Current:Home > reviewsThe best TV of early 2024: Here's what to watch in January -PrestigeTrade
The best TV of early 2024: Here's what to watch in January
View
Date:2025-04-19 10:40:04
This is the year everything comes back.
That's the sentiment you can practically feel bursting from show business, as we start a new year freed from the shackles of two Hollywood strikes, easing away from compensation conflicts that threatened to hobble most of the country's film and TV industry permanently.
Given everything that's happened so far, it feels like a miracle to note that there are still a fair number of interesting, powerful and compelling TV shows headed our way in 2024 — from the return of one of the most creatively ambitious crime dramas in recent memory, now set in Alaska, to a Marvel series mostly shorn of superheroes that may demonstrate exactly how the MCU should do TV from now on.
Here's a list ticking off the best stuff coming to the small screen in the next few weeks. You can't say you weren't warned.
Echo, Disney+, Jan. 9
I know. I'm the one who was optimistic enough to say that dud of a Nick Fury series Secret Invasion might be the answer to Marvel's problems with streaming. But it turns out, Echo's violent, back-to-basics story, starring Alaqua Cox is just what the TV critic ordered.
Here, Cox plays Maya Lopez, also known as Echo, a skilled fighter and gang leader who debuted in Disney+'s Hawkeye series. And this story — in which Lopez is forced to revisit her past after learning Vincent D'Onofrio's Kingpin wanted her father killed – hearkens back to the heyday of Netflix's Daredevil-connected Marvel series, which mostly ditched flying people with capes for a more realistic, gritty style of action. Lopez, like the actor who plays her, is Native American, was born deaf, and wears a prosthetic leg, breaking loads of barriers in representation through one, powerful performance. She has to overcome a lot of assumptions and bridge a lot of different cultures while trying to discover exactly how she is going to make her former mentor pay for orchestrating the death of the person she loved most in the world.
Criminal Record, Apple TV+, Jan. 10
Featuring two of my favorite actors – The Good Wife/Good Fight alum Cush Jumbo and former Doctor Who star Peter Capaldi – this series explores in agonizing detail the effort by a young British police detective (Jumbo's June Lenker) to learn if a police task force once led by Detective Chief Inspector Daniel Hegarty (a world-weary Capaldi) may have unfairly imprisoned a Black man years ago for murder. Along the way, we see Lenker forced to question her sensitivities to racism and sexism, while Hegarty fights to protect his legacy and his task force from accusations of corruption and prejudice. Best of all, there are no easy answers in this story, which delivers a delicious cat-and-mouse game between Lenker and Hegarty, with a surprising end.
True Detective: Night Country, HBO and Max, Jan. 14
Since its groundbreaking first season in 2014 with movie stars Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson and Michelle Monaghan, this anthology cop drama has struggled to live up to its potential as a genre shattering, high-end TV show. Fortunately, the new season remedies that problem with a typically excellent Jodie Foster as an irascible chief of police Liz Danvers in remote Ennis, Alaska. She's forced to partner with a state trooper she hates — Evangeline Navarro, an Indigenous woman played by Kali Reis — to solve a mysterious mass murder at a scientific research station.
Series creator Nic Pizzolatto steps aside as showrunner for the first time, allowing Mexican producer and film director Issa Lopez to serve as showrunner, director, and lead writer — crafting a complex, enthralling story centered on women resisting abuse from men, indigenous culture, mental health, mysticism and the odd things which can happen in a town shrouded by darkness for six months.
After Midnight, CBS, Jan. 16
Late night TV stands at a crossroads, with stars like James Corden fleeing the genre as young people increasingly lose interest. I'm not sure if hiring youthful comic Taylor Tomlinson to host a faux game show centered on Internet culture will help any of that. But this program – a reboot of a former Comedy Central series called @midnight that's replacing Corden's The Late Late Show — might at least offer an alternative. As I write this, critics haven't yet seen the rebooted show, which originally featured a trio of comics joking around while answering a series of questions about Internet culture. With Stephen Colbert and Funny or Die among a lengthy list of executive producers, one thing is certain: they will have few excuses for not bringing the funny.
