewinding episodes or “scratching” them like a record with a DJ-like sensibility as these classical themes get mashed together with current aesthetics.

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Just like Watanabe has revamped other classic anime archetypes, even if you’ve never been big on samurai series before, this one is likely to rub you the right way. Part of the fun here is just how successful Samurai Champloo is at creating its tone. It’s really a different way of presenting a narrative, and a smart pairing that deserves more credit. There’s also just something about seeing an elegant sword fight set to a hip-hop soundtrack.

Shimoneta: A Boring World Where the Concept of Dirty Jokes Doesn't Exist

Available on: FunimationNow, Hulu

The series’ introduction (and even its lengthy title) gives you a pretty good idea of what’s going on here. In a world where pornography, lewd language, and even crude humor are made illegal, a certain group of freedom fighters try to insert sexuality back into the world. This mash-up of Bradbury with bawdy humor turns out to be an ingenious pairing. You’d have no idea that flashy terrorist acts involving nude photos raining down on the population could not only be so hilarious, but also saying something poignant at the same time.

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There’s some exceptionally smart, informed humor coming out of this show (even their heavy “censorship” towards their language and gratuitousness is very funny while also servicing the story) and a delicious What If? scenario like nothing else. It’s also just nice to see the rampant sexuality that can so often dominate anime being portrayed in such an empowering light, too.

Space Dandy

Available on: Adult Swim (Random Episodes), FunimationNow, Hulu

This might be the greatest television show that I’ve ever seen—not just anime, but television, as a whole. The incredibly complex show has one of the simplest premises as the series follows a bounty hunter, Dandy, and his unusual crew on the hunt for rare alien species. Masterminded by Shinichiro Watanabe (a name that will pop up a lot here), each episode takes Dandy and company to a different planet, ostensibly making it a new show each time. One episode it’s a zombie story, the next a romantic comedy, and then an intergalactic dance competition. Another installment is focused entirely on the idea of a robot trying to learn and comprehend how to love. The show’s narrator is just as much a character on the program as any of the actual cast.

read more: Space Dandy: 5 Essential Episodes

Space Dandy goes the extra mile by having a different art director and character designer in use for each planet they visit, giving the locations and their inhabitants all a distinctly unique look. On top of that, the animation and music is just a gorgeous, psychedelic avalanche for the senses. It’s over-the-top aesthetic is very much something to get excited about. When combining that with truly avant-garde, unpredictable storytelling, Space Dandy becomes a series like no other. It demands watching and refuses defining.

Tatami Galaxy

Available on: Crunchyroll, FunimationNow

I’m going to rave a lot about Masaaki Yuasa because he’s just that damn amazing and groundbreaking. Even if the storyline in Tatami Galaxy was utter trash it would still be worth watching for Yuasa’s one of a kind animation style, but this series actually tells a rather profound story. The series centers around an unnamed protagonist who’s a freshman at college and is hungry for a “rose-colored campus life” of wonders. Each episode sees the character join a different campus club (tennis club, film club, cycling club…) and explores the disastrous, hilarious results of this decision and how reality doesn’t meet expectation. However, what’s great about this show is that each episode literally rewinds through time back to the beginning so that in the next episode a different club can be chosen. 

The series explores the similarities and differences that take place based on these decisions and it’s a creative take on parallel universes and the hand of fate. Then Yuasa also goes and breaks every rule that exists for animation and delivers such an orgasmic display of color and movement. At only eleven episodes, how can you really refuse such an anime?

Trigun

Available on: Crunchyroll, FunimationNow, Hulu

As all sorts of flashy new anime hit the scene, there’s something to be said for an action classic from the ‘90s like TrigunVash the Stampede is your mysterious “Man With No Name” gunslinger archetype. The series bills him as one of the most destructive forces in the nation and while he is an impeccable shot and gunfighter, he’s also an incredibly sensitive individual who’d much rather preach the gospel of “love and peace” than empty out his chamber. With an obscene bounty of sixty billion double dollars on Vash’s head, there is never a shortage of assassins and derelicts out there who are looking to take him down.

read more: The Best Sci-Fi Movies on Hulu

Trigunoffers incredible gunplay and action set pieces that are amazing to watch, but also highlight Vash’s extreme skills and ability to avoid death, whenever possible. The series only becomes more complex and fascinating when Vash’s spotty past gets explored and he attempts to fill in the blanks surrounding his retrograde amnesia.

Trigun provides an emotional, suspenseful story about a man who wants to reject his violent talents and reclaim his past, but it’s also full of memorable villains and intense weapons that make the show even more impressive. Many chivalrous archetypes have come after Vash the Stampede’s time, but there’s a reason that he’s still such a classic character from anime (there will definitely be someone dressed up at him at the next Comic-Con you attend).

Urahara

Available on: Crunchyroll, FunimationNow

Urahara is a strange little serious that is more about style over substance. It follows a group of girls obsessed with Harajuku culture who find themselves in battle against an invasion of aliens who want to steal their adorable culture. It’s a very weird idea that features things like a live-action talking tempura shrimp, but this anime still works even if you have no Harajuku knowledge. In fact, it’s genuinely surprising that this is an anime with a dub counterpart since it seems so intrinsically linked to Japanese culture. Then again, Dagashi Kashi also had a dub and maybe it’s a testament to just how popular Harajuku culture has become in America. Or maybe they’re just that confident in the animation.

When it begins it might feel like Urahara is just Harajuku fan service and “cuteness porn,” but the seriessurprises and whips out a compelling arc by the time that it comes to its conclusion. These plucky characters begin to turn into the very aliens that attack them and some real decisions need to get made. That being said, this isn’t an anime that you come to for its story, this is a show that’s a marvel to look at and every episode takes advantage of that and shows off in a different way. Urahara is far from the deepest series of the year, but it is the most beautiful.

