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30 Shows to Watch This Winter

This season promises a deluge of big stars (Nicole Kidman, Kate Winslet), intriguing adaptations (“Avatar: The Last Airbender”), long-awaited returns (“True Detective”) and final goodbyes (“Curb Your Enthusiasm”).

Is it a delayed effect of the writers’ and actors’ strikes? The Year of the Dragon? Climate change? Whatever the reason, a paper-thin fall season on television screens (definitely a result of the strikes) is being followed by a deluge of attention-grabbing shows this winter. A-list stars (Jodie Foster, Nicole Kidman, Kate Winslet), intriguing adaptations and reboots (“3 Body Problem,” “Avatar: The Last Airbender”), long-awaited returns (welcome back, “True Detective”) and final goodbyes (so long, “Curb Your Enthusiasm”) abound. Throw in all the delayed broadcast-network premieres — your various “Chicago,” “FBI,” “NCIS” and “Law and Order” series, among others — and it promises to be exhausting.

Here, based on available screeners, track record or sheer star power, are 30 of the more interesting selections, arranged in chronological order. All dates are subject to change.

Episode 1,089 of the 25-year-old pirate-adventure anime marks the beginning of what is being called its Final Saga, but there’s no telling how many more hundreds of episodes that might entail. (Crunchyroll, Jan. 6)

The actress (“Skins”) and writer (“Slow Horses”) Morwenna Banks adapted this six-episode drama from the Nick Hornby novel “Funny Girl.” Gemma Arterton plays a woman who leaves behind her life as a beauty queen in 1960s Blackpool, England, to move to London for a career in TV comedy. (PBS, Jan. 7)

No one is currently doing the self-centered, self-righteous — but charming! — force of nature better than Kate Phillips, now in her fourth season as Eliza Scarlet, who is still struggling to succeed as a female detective in Victorian London. (PBS, Jan. 7)

Peter Capaldi and Cush Jumbo headline this dark London-set police thriller, while Cathy Tyson, star of the great British neo-noir “Mona Lisa,” lends gravitas as the mother of a man who may have been unjustly imprisoned. (Apple TV+, Jan. 10)

Your long parental nightmare is over, at least for a few hours: Everyone’s favorite family of talking Australian dogs drops 10 new episodes. (Disney+, Jan. 12)

Helen Edmundson, chief writer of the quite decent British mystery “Dalgliesh,” takes over Julian Fellowes’s Georgian-Victorian, upstairs-downstairs melodrama “Belgravia.” This second season picks up several decades after the first and centers on the son who caused such consternation in the original, now grown into Lord Trenchard (Benjamin Wainwright). (MGM+, Jan. 14)

Jodie Foster, left, and Kali Reis in “True Detective: Night Country,” which takes place in Alaska.Michele K. Short/HBO

HBO’s horror noir returns after a five-year hiatus. Season 4 enters the arctic-derangement territory of “Fortitude,” “The Terror” and “The Thing,” as the crew of an Alaska research station collectively disappears into the 24-hour darkness. Jodie Foster plays the series’s latest angsty cop. (HBO, Jan. 14)

Mandy Patinkin stars as the professed “world’s greatest detective” in a shipboard mystery-comedy that appears to triangulate among “Only Murders in the Building,” “White Lotus” and Hercule Poirot. (Hulu, Jan. 16)

The talented Danish director Lone Scherfig (“An Education”) created and is the showrunner of this hospital drama about a team of midwives whose high performance masks critical understaffing; the Danish title translates as “Day and Night.” Sofie Grabol of “The Killing” plays the chief midwife. (MHz Choice, Jan. 16)

Bilal Baig’s loosely autobiographical, Toronto-set series is known for its head-on but nonchalant approach to gender and identity. It has reached a third season — in which Baig’s character, Sabi, deals with the fallout from their father’s death and their boss’s longings — because it nails the very particular texture of the Canadian dramedy: muted, expertly paced, earnestly whimsical, polished in the most nonaggressive way possible. (Max, Jan. 18)

Ruth Wilson brings her layered, off-kilter intensity to this thriller involving an Irish woman who has not recovered from her encounter with one of the country’s notorious Magdalene asylums. Daryl McCormack of “Good Luck to You, Leo Grande” plays a cop investigating the murder of a priest. (Paramount+, Jan. 19; Showtime, Jan. 21)

