Entertainment

The Crown, The Walking Dead: The most anticipated TV coming later this year

In a year already full of film and TV releases, there's still much to come. For the fall and winter months, streamers and traditional broadcast networks are locked in an original-content race for viewers. Here is a look at some of the shows coming out later this year.

Slew of horror, western and action projects expected to hit small screens later this year

Imelda Staunton as Queen Elizabeth in Season 5 of Netflix's The Crown. It's one of many anticipated series launching later this year. (Alex Bailey/Netflix)

In a year already full of film and TV releases, there's still much to come. For the fall and winter months, streamers and traditional broadcast networks are locked in an original-content race — all looking to command eyeballs and bump up audience numbers in an already-overstuffed industry.

The good news? Lots of new shows for media-hungry TV fans. Here, CBC News has compiled some of the buzziest — and some of the lesser known — shows coming out later this year. 


The Crown — November

Netflix

Elizabeth Debicki portrays Princess Diana in the fifth season of Netflix's The Crown. This season was made as a 'love letter' to Queen Elizabeth, who died earlier this month. (Netflix)

Following on the heels of four incredibly successful seasons, Netflix's The Crown — a biopic that follows Britain's Queen Elizabeth from her coronation to increasingly modern-day events — will drop in November.

After two seasons of Olivia Colman portraying the queen, English actor Imelda Staunton is set to debut an older, though no less regal, Elizabeth for Season 5.

The series was still filming its following sixth season on the day of the queen's death earlier this month, resulting in a temporary hiatus both on that date and for her funeral on Sept. 19.

At the time, writer Peter Morgan described the newest season as a "love letter to her."


The Walking Dead — Oct. 2

AMC

Norman Reedus appears as Daryl Dixon in Season 11 of The Walking Dead. The final episodes of the long-running series will air later this year. (Jace Downs/AMC)

After an unbelievable 12-year run, The Walking Dead's main series will conclude next month. The eight remaining episodes of the zombie-apocalypse show will air beginning on Oct. 2. Canadian watchers can stream on AMC+, or on participating cable providers.


Entergalactic — Sept. 30

Netflix

Scott Mescudi, left, appears as Jabari and Timothée Chalamet, as Jimmy, in Entergalactic. (Netflix)

This Kid Cudi "TV special" ties into the musician's latest album, boasts co-stars Timothée Chalamet, Macaulay Culkin, Jaden Smith, Vanessa Hudgens and Cudi himself, and uses the increasingly popular pop-art style first popularized by smash hit Into the Spiderverse.

The series — which will debut alongside his 10th studio album of the same name — follows Cudi as up-and-coming artist Jabari "as he attempts to balance love and success."

In a tweet promoting Entergalactic, Cudi (real name Scott Mescudi) described it as "really f--king special," and that "minds will melt."


Sort Of — Nov. 15

CBC Gem

Bilal Baig in Sort Of. Medium close up of a smiling person of colour, photographed at night on a Toronto street that is illuminated with twinkling lights. They have wavy dark hair that falls to their shoulders and they wear clashing prints and pattern with a chunky brass necklace.
Bilal Baig appears in a scene from Sort Of. The second season will premiere later this year. (CBC)

The sleeper hit from Canadian star and writer Bilal Baig is back; Sort Of is debuting a new season of the Fleabag-esque character-drama in mid-November. The series follows Sabi Mehboob, a gender-fluid millennial trying to get their life in gear, all while dealing with a family and friend group caving in on itself.

The series' second season welcomes new stars, including The Kids in the Hall's Scott Thompson and The Handmaid's Tale's Amanda Brugel.


Tulsa King — Nov. 13

Paramount+

Tulsa King is a mob drama that has something else to brag about — creators Taylor Sheridan and Terence Winter have snagged silver-screen legend Sylvester Stallone in his scripted-TV debut.

Stallone will appear as Dwight (The General) Manfredi, heading to Tulsa after serving 25 years in an Oklahoma prison, busting out every bit of violence and action you'd expect from a Stallone-led production.


Alaska Daily — Oct. 6

ABC (broadcasting on CTV in Canada)

Filmed largely in British Columbia and the Northwest Territories, this Hilary Swank story is a bit surprisingly titled Alaska Daily. It follows Swank as a disgraced journalist on the trail of crime and murder in the northern state.