Violet Evergarden

Available on: Netflix

Violet Evergarden tells the delicate kind of sci-fi friendly story that would feel at home as the plot in a Phillip K. Dick or Isaac Asimov story. The anime presents a thoughtful spin on the science fiction genre as it attempts to turn the sometimes cold, distant environment into something incredibly emotional and human. Violet Evergarden is an Auto Memory Doll—a person whose purpose revolves around writing letters for others or conveying the emotions that they cannot—and she attempts to find purpose and figure out who she is as she carries out these personal tasks for others.

read more: Ultraman Anime Coming to Netflix

Violet Evergarden is also a former soldier who’s part robot and she struggles to function after the war is over. The series fluctuates between glimpses of Violet’s PTSD and her various Auto Memory Doll jobs for others. The series adopts a structure that’s almost anthology-like in nature as Violet helps a new individual whose words have gotten away from them. Violet Evergarden’s script can occasionally be wonky and its presentation of gender roles is absolutely problematic, but it’s also one of the most gorgeous shows to come out of Kyoto Animation and its grasp on small-scale storytelling hits such heights.

Yu Yu Hakusho

Available on: FunimationNow, Hulu

Yu Yu Hakusho is a shonen contemporary to the likes of Dragon Ball and even though the series saw a lengthy run on Adult Swim, the spirit-fighting adventures of Yusuke Urameshi never quite caught on the same way that Goku’s journeys did. That being said, now is the perfect time to sit down and binge on all 112 episodes of Yu Yu Hakusho because it’s a great example of a series that knows when to quit, rather than needlessly drag things on and dilute the brand (I’m looking at you, Naruto, Bleach, One Piece…).

Yusuke Urameshi, the show’s hero, gets hit by a car and killed in the show’s opening minutes. After demonstrating a proficiency in the afterlife, he returns to Earth and eventually engages in battle with some truly creative demons. Yusuke and every member of his team offer a unique style to battle and the show makes each of its major arcs feel like the best one and have real stakes.

Daniel Kurland is a published writer, comedian, and critic whose work can be read on Den of Geek, Vulture, Bloody Disgusting, and ScreenRant. Daniel knows that the owls are not what they seem and his perma-neurotic thought process can be followed at @DanielKurlansky.

Best Anime to Stream
The ListsDaniel Kurland
Dec 26, 2019

Best Anime On Amazon Prime Video

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Amazon Prime Video has a fine collection of anime from Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood to Pop Team Epic and more.

Editor's Note: This post is updated monthly. Bookmark this page and come back to see what other anime classics get added to Amazon Prime.

Updated for January 2020

You can see a complete list of Amazon new releases here.

Isn’t it just the worst when you’re out with friends at your favorite restaurant and everyone’s discussing RahXephon and you’re unable to jump in? How about when you’re waiting for the bus to arrive and people are discussing the latest Happy Sugar Life plot twist? Or when your cashier at the supermarket tries to make small talk and naturally namedrops the eternal equalizer, Re: Creators, and you just have to quietly look at your shoes?

Okay, so anime’s presence might not be quite at that level, but the popularity of the once-niche area of the animation industry only continues to blossom and become more mainstream. Not only are there now ample anime series that are available on popular streaming services, but this is even used as a selling point in some cases! There have never been more anime titles readily available to audiences, which is certainly exciting, but it can also be overwhelming.

Not only are more legacy titles being added to streaming services every month, but there is also a steady stream of new series that are being added. To guarantee that the various libraries of content at your disposal don’t swallow you whole, we’ve done the hard work and narrowed it down to just the top and most important titles! For both the obsessive anime fan and those entirely new to the form, here’s the top anime currently streaming on Amazon Prime Video!

Inuyashiki: The Last Hero

Inuyashiki is easily one of the best anime to come out in the past few years. Its storytelling even rivals that of great American serialized television. It’s just that good. Right from the start it presents the sort of story that immediately gets your attention and lets you know that you’re watching something special. Inuyashiki is an elderly man whose family seems to hate him and are totally unappreciative of his existence. One night he goes for a walk in the park and some sort of alien explosion rocks the area. When Inuyashiki comes to, he appears to be a super powered robot with insane abilities. He uses these new powers to help those in need and even learns that he can heal and bring people back to life. Suddenly Inuyashiki has a purpose in life and watching him reawaken straight up made me cry on multiple occasions. 

read more: The Best Anime of 2017

A bratty teenager is also at the park when the explosion happens and he turns into the same robot that Inuyahsiki becomes. This kid, however, is a psychopath and begins mass murdering individuals at an alarming rate. It’s terrifying how callous he is and what this power brings out in him. Some scenes are genuinely hard to watch and it doesn’t take long for him to become one of the most dangerous murderers that the country has ever seen. Suddenly Inuyashiki has a “rival” and the two are pit against each other in a bizarre, infinitely interesting way. This series is a thrilling examination of what people do with power and it balances humble moments of humanity with disturbing violence and insane action. Everything it does hits hard and its ending is perfect in its precision and poignancy. The animation is also stunning in its depiction of these human/robot hybrids and the “minimalist” (ie. finger guns) approach to the violence.

Inuyashiki is a series that I will be absolutely shocked if some savvy American director doesn’t opt to turn into a movie within the next few years. It’s an absolutely beautiful story that boils down to the universal concepts of good and evil. Catch it now and get ahead of the game. At eleven episodes it’s an extremely easy commitment that you’ll wish was longer.

Watch Inuyashiki: The Last Hero

Kokkoku: Moment by Moment

Kokkoku: Moment by Moment is a bleak, surreal mystery that plays with time and space in a way that feels fresh and exciting. Juri Yukawa is your typical underachieving teenager who’s failed to find her calling. Kokkoku quickly pulls the rug out from under the viewer and transforms this slice of life anime into something substantially trippier. Juri’s brother and nephew get kidnapped by a cult and Juri’s uncle reveals that their family has the power to stop time, which is exactly what they’re going to do to save them.

read more: The Best TV Shows Hidden on Amazon Prime

It’s fascinating to watch Juri learn more of the secrets about her lineage as well as her own unique powers. When Juri and her grandfather freeze time, this frozen world is called Stasis, but there are also terrible monsters that lurk in Stasis that prey on those who stay in there for too long. Kokkoku creates such a rich, fully formed story with a deep history to it, but it also initially keeps the audience in the dark to simulate the same overwhelming experience that Juri is going through. Kokkoku slowly parses out answers as Juri and her grandfather become more entwined in the world of Stasis. It’s such an engrossing story that’s so much bigger than the characters and what they’re caught up in.

