Fans of Netflix’s American Primeval are eagerly awaiting updates on its future. The series follows a mother and son escaping their past while forming a found family in the harsh American West. Viewers are curious about the prospects for Season 2.
The 19th-century American West of American Primeval is a land of unyielding brutality, though nothing about this six-part Netflix series, premiering Jan. 9, is as violent as Peter Berg’s belligerently over-the-top direction.
The series, now streaming on Netflix, depicts the brutality with which the Mormons sought to create a new world for their beliefs, the pride with which the native people held onto their ancestral lands, and the tragedy of the people just seeking to make a new home in the chaos. But is any of it true?
American Primeval, which stars Betty Gilpin and Taylor Kitsch, has been dubbed one of the most violent and brutal shows Netflix has produced in recent times
Around the same time, a young Indigenous woman named Two Moons (Shawnee Pourier) flees from her Shoshone tribe after killing a man who attempted to rape her. She stows away on the back of Rowell’s wagon, and, though Devin finds her, he lets her stay.
Netflix has unveiled a new historical miniseries that could be perfect for fans of Yellowstone - but be been warned that this is not for the faint-hearted.
So without further ado, here are my seven most anticipated Netflix shows of 2025. For more recommendations, check out my seven shows I can't wait to see in 2025 from Max, Apple TV Plus and more of the best streaming services.
From new shows with big stars to favorites like 'Wednesday' and finales for 'You,' 'Stranger Things,' and 'Squid Game,' it's a big year for Netflix.
The highly fictionalized six-part series drops Thursday. It centers around 1857 events in the Utah War as the federal government attempted to wrest control of the Utah Territory from the Latter-day Saints.
While Yellowstone is a contemporary Western, Sheridan's various series cover several different time periods going as far back as post-Civil War America. Lawmen: Bass Reeves, which
However, it saps anything resembling wistfulness from its Hollywood Western roots, complicating its chances of cornering the post-Yellowstone market (alongside the latter's many spin-offs). What's left is the husk of a beloved genre,