Better Call Saul is a prequel television series that explores the story of Jimmy McGill, a small-time lawyer struggling to make a name for himself in the criminal law world. Set in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the show delves into Jimmy's transformation into the morally ambiguous lawyer Saul Goodman, known for his cunning tactics and connections to the criminal underworld. Along the way, Jimmy navigates the strained relationship with his brother Chuck, battles his own self-destructive behavior and psychosomatic illness, and faces challenges in the form of both friend and foe.
Emma, a loving wife and mother, has a secret as an assassin. When her husband discovers her double life, they must go on the run to escape a dangerous organization that wants her dead. They must navigate betrayal, deception, and assassins as they fight to protect their family and rebuild their lives.
Competitive gamer Max (Jason Bateman) and Annie (Rachel McAdams) meet during trivia night at a bar, quickly fall in love, and get married. They are trying to have a child, but their attempts are unsuccessful due to Max's stress surrounding his feelings of inadequacy when compared to his vastly more successful, attractive brother Brooks (Kyle Chandler). During Max and Annie's routine weekend game night with their friends Ryan (Billy Magnussen), Kevin (Lamorne Morris), and his wife Michelle (Kylie Bunbury), Brooks shows up and immediately shows Max up by arriving in a Corvette Stingray and sharing an embarrassing childhood story during charades. Annie also finds Brooks extremely obnoxious and decides to work together with Max to defeat him at the upcoming game night, which Brooks offers to host at a house he's renting while visiting. Max and Annie also try to keep game nights secret from their neighbor Gary (Jesse Plemons), a humorless and awkward former police officer who stopped being regularly invited when his wife, a former friend of the couple, divorced him. When the guests arrive, including Ryan's new date, Sarah (Sharon Horgan), Brooks says he's initiated an interactive role-playing mystery game, promising the winner his Stingray. After a while, an actor playing an FBI agent informs them of the narrative of the mystery, only for two masked men to break in and assault him and Brooks. The guests, believing it to be part of the game, idly watch. After Brooks is dragged out of the house, the couples begin to solve the mystery using the clues left behind by the actor...
Our Mutual Friend, a TV mini-series based on the novel by Charles Dickens, explores the interwoven lives and complex relationships of various characters in 19th century London. It delves into themes of obsessive love, mistaken identity, poverty, and greed.
A young woman, Adaline Bowman, born in 1908, becomes ageless after a car accident and lightning strike. She spends her years on the run, changing her identity every decade. She meets Ellis Jones, who she initially rejects but later falls in love with. Eventually, she decides to stop running and settle down with Ellis. After another accident, she regains her mortality. One year later, she discovers her first gray hair, signifying that she has started aging again.
Paranoid is a thrilling TV show that follows a group of detectives investigating a murder case that leads them down a rabbit hole of conspiracy. As they uncover more clues, they become increasingly paranoid, unsure who they can trust. The show delves into themes of schizophrenia, OCD, and inner turmoil, creating a tense atmosphere that keeps viewers on the edge of their seats.
In this classic murder mystery, renowned detective Hercule Poirot needs to solve a murder that occurs on the famous Orient Express. With a diverse cast of passengers and a limited number of suspects, Poirot must use his exceptional deductive skills to unravel the truth before the train reaches its destination.
Six guests are anonymously invited to a strange mansion for dinner, but after their host is killed, they must cooperate with the staff to identify the murderer as the bodies pile up. In 1954, six strangers are invited to a dinner party at Hill House, a secluded mansion in New England. They are met by the butler, Wadsworth, who gives each of them a pseudonym, with none of them knowing or being addressed by their real names. The guests - Colonel Mustard, Mrs. White, Mrs. Peacock, Mr. Green, Professor Plum, and Miss Scarlet - are served by Wadsworth and the maid, Yvette. During dinner, a seventh guest, Mr. Boddy, arrives. Afterwards, Wadsworth reveals the real reason they are there: Mr. Boddy has been blackmailing the other guests (as well as Wadsworth and his now-dead wife, it is later revealed) for some time now. The group is here to confront him and turn him over to the police. Mr. Boddy, however, reminds them that if he is arrested, their guilty secrets for which he has been blackmailing them will be exposed. He then gives each of the other guests different weapons as a gift (a candlestick, a dagger, a lead pipe, a revolver, a rope, and a wrench), suggesting that one of them kill Wadsworth instead to avoid exposure and humiliation. When he turns out the lights, a gunshot rings out, and when the lights are turned back on, they find Mr. Boddy apparently dead with no visible trace as to how. Wadsworth then goes on to explain that he was the one who arranged for everyone to meet at the mansion, knowing that Mr. Boddy was blackmailing them. He reveals that his late wife committed suicide as a result of Mr. Boddy's manipulations, which drove him to try and help free them from the same cycle of blackmail by bringing them all together to force a confession out of him and then turn him over to the police. Later, the cook Mrs. Ho is found dead, stabbed with the dagger, and Mr. Boddy's body disappears, only to be rediscovered dead again but with new injuries from the candlestick. Wadsworth locks the weapons in the cupboard and is about to throw the key out when a stranded motorist arrives and is locked in the lounge. Wadsworth then throws the key out onto the blacktop. Colonel Mustard proposes they split into pairs and search the house to make sure no one else is there. While they are searching, the motorist is killed with the wrench. Mustard and Scarlet find his corpse in the locked lounge and Yvette uses the revolver from the now-unlocked cupboard to break the keyhole. A police officer investigating the motorist's abandoned car arrives and comes inside to use the phone. The guests resume their search of the mansion. The electricity is then turned off. Yvette, the cop, and a singing telegram girl are subsequently murdered with the rope, lead pipe, and revolver, respectively. Wadsworth