Watch Kokkoku: Moment by Moment

Happy Sugar Life

Happy Sugar Life is one of the darkest series that you’ll ever come across, anime or otherwise. It may even cause some viewers to tap out due to its extreme subject matter, but those that stick around will see a gripping character study that chronicles cyclical abuse and the worst versions of Stockholm Syndrome.

read more: Blade Runner Anime Series Set for Adult Swim

Happy Sugar Life looks at Sato Matsuzaka, a high school girl who kidnaps a small child named Shio because she’s madly in love with her. Now this isn’t a sexual love, but purely romantic and this child is just so innocent and pure that she tunes out all of the darkness in Sato’s life. Sato goes to any lengths necessary (like murder, for instance) to keep Shio locked in her home and a secret to the public. The series follows the very worst of deviants, but its dark perspective and Sato’s sugary sweet fantasies make for a strangely addictive curiosity.

Watch Happy Sugar Life

Eromanga Sensei

Eromanga Sensei operates with a very Three’s Company degree of logic to it, but there’s such a sweet story at its core. Masamune Izumi is a budding writer, but he can’t draw to save his life. An illustrator who goes by the name “Eromanga Sensei” communicates with Masamune online and illustrates his novels. Together they build a popular manga series through their odd relationship. Masamune also has a 12-year old sister, Sagiri, who’s a shut-in and stays in her room 24/7. What’s the big deal? Masamune’s little sister is actually Eromanga Sensei, his manga collaborator!

read more: Best TV Comedies on Amazon Prime

Eromanga Sensei finds its sweet spot with the unusual but endearing relationship between Masamune and his sister. What also makes this series so much fun is that it’s all about writing and drawing. It’s an anime that gets to be about manga and anime.

Watch Eromanga Sensei

Re: Creators

Re: Creators is extremely awesome in the sense that it delivers sprawling, insane battle sequences, but is also all about the struggles of creation and failing expectations. Sota Mizushino is an avid manga and anime fan and hopes to one day create his own series that finds an audience. Suddenly, characters from all across media—manga, anime, video games— get brought to the real world and Sota somehow becomes the middleman between two factions of creations where the fate of the Earth is at stake.

read more: The Best Anime to Watch on Netflix

Re: Creators is far from the typical “lost characters need to get home” narrative and it manages to continually add surprises throughout the season (it also features one of the more creative takes on the “recap episode” that you’ll ever find). The series mixes existentialism with flashy fight scenes and Re: Creators creates something very bold and memorable in the process. It’s a great deconstruction of the medium in general.

Watch Re: Creators

Vatican Miracle Examiner

Vatican Miracle Examiner is essentially “The Exorcist: The Anime” and isn’t that all you really need to hear? The series follows two priests from the Vatican who investigate alleged “miracles” and supernatural faith-based murders. Vatican Miracle Examiner operates with a fun episodic approach for the most part where each new miracle that the duo go to explore put them in the orbit of things like demonic possession, deals with the devil, and killer clowns. As the anime gets further into these investigations, it becomes clear that there’s a much deeper conspiracy afoot where a shadow organization aims to take control of the Vatican. Immortality is also on everyone’s minds and you’d almost expect Indiana Jones to show up in the final stretch of episodes.

read more: The Best Vintage Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Horror Shows on Amazon Prime

Vatican Miracle Examiner feels like it shouldn’t be an anime, but it’s definitely refreshing to see supernatural and conspiratorial elements worked into religion and faith in an anime series.

Watch Vatican Miracle Examiner

Pop Team Epic

Pop Team Epic doesn’t give a fuck if you like it or not—in fact it probably hopes that you don’t—and it’s why this manic, insane series is so special. The show is a parody sketch anime that operates with unpredictable, frenetic pacing. Any topic is fair game, but the animation style also radically changes without notice and the series tries to break itself down more than it presents a polished anime. Hell, the end of every episode even presents a “Next Time On…” preview for Hoshiri Girldrop, a fake series that they made up. Just watch the show’s legendary “Hellshake Yano” sequence to get a glimpse of its crazy style and fall in love with it.

read more: Pop Team Epic Brings Its Madness to Adult Swim

If the show’s unleashed attitude wasn’t enough, each episode is basically eleven minutes long and then the following eleven minutes is the same footage that preceded it, but with minor differences. The voice actors will be changed the second time around, animation touches will contrast, but it’s an incredibly bold experiment to play with the audience and their patience. There seems to be an equal split on the people that love and hate the show’s “Bob Team Epic” halves, but they have people’s attention. With Pop Team Epic recently joining the irreverent Adult Swim’s Toonami lineup, the cult series has become more popular than ever.

Watch Pop Team Epic

Sagrada Reset

Sagrada Reset is set within the town of Sakurada, a special community where everyone that lives there possesses some kind of special ability. Kei Asai, for instance, has an exceptional case of photographic memory to the point that he hasn’t forgotten a single thing that’s happened to him in Sakurada. Kei eventually comes in contact with Misora Haruki, who has the ability to reset time for as far back as three days. This is an exceptional power, but through these resets Kei still retains his memory of the now-deleted time. Accordingly, Kei and Misora team up and use their powers in tandem to help out individuals and solve a much larger mystery that’s afoot in Sakurada.

read more: Attack on Titan Movie Gets Director

The dynamic here between Kei and Misora is so loving and beautiful, but the show also creates an interesting world where special abilities are not only common, but monitored by a shady corporate board. One of the biggest joys of the series is watching how various abilities overpower and cancel each other out. Kei and Misora have to put some real quick thinking into play to get out of their problems and this thoughtfulness to the stories is why the idea works so well.