American Nightmare, Netflix, Jan. 17
This three-episode docuseries is focused on a jarring story: When physical therapist Aaron Quinn called police with a bizarrely outlandish tale, claiming that someone had bound and drugged him and kidnapped his girlfriend Denise Huskins for ransom, the cops assumed what many would – that Quinn was lying to cover up something he had done. But the truth was much darker.
This Netflix docuseries briskly traces the evolution of Quinn's story – including the re-appearance of Huskins a while later, seemingly unharmed – revealing the shocking, terrible consequences when a police department has unacceptable procedures for handling crimes involving relationships and gender violence, choosing easy explanations over believing potential victims.
Masters of the Air, Apple TV+, Jan. 26
Between the two of them, Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks have given us a long list of films and TV shows centered on the valor of American soldiers in World War II. So it makes a certain kind of sense they would return as executive producers on this limited series, which is a kind of Band of Brothers set in the Air Force, depicting the true stories of an American bomber group in the Great War.
It's a well-produced, at times gorily explicit drama featuring Austin Butler, working a buttery accent only slightly downshifted from his Elvis patois, playing an airman trying to stay alive as U.S. forces face staggering losses while bombing Nazi Germany. At a time when audiences are trying to sort out complicated geopolitical conflicts in real life, Spielberg and Hanks once again offer simpler stories from a time when America was more likely to be considered the unambiguous hero.
Feud: Capote vs. the Swans, FX, Jan. 31
It has taken Ryan Murphy nearly seven years to craft a successor to the first season of his Feud anthology series, which debuted in 2017 with a take on the legendary rivalry between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford. This time, Murphy's taking on author Truman Capote's estrangement from a coterie of wealthy New York City socialites who were his gossipy friends – until he published stories widely recognized to be thinly-veiled accounts of their turbulent personal lives.
The White Lotus alum Tom Hollander excellently reproduces the oddly-thin voice and cheeky mannerisms of mid-1960s-era Capote, who had already written Breakfast at Tiffany's and In Cold Blood, but was desperate for a new literary triumph while drowning in addictions. With Naomi Watts, Diane Lane, Calista Flockhart and Chloë Sevigny on board, Murphy has packed his cast with big names who are sure to deliver big scenes.
Still catching up on last year? Here's a collection of the best movies and TV of 2023, picked for you by NPR critics.
veryGood! (17)
Related
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Trump to host rally on Biden’s home turf in northeast Pennsylvania, the last before his trial begins
- My Date With the President's Daughter Star Elisabeth Harnois Imagines Where Her Character Is Today
- 3 people found shot to death in central Indiana apartment complex
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Kris Jenner's Sister Karen Houghton's Cause of Death Revealed
- NASCAR Texas race 2024: Start time, TV, streaming, lineup for Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400
- Proof Sarah Michelle Gellar and Freddie Prinze Jr.'s Love Is Immortal
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Robert MacNeil, founding anchor of show that became 'PBS NewsHour,' dies at age 93
Ranking
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Ford recall on Broncos, Escapes over fuel leak, engine fire risk prompt feds to open probe
- Iowa Supreme Court overturns $790,000 sexual harassment award to government employee
- How Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton Took Their Super-Public Love Off the Radar
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Army veteran shot, killed in California doing yard work at home, 4 people charged: Police
- How to get rid of NYC rats without brutality? Birth control is one idea
- Eleanor Coppola, matriarch of a filmmaking family, dies at 87
Recommendation
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
How to get rid of NYC rats without brutality? Birth control is one idea
Can homeless people be fined for sleeping outside? A rural Oregon city asks the US Supreme Court
What we know about the Arizona Coyotes' potential relocation to Salt Lake City
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
Washington Capitals' Nick Jensen leaves game on stretcher after being shoved into boards
Michael J. Fox says actors in the '80s were 'tougher': 'You had to be talented'
Jury convicts former DEA agent of obstruction but fails to reach verdict on Buffalo bribery charges