Prime Video: The 46 Best TV Shows to Watch – CNET [CNET]

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Aside from dropping several TV shows at the beginning of each month, Amazon Prime Video doesn’t have a ton of new weekly releases. But occasionally, an Amazon original comes knocking that deserves to pop up on your radar. Below you’ll find highlights for this week, as well as CNET’s full list of best Amazon Prime Video original TV shows.

What’s coming up this week (May 16-22)

Here are the highlights.

Friday

  • Troppo, season 1 (2022-) — Crime drama. An eccentric private investigator with a disturbing criminal past recruits a disgraced ex-cop to help her solve her first real case.

Read more: Amazon Prime Video: The Best Movies to Watch | Everything You Need to Know to Sign Up for Amazon Prime Video

Best Amazon Prime Video original TV shows


Comedy


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Jackie Brown/Amazon Studios

The Kids in the Hall (2022-)

Prime Video has resurrected The Kids in the Hall, the Emmy-nominated Canadian sketch comedy show that originally ran from 1988 to 1995. (By “resurrects,” I mean the show literally exhumes members of the comedy troupe from a grave they were buried in at end of the original show. That’s just the beginning of the fun.)  Follow the comedians as they freak out over mislabeled desserts, fight over imaginary love interests and write Earth’s last fax. But be warned: Some of these sketches are highly NSFW.

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Seven strangers are assigned to the same community payback sentence in this appealing comedy thriller set in Bristol, England. The six-episode show is fun, dark and touching, offering an engaging look at its rule-breakers’ backgrounds and the relationships that form between them. The plot thickens when some members of the group come across a bag of cash. If you need another draw, the show is co-created by Stephen Merchant, who co-created of the UK version of The Office.

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Amazon

Going on a Katheryn Hahn binge after WandaVision? Marvel’s new favorite witch starred in one season of this 2016 comedy with a memorable title. Her character’s name is just as memorable: Chris Kraus, an artist and filmmaker who moves to Texas with her husband. She quickly falls in love with his fellowship sponsor, played by Kevin Bacon. Yes, Kevin Bacon is in this. The dynamic of her marriage shifts as her infatuation challenges everything in smart and provocative and adult ways. Sadly, I Love Dick didn’t score a second season, but the first is well worth your time.

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Amazon Studios

A coming-of-age story. College. ’80s movie references. ’80s music. Endearing characters. This gem of a show from a few years back is easy viewing in the best way possible. David Myers (Craig Roberts) is a college student who gets a gig at Red Oaks, a Jewish country club, in the summer of 1985. As he figures out where he’s going in love and life, David meets eccentric, chaotic characters who provide plentiful laughs along with warranting your emotional investment. Put Red Oaks on your list of ultimate comfort viewing.

Sci-fi


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Prime Video

In this sci-fi Western, Josh Brolin stars as Royal Abbott, a Wyoming rancher who finds an obtrusive, inexplicable void on one of his pastures. The mysterious pit isn’t the only thing he has to worry about, though — his family is also locked in a battle with neighbors who’d like to take a portion of their land. Between these two developments, there’s more than enough going on in this small town to hold your attention. Stick with the series long enough, and you’ll get swept into its rural mystery. 

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Amazon

Tales from the Loop (2020-)

Not just another show about a small town where strange things happen, Tales from the Loop has a lot more underneath the surface. Drawing from a narrative art book by Swedish artist Simon Stålenhag, the series is stunning to look at, meticulous as can be with symmetrical frames. Light and space are infused with a painterly feel. The interconnected townspeople are similarly nuanced, their stories exploring loneliness, aging, the impact of technology and more through sci-fi ideas.

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Katie Yu, Aaron Epstein / Amazon Studios

Set in the near future, this sci-fi comedy imagines humans are able to upload themselves into a virtual afterlife. Nathan, a computer programmer played by Robbie Amell, finds himself pressed with that choice after a self-driving car accident and decides to upload to cozy, expensive Lake View. Though imperfect, Upload, which is part satire, part romance and part murder mystery, is easy to consume. Plus, a second season is now streaming.

