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"Outlander: Blood Of My Blood" Cast Play Who's Who

"Outlander: Blood Of My Blood" Cast Play Who's Who

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To celebrate the new spinoff series, "Outlander: Blood of My Blood," we got to know the cast a little better with a game of Who's Who with Jamie Roy, Harriet Slater, Hermione Corfield, and Jeremy Irvine. #Outlander #OutlanderBloodofMyBlood
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Netflix finally adds 'Outlander' season 7 — but there's one huge catch
Netflix finally adds 'Outlander' season 7 — but there's one huge catch

Tom's Guide

time2 days ago

  • Tom's Guide

Netflix finally adds 'Outlander' season 7 — but there's one huge catch

If you're a huge 'Outlander' fan and have been waiting for another season to hit Netflix, then you're in luck. One of the best streaming services has finally added season 7 of the fan-favorite historical romance time-travel series to its platform. The catch? You can only watch the first eight episodes on Netflix, and it'll be a while before the second half arrives. That's right, Netflix's annoying habit of releasing shows in batches continues, though this time the decision is really out of the streamer's hands. You see, "Outlander" is a Starz exclusive, so Netflix subscribers have always had to endure lengthy waits for the latest episodes to make their way over. As of this week (August 11), Netflix subscribers can watch the first eight episodes of "Outlander" season 7, the show's second-to-last season. We hope you like cliffhangers, though, because part two (episodes 9 through 16) won't arrive on Netflix until next year: January 17, 2027. If five months is too long to wait for part 2, you'll have to shell out for a Starz subscription to catch the rest of "Outlander" season 7 in the meantime. Starz usually costs $10.99/month, but right now you can get your first three months for just $4.99 a month. Prime Video also offers a Max and Starz streaming bundle in the U.S. that's 25% less than subscribing to each service individually, saving you around $6.99 each month. Since Netflix is the more popular streaming service of the two, season 7's arrival is the perfect opportunity to dive into this much-lauded saga before it wraps up with season 8 next year. As with past seasons, season 8 will premiere on Starz, and it's set to arrive in early 2025 with no official release date announced yet. Starz: was $10.99/month now $4.99 for the first three monthsStarz is one of the more underrated streaming services out there, offering access to some great thriller shows like "Sweetpea" and the hit drama "Outlander" season 7 part 2. With its rich library of original content, movies and shows, it's perfect for anyone seeking more premium entertainment. For those unfamiliar, "Outlander" is based on the novels of the same name by Diana Gabaldon. The series stars Caitríona Balfe as Claire Randall, a former World War II military nurse whose honeymoon takes an unlikely turn when she's mysteriously transported back to the year 1743. As she navigates life in a bygone century, she falls in love with another man named Jamie (Sam Heughan), a Highland warrior allied with Clan Fraser of Lovat. Claire adapts to having two completely different relationships, which naturally come with unforeseen consequences. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. In season 6, the couple navigated the trials and tribulations of life in colonial America, including building a home together and fighting a wrongful conviction that threatens to uproot everything they've worked for. Season 7 sees them facing the brutal birth of a new nation as the American Revolution breaks out. "Outlander" has remained consistently impressive throughout its run in terms of its narrative, character development, and world-building. The series has an overall critics' score of 90% on Rotten Tomatoes, with season 7 being heralded as a particular high mark, earning a 95% score. Netflix has been killing the game so far this year with new content on its streaming platform. There are many more movies and shows to watch on Netflix in August, including the highly anticipated season 2 of "Wednesday" and a charming new mystery, "The Thursday Murder Club," starring Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, and Ben Kingsley. Now is your chance to stream every season of 'Outlander' again (or check it out for the first time) before the eighth season comes out next year. Watch "Outlander" season 7 on Netflix or find more of the best Netflix shows to tide you over in the meantime. Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.

You Should Be Reading the 'Outlander' Books in This Order
You Should Be Reading the 'Outlander' Books in This Order