and the others regroup after he turns the electricity back on, and he reveals he knows who the murderer is. He proceeds to recreate the events of the night so far as to explain how the murders occurred. He reveals that the other five people who died with Mr. Boddy were his accomplices, who gave him vital information about the different guests. After an evangelist interrupts them, Wadsworth continues and shuts off the electricity again. In the theatrical showing, at this point audiences would then be shown one of the three following endings after Wadsworth brings the lights back up. In the home media, all three endings were included, with 'Ending A' and 'Ending B' identified as possible endings but 'Ending C' being how the events really occurred. Ending A: Yvette murdered the cook and Mr. Boddy under orders from Miss Scarlet, for whom she once worked as a call girl. Miss Scarlet then killed her along with the other murder victims. She wanted to keep her business of extortion safe and now plans to sell the other guests' secrets. She intends to shoot Wadsworth, who asserts there are no more bullets in the gun. Wadsworth then reveals himself to be an undercover FBI agent, takes the gun from Miss Scarlet and apprehends her. The evangelist is revealed to be a police chief, who arrives with police officers and federal agents. To prove that the gun was empty, Wadsworth fires it towards the ceiling. However, it still contained one bullet, and the gunshot brings down the hall chandelier right behind Colonel Mustard, narrowly missing him (again, the first time being when Yvette breaks the keyhole). Ending B: Mrs. Peacock killed all the victims to cover up her engagement of bribes from foreign powers. Mrs. Peacock holds the others at gunpoint while she escapes to her car, but she is caught by the chief (the evangelist). Wadsworth reveals he is an undercover FBI agent planted to spy on her activities as to secure her arrest. Ending C: Each murder was committed by a different person: Professor Plum killed Mr. Boddy, Mrs. Peacock killed the cook, Colonel Mustard killed the motorist (and picked out the key from Wadsworth's pocket), Mrs. White killed Yvette, and Miss Scarlet killed the cop. Mr. Green is therefore accused of killing the singing telegram girl, but Wadsworth reveals he killed her, and that he is, in fact, the real Mr. Boddy (the man Professor Plum killed was his butler). With the witnesses to each of their secret activities dead and the evidence destroyed, Mr. Boddy now plans on continuing to blackmail them all. Mr. Green suddenly pulls out a revolver and kills Mr. Boddy. He reveals himself as an undercover FBI agent who has been on Mr. Boddy's case. He brings in the chief/evangelist to arrest the others. Mr. Green then leaves, saying 'I'm gonna go home, and sleep with my wife', revealing his earlier claim of homosexuality was just part of his cover.
Brokedown Palace is a drama, mystery, and thriller movie released in 1999. The story revolves around two American high school graduates, Alice and Darlene, who go on a vacation to Bangkok, Thailand. During their trip, they are framed for drug trafficking and end up in a Thai prison. With the help of an inexperienced American lawyer and a sympathetic fellow inmate, they must fight against the corrupt Thai government and prove their innocence.
An alien named John, who is Number Four, is next on the list to be killed by intergalactic bounty hunters. Alongside his Guardian, Henri, he develops superpowers and forms relationships with a conspiracy theorist, Sam, and a girl named Sarah. As the Mogadorians close in, John discovers other Loriens and prepares to protect Earth.
After her husband's murder, Regina Lampert finds herself being pursued by the CIA, the her late husband's friends, and a charming stranger. She must unravel the truth about her husband's secret life while avoiding danger at every turn.
A hairdresser gets involved with an IRA member's girlfriend, leading to unexpected consequences. The film explores themes of gender identity, political unrest, and tragic love.
After being double-crossed, a hitman named Frank Kitchen wakes up to find that he has been surgically transformed into a woman. Fueled by rage and revenge, Frank sets out to track down the people responsible for his transformation and make them pay. Along the way, Frank becomes entangled in a dangerous game of cat and mouse, facing off against gangsters, assassins, and a corrupt doctor.
When an 11-year-old boy accidentally receives a blank check for one million dollars, he embarks on a wild spending spree, buying expensive toys and attracting the attention of a ruthless gangster who is determined to get the money back. With the help of his friends, the boy manages to outsmart the gangster and teach him a lesson in the process.
When a powerful ancient creature threatens to destroy the world, a group of friends must use their skills in a card battle to stop it. With the fate of humanity at stake, they must summon their best monsters and strategize to defeat the evil that lurks within.
In Dead Reckoning, a World War Two veteran is accused of killing his army buddy and goes on the run to clear his name. Along the way, he uncovers a web of deceit and must navigate a dangerous world of secret pasts and hidden identities.
After his wife is killed by assassins, an American man finds himself in the witness protection program in London. As he tries to seek revenge, he must also protect his daughter from the same people who want him dead.
Coronet Blue is an American TV series that ran on CBS from May 29, 1967, to September 4, 1967. It starred Frank Converse as Michael Alden, an amnesiac in search of his identity, with Brian Bedford his co-star. The show's 13 episodes were filmed in 1965 and were originally intended to be shown during the 1965-66 television season, but CBS put the show on hiatus when they reversed an earlier decision to cancel the drama Slattery's People. The network had plans to show Coronet Blue the following year, with CBS head of programming Michael Dann saying that, "there still is enormous enthusiasm" for it, but it would take another full year until the network aired it as a summer replacement. It proved moderately popular and developed a cult following. According to Converse, CBS wanted to renew it but by then Converse had signed to do another series for ABC, N.Y.P.D., which premiered the day after the last airing of Coronet Blue. Due to a number of pre-emptions, only 11 of the 13 episodes were shown during the initial run. The theme song was performed by R&B singer Lenny Welch.
A New York City cop becomes involved in the life of an Irish terrorist whose past poses a threat to both of them.