The life of the cocaine merchant Griselda Blanco gets the full-gloss treatment, with a striving-immigrant story line, lots of disco nostalgia and Sofia Vergara in the title role. (Netflix, Jan. 25)

Mike Judge and Zach Woods, who worked together on “Silicon Valley,” bring a similar strain of cerebral satire to the quirks and pretensions of public radio, except this time the unbearable egoists and patient enablers are portrayed by stop-motion puppets. Woods voices an NPR host with an undeniable physical resemblance to Ira Glass; his interview subjects are real people who appear on the animated studio’s monitors. (Peacock, Jan. 25)

Brian Tee and Nicole Kidman in “Expats,” based on the Janice Y.K. Lee novel, “The Expatriates.”Prime Video

Janice Y.K. Lee’s 2016 novel, “The Expatriates,” about the lives of high-strung Americans living in Hong Kong, comes to TV as a series directed by Lulu Wang (“The Farewell”) and starring Nicole Kidman as the perfect expat wife, Margaret, a bit of casting that feels inevitable. (Amazon Prime Video, Jan. 26)

This engaging beach-town crime drama — energetic but downbeat, in the general neighborhood of “Justified” — enters its third and final season with the highly problematic fisheries agent Jackie Quinones (Monica Raymund) passed out on the Cape Cod sand after her latest blackout bender. (Starz, Jan. 26)

The producing team behind “Band of Brothers” and “The Pacific” — including Gary Goetzman, Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg — offers another salute to American forces in World War II, this time chronicling the crews of the 100th Bomb Group of the Army Air Force as they fly missions over Germany. Like its predecessors it has a large and not overly well-known cast, led by Austin Butler and Callum Turner. (Apple TV+, Jan. 26)

The fourth edition of the “Genius” series yokes together the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (Kelvin Harrison Jr.) and Malcolm X (Aaron Pierre), who crossed paths just once, so expect a lot of scene shifting. (National Geographic, Feb. 1)

Maya Erskine and Donald Glover in “Mr. and Mrs. Smith,” a remake of the 2005 movie.David Lee/Prime Video

Determined to keep us guessing, Donald Glover, working with the writer Francesca Sloane, follows up “Atlanta” and “Swarm” with a remake of the 2005 married-spies film that starred Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie. Glover and Maya Erskine, as John and Jane Smith, lead a promising cast that includes John Turturro, Michaela Coel, Sarah Paulson, Paul Dano, Sharon Horgan and Parker Posey. (Amazon Prime Video, Feb. 2)

The most recent season of Larry David’s burlesque of Hollywood self-absorption was a pretty good argument for watching “Family Guy” at 10:30 on Sundays. But with more than two years to prepare for its 12th and final season, maybe the show can recapture some of its former glory. (HBO, Feb. 4)

The indefatigable historian-impresario Henry Louis Gates Jr. follows up the 2021 documentary “The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song” with a four-hour history of gospel music, directed by Stacey L. Holman and Shayla Harris. (PBS, Feb. 12)

Ben Mendelsohn, best known for dark crime dramas and thrillers (“Bloodline,” “The Outsider”) and for playing a shape-shifting alien in the Marvel universe, changes things up. He plays the post-World War II Christian Dior, about to revolutionize the fashion world, in a series from Todd A. Kessler, a creator of “Bloodline” and “Damages.” Juliette Binoche co-stars as Dior’s great competitor Coco Chanel. (Apple TV+, Feb. 14)

Attention Jonathan Banks fans: With “Better Call Saul” kaput, the peerless character actor resurfaces in this science-fiction thriller. Noomi Rapace stars as an astronaut who returns to Earth after a bad trip. (Apple TV+, Feb. 21)

Gordon Cormier in “Avatar: The Last Airbender,” a live-action adaptation of the beloved animated series.Robert Falconer/Netflix

Netflix turns an animated hit into a live-action show, as it did with the anime “Cowboy Bebop” and “One Piece.” This time it transmutes the highly regarded American series about a young lama-like warrior fighting to bring about harmony among the nations of fire, water, earth and air. (Netflix, Feb. 22)

“Grey’s Anatomy” meets “Rick and Morty” in an animated comedy set in an intergalactic hospital in the year 14,002; it is the first show created by Cirocco Dunlap, a writer on “Miracle Workers” and “Man Seeking Woman.” Stephanie Hsu and Keke Palmer voice the young renegade surgeons Sleech and Klak. (Amazon Prime Video, Feb. 23)