Watch Sagrada Reset

Onara Gorou

Okay you guys, Onara Gorou isn’t freaking Shakespeare, but it’s a supremely weird series that looks at the antics of Gorou, “the most admirable of farts.” Gorou attempts to help out individuals (all while connected to the human that’s producing him) and every moment of this show elicits questions that you’re not even sure that you want the answers.

read more: The Best Comedy Movies on Amazon Prime

Onara Gorou almost feels like the early seasons of South Park where this crudely presented idea looks juvenile at its surface layer, but there’s something more intelligent going on underneath. Make no mistake, Onara Gorou isn’t a smart series, but it’s unrepentantly silly and it will make you laugh and question the laws of nature in a way that more shows should. How did you live your life without having this show and its nightmarish ending theme in your world!?

Watch Onara Gorou

RahXephon

In many ways RahXephon may seem like the poor man’s Neon Genesis Evangelion, and while there are ample similarities between the two, RahXephon tells a distinct story that is crazy, contemplative, and awesome in its own way. RahXephon starts as the “boy meets mecha, boy pilots mecha to save the world” start of narrative, but it turns into such a perplexing mash-up of themes and sensibilities. There’s also a delicious ‘70s flavor to the show’s aesthetics that keep it in this weird displaced time that doesn’t feel quite like the past or the future.

read more: The Best Sci-Fi Movies on Amazon Prime

Where Evangelion finds its fuel from depression and nihilism, RahXephon turns to the power of music and folklore. The series still operates with all of the staples of a giant mecha action series, but RahXephon strives for more and tries to redefine what the mecha genre can do. The stylized, methodical series is not for everyone, but it should still resonate in a way that’s deeper than the standard robot brawler.

Watch RahXephon

Blue Exorcist and Blue Exorcist: Kyoto Saga 

Blue Exorcist has all of the makings of a good adventure with a classic tortured hero. Rin Okumura isn’t just a delinquent that suffers from normal daddy issues, but his life gets turned upside down when he learns that his biological father is Satan. Rin goes through a lot at once when he not only learns about the existence of demons, but loses his guardian, Father Shiro Fujimoto. All of a sudden Rin has a proper focus for his rage and he pledges to become an Exorcist in order to deal with demons and ultimately kill his father, Satan.

read more: Best Horror Anime to Watch on Crunchyroll

Blue Exorcist leaps off from this strong premise and tells a satisfying story that knows how to balance its intense action sequences with the more intimate character work. As Rin heads for Satan he shows tons of growth and he’s a character that you really get worried about when it looks like he’s in trouble. There are other series like Black Clover or Yu Yu Hakusho that tread on similar territory, but Blue Exorcist presents a concise tragedy that’s effective. 

Watch Blue Exorcist

GTO: Great Teacher Onizuka

Great Teacher Onizuka is such a twisted morality story that it sneaks up on you slow subtly that you don’t even realize what’s happened. Eikichi Onizuka enters the series as slacker ex-gang member with few prospects. After an unattractive teacher steals Onizuka’s date, he determines that teachers must hold a strong sexual power over their students. This random event reshapes Onizuka’s entire life and he becomes a teacher! However, through the process he inadvertently develops a strong sense of morals and is no longer interested in doing something as depraved as hooking up with students.

read more: 13 Great Fantasy Anime Movies That Aren't from Studio Ghibli

As Onizuka’s quest goes on, he finds himself hungry to become the best teacher of all-time and happy to dispense his unique outlooks on life to help his class. Onizuka turns into an inspiring mentor to dozens and it’s amazing to see how this “bad guy” finally figures out what his passion is in life. Great Teacher Onizuka will make you feel warm inside, but it’s also funny as hell. Onizuka’s embarrassing antics never disappoint and the show finds the perfect rhythm for its comedy. With 43 episodes available, Great Teacher Onizuka is the kind of comforting comedy that’s there for you to binge watch and relax. Live your best life.

Watch Great Teacher Onizuka

Also Available On Amazon Prime Video: Fushigi Yugi, Black Jack, Fist of the North Star, Onihei, Samurai Pizza Cats, Pokemon, and Masaaki Yuasa’s short film, Kick-Heart.

Daniel Kurland is a published writer, comedian, and critic whose work can be read on Den of Geek, Vulture, Bloody Disgusting, and ScreenRant. Daniel knows that the owls are not what they seem and his perma-neurotic thought process can be followed at @DanielKurlansky.

Best Anime On Amazon Prime Video
The ListsDaniel Kurland
Dec 26, 2019

Best Horror TV Shows on Amazon Prime

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Old classics and international hits make up the some of the scariest TV shows available to stream on Amazon Prime.

If you're reading this on Halloween, Happy Halloween! If you're not reading this on Halloween, Happy Halloween anyway! With streaming services like Amazon Prime, there's no excuse for not making every day Halloween. 

Join Amazon Prime - Watch Thousands of Movies & TV Shows Anytime - Start Free Trial Now

You already know about some of the scariest horror movies on Amazon Prime, but don't forget that there are plenty of terrifying and bingeworthy horror shows on Amazon Prime as well. Many of them are classics like The Veiland One Step Beyond, even more, however, are modern, disturbing fairy tales like Lore and American Horror Story. Without further ado, here are some of the scariest shows to stream on Amazon Prime.

Updated for January 2020

Editor's Note: This post is updated monthly. Bookmark this page and come back every month to stay up to date with the best horror TV shows on Amazon Prime.

Dark/Web

For those interested in anthology and serialized horror storytelling, Dark/Web offers the best of both worlds. This Amazon Prime original tells a single spooky tale, spread out over eight largely self-contained "chapters."

read more: The Best Horror TV Shows on Netflix

Dark/Web picks up with the disappearance of cyber analyst Molly Solis (Noemi Gonzalez). As her friends investigate what happened to Molly, they begin to uncover some truly dark secrets hidden within the fabric of the Internet. Dark/Web expertly exploits real world fears about the spreading influence of this omniscient communication technology.