Elle

time3 days ago

  • Elle

You Should Be Reading the 'Outlander' Books in This Order

Every item on this page was chosen by an ELLE editor. We may earn commission on some of the items you choose to buy. When Outlander first hit screens in 2014, it entranced a huge audience with the story of Claire Randall (Caitríona Balfe), an English woman who travels in time from 1945 to 1743. Over seven seasons, fans have fallen in love with the series—and its steamy central romance—which will bow with its eighth and final season in early 2026. A prequel series, called Outlander: Blood of My Blood, is out now. But the Outlander story started with Diana Gabaldon's 1991 novel of the same name. It sparked a nine-book series, followed by additional novellas, short stories, and eventually the beloved Starz TV series. (Gabaldon has also announced a tenth book, A Blessing for a Warrior Going Out, which does not yet have a release date.) Are you ready to jump deeper into the Outlander world? Here's where to start. This short story prequel takes us to France in 1740. Years before he meets Claire in Outlander, a young Jamie and his friend Ian become mercenaries. The story begins in 1946, when Claire Randall and her husband Frank, who spent World War II apart, take a vacation to Inverness, Scotland. While looking for plants, Claire comes across a circle of ancient stones on the hill of Craigh na Dun. She walks through a large stone and is suddenly transported to 1743, where she's labeled an outlander, a foreigner. She's walked into a land at war and faces tremendous danger, but finds protection from the Scottish warrior James Fraser, and falls deeply in love with him. Gabaldon's second Outlander book starts in 1968, with Claire back home, where she has a daughter and has been married to Frank for years. After Frank's death, she brings her daughter Brianna to Scotland to meet with the historian Roger Wakefield, who she hopes can tell her what happened to soldiers after the real-life battle of Culloden, which occurred in 1746. While searching for these answers, Claire shares painful and shocking parts of her life with Brianna and explains what happened to her in the second timeline after the events of the first book. In this novella, we turn to Hal Grey, the brother of Lord John Grey, and Minnie Rennie, the woman that he will one day marry. Minnie runs a rare book business with her father. She's in London both working and secretly looking for her mother, whom she's never met, when she stumbles into Hal, who is mourning his wife and unborn child, and they develop an instant connection. Jamie lives and he's desperately searching for Claire and her baby. Claire and Brianna are living in Boston and Brianna now knows that Jamie is her biological father. When Claire finds out that Jamie did not, in fact, die in the battle of Culloden and is still alive 20 years later, she must decide whether to leave her life with her daughter and return to the 1700s to find him, not knowing if she ever will. Drums of Autumn picks up where Voyager left off. Having reunited, Claire and Jamie are in the American colonies, where they are building a cabin for themselves in North Carolina. She has left Brianna, who remains in the present day. Brianna learns that a dangerous historical event is coming towards her parents and decides to go back in time to save them, and Roger Wakefield, the historian who loves her, follows to save her. In the fifth Outlander novel, Claire, Jamie, Brianna, and Roger (now Brianna's husband) are all together in 1771 North Carolina, facing down the coming Revolutionary War. They live on Fraser's Ridge, a 10,000-acre land grant that Jamie was given in order, alongside many other families. Because of Claire's knowledge of the future, she and Jamie know that the war is coming and when Jamie is asked by the British government to form a militia to quash a rebellion, he understands how dangerous the situation has become. It is now 1772 and the signs of war are becoming increasingly apparent, as tensions are heating up and violence is increasing. Claire is working as a healer, and her abilities have led some to become suspicious of her. Jamie is receiving increasing pressure from the British government to further the king's agenda while secretly knowing that their cause is a losing one. When An Echo in the Bone opens, Claire and Jamie still know that the Revolutionary War is coming but have no idea of how they will fare or which side Jamie will choose: the British, who he knows will lose, or the Colonies, which would pit him against his secret son. In the 1970s, where Brianna and Roger have travelled with their children, they are living on Jamie's family's estate. Through letters written by Claire, they are piecing together the mysteries of their family. In 1778, Claire, believing that Jamie was killed in a shipwreck, has married Lord John Grey. When Jamie returns, very much alive, he's angry to learn that his best friend has married his wife. His comeback surprises everyone, including Lord John Grey's son, who learns that Jamie is his biological father. Brianna and her family's peace in the 1970s has ended with the kidnapping of her son and Roger's quest to find him. As the devastation of the Revolutionary War continues, Claire and Jamie have been reunited with Brianna and her family and are rebuilding after the crisis of the past few years. There is fear that the war will ravage Fraser's Ridge and Brianna wonders: Was it a mistake to leave the safety of the 20th century to be with her parents in one of the most dangerous periods in American history?

New on Netflix — 7 top shows and movies this week
New on Netflix — 7 top shows and movies this week