Andrew Lincoln’s Rick Grimes, the franchise’s original alpha, and Danai Gurira’s sword-wielding Michonne are revived in the seventh “Walking Dead” TV series. (AMC, Feb. 25)

You could ask whose needs are being served by making another miniseries based on James Clavell’s 1975 best seller, beyond those of whomever’s digital pocket the film rights were burning a hole in. (Michaela Clavell, the novelist’s daughter, is an executive producer.) But you can’t argue with the chance to watch excellent Japanese performers like Hiroyuki Sanada, Tadanobu Asano and Fumi Nikaido. (FX, Feb. 27)

Elsbeth Tascioni, the aggressively quirky lawyer played by Carrie Preston in “The Good Wife” and “The Good Fight,” was a bit of an acquired taste. If you acquired it, Preston is now starring in a spinoff series also created by the generally reliable team of Michelle and Robert King. The premise is clever: Tascioni comes to New York to observe the police department as part of a consent decree (we’re told the other candidate was Cary Agos, the “Good Fight” lawyer played by Matt Czuchry), setting up “Elsbeth” as more of a comic procedural than a legal drama. (CBS, Feb. 29)

Kate Winslet plays an autocratic ruler in “The Regime.”Miya Mizuno/HBO

Will Tracy, a writer for “Succession” and “Last Week Tonight With John Oliver,” cements his connection to HBO with this miniseries he created about the ruler of a fictional, failing Central European autocracy. Among the bonuses of that association: Kate Winslet as your star, Jessica Hobbs (“The Crown”) and Stephen Frears as your directors and Gary Shteyngart as one of your writers. Andrea Riseborough plays the chancellor’s chief minister, Hugh Grant the opposition leader and Martha Plimpton the American secretary of state. (HBO, March 3)

Kristen Wiig stars as a woman campaigning to join 1969 Palm Beach society in a cheerfully mordant comedy from the writer and producer Abe Sylvia (“George & Tammy,” “Dead to Me”) that also boasts Allison Janney, Leslie Bibb, Laura Dern and Carol Burnett. (Apple TV+, March 20)

The producers of the blockbuster American fantasy series “Game of Thrones” adapt the blockbuster Chinese science-fiction novel “The Three-Body Problem,” in some kind of apotheosis of the nerd-tech takeover of our storytelling culture. The trailer looks cool, though. (Netflix, March 21)

Other returning shows: “The Great North,” Fox, Jan. 7; “All Creatures Great and Small,” PBS, Jan. 7; “La Brea,” NBC, Jan. 9; “SkyMed,” Paramount+, Jan. 11; “The Traitors,” Peacock, Jan. 12; “Family Law,” CW, Jan. 17; “It Was Always Me,” Disney+, Jan. 17; “Chicago Fire,” “Chicago Med,” “Chicago P.D.,” NBC, Jan. 17; “Double Cross,” AllBlk, Jan. 18; “Law & Order,” “Law & Order: Organized Crime,” “Law & Order: SVU,” NBC, Jan. 18; “Real Time With Bill Maher,” HBO, Jan. 19; “The Way Home,” Hallmark, Jan. 21; “The Bachelor,” ABC, Jan. 22; “Father Brown,” BritBox, Jan. 23; “Abbott Elementary,” “The Conners,” “Not Dead Yet,” ABC, Feb. 7; “Halo,” Paramount+, Feb. 8; “Bob Hearts Abishola,” “NCIS,” “NCIS: Hawaii,” “The Neighborhood,” CBS, Feb. 12; “Ghosts,” “So Help Me Todd,” “Young Sheldon,” CBS, Feb. 15; “Blue Bloods,” “Fire Country,” CBS, Feb. 16; “Life and Beth,” Hulu, Feb. 16; “CSI: Vegas,” “The Equalizer,” CBS, Feb. 18; “The Good Doctor,” “Will Trent,” ABC, Feb. 20; “The Tourist,” Netflix, Feb. 29; “BMF,” Starz, March 1; “Alert: Missing Persons Unit,” “The Cleaning Lady,” Fox, March 5; “Animal Control,” Fox, March 6; “Grey’s Anatomy,” ABC, March 14; “Girls5Eva,” Netflix, March 14; “Call the Midwife,” PBS, March 17; “Bridgerton,” Netflix, May 16.

Source: Television - nytimes.com


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