Watch Dark/Web

Lore

Aaron Mahnke's history horror podcast Lore has always operated under the theory that truth is stranger (and scarier) than fiction. That's the same philosophy that this Amazon Prime original adaptation adopts.

read more - Lore: The Challenges of Adapting a Scary Podcast

Both seasons of Lore tell a handful of real life stories that illustrate the origins of some of our world's spookiest legends and events. Narration combined with live action recreations present tales of vampirism, grave-robbing, werewolves, and more.

Watch Lore

American Horror Story

Ryan Murphy's American Horror Story is revolutionary in quite a few ways. Not only did it help usher in a renewed era of anthology storytelling on television, it also was arguably the first successful network television horror show since The X-Files.

read more: How American Horror Story Has Changed Since Murder House

Like all anthologies, American Horror Story has its better seasons (season 1 a.k.a. Murder House, season 2 a.k.a. Asylum, season 6 a.k.a. Roanoke) and its worse (season 3 a.k.a. Coven and season 8 a.k.a. Apocalypse). Still, for nine years and counting, American Horror Story has been one of the go-to options for TV horror fans.

Watch American Horror Story

The Veil

1958's The Veil consists of dramatizations of strange tales, the majority of which also feature host Boris Karloff in the cast. At story's end, our host is back to offer a conclusion to that particular story of “the world beyond our understanding.”

read more: The Best Modern Horror Movies

Not that 1950s TV audiences would have known about it, because The Veil wasn’t broadcast. Footage from its episodes appeared in some late sixties TV movies, and a DVD release followed in the 1990s, but its cancellation prior to airing have made it a cult find.

Watch The Veil

Haunted State

There are so many claims of ghosts, paranormal activity, and other things that go bump in the night worldwide that sometimes it seems best just to focus on one geographic area. That's the goal of documentary series, Haunted State. Haunted State narrows its paranormal coverage down to just one U.S. state.

read more: The Best Horror Movies on Amazon Prime

That state in question? Wisconsin. Despite not achieving statehood until 1848, Wisconsin apparently has some of the most ghost activity of state in the union. And it's up to four documentarians to investigate these spooky claims.

Watch Haunted State

One Step Beyond

The amazing drama you are about to see is a matter of human record,” runs John Newland’s introduction to this Twilight Zone-esque series. “The real people who lived this story, they believe it, they know, they took that one step beyond.

further reading: The Best TV Comedies on Amazon Prime

Famously, Newland took one step beyond himself when making "The Sacred Mushroom" episode in which he ingested hallucinogenic mushrooms and filmed his reaction. It’s not available here, but it’s out there in both senses of the phrase.

Watch One Step Beyond

Ghost Stories

“Come with me to a place of wondrous contradictions, a place that is silent and unstirring, yet restless and alive. A place of untold peace and boundless dread. Come with me into the very cradle of darkness, where those who dwell, dwell alone."

further reading: The Best Horror Movies Available to Stream

Thus actor Rip Torn ushers viewers in to each episode of Ghost Stories, an American horror anthology series that ran for 44 episodes in the late nineties. It’s the expected things-that-go-bump-in-the-night deal, tales of hauntings, vengeful ghosts, possessions and poltergeists, all dramatised in neat half hour instalments.

Watch Ghost Stories

Monsters

Monsters' opening credits feels haunted in a way that only corny late '80s/early '90s sci-fi and horror can feel haunted. The camera zooms in on planet Earth and right to a cozy suburban house in the evening. A father dejectedly turns the TV off as a mother and daughter enter the family room with popcorn. "Honey, it's family hour! There must be something on." Lo' and behold there is! Monsters: their favorite show. The father is a boulder-headed freak and the mother is a Cyclops.

read more: The Best Horror Movies on Netflix

Monsters disabuses us of the notion that horror anthologies belong to the modern day. This Sci-Fi Channel (now Syfy) series ran from 1988 to 1991 and featured several standalone episodes following different monsters. Monsters is creative, weird, unsettling, and perfectly scary.

Watch Monsters

Historic Hauntings

It's commonly accepted knowledge that the older a civilization is on Earth, the riper it is for haunting. A longer history of people means a longer history of hauntings. With that in mind, Great Britain has to be one of the more haunted places in the world.

read more: The Best Haunted House Movies and TV Shows of All Time

That's the theory that Historic Hauntingsis operating under at least. Historic Hauntings' four episodes cover Great Britain's four countries: England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland. If nothing else, this is a compelling travelogue for the spooky-minded among us.

Watch Historic Hauntings

The Living and the Dead

The BBC's The Living and the Dead is an aesthetically beautiful show. It's not entirely dissimilar to a British-ized The Returned. It stars Colin Moran as Nathan Appleby, a psychology who inherits a beautiful, if creepy manor.

further reading: Best Sci-Fi Movies on Amazon Prime

Sure, the property is a touch isolated but that doesn't concern Nathan and his wife. It should because what comes next is a bit more Amityville Horror than The Returned.

Watch The Living and the Dead

Apparitions

When The Exorcist first premiered in 1973, it changed everything for horror. A whole world of demonology and exorcism entered into our collective unconscious to torment the masses. Still, the TV world hasn't done much with exorcism-based horror since that then. BBC's Apparitionsfrom 2008, however, might be the exception. This is a nifty little horror drama that goes about demons the right way.

read more: The Best Horror Movies on Hulu

Apparitionsstars Martin Shaw as Father Jacob Mays. Mays is tasked with examining potential miracles for canonization. But as Mays sets out, he begins to come into contact with dark forces in need of some exorcising. Apparitions is an excellent miniseries that has a shockingly complete perspective on how the Catholic Church operates.

Watch Apparitions

Grimm

There may be more "cop drama...with a twist" shows than there are actually cop drama shows. Thankfully, Grimm is one of the better (and spookier) cop drama... with a twist shows out there. The twist in this instance is that the characters and crimes are based off of Grimm's Fairy Tales.

further reading: Best Vintage Sci-Fi, Horror, and Fasty TV Shows Available on Amazon Prime

Homicide investigator Nick Burkhardt (David Giuntoli) is charged with keeping the balance between humanity and Wessen, the mythological creatures of the world. It rarely goes well. Watch Grimm if for no other reason than to understand what 40 percent of the .gifs on Tumblr mean.

