9 Shows Like The Flight Attendant to Watch If You Miss The Flight Attendant TV Guide
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9 Shows Like The Flight Attendant to Watch If You Miss The Flight Attendant
More zippy mysteries, please Allison Picurro Oct. 19, 2022, 12:38 p.m. PT T.R. Knight and Kaley Cuoco, The Flight Attendant Jennifer Rose Clasen/HBO Max The Flight Attendant is an easy show to miss. HBO Max's super fun dramedy stars Kaley Cuoco as Cassie Bowden, an alcoholic flight attendant with a habit of getting herself in trouble. Season 1 is all about her getting caught up in an international murder mystery, while Season 2 finds her sober and side-hustling for the CIA, but still plagued by personal demons while she tries catch a killer who seems to be impersonating her. Its fast-paced liveliness made its success a no-brainer, but we don't know yet whether it'll be getting a third season. Cuoco was pretty clear when she said the plane had landed, but she still left the door open for future seasons further down the line. But until we know anything for sure, finding a new show to watch is never a bad idea. If The Flight Attendant left you jonesing for more murder mysteries, intriguing thrillers, or complicated women teetering on the brink, we have some suggestions for shows to check out next. The Flight Attendant Watch on HBO Maxbr The Patient br
Steve Carrell, The Patient Frank Ockenfells/FX The Patient comes from the twisted minds of Joel Fields and Joe Weisberg, who were also behind one of the greatest shows of the past decade, The Americans, and stars Steve Carell as Alan Strauss, a therapist who gets kidnapped and taken prisoner by his patient Sam Fortner (Domnhall Gleeson), a serial killer hoping to change his ways. The series is as much about Alan's struggle to explore and unravel the inner workings of Sam's mind in order to dissect where his murderous impulses come from as it is about Alan's own familial issues. Where the much zippier Flight Attendant is always on the move, The Patient is more of a "just sit and wait" kind of show, but what bonds them is all the good old psychological torture running through both. [Trailer] Watch on Hulubr You br
Penn Badgley, YOU Netflix You and The Flight Attendant are cousins. They're both executive-produced by Greg Berlanti and Sarah Schechter, and share key behind-the-camera talent, like awesomely named director Silver Tree. And the connections between the shows are spiritual as well as familial. They're both super-fun thrillers that refuse to take themselves too seriously, blending twisty suspense plots with hilarious dark humor, though You is darker than The Flight Attendant, as its main character Joe Goldberg (Gossip Girl alum Penn Badgley) is a sociopathic serial killer. The Flight Attendant and You are doing a very specific "comedic thriller based on a series of novels with a career-redefining performance from its star" thing that no other shows are doing right now. -Liam Mathews [Trailer] Watch on Netflixbr Sharp Objects br
Amy Adams and Chris Messina, Sharp Objects Anne Marie Fox/HBO Sharp Objects, the eerie, atmospheric adaptation of Gillian Flynn's debut novel, stars Amy Adams as Camille Preaker, an alcoholic reporter who goes back to her small Missouri hometown to investigate the murders of two young girls. Camille has a history of self-harm, and memories of her own trauma bubble to the surface once she's reunited with her cold but overbearing mother (Patricia Clarkson). While Sharp Objects lacks the delirious fun of The Flight Attendant, there are shades of Camille in Cassie — they both self-medicate to cope with their pain, and they've both carried their troubled relationships with their mothers into adulthood. It's an incredibly dark series, but gorgeous, fully realized, and totally worth your time. [Trailer] Watch on HBO Maxbr Search Party br
Alia Shawkat, Search Party Jon Pack/HBO Max It's hard to describe Search Party, a show that boldly switches genres every season and ends in a completely different place than the one it starts, but let me try: After learning about the disappearance of a college classmate, listless Brooklynite Dory (Alia Shawkat) and her three friends make it their business to track the missing girl down, and everything kind of spins out of control from there. The first two seasons vibrate with a darkly comedic Flight Attendant-esque spirit as Dory and company get embroiled in a crime they absolutely do not have the coping skills or general intelligence to handle, and the final three seasons deal with courtroom drama, psychological torture, and, eventually, cults. And if you appreciate The Flight Attendant's Hitchcockian elements, you'll enjoy Search Party, which at different points pulls inspiration from Vertigo, Psycho, and The Man Who Knew Too Much. [Trailer] Watch on HBO MaxMore recommendations:
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