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Prime Video

Philip K. Dick’s Electric Dreams (2017-2018)

A sci-fi anthology based on short stories by writer Philip K. Dick, Electric Dreams transports viewers to the future in each of its 10 tales. Exploring what it means to be human, the series is stuffed with intriguing premises, and boasts an impressive roster of stars. In one episode, Richard Madden and Holliday Grainger play a human and a telepathic mutant whose romance heats up as they’re trying to prevent a war between their kinds. If you’re in need of a sci-fi fix, sample an episode from this imaginative series. 

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Amazon Studios

The Black Mirror vibes are strong in this British series about technology gone wrong. The Feed is set in a futuristic London where a family develops an implant that lets people livestream their lives without needing to press a button on a phone. No, absolutely nothing can go wrong with that! Some pretty impressive actors stack out the cast, including David Thewlis and Michelle Fairley. While it’s not as polished or deep-cutting as Black Mirror, it’s still worth a look — just grab your phone during the less gripping parts.

Thriller


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Amazon Prime Video

Adapted from Lee Child’s best selling Jack Reacher book series, Reacher’s 10-episode first season packs a muscular punch. Jack, a brawny former US Army military policeman played by Alan Ritchson, arrives in a small town and is promptly arrested for a murder he didn’t commit. Armed with killer strength and some solid detective skills, the protagonist eventually fends off an array of enemies while uncovering a criminal conspiracy. A treat for crime thriller fans and lovers of Child’s novels.

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Amazon Studios

The Man in the High Castle imagines an alternate history where the Axis powers (Rome-Berlin-Tokyo) win World War II. Based on a Philip K. Dick novel, the series follows characters in the ’60s who live in a parallel universe, where Nazi Germany and the Empire of Japan control the US. But there’s impossible newsreel footage surfacing of a world where Germany and Japan lose the war, causing some to rebel. To really hammer home its dystopia credentials, The Man in the High Castle is steered by producer Ridley Scott. Fully realized and with a focused plot, this is gripping TV.

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Amazon Prime

The premise of Hanna, a Joe Wright action thriller from 2011, is so good Amazon fleshed it out for a TV series. Starring Esme Creed-Miles as the skilled young assassin living in the Romanian wilderness, Hanna the TV show expands the teen’s backstory and explains why the CIA’s Marissa Wiegler has an obsession with capturing her.

Drama


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A Very British Scandal (2022)

Unfurling over three hour-long episodes, A Very British Scandal dramatizes the highly publicized, real-life divorce between the Duke and Duchess of Argyll in the 1960s. Starring Claire Foy, of Netflix’s The Crown, and WandaVision’s Paul Bettany, it depicts everything from the pair’s first meeting to their appearances in court. Escape into this gripping retelling, which features committed performances from Foy and Bettany.

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Amazon

Amazon’s first original young adult offering is an intriguing combination of Lost and the Breakfast Club — and it works. Crucially, the cast of characters who find themselves stranded on a deserted island are all teenage girls. To them, that makes life even more excruciating. Each has a very different background — from spoiled rich girl to Native American — but they have to put aside their differences to survive, learning a thing or two about themselves on the way. Things get even more dark and thrilling when Rachel Griffiths’ Gretchen Klein comes into the picture as the head of the secretive Dawn of Eve program.

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Ali Goldstein/Amazon Studios

A newer entry to Prime Video, As We See It earns a spot among its best shows. Starring three actors who identify as autistic, this sincere series follows young adults on the autism spectrum as they navigate jobs, making friends and finding love. Neurotypical actors usually play autistic characters on screen, so the casting sets this one apart. It’s also heartfelt, funny and poignant, with well-rounded characters you’ll want to root for. I could let the show’s glowing Metacritic score speak for itself — but whatever convinces you, this needs to be your next watch.

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Amazon Studios

Picnic at Hanging Rock (2018)

This TV version of Picnic at Hanging Rock isn’t quite a masterpiece like the 1975 film adaptation of the classic Australian novel. But it’s just as mysterious, unfurling a dreamy yet eerie veil over a fictional disappearance in the isolated Australian bush. When three students and their governess go missing after a picnic at the rock area, hysteria sets into the community and the esteemed Appleyard College, led by Natalie Dormer’s formidable headmistress. Dark secrets emerge, keeping you hanging on until the end.

