Peacock
Our First Look at 'Vigil' Season 3 Heads to the Arctic
The first images from 'Vigil' Season 3 head to the cold climate of the Arctic.
Peacock
The first images from 'Vigil' Season 3 head to the cold climate of the Arctic.
PBS
Welcome to the latest on-screen incarnation of Maigret, the famous 1930s-era Parisian policeman, created by author Georges Simenon, played by British actor Benjamin Wainwright (Belgravia). If Wainwright's sculpted face and fluffy hair weren't enough to tell you we are dealing with a hot-cop version of Maigret,
PBS
Masterpiece has now lasted long enough as an entity that it has a catalog of old shows that once ran on PBS to work from and revive, such as Poldark (the original 1970s version aired on Masterpiece Theater) and All Creatures Great & Small (the original aired on PBS, but
PBS
Jules Maigret has been a fixture on screens large and small since writer Georges Simenon introduced him to the world in 1931's Pietr-le-Letton (The Strange Case of Peter the Lett). Moreover, actors who have played the role tended to keep to Simenon's description of the Parisian
PBS
PBS has confirmed that the new contemporary set Maigret is officially joining the Fall 2025 Masterpiece lineup, giving the Benjamin Wainwright-starring remake of one of France's most famous detectives the plum premiere slot in October/November. Unlike The Gold (which was confirmed to debut on Sunday, October 5,
PBS
One of the most challenging decisions when remaking a once-popular series that has fallen by the wayside is whether or not to update it to the modern era, especially when the series in question was initially set in "contemporary times" when it was originally released. For some shows,
PBS
It's been nearly 30 years since the last episodic television adaptation of Maigret was launched. However, there was a time when the titular French detective from Georges Simenon's best-selling novels was a staple of European television. From 1960 to 2005, there were no less than eight
MGM+
Despite its initial promising start, Belgravia: The Next Chapter has become something of a muddle, crammed with what feels like a half dozen subplots that don't get the depth they deserve and a narrative that's all too content to use Frederick's abundant (and annoying)
MGM+
After a season that often felt like it was struggling to get to the point, the endgame of Belgravia: The Next Chapter is finally in full swing. The penultimate episode is stuffed to bursting with subplots, surprise revelations, emotional meltdowns, and unexpected twists. This hour goes so hard that it&
MGM+
Secrets abound as Belgravia: The Next Chapter continues, most of which seem as though they're inevitably on a collision course with one another. A briskly paced hour that feels much more propulsive than last week's meandering installment, we're treated to everything from forbidden love
MGM+
Anyone who's still watching Belgravia: The Next Chapter probably has to be asking the same question at this point in the series: What on earth are we doing here? Five episodes into its run, it really shouldn't be this hard to identify the series' primary
MGM+
This episode marks the halfway point of Belgravia: The Next Chapter, and everybody in London's poshest neighborhood is just straight up not having a good time. It's possible viewers aren't either. Don't get me wrong, this episode has a couple of genuinely