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Prime Video Releases ‘We Were Liars' First Look Images (TV News Roundup)

Prime Video Releases ‘We Were Liars' First Look Images (TV News Roundup)

Yahoo22-04-2025

First look images for Prime Video's young adult adaptation, 'We Were Liars,' show a vibrant summer getaway — and some unanswered questions.
The series is based on E. Lockhart's book of the same name and features Cadence Sinclair Eastman (Emily Alyn Lind) and her friend group, called the Liars. The Liars hang out on a private island that belongs to Cadence's wealthy grandfather. 'After a mysterious accident changes Cadence's life forever, everyone, including her beloved Liars, seems to have something to hide,' according to the show description.
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The cast also includes Shubham Maheshwari playing Gat Patil, Esther McGregor playing Mirren Sinclair Sheffield and Joseph Zada as Johnny Sinclair Dennis. Additional cast members are Caitlin FitzGerald, Mamie Gummer, Candice King, Rahul Kohli and David Morse.
Julie Plec and Carina Adly MacKenzie serve as co-showrunners. The series drops with the full eight episodes on Prime Video June 18.
American Public Television will release the documentary 'American Delivery,' which traces nurses' efforts to address the national maternal mortality crisis, on public television stations May 1. The film will also be available to stream on PBS.org at that date.
Kino Lorber will bring an extended cut of the documentary to DVD and digital platforms like Apple TV, Prime Video, Google Play and Fandango at Home starting May 6.
Carolyn Jones directed the documentary, which was filmed in California, Ohio, Kentucky, Massachusetts, New York and Tanzania. The film is presented by WHYY.
During National Nurse Appreciation Week, May 6-12, there will be screenings of the film in every state.
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VICE TV's 'United Gangs of America' makes its return with Season 2 on June 3.
The season will have ten one-hour episodes, releasing on a weekly basis. The first episode of Season 2 delves into the Pagan Biker Gang, and the rest of the season will unpack organizations like Fresno Bulldogs, Nuestra Familia, Black Mafia Family, Vagos and Aryan Sisters of Texas.
'United Gangs of America isn't just about gangs – it's about power, loyalty, fear, and survival,' VICE TV president Pete Gaffney said in a statement. 'We're going inside worlds most people never see, and every episode is as gripping as it is eye-opening. This show has connected with our audience in a big way, and Season 2 raises the stakes even higher.'
'Dept. Q,' a new series starring Matthew Goode, releases on Netflix May 29.
The series is written and directed by Scott Frank, who was behind 'The Queen's Gambit.' It follows DCI Carl Morck, an Edinburgh cop who gets saddled with running a cold case unit called Department Q.
'Dept. Q' has nine episodes. Cast members include Chloe Pirrie, Alexej Manvelov, Kelly Macdonald and Leah Byrne.
Frank, Rob Bullock and Andy Harries serve as executive producers.
The nonprofit Moonshot Initiative has selected seven fellows and their female-centric feature scripts for the inaugural Moonshot Feature Accelerator, including Lauren Brown ('Deadbeat'), Briana M. Cox ('The Sum of Our Parts'), Elizabeth Dwyer ('When Ani Met Jo Met Cris'), A.K. Espada ('This Is Our Home'), Julia Morizawa ('Something About the Tide'), Katerina Munis ('A Singular Girl'), and Sylvia-Anne Parker ('600 Steps').
The fellows will have the opportunity to participate in a three-week development program before pitching to top companies like Netflix, HBO, Neon, Yes, Fusion Studios and Norman Productions, among other studios. They will also hear directly from industry insiders at United Talent Agency and Kaplan/Perrone Entertainment.
'We're proud to launch our Moonshot Feature Accelerator with a cohort of seven talented emerging screenwriters, with features ranging from a dystopian horror to a queer rom-com to a family drama,' Moonshot Initiative's co-founder and co-executive director Katrina Medoff said in a statement. 'We're proud to be able to provide the training and connections that they need to break into this industry.'
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We Were Liars: TV Show vs. Book Differences
We Were Liars: TV Show vs. Book Differences

