
The setting is a post-apocalyptic Australia, sealed off from the outside world and ruled by rampaging “Kaiju” – ie this universe’s answer to Godzilla. We join a group of high-school kids marooned in the dinosaur theme park in a drama that harks back to the glory days of hungry T-Rexes and velociraptors who know out how to open doors.Īnimated sequel to Guillermo del Toro’s 2013 monsters v giant robots modern classic. For the true spiritual follow-up to the Spielberg Jurassic Park films, Camp Cretaceous is the must-visit destination. The Jurassic World movies have been 50 shades of dino-pants. Who unleashed these forces? And what do they have to gain? It’s a lurid mash-up of detective drama and splatter horror movie, with demonic spirits hunting down “cursed” individual in broad daylight. Squid Game has sucked up all the publicity – but this infernally bingeable South Korean drama deserves attention too.

In this sequel to Borgen, Nyborg is now Foreign Minister – and is caught up on a controversy over the discovery of oil in Greenland. The knitwear is reliably stunning, the politics backstabbingly vindictive as Sidse Babett Knudsen returns to her defining role as Danish leader Birgitte Nyborg. Gaiman took to Twitter urging fans to binge – and his campaigning paid off with a second season greenlit. A moving, imaginative and thoughtful retelling of the graphic novels it features Tom Sturridge as the eponymous grumpy goth immortal, Kirby Howell-Baptiste as his sister Death and Boyd Holbrook as “The Corinthinan” – a serial killer with a difference. They said it was unfilmable but, with Neil Gaiman overseeing the adaptation of his surrealistic 1990s comic series, the adventures of Morpheus, Lord of Dreams have reached the screen.

A spin-off reality show has been confirmed – a disturbing example of life imitating art. The shock factor is high – but the characters are compellingly drawn and the implicit criticism of the widening gulf between rich and poor earns parallels with Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite.

There’s only one catch – put a foot wrong and a machine gun will take your arm off. These are presided over by guards dressed like refugees from Super Mario Brothers by way of Patrick McGoohan’s The Prisoner.