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Amazon Prime Video

The Underground Railroad (2021-)

Sublime filmmaker Barry Jenkins (Moonlight) takes on adapting Colson Whitehead’s novel The Underground Railroad into a powerful 10-episode series. Set in the southern US during the 1800s, the fictional story follows Blacks attempting to escape from slavery via a network of hidden tracks and tunnels. Tapping magical realism and a superb cast including Thuso Mbedu and William Jackson Harper, The Underground Railroad is an emotional and chilling triumph.

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Amazon Studios

This gripping British series is about, yes, an informer and the murky territory involved in coercing someone to take on the dangerous gig. Paddy Considine (who now has a gig on the Game of Thrones prequel) stars as DS Gabe Waters, a counterterrorism officer tasked with infiltrating a far-right movement in West Yorkshire. Partnered with an excellent Bel Powley (The Morning Show, The King of Staten Island) as the young and inquisitive DC Holly Morten, he attempts to bring British Pakistani Raza (Nabhaan Rizwan) on board to uncover information about a possible terrorist attack. A provocative thriller that will keep you on your toes.

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Amazon Studios

The Last Tycoon (2016-2017)

Matt Bomer, Lily Collins and Kelsey Grammer star in this 1930s-set drama about a brilliant Hollywood executive. Self-made prodigy Monroe Stahr (Bomer) faces a constant struggle with studio head Pat Brady (Grammer). The series takes an interesting angle, exploring the influence of the Nazis and the German market on Hollywood politics in a world on the brink of war. The Last Tycoon is based on F. Scott Fitzgerald’s last book, unfinished and posthumously published, with loose inspiration from producer Irving Thalberg, known as The Boy Wonder during the early 1900s. Superbly acted, sumptuous to look at and centered on absorbing characters, The Last Tycoon ended too soon after one season.

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Amazon Studios

If you like your fashion and historical drama, The Collection aptly brings the two together. Set in a post World War II Paris, the eight-part series follows two entrepreneurial brothers who clash as they build their fashion empire. Rivalry, betrayal and Nazi occupation are the provocative elements that light a fire under this handsomely shot family drama. Note of warning, once you become hooked on the deftly layered intrigue, you’ll have to face the disappointment of no second season.

Fantasy


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Amazon Studios

The Legend of Vox Machina (2022-)

Buckle up for a brand-new animated series that centers on a group of boisterous, belching misfits called Vox Machina. Based on Dungeons & Dragons web series Critical Role (you don’t have to be familiar with that to enjoy this show), The Legend of Vox Machina sees its protagonists go from broke bar-hoppers to accepters of a mission to stop evil brewing in Exandria. We’re further introduced to the characters in a musical number that occurs about halfway through the first episode. That’s right, I said musical number. But you’ll be down for every element this show throws at you. Why would anyone choose these misfits to fight for the kingdom? “Well… they do have a bear,” one royal decision-maker concedes.

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Amazon Prime Video

The Wheel of Time (2021-)

This fantasy show adapts Robert Jordan’s popular series of novels. Rosamund Pike plays the mystical Moiraine, a member of a powerful organization of women called the Aes Sedai. She’s on the hunt for the reincarnation of the Dragon, a wielder of the One Power who went mad and destroyed much of the world. This reborn hero or heroine could potentially vanquish an evil entity called The Dark One. The show, rife with magic and wicked monsters, brought in a ton of eyeballs during its debut week. Though it may not replace your favorite fantasy series, it still may be destined for your screen.

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Amazon Studios

If you’re in a particularly meditative mood, reflecting on life, relationships and the big choices we make in life, Forever will gently set your world on fire. June (Maya Rudolph) and Oscar (Fred Armisen) are a married couple cruising through their suburban life until vastly unexpected turns take them into otherworldly territory. Stick through the slow-burning first episode and you’ll be rewarded with an exceptionally crafted eight-episode series, gently wrapping you in its visually beautiful and meaningful dream.

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Chris Raphael

This adaptation of Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett’s novel pairs two other UK treasures in David Tennant and Michael Sheen. They play the demon Crowley and the angel Aziraphale, respectively, in this miniseries that sees Earth on the brink of destruction thanks to a final battle between Heaven and Hell. Decidedly against this, after enjoying their time on the planet, the bickering pair team up and attempt to prevent Armageddon. With a stacked cast, including a cameo from Benedict Cumberbatch as, well, Satan, Good Omens is a worthy adaptation, largely thanks to Tennant and Sheen’s double act.