Watch Grimm

The Secret of Crickley Hall

British audiences seem to have a bigger appetite for horror on television than their American counterparts. And thank goodness, or Amazon's horror offerings could be very sparse indeed. The Secret of Crickley Hall is another creepy, and ultimately kind of profound supernatural thriller from the other side of the pond.

read more: The 25 Best Horror Movies You've Never Seen

Crickley Hall is based on a novel of the same name by James Herbert. It tells the story of the titular Crickley Hall in two time periods. The first is the present day (2006 in this case) in which the Caleigh family rents and resides in Crickley Hall, while the other takes place in war torn 1943. When one of the Caleigh children goes mysteriously missing in the present, some secrets (and ghosts) from the past could prove useful.

Watch The Secret of Crickley Hall

Best Horror TV Shows Amazon Prime
The ListsAlec Bojalad Louisa Mellor
Dec 26, 2019

The Flash Season 6 Episode 10 Return Date, Trailer, Cast, Villain, Story, and News

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The Flash Season 6 is in the midst of Crisis on Infinite Earths. Here's everything you need to know.

The Flash season 6 is here! That means way more speedster shenanigans and time-traveling adventures with Barry Allen and his team at STAR Labs. 

But there will be some changes in the new season, and we're not just talking about Barry's sharp new Flash costume! Current showrunner Todd Helbing was replaced by Eric Wallace.

"From his first day on The Flash, Todd Helbing has been a leader on the show, beloved by the cast and crew for his exceptional talent, vision and wonderful attitude. We are all sad to see him go, but we will all be better for the many shows he will no doubt create and run in the future," The Flash executive producer Greg Berlanti said in a statement (via The Hollywood Reporter). "Eric Wallace has proven his own exceptional talent and voice since season four, and we couldn’t be more thrilled to watch how he shapes the future of Team Flash and the many thrilling adventures that lay ahead for our characters and dedicated fans."

The Flash Season 6 Return Date

The Flash season 6 episode 10 is called "Marathon" and it airs on Feb. 4. No other details are currently available. But you won't have to wait QUITE that long to see Barry Allen again. There's still two episodes of Crisis on Infinite Earths to get through, both of which will air on Jan. 14. Here's a taste of what to expect...


The Flash Season 6 Episodes

We're keeping track of everything we know about the new season right here! We'll update this with new details as they become available. One interesting note about this new season, while it will have the traditional 22 episode season, they're treating this like two mini-seasons. So the first batch of episodes will focus on Bloodwork, then we'll get the Crisis on Infinite Earths interlude, and when the show returns after that, they'll be treating it like a brand new season, with a second big bad!

The Flash Season 6 Episode 1: Into the Void

"While Barry (Grant Gustin) and Iris (Candice Patton) deal with the heartbreaking loss of their daughter, Nora, the team faces their greatest threat yet — one that threatens to destroy all of Central City. Meanwhile, Killer Frost (Danielle Panabaker) has a brush with death that results in an unexpected new dynamic that will change her relationship with Caitlin forever."

air date: 10/8/19

read our review of "Into the Void" here.

The Flash Season 6 Episode 2: A Flash of the Lightning

"Faced with the news of his impending death, Barry’s (Grant Gustin) resiliency suffers as he struggles to fight fate. Meanwhile, Cecile’s (Danielle Nicolet) career as a D.A. conflicts with her identity when she crosses paths with a villainous meta-human."

air date: 10/15/19

read our review of "A Flash of the Lightning" here.

The Flash Season 6 Episode 3: Dead Man Running

"Knowing that Crisis is only weeks away, Barry (Grant Gustin) prepares a member of Team Flash for life without him while hunting a terrifying meta-human with an unquenchable thirst. Meanwhile, Ralph (Hartley Sawyer) uncovers a family secret."

air date: 10/22/19

read our review of "Dead Man Running" here.

The Flash Season 6 Episode 4: There Will be Blood

"Barry’s (Grant Gustin) efforts to prepare Cisco (Carlos Valdes) for Crisis are derailed when Cisco schemes to save Barry’s life instead. Meanwhile, Ramsey Rosso (guest star Sendhil Ramamurthy) uses his deadly new abilities to save his own life, while sacrificing his humanity in the process."

air date: 10/29/19

read our review of "There Will be Blood" right here.

The Flash Season 6 Episode 5: Kiss Kiss, Breach Breach

"Cisco’s (Carlos Valdes) faith in his ability to fill Barry’s (Grant Gustin) shoes as Team Leader is upended when he learns of a shocking murder. Meanwhile, Killer Frost (Danielle Panabaker) trusts no one except herself to hunt down the dangerous Ramsey Rosso (guest star Sendhil Ramamurthy)."

air date: 11/5/19

read our review of "Kiss Kiss Breach Breach" here.

The Flash Season 6 Episode 6: License to Elongate

"Barry (Grant Gustin) turns his attention to prepping Elongated Man (Hartley Sawyer) for life after Crisis and without The Flash, but Ralph ultimately teaches Barry a lesson. Meanwhile, Cecile (Danielle Nicolet) faces her own moment of self-discovery while helping a recuperated Chester P. Runk (guest star Brandon McKnight) reclaim his identity."

Danielle Panabaker will direct this episode.

air date: 11/19/19

read our review of "License to Elongate" here.

The Flash Season 6 Episode 7: The Last Temptation of Barry Allen Part One

"As Barry Allen (Grant Gustin) stands on the threshold of his impending death in Crisis, his convictions are tested when the monstrous Dr. Ramsey Rosso (guest star Sendhil Ramamurthy) infects The Flash with a mysterious, hallucinogenic contagion. Meanwhile, reporter Iris West-Allen (Candice Patton) uncovers a vast conspiracy."

air date: 11/26/19

read our review of "The Last Temptation of Barry Allen Part One" here.

