1. "Daredevil: Born Again"
Blind lawyer and vigilante superhero Matt Murdock (Charlie
Cox) is back to face nemesis Kingpin (Vincent D'Onofrio) as the supervillain runs for mayor of New York City. Frank Castle/The Punisher (Jon
Bernthal) makes an appearance, but the series has already been renewed for season
two, with hopes of Jessica Jones, Iron Fist and Luke Cage joining him soon.
March 4, Disney+
2. "Lost Boys & Fairies"
A queer entertainer and his partner want to adopt a child,
but the past threatens their future in this dramatic series from the BBC.
March 4, Britbox
3. "Deli Boys"
When their convenience
store-owner father suddenly dies, two brothers discover he was part of a crime
ring in this new comedy series.
March 6, Hulu
4. "Everybody's Live With John Mulaney"
Netflix is continuing its foray into live programming with a
new weekly talk show by comedian John Mulaney. The show will be similar to last
year’s “Everybody’s in L.A.” series with Richard Kind as co-host,
celebrity guests and a robot named Saymo.
March 12, Netflix
5. "Adolescence"
A 13-year-old is accused of murdering his classmate in this British
psychological drama. Each episode is filmed in one take, in real-time.
March 13, Netflix
6. "Long Bright River"
A beat cop in Philadelphia realizes a series of murders might
be related to her personally in this Amanda Seyfried-led thriller, adapted from
a novel by Liz Moore.
March 13, Peacock
7. "The Parenting"
In this horror/comedy movie, a couple rents a country house with
both sets of their parents, but things start to get weird when the resident
ghost makes its presence known. Brian Cox, Edie Falco, Lisa Kudrow and Dean Norris play the in-laws.
March 13, Max
8. "Dope Thief"
Based on a book by Dennis Tafoya, two friends cook up a
scheme to pose as DEA agents and rob small-time drug dealers. A plan gone wrong
mixes them up with a major East Coast smuggling operation, and the stakes become major. Ridley
Scott produces and directs the first few episodes.
March 14, Apple TV+
9. "The Electric State"
In a dystopian, alternate 1990s, a teen (Millie Bobby Brown)
searches for her brother, Christopher, post a robot uprising. An exiled robot
named Cosmo serves as her guide and they meet Keats (Chris Pratt), a smuggler,
and his sidekick robot Herman (Anthony Mackie) as they search for Christopher in
a desert robot wasteland.
March 14, Netflix
10. "Good American Family"
If you’ve followed the true story of Natalia Grace, you already
know the bones of this drama series about a family who adopts a girl from Russia with
dwarfism, only for them to doubt her age. Ellen Pompeo and Mark Duplass star, along
with Christina Hendricks and Dulé Hill.
March 19, Hulu
11. "Happy Face"
Annaleigh Ashford plays the daughter of a serial killer
in this new drama series. Dennis Quaid plays her father, serving time as "The Happy Face Killer," when he
reveals he committed another murder police have yet to discover. He will
tell the location of the victim only to his daughter face-to-face, so she must confront him in-person. This show is based on the
book Shattered Silence," written by the real-life daughter.
March 20, Paramount+
12. "Ludwig"
A hit in the UK, this cozy mystery/comedy arrives
stateside. In it, a man investigates the disappearance of his twin brother, a detective, by
pretending to be him. Not only is he dragged into his brother’s open cases, but
he also begins to solve puzzles leading to his brother’s location.
March 20, BritBox
13. "O’Dessa"
In this expansive rock opera, Sadie Sink plays a girl
traveling to a dystopian future city to recover a family heirloom. She meets
her true love but must save him with the power of song.
March 20, Hulu
14. "The Residence"
Shonda Rhimes produces this new White House-set comedy/drama/murder mystery. Based on a book, there’s a murder at a state dinner, and
the lead detective on the case must solve it before anyone leaves. The all-star
cast includes Uzo Aduba, Randall Park, Giancarlo Esposito, Ken Marion, Jason
Lee, Jane Curtain and more.
March 20, Netflix
15. "Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light"
Ten years after the original “Wolf Hall” series comes the
adaptation of the third book of the “Wolf Hall” trilogy. Picking up in 1536
after the beheading of Anne Boleyn, King Henry VIII (Damian Lewis) spars with Thomas
Cromwell (Mark Rylance) as Cromwell wrestles with moral dilemmas versus his
survival.
March 23, PBS
16. "The Studio"
Seth Rogen and his writing partner, Evan Goldberg, have
created this new comedy series with Rogen as the head of an aging movie studio.
Regular co-stars include Catherine O'Hara, Kathryn Hahn, Ike Barinholtz, Chase
Sui Wonders and Bryan Cranston, but there’s tons of cameos planned, too, including stars like Martin Scorsese, Charlize Theron, Ron Howard and Zac
Efron.
March 26, Apple TV+
17. "Holland"
Nancy (Nicole Kidman) and her husband (Matthew
Macfadyen) live in picture-perfect, tulip-covered Holland, Michigan, but she suspects
there are secrets he’s keeping. When she enlists a colleague (Gael García
Bernal) for help, they uncover more than they ever planned.
March 27, Prime Video
18. "Mid-Century Modern"
Viewers have nicknamed this show “Golden Guys,” which is
fitting. In the Max Mutchnick and David Kohan comedy series, two friends (Nathan
Lane and Matt Bomer) move into a Palm Springs community, with one of their mothers
(Linda Lavin, who passed away after seven episodes were filmed). Guests include Pamela
Adlon, Richard Kind, Vanessa Bayer, Judd Hirsch, Rhea Perlman, Billie Lourd and Jesse Tyler Ferguson.
March 28, Hulu
19. "The Last Anniversary"
Author Liane Moriarty (“Big Little Lies”) penned the novel
on which this series is based. Sophie (Teresa Palmer) inherits a house from her
ex’s family but soon gets entrenched in the secrets of the island the house resides on.
March 30, Sundance Now/AMC+
20. "Mobland"
Guy Ritchie directs this family crime drama series with
Pierce Brosnan as the patriarch, battling for control of the larger syndicate.
Helen Mirren, Tom Hardy, Paddy Considine and Joanne Froggatt co-star.
March 30, Paramount+
21. "An Oprah Winfrey Special: The Menopause Revolution"
A topic that’s not discussed enough, menopause, is the feature of
this roundtable discussion, led by Oprah Winfrey. She’ll have experts plus
celebs like Halle Berry, Naomi Watts and Maria Shriver.
March 31, ABC/Disney+/Hulu
22. "Truelove"
A gang of senior citizens makes a pact to assist each other
with death when their times come, but the reality of it leads to huge issues for the
group in this popular British drama series.
March 31, Acorn TV