Silo lines up a summer return as season four wraps
Apple TV+'s dystopian thriller locks in its endgame with a summer 2026 premiere for season three.
The White Lotus takes its fourth season to the French Riviera
Max Greenfield and Kumail Nanjiani join Mike White's HBO satire as it heads to France for season four.
The Last of Us season 3 casts Abby's orbit
Michelle Mao and Kyriana Kratter join the HBO drama as Yara and Lev.
Star City explores the Soviet side of For All Mankind
Apple TV+ has set a May release date for its paranoid thriller spin-off exploring the Russian space race.
Severance season 3 taps Kogonada to direct
Apple TV+ resets the board as the acclaimed filmmaker steps in to direct the new season.
Project Hail Mary arrives like the sci-fi event Hollywood keeps asking for
Ryan Gosling's Project Hail Mary opened to a massive $80.5 million in North America.
Off Campus brings Briar U to Prime Video in May
Prime Video will launch the Elle Kennedy adaptation worldwide on 13 May 2026.
Mayday brings Ryan Reynolds and Kenneth Branagh to Apple TV+ in September
Apple TV+ has dated the Cold War action-comedy Mayday for 4 September 2026.
Jack Ryan returns in cinematic Ghost War
John Krasinski's Jack Ryan returns on 20 May 2026 in a new Prime Video feature.
For All Mankind season 5 pushes deeper into the red on Apple TV+
Apple TV+ has set Ronald D. Moore's alt-history sci-fi drama to return on 27 March 2026.
Bloodhounds season 2 lands a harder April return on Netflix
Netflix has set the Korean action drama's season 2 for 3 April 2026.
TL;DR
Netflix isn’t messing about. Bloodhounds is officially back for season 2 on 3 April 2026, dropping a new teaser and looking punchier than ever.
Gun-woo and Woo-jin have levelled up from neighbourhood loan sharks to an underground international boxing league. Think bigger stakes, nastier villains, and the same brutal action that made the first run such a hit. Jung Ji-hoon joins the cast as the new big bad, Baek-jeong, who treats the ring as his own personal cash machine.
If you loved the bruised, battered bromance of season 1, you’re in for a treat.
Still with us? Good
Three years is a fair wait for a streaming action show, especially one built on pure adrenaline and bone-crunching fights. But Netflix has played a blinder here. They aren’t trying to reboot things; they’re leaning hard into the continuity and the trauma our boys went through last time.

The creative team is thankfully still intact. Kim Joo-hwan is back in the writer-director’s chair, ensuring the sequel doesn’t lose that gritty, almost comic-book feel. Woo Do-hwan and Lee Sang-yi are back bringing the wounded intensity and warmth we loved.
What’s really exciting is the shift in scale. Moving from local street scraps to a global underground league gives the show a cleaner, more gladiatorial focus. Baek-jeong isn’t just another scrappy underdog; he’s a proper menace with deep pockets.
Season one worked because it hit incredibly hard and didn’t hang about. If this new run can keep that same bruising intimacy while widening the arena, Bloodhounds is going to be an absolute knockout this April.
Blade Runner 2099 pushes the replicant timeline forward
Michelle Yeoh leads Prime Video's new cyberpunk miniseries set fifty years after the last film.