Cosmopolitan

time3 hours ago

  • Cosmopolitan

We Were Liars: TV Show vs. Book Differences

We Were Liars, the new Prime Video series from showrunners Julie Plec and Carina Adly Mackenzie that's a juicy mishmash of YA romance, vacation mystery, and Succession-y family drama, also happens to be based on the very popular novel by E. Lockhart. If you're too curious about what was different in the book or how the show handled *that* ending, here's the 411 on the adaptation. The basic story, characters, and relationships are the same. There will be spoilers ahead, uh, obviously. Starting with the big one because I am no liar! We Were Liars is about a seventeen year-old girl named Cadence Sinclair working through post-traumatic amnesia after a fire she helped set killed her cousin Johnny, her cousin Mirren, and her childhood best friend/boyfriend Gatwick "Gat" Patil. Her amnesia and trauma is represented by the ghosts of those three dead teenagers, who used to call themselves "the Liars" when they spent summers growing up on the Sinclair family's private island called Beachwood. Every time a living person tries to tell her what happens, she has a panic attack and forgets all over again. The fire occurred after a dramatic summer caused the Liars to become disillusioned with their picture perfect, privileged family. On the show and in the book, we see that fateful summer unfold as Cadence remembers the truth. There are some small changes to the narrative in the adaptation. For example: Mirren's younger brother Taft is simply not in the show! His character is basically combined with Johnny's younger brother William. Here are the bigger changes: In the book: Grandma Tipper dies between Summer 14 and Summer 15, and the fire happens at the end of Summer 15. We spent time with Cadence at home in Vermont recovering from her physical injuries and recalling sporadic memories. She spends Summer 16 in Europe with her father. Almost two years later, during Summer 17, Cadence returns to the island seeking the truth and reunites with the Liars' ghosts. In the show: All of the tragic events happened in Summer 16. We never see Cadence's life in Vermont outside of a hair dye montage. Just one year after the accident, Cadence goes back on the island for all of what would have been Summer 17, working with the ghosts of the Liars to figure out what happened. In the book: Johnny gets more and more distressed, Mirren gets more and more sick, and Gat gets more and more angsty about resuming his relationship with Cadence. The house where they're "staying" gets progressively messier with clutter and dirty dishes. In the show: The ghosts are the tiniest bit, well, friendlier and there's no mess for Cadence to clean up. I guess that wouldn't make for compelling TV. In the book: Cadence processes her mental state by telling the reader fairy tales in which she casts her family members and Gat as kings, princesses, princes, fire-breathing dragons and outcast mice. In the show: There are fairy tales in voiceover, and the Sinclair family Father's Day tradition has some on the nose King Lear vibes... but that's it. Instead, since the show is only partially from Cadence's POV, we do learn a little more about her cousins and aunts. They have interests and love lives that the book doesn't get as into. In the book: The ground floor caught fire too fast because Cadence, who was in charge of that section, used too much gas and started on the wrong side of the house to ensure a safe exit for everyone. That trapped Gat in the basement and her cousins (and the dogs) upstairs. In the series: Gat was waiting outside in the boat, and ran into the fire when he didn't see Cadence and her cousins leaving the house as planned. Mirren and Johnny got trapped because they were distracted–Mirren by one of her paintings in her mom's room and Johnny by one last opportunity to smash things–and the smoke rose more quickly than they anticipated. Cadence thinks she threw off the plan by running upstairs to grab her grandmother's black pearl necklace. But since she ran back inside moments after to try and rescue the sleeping dogs they all forgot about (I'll never be over that BTW) what happened is not so much her fault as it is in the book. In the book: Cadence suspects that her mom, Penny, knows the truth about the fire. But the important thing is that Cadence has resolved to be a better, more considerate person and own her responsibility and her place in her "evil" family. In the series: Cadence's grandfather, Harris, definitely knows the truth about the fire. He names her as a successor to her family's complicated legacy and urges her to keep the lie he's told the family and the press: that the fire was an accident and she was a hero who tried to save everyone. But she runs away, neither admitting to what really happened or maintaining the fairy. She's still very against the family. Will this be resolved in a potential Season 2? There's always room for more character growth... right? There are some references in the series to things that book readers would only know if they'd read the prequel Family of Liars, like another horrible summer and what happened to the fourth Sinclair sister Rosemary, so fingers crossed!