The Flash Season 6 Episode 8: The Last Temptation of Barry Allen Part Two

"With The Flash (Grant Gustin) battling Bloodwork (guest star Sendhil Ramamurthy), Iris (Candice Patton), and Cisco (Carlos Valdes) fight to help Barry take control before he’s lost to Ramsey’s influence. Meanwhile, the rest of Team Flash fight to reclaim Central City from Bloodwork’s growing army."

air date: 12/3/19

read our review of "The Last Temptation of Barry Allen Part Two" right here.

The Flash Season 6 Episode 9 - Crisis on Infinite Earths: Part Three

"Pariah (Tom Cavanagh) enlists Black Lightning (guest star Cress Williams) to help stop the Anti-Monitor (guest star LaMonica Garrett) after Flash-90 (guest star John Wesley Shipp) shares what he learned from his battle in ‘Elseworlds.’  With the help of Black Lightning, Barry (Grant Gustin), Cisco (Carlos Valdes) and Killer Frost (Danielle Panabaker) come up with a plan that could save them all.  Meanwhile, Iris (Candice Patton) has a heart-to-heart with Ryan Choi (guest star Osric Chau), while Oliver (guest star Stephen Amell) and Diggle (guest star David Ramsey) return to an old familiar stomping ground."

air date: 12/10/19

Read our review of "Crisis on Infinite Earths Part Three" right here.

The Flash Season 6 Episode 10: Marathon

air date: 2/4/20

The Flash Season 6 Episode 11: Love is a Battlefield

air date: 2/11/20

The Flash Season 6 Episode 12: A Girl Named Sue

air date: 2/18/20

The Flash Season 6 Episode 13: Grodd Friended Me

air date: 2/25/20

The Flash Season 6 Villain

The Flash season 6 has made a major...and villainous addition to its cast. Sendhil Ramamurthy (best known for his work on Heroes) is playing Dr. Ramsey Rosso a.k.a. Bloodwork. Rosso is a brilliant physician who works on hematological oncology. He's a friend of S.T.A.R. Labs’ Caitlin Snow (Danielle Panabaker), and meets back up with her after an unexpected event. Rosso's desire to defy the laws of nature take him down a dark path where he enters the pantheon of Flash villainy. 

We wrote much more about Bloodwork and what you can expect from this new Flash villain right here!

The Flash Season 6 Story

The Flash will feature some sort of lead up to and deal with the aftershocks of this year's Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover event, which promises to shake the Arrowverse to its very core. There's no doubt that life will change for Barry, especially after an event as famous as DC's biggest and best Crisis. As some of you already know, a DC Crisis usually means that a Flash is about to die...and the events of the season 5 finale seem to have moved the clock up on that possibility by a few years.

Whoever the Crisis claims (although given the recent Arrow news, it's almost certainly Oliver...but he probably won't be alone) it probably won't be easy to say goodbye. 

We'll keep you updated as we hear more about The Flash season 6. In the meantime, check out our primer on what exactly Crisis on Infinite Earths means for the Arrowverse!

You can also expect some big changes coming for Caitlin Snow and Killer Frost this year. We have more details on that right here.

The Flash Season 6 Cast

Efrat Dor (Mayans MCSneaky Pete) is joining the cast of The Flash in its post-Crisis Season 6B portion (referred to as “Graphic Novel #2”), reports EW. She will play Eva McCulloch, whose official description reads:

“A quantum engineer and co-founder of McCulloch Technologies, Eva McCulloch is a scientific genius who works on the bleeding edge. Eva has been away from Central City for many years. But a chance meeting with Iris West-Allen results in a surprising alliance that pushes the boundaries of sanity, while also uncovering a vast conspiracy to take down Team Flash and its allies.”

Intriguingly, as the report points out, the closeness of the name Eva McCulloch to that of Evan McCulloch, a.k.a. the once-mentioned villainous Mirror Master of Earth 2 (and of the comics,) is hardly coincidental, although not to be confused with the show’s Earth 1 Mirror Master, Sam Scudder, with whom Team Flash has tangled back in Season 3. Thus, amongst the numerous possibilities for Eva’s origin is the theory that she is Earth 2 Mirror Master, gender-swapped post-Crisis. Such a concept wouldn’t even be unprecedented, since the timeline alterations of "Flashpoint" saw John Diggle’s baby daughter, Sara, replaced with son John Jr., a.k.a. “JJ.”

Natalie Dreyfuss (The OriginalsStill the King) is joining The Flash Season 6 for the recurring role of Sue Dearbon, reports TV Line. The casting foreshadows a monumental development for the television arc of Ralph Dibny/Elongated Man, since, as discerning DC Comic fans already know, Sue is destined to become his wife and cohort. The character first appeared back in The Flash Vol 1 #119, dated March 1961, introduced as a wealthy-family-hailing debutante who the enamored superheroic schmoe, Ralph, manages to woo after some crimefighting circumstances. The comic-depicted caste-clash will be prevalent on television, and Ralph will learn that there’s more to Sue's backstory than fancy soirees.

And yes, of course Tom Cavanagh will be back, and this time, he'll be playing a new version of Harrison Wells. Cavanagh will also play a different character, the mysterious (and central to Crisis) Pariah!

You can also expect Keiynan Lonsdale to return as Wally West for at least one episode at some point this season.

We also know that The Flash chapter of Crisis on Infinite Earths will air on Tuesday, Dec. 10.

Mike Cecchini is the Editor in Chief of Den of Geek. You can read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @wayoutstuff.

Read and download the Den of Geek NYCC 2019 Special Edition Magazine right here!

The Flash Season 6: News, Reviews, and Episodes Guide
NewsMike CecchiniJoseph Baxter
Dec 26, 2019

Star Wars: The Mandalorian Episode 8 Review - Redemption

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The Mandalorian reaches its explosive end in an episode with lots of action and a few laughs. Our review of "Redemption" is here!