Tom's Guide

time4 days ago

  • Tom's Guide

New on Netflix — 7 top shows and movies this week

Another week, another slew of new shows and movies coming to Netflix. In a twist, though, many of the biggest shows and movies coming to the streaming service this week are not Netflix originals. There are still a few, but the biggest names are licensed titles: "Outlander" season 7 part 1, "Sullivan's Crossing" season 3 and several of the "The Fast and the Furious" movies. Still, several Netflix originals are dropping this week that are must-watches. "Night Always Comes" is a new crime thriller starring Vanessa Kirby, sure to dominate the Netflix Top 10 when it debuts this Friday. Reality TV show fans will be logging on a few days earlier to catch "Love is Blind: UK" season 2 when it premieres on Aug. 13. For more to watch, read on for my top picks, a full list of everything new on Netflix this week and the scoop on what's leaving Netflix this week. If you need more, check out our guide to everything new to Netflix in August, and check out these seven shows that will disappear from Netflix later this month. "Night Always Comes" stars Vanessa Kirby as Lynette, a Portland woman who is trying to take care of Kenny, her older brother with Down Syndrome. She has her family home for now, but she's struggling to hold onto it. If she loses it, then she loses everything, including him. So when her mother (Jennifer Jason Leigh) spends money on a new car instead of the house, Lynette is driven to desperation. She steals a car belonging to an acquaintance (possibly a client) and goes on a wild journey through the Portland underworld to get $25,000 in a single night. Having watched the trailer, "Night Always Comes" looks like it will deliver on the tension you want from a crime thriller. It has a talented cast and an intriguing premise, so I'm hopeful it'll be the next hit movie for Netflix. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Watch on Netflix starting Aug. 15 Netflix is adding seven "The Fast and the Furious" movies on Saturday, including the spin-off "Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw." But if you're only going to watch one of the movies in the franchise, it has to be the first one. "The Fast and the Furious" (2001) stars Paul Walker as LAPD officer Brian O'Conner. He's been assigned to go undercover and infiltrate a street racing gang suspected of robbing several semitrucks on local highways. To get in the crew, he'll need to impress Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel), and that means he'll need a fast car. Is this movie basically a "Point Break" remake? Well ... yes. But even though it's still not quite as good as Kathryn Bigelow's masterpiece, it's still a great action movie and genuinely one of my favorite movies to watch. Don't miss your chance to watch, or rewatch it, now that it's on Netflix. Watch on Netflix starting Aug. 16 If you're a Netflix reality show fan, you're probably familiar with the concept of "Love is Blind." A group of singles enters the show looking for love, but there's a catch: they can't actually look at their potential mate. Instead, they need to develop an emotional connection, entering pods to get each other without ever seeing each other until they're ready to get engaged and live together for a trial run before marriage. "Love is Blind: U.K." takes that same premise and applies it to singles in the British Isles. This season, the singles range in age from 26 to 37 and include a dating app founder (how ironic), a gaming entrepreneur, a professional dancer, a DJ, a certified genius and more. Watch on Netflix starting Aug. 13 Watching new episodes of "Outlander" remains one of the few reasons to have a Starz subscription. But if you're patient, you can just wait for the episodes to come to Netflix instead. For those of you who have never seen the incredible period drama, it stars Caitríona Balfe as Claire Randall. Claire is a former World War II military nurse who suddenly finds herself transported back in time to 1743. Once she's there, she encounters Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan), a Highland warrior allied with Clan Fraser of Lovat. Jamie happens to be easy on the eyes, so eventually the two marry. But once they're united, they become entangled in one conflict after another, from the Jacobite rising to (now) the beginnings of the American Revolution. Whether you love romance or historical fiction, "Outlander" has something for you. Watch it now on Netflix "Sullivan's Crossing" is based on the popular novel series by Robyn Carr, and the first two seasons became a surprise hit for Netflix last month. It stars Morgan Kohan as Maggie Sullivan, a Boston-area neurosurgeon who finds herself returning to her hometown of Sullivan's Crossing in rural Nova Scotia after getting in some legal trouble. The show follows Maggie as her career is upended and she begins to reconnect with her estranged father, Harry "Sully" Sullivan (Scott Patterson). She also begins to connect with California "Cal" Jones (Chad Michael Murray), a newcomer to the small camping town who doesn't have past baggage with Maggie. If you love a soapy romance show, this is your next binge-watch. Watch it now on Netflix "Tyler Perry's She the People" is no more ... because it's now "Miss Governor." But besides the name, nothing about the show has changed. It still stars Terri J. Vaughn as Antoinette Dunkerson, the newly elected Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi. She's also still figuring out how to thrive while working with a sexist governor, keeping her family in line now that they're public figures and dealing with the complications of being a Black woman politician in a white man's world. Check out part two of the show's first season this week on Netflix. Watch on Netflix starting Aug. 13 This may be an animated comedy movie, but it's definitely not for the kids. 'Fixed' is an adult animated comedy about Bull (Adam Devine), a dog whose world is about to be rocked. That's because Bull is about to lose his balls, aka he's getting fixed. So his dawgs are taking him out on the town for one last day of partying before he's a changed dog forever. The premise of "Fixed" may seem dumb, but it's pedigree is not. Aside from Devine, the movie stars the voices of Idris Elba, Kathryn Hahn and Fred Armisen, among others. It's also written and directed by acclaimed animator Genndy Tartakovsky, who did the original "Clone Wars" series on Cartoon Network. Watch on Netflix starting Aug. 13 AUGUST 11 AUGUST 12 "Final Draft" (JP) (Netflix series) Twenty-five athletes, most retired, compete to win 30M yen to launch their second career. Can they overcome tough physical and psychological challenges? "Jim Jefferies: Two Limb Policy" (Netflix comedy special) Comedian Jim Jefferies unleashes his thoughts on tiny mustaches, straight-guy struggles and why acting doesn't count as a real job. AUGUST 13 "Love Is Blind: UK" season 2 (GB) (Netflix series) A new batch of singles in the UK search for love sight unseen. Who will make it from the pods, to living together, to all the way up the aisle? "Fixed" (Netflix film) After learning he's getting neutered, a dog has 24 hours to squeeze in one last balls-to-the-wall adventure with the boys in this raunchy adult comedy. "Saare Jahan Se Accha: The Silent Guardians" (IN) (Netflix series) A resilient Indian spy must defeat his counterpart across the border in a battle of wits and tradecraft to sabotage their nuclear program. "Songs From the Hole" (Netflix documentary) Songs from the Hole is an innovative documentary/visual album composed by JJ'88, a musician incarcerated at 15 and serving a life through first-person narration and lyrical journal entries, the film explores his identity and untangles the complex emotions stemming from his crime and the