And though it's not Swank's first broadcast television project, it is her first in more than 20 years, since a 1998 appearance in Beverly Hills, 90210.


Shantaram — Oct. 14

Apple TV+

Actor Charlie Hunnam appears in Shantaram. The 12-episode series will premiere Oct. 14, 2022, on Apple TV+. (Apple TV+)

Apple TV, like all production houses diving deep into the war of the streamers, is continuing to invest in original programming. The latest offering is Shantaram, an adaptation of the novel of the same name by Gregory David Roberts, which follows Australian fugitive Lin Ford living in Bombay, India.

It stars Charlie Hunnam as Ford, and will release three episodes on Oct. 14, followed by weekly Friday releases until its 12-episode run is exhausted on Dec. 16.


Avatar — TBA

Netflix

The cast of Netflix's upcoming Avatar adaptation appear in this promotional image. The series is the latest remake of the beloved Nickelodeon cartoon. (Noah Asanias/Netflix)

Adapted from the much-loved cartoon of the same name, Avatar: The Last Airbender is going for its second live-action remake following the ill-fated 2010 attempt by director M. Night Shyamalan.

The anime-influenced original series followed 12-year-old Aang, who, after spending 100 years frozen in ice, emerged as the last "airbender" — one of the four telekinetic groups that control a different fundamental element — tasked with saving the world.

The series boasts a slew of Canadian talent, from B.C.'s Gordon Cormier, starring as Aang, and Kiawentiio (the young lead of Tracey Deer's Beans) starring as fellow lead, Katara, to Kim's Convenience patriarch Paul Sun-Hyung Lee as the loveable Uncle Iroh.

There is no release date — aside from an optimistic "coming soon" from Netflix. And the series itself isn't without controversy: original creators cut ties with the adaptation in 2020 due to creative differences


Let the Right One In — Oct. 9

Showtime

Another story that has been adapted, re-adapted and adapted again is here. Let the Right One In began its life as a Swedish novel by John Ajvide Lindqvist, before finding second life as a haunting film also written by Lindqvist.

That led to another adaptation, called Let Me In, featuring then up-and-coming child stars Kodi Smit-McPhee and Chloë Grace Moretz.

As a gory tale of a child-vampire befriending an ostracized and bullied boy, the story has proved particularly difficult to adapt — with a morbid twist that has been largely omitted from both film adaptations. The series' recently released trailer hints at just as much gore as the novel, with a particular focus on horror and potential departures from the original.


1899 — TBA

Netflix

Andreas Pietschmann appears in a still from 1899. The Netflix series sees the creators of thriller series Dark return to the small screen. (TIFF)

From the creators of warped time-travel series Dark comes another otherworldly series: Netflix's 1899. It follows the passengers of a migrant steamship, in that same year, who encounter the long-lost ship Prometheus, drifting seemingly deserted in the Atlantic Ocean.

The first two episodes — which centre around a mystery presented by passengers discovering a lone child onboard the ship — premiered at this year's Toronto International Film Festival to mostly positive reviews. It is set to debut sometime later this year.


The English — Nov. 11

Amazon Prime Video

Emily Blunt appears in this still from The English. The Amazon Prime Video series follows a woman in the 1890s looking for justice in the death of her son. (Diego Lopez Calvin/Prime Video)

Early looks at Emily Blunt's new western series have been described as everything from violent, to tender, to "bonkers," and continues the trend of big-screen actors moving to television for new and daring projects — ones that perhaps promise more of an audience than the increasingly threatened world of cinema.

Blunt has previous television experience, appearing in the ABC mini-series Empire back in 2005. Though The English appears completely different. Here, the Edge of Tomorrow star plays Cornelia Locke, an 1890s Englishwoman seeking vengeance for the death of her son.

In an interview with People, Blunt called the Prime Video/BBC-joint production an "epic chase thriller" combined with "a love story that runs and reigns supreme through it."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jackson Weaver

Senior Writer

Jackson Weaver is a reporter and film critic for CBC's entertainment news team in Toronto. You can reach him at jackson.weaver@cbc.ca.