[imagesource: WarnerMedia]
I’ve watched some stellar series over the past few months.
I can highly recommend Pose on Netflix which takes a look at the ballroom scene and queer culture in the ’80s.
I also can’t wait for season two of The Great, a surprisingly funny and cleverly written retelling of Catherine the Great’s rise to power.
You can watch the trailer for that here.
If you have managed to cycle through everything worth watching up until this point, forcing you to return to yet another re-watch of Brooklyn Nine-Nine, don’t stress.
There are some great shows coming your way in July, according to the BBC.
Here are five of them for your consideration:
Brave New World
Based on Aldous Huxley’s 1932 dystopian novel, this sci-fi series created for NBC’s new streaming service Peacock imagines a society that has achieved peace and stability through the prohibition of monogamy, privacy, money, family, and history itself.
It imagines a futuristic ‘New London’, whose citizens include Bernard Marx (Harry Lloyd) and Lenina Crowne (Jessica Brown Findlay). As the series begins, the pair embark on a holiday to the so-called Savage Lands.
Premieres July 15 on Peacock and later in 2020 on Sky One.
The Alienist: Angel of Darkness
The first season of this Victorian crime drama followed Dr Laszlo Kreizler (Daniel Brühl), a medic in the controversial new field of criminal pyschology, as he pursued a never-before-seen ritualistic killer, assisted by newspaper illustrator John Moore (Luke Evans) and ambitious secretary Sara Howard (Dakota Fanning), who was determined to become the city’s first female police detective.
Premieres July 19 on TNT.
Season one is on Netflix, so let’s hope it finds its way there, too.
The Young Offenders
This sweary but heart-warming Irish comedy set in Cork returns for a third series. It follows the coming-of-age adventures of best friends Conor (Alex Murphy) and Jock (Chris Walley) as they navigate their awkward teenage years, wearing the same tracksuits and sporting the same weak moustaches.
The new season premieres in July on BBC Three/BBC iPlayer.
Stateless
The paths of strangers intersect as they get caught up in an immigration system that profoundly affects their lives, in this timely Australian series co-created by and starring Cate Blanchett, which provides insights into issues which countries are grappling with around the world.
Premieres July 8 on Netflix.
Hanna
This spin-off from the 2011 film thriller of the same name about a teenage assassin enters its second season with its extraordinary protagonist Hanna (Esmé Creed-Miles) now aware that she is not the only young woman with unparalleled skills and elite training.
Premieres July 3 on Amazon Prime Video.
And, there you have it – continuations of old favourites, and a couple of new shows to keep you entertained in the coming month.
Happy watching.
[source:bbc]
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