Netflix ‘The Waterfront' Ending, Explained
Netflix ‘The Waterfront' Ending, Explained

Cosmopolitan

time4 hours ago

  • Cosmopolitan

Netflix ‘The Waterfront' Ending, Explained

Within the span of seven episodes, Netflix's latest drama series The Waterfront has unraveled the perfect façade of the wealthy Buckley family, showing the dark and ugly things they've been hiding from Havenport society, from their employees, and from each other. The eighth and final episode of the series is a satisfying culmination of events, tying a lot of loose ends together neatly—more-or-less. Though, of course, because drugs, guns, fishing boats, family drama, and a sociopathic narcissistic bad guy are involved, it's definitely a messy, intense, and bloody battle to the finish. Besides all the action, audiences also get to see some heartwarming moments, redemption arcs, and a tease of what might be another season to come—with a whole new captain possibly taking charge of the Buckley family ship. A lot certainly happens within the span of the finale's 43-minute run, but we've got you covered. Here's the ultimate breakdown of the last episode of The Waterfront. In the seventh episode, the Buckleys deal with the repercussions of their attempt to take out Grady (Topher Grace). Grady had been a little too close to their family for comfort, and Harlan (Holt McCallany) has been trying to cut him loose only to be met with brute force, torture, and threats to his family's lives. So as part of the business deal Cane (Jake Weary) and Harlan (Holt McCallany) made with the Parkers—who run a big drug-smuggling operation, and with whom they used to be involved with—the Parkers's men would kill the drug supplier for the Buckleys. Unfortunately, that plan didn't work out. And as revenge for this attempt at his life, Grady's men abduct Bree (Melissa Benoist). Bree wakes up on Grady's yacht, figures out what's going on, but is surprised to see her teen son Diller aboard with her. Diller tells her that he saw the men take her and snuck onto the boat to try and save her. While she appreciates the gesture, Bree tells Diller to hide, protect himself, and make sure no one else knows he's there. This plan ultimately fails, and when Bree takes a stab at Grady, he shoots her in the leg—figuring he only needs to hold one Buckley as hostage. As Bree's leg bleeds out, she gets thrown overboard. But Diller manages to throw a raft over to his mom before she drifts away. As soon as Harlan learns about his daughter Bree's kidnapping, he gears up for battle. Grady wanted to take Harlan in exchange for Bree, but that would make it too easy to kill them both off. So Cane, and his half-brother Shawn (Rafael L. Silva), decide they're coming with. They hide in a secret compartment of their boat, and ambush Grady and his men just in time to stop them from killing Harlan. They retrieve Diller, but soon discover that Bree has been thrown overboard and is floating away somewhere out in the ocean. A gunfight and chase on the yacht ensues. It ultimately ends with Grady, cornered by Harlan and Cane at the bow of his own boat. He tries to talk his way out, speaking to Harlan about how Cane isn't worthy to be his son because he's a coward and isn't willing to do what it takes to get the job done. Grady goads Cane, saying that he doesn't even have it in him to shoot him then and there. And in a split-second, before Grady could even finish his whole rant—much to Harlan's surprise (as well as the audience's, I'm sure)—Cane shoots him in the head multiple times and his dead body drops in the water. Though shaken by these events, the Buckleys move quickly to rescue Bree. All alone, on a raft while bleeding to death, Bree has a flashback and is finally able to forgiver her nine-year-old self for not having been able to help her grandpa when he was tortured and killed in his own home. In real time, she then finds the strength to use a flare gun to send a signal for rescue. This is when her family finally finds her and rushes her back to shore to get the care she needs at a hospital. Diller is happy to find out that his mom's surgery goes well and tells her while she's in recovery that he doesn't