This Star Wars: The Mandalorian review contains spoilers.

Star Wars: The Mandalorian Episode 8

“Redemption” is both the finale of The Mandalorian and the best episode of the season. Taika Waititi’s self-assured, clear-eyed direction benefits from what came before, certainly: he’s wrapping up the story of Mando and Baby Yoda’s pursuit by the formidable Moff Gideon. Waititi brings his hallmark humor as well as an excellent sense of space. Even the bar and the Mandalorian enclave we’ve seen before gain new dimensions and depth. The dialogue is charming, and fans will find Star Wars Expanded Universe references aplenty in this very entertaining episode. 

When last we saw our heroes, they were besieged in the bounty hunters’ bar, pinned down by Moff Gideon and his stormtroopers. The episode lets them stew in there for a little while with an opening scene perfectly suited to Waititi. (Note that this episode, like most of them, was written by Jon Favreau.) The dialogue is funny and casual, with stormtroopers bantering about Baby Yoda and failing miserably to hit a target when doing some target practice out of boredom. Just when it begins to feel like everyone will speak in banter that feels a little too much like contemporary Star Wars memes, Moff Gideon shows up with elevated, careful rhetoric. Impressively, each character in the episode speaks distinctly.

Lending the episode a lot of humor on screen is Waititi himself, whom we already know makes a great IG-11, and he continues to do so directing himself here. The droid’s two sets of programming -- bounty hunter and nurse -- complement one another and emerge in surprising and touching ways. He does enough here to make his death one of the more emotional moments of the episode.

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From the first scene on, Waititi's direction gives everything heft: armor rattles, troopers snap open the latches on a box, armor shatters under the force of a punch. It’s a crumbly, crunchy episode flavored with the action nonsense of a D&D game. Especially toward the end, you can practically hear the players wondering which characters’ last-ditch plan will get them out of their predicament. Fights have distinct segments, each an entertaining tiny scene in its own right. 

The Mandalorian’s theme music is expertly laid out in "Redemption," and not just as a theme for Mando himself. Ludwig Göransson's score captures the energy of the entire show. In particular, driving percussion at the beginning of the episode emphasizes Baby Yoda’s peril, and a new rhythm heralds the arrival of the Mandalorians in a flashback.

Part of the strength of the script comes from the way it fills in characters’ backstories and connects to other parts of Star Wars without feeling like a neon sign pointing toward another product. (Even if it is also that.) One of the more mild revelations, that Cara Dune is from Alderaan, is mentioned quickly but immediately adds context. Alderaan was destroyed by the Death Star, so it’s a quick jump to go from her heritage to the reason she joined the Rebellion against the Empire. 

Fans of The Clone Wars will find more references to a familiar Mandalore here. Truthfully, after the last few episodes and the referential The Rise of Skywalker, I wasn’t expecting The Mandalorian to explain its connections to other parts of the saga. These Mandalorians hiding under Nevarro are not the same as the ones on Mandalore itself, the same way the Sith dagger in The Rise of Skywalker is not the Dagger of Mortis it so closely resembles. Sometimes all that matters is how easy the scene is to read, regardless of how it connects to other canon. Not having direct connections is a smart decision from a storyteller's perspective. 

Read More: The Mandalorian Episode 8 Easter Eggs

But on the other hand, Star Wars is a huge and long-storied galaxy. The Disney canon declares that different stories do take place in the same realm as one another, so why not make them dovetail? And “Redemption” does, bringing us back to The Clone Wars’ Mandalorians. And it’s a delightful scene. Other revelations are not connected to the saga at all and instead dig into character: here is the Mando’s name (Din Djarin) and exactly how far he’ll go to protect the creed. Here is more of his history, in a heroic flashback that feels just like kids playing with action figures -- in a good way. 

Perhaps the only emotional weakness in the episode is Baby Yoda, whose role is predictable and not different enough from scenes we’ve seen before. Putting his hero moment later in the episode might have made it feel more triumphant. The episode has other flaws, too. The return to the Mandalorian enclave drags a bit: why don’t the stormtroopers follow them inside more quickly? These scenes also feature an oddly placed but utterly wonderful fight starring the Armorer. I’ve liked her from the beginning of the show, and seeing her mauling stormtroopers with the tools of her trade was a fist-pumping moment of victory. 

Now that the season is at an end, we know Mando well. It’s still remarkable and entertaining how he can be so stubborn and impulsive without ever coming off as abrasive or hyper-aggressive. Pedro Pascal’s vulnerable acting and the Mando’s orphan backstory soften him to a middle ground that never feels diluted either. He continues to be excellent at showing emotion when a lot is going on in his character’s helmeted head, as well as the exact opposite. There’s a great moment in this episode where Mando clearly switches into “just do it without thinking” mode and achieves his goal in a way that is both undeniably cool and humorously slapdash. 

Read More: The Mandalorian Ending Explained

The end of the episode brings with it a tumble of emotions: sadness and joy, humor and a sudden, grim sense of everything being even worse than it seemed at first. But the promise of a second season and the search for Baby Yoda's home brings hope. The cliffhanger ending -- Moff Gideon rising from his TIE fighter with the Darksaber in hand (another big The Clone Wars/Rebels connection) -- should keep fans talking until then.

I've thought of The Mandalorian as a 3/5 show: most episodes are technically impressive but don’t dig beyond the surface into their subjects. Neither does this one, really. Sometimes the references to other parts of Star Wars stories fill in where deeper characterization might have gone, as in the case of Cara’s Alderaanian heritage. But the show, and episode eight in particular, remains a good Star Warsstory that isn’t interested in subverting or digging into anything bigger but delivers an adventure that fascinates and delights nonetheless.

Megan Crouse writes about Star Wars and pop culture for StarWars.com, Star Wars Insider, and Den of Geek. Read more of her work here. Find her on Twitter @blogfullofwords.

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4.5/5
ReviewMegan Crouse
Star Wars: The Mandalorian Episode 8 Review
Dec 27, 2019
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