Romance


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Prime Video

Looking for love? With Love might be the perfect feel-good rom-com. The charming premise sees the Diaz siblings, Lily and Jorge, navigate major holidays across the year, from Halloween to Christmas — major holidays that put pressure on singletons in search of romantic relationships. Follow the Diaz’s on their journey, along with their delightful and sometimes delightfully awkward extended family. An earnest, enjoyable breeze.

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Amazon Studios

The Pursuit of Love (2021)

You’re either going to fall madly in love with or arch an unimpressed eyebrow at this romance based on the 1945 Nancy Mitford novel of the same name. The Pursuit of Love follows two cousins who represent different ways of life. Lily James is Linda Radlett, whose exuberant romantic adventures see her travel from London to Paris. Emily Beecham, meanwhile, is Fanny Logan, navigating the confinements of married life. If you’re in the mood, this three-episode miniseries will sweep you up into a story of happiness and sadness, laughter and pain.

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Amazon Studios

Grab your blanket and a cup of tea for this sweet, cozy viewing. Modern Love is based on real-life personal essays about love from The New York Times column of the same name. These stories are delicately brought to life for the screen by a starry cast, including Anne Hathaway, Dev Patel and, in season 2, Minnie Driver and Kit Harington. Some stories won’t be tied up with a neat bow, and some will take you to unexpected places. The overall tone is feel good without being overly saccharine, and it might just stir your belief in the magic of true love.

Horror


Read more: The Best Horror Movies on Prime Video

Crime


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Amazon Studios

Ripper Street (2012-2016)

This dark and gritty series is set in the late 1800s on the streets of Whitechapel, a place once terrorized by Jack the Ripper. Detective Inspector Edmund Reid (Matthew Macfadyen) and the police have to deal with the aftermath of the Ripper murders, which have left the area of London in an anarchic state. Fine acting, strong characters and, importantly, strong dialogue make the episodic mysteries all the more suspenseful and immersive. Five superb seasons await you (consisting of six to eight episodes each).

Superhero


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The Boys Presents: Diabolical (2022-)

This superhero anthology includes eight shorts penned by comedians like Seth Rogen, Andy Samberg, Justin Roiland and Ilana Glazer. A spinoff from Prime Video’s hit live-action show The Boys, Diabolical takes an animated approach to its superpowered (and adult-oriented) adventures. Different animation styles are on display, and The Boys’ typical themes of over-the-top violence and social commentary are there. Add this one to your viewing history before The Boys returns June 3. 

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For those who aren’t a fan of cartoons, Invincible could be your converter, up there with other adult cartoons like BoJack Horseman and Rick and Morty. Based on a comic book from Robert Kirkman, the creator of the Walking Dead, Invincible follows 17-year-old Mark Grayson and his training to become a superhero just like his father, who happens to be the most powerful superhero on the planet. Episodes run long at nearly 50 minutes, connected into one big, blood-spattered story. A subversive series with a huge cast featuring Steven Yeun, Sandra Oh and J.K. Simmons, Invincible will engross you in its smart animated world.

Reality


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James Clark/Amazon Studios

Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls (2022- )

You may be familiar with Lizzo’s hits like Truth Hurts, her Grammy wins or even her stunning flute skills, but it turns out she’s one heck of a reality show host, too. Her charisma is on full display in this eight-episode show, which sees 13 plus-size women compete to score a spot as one of Lizzo’s back-up dancers. Lizzo sets the bar high for these talented hopefuls and celebrates them when they knock performances out of the park. A vibrant, infectious experience that’s perfect to binge-watch.

Documentary


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Prime Video

In LulaRich, the directors of Hulu’s Fyre Festival documentary explore the dark side of multi-level-marketing company, LuLaRoe. The four-part docuseries interviews founders DeAnne and Mark Stidham and paints a not-so-rosy picture of the women’s clothing giant, which is known for its loudly-colored and patterned leggings and tops. In the doc, women who joined the company (investing a chunk of money in the process) dealt with stinky merchandise, a toxic culture and challenges reaching financial goals. Settle in for an intriguing and well-made docuseries that spotlights the stories of former LuLaRoe retailers. 

Movies Coming in 2022 From Marvel, Netflix, DC and More

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