want to move out of Havenport with his dad. He wants to stay in Havenport to be with her. Meanwhile, on land, another one of the Buckley women is trying to handle her own problems. Upon learning of her husband Cane's infidelity, Peyton (Danielle Campbell) marches off to Jenna's (Humberly González) house to confront her. However, things don't pan out the way that Peyton imagined as she's met with a Jenna who's just returned from the hospital with the news that her ill dad had just passed away. Instead of giving Jenna an earful, Peyton ends up helping her with everything—from funeral arrangements to calling Jenna's family for support. And though Jenna tries to apologize and talk about everything with Cane, Peyton stops her and says that's a conversation they can have another time, if needed. When Cane gets back from all the action out at sea, he goes to Jenna's house. He tells her that he's heard the news about her father's death, so he wanted to come over to check-in on her and provide some comfort. But instead of welcoming him into the house, Jenna tells him about Peyton's visit and how incredibly kind she was to her despite the fact that she's been sleeping with her husband. This is when Jenna says that Cane was probably just a distraction from the terrible things happening in her life—from her dad's illness, from her impending divorce—and that she's probably the same to him. She tells him never to return to her house again. Cane is greeted at home by Peyton, who has a glass of scotch ready for him. They have an honest conversation about where they want their relationship to go from here, and Cane says that he wants to do better by his family, his wife, and himself. Peyton then says that she'll make sure that everything between them is alright, insinuating that no one and nothing can get in her way when it comes to securing their future. Though they appear to be the town's power couple, it's become clear that Harlan and Belle (Maria Bello) have marital problems of their own. They've been lying to and cheating on each other, but they've stuck through it all to appear as a united front. The events that have transpired with Grady, and dealing with all these threats to their family, have made their bond stronger. But while they seem to kiss and make up, it's clear that Belle is still hiding something from her husband. One of the big revelations during this season is Shawn's identity as Harlan's son with their now-deceased friend Bebe West. He came to Havenport wanting to learn more about his father, the Buckley family, and see if he could finally find the place where he belongs. It turns out that he has, and that he's staying with his newfound fam for the foreseeable future—which makes total sense given the rollercoaster he's been through with them. We have to remember that the reason why the Buckleys got into this whole mess in the first place was because of financial trouble. They were $2 million in debt to the bank, and moving drugs was a way to earn money to pay that back as well as ensure the future of the family fishery and restaurants. Belle initially had a plan—behind Harlan's back—to work with a local businessman named Wes Larsen (Dave Annable) to develop some parcels of land they owned by the beachfront. But things went sideways after she ended up sleeping with him and things got complicated. So when Belle tried to get the deal back, Wes refused. However, while sorting out all the Grady stuff, Emmett Parker (Terry Serpico) offers her a deal to help them out—but only if she's in the driver's seat, and not her husband. At the end of the episode, Belle meets with Emmett in the dead of night, and it seems as though she's accepted his offer. And to kick things off, Emmett decides to bring Belle a gift: a bloody Wes, tied to a chair. Emmett then introduces Belle as Wes's new boss, to which the poor tortured man has no choice but to agree with. This ending teases up a second season in which Belle double-crosses her own husband in order to take charge, and possibly save their business from ruin. Although, naturally, working with a crime family such as the Parkers is sure to have its own potentially-deadly consequences.

Is ‘The Waterfront' returning for season 2? Everything we know so far
Is ‘The Waterfront' returning for season 2? Everything we know so far

Business Upturn

time4 hours ago

  • Business Upturn

Is ‘The Waterfront' returning for season 2? Everything we know so far

By Aman Shukla Published on June 21, 2025, 18:30 IST Last updated June 21, 2025, 19:09 IST Netflix's The Waterfront hit like a rogue wave, pulling viewers into the messy, thrilling world of the Buckley family in Havenport, North Carolina. Since the show dropped on June 19, 2025, folks can't stop talking about its blend of family fights, shady deals, and that jaw-dropping Season 1 finale. Everyone's itching to know what's up with Season 2. Here's the scoop on when it might land, who's likely returning, and what kind of drama could unfold, written straight from the heart for fans like you. Is Season 2 of The Waterfront Actually Happening? Right now, Netflix hasn't said 'yay' or 'nay' to a second season, which is keeping us on edge. But there's hope! Kevin Williamson, the guy who created the show and gave us classics like Scream , has said he's got big plans, dreaming up three seasons total. The way Season 1 ended, with Belle Buckley getting a cryptic message from a new crime family, screams 'more story to tell.' Fans are crossing their fingers, and with all the chatter online, Netflix might just give us what we want. Stay tuned! The Waterfront Season 2 Potential Release Date Trying to guess a release date without a confirmed Season 2 is like predicting the weather in a storm, but let's break it down. Season 1 got announced in May 2024, was shot from September to December, and landed on our screens in June 2025—that's about a year from start to finish. If Netflix says 'go' by late 2025, they could start filming by spring 2026 and have it ready by summer or early fall 2026, maybe July or August. The Waterfront Season 2 Expected Cast If Season 2 happens, we're betting the main Buckley crew will be back to stir the pot. Here's who we think we'll see in Havenport again: Holt McCallany as Harlan Buckley : The tough guy running the family's fishing business, Harlan's got his hands full keeping things together. He's not going anywhere. Maria Bello as Belle Buckley : Belle stole the show in the finale, getting mixed up with some dangerous new folks. She's ready to shake things up. Jake Weary as Cane Buckley : Harlan's son made some bad calls with drugs last season, and his messy life's bound to keep us glued. Melissa Benoist as Bree Buckley : Bree's fight with addiction and that scary moment in Season 1 make her someone we're rooting for. Her story's got more to give. Danielle Campbell as Peyton Buckley : Cane's wife isn't just along for the ride—she's got her own plans, and her chilly vibe with Cane hints at trouble. Rafael L. Silva as Shawn Wilson : The bartender who knows too much about the Buckleys could spill more secrets. Humberly González as Jenna Tate : Her fling with Cane's got drama written all over it. Brady Hepner as Diller Hopkins: This kid might step up and surprise us. Some characters, like Topher Grace's sketchy drug guy Grady, probably won't be back after what went down. But with a new crime family, the Parkers, in the mix, we could meet fresh faces. Side characters like Dave Annable or Zach Roerig might pop in too, depending on where the story goes. The Waterfront Season 2 Potential Plot That Season 1 ending left us with more questions than a small-town gossip mill. Here's what we might see in Season 2, based on those final moments and what Kevin Williamson's been hinting at: Belle's Big Move: A new crime family, the Parkers, reached out to Belle, and she saw something shady at their warehouse—poor Wes looked roughed up. Is she jumping into a dangerous deal or playing her own game? Family Fights and Fixes: Harlan's trying to run the fishery with Cane, but after all the backstabbing last season, trust is thin. Will they patch things up or fall apart? Cane's Messy Love Life: Cane's cheating with Jenna, and Peyton's not having it. That cold shoulder she gave him spells more arguments ahead. The Parkers Stirring Trouble: These new bad guys sound like they could challenge the Buckleys' hold on Havenport. Think turf wars or sketchy partnerships. Ahmedabad Plane Crash Aman Shukla is a post-graduate in mass communication . A media enthusiast who has a strong hold on communication ,content writing and copy writing. Aman is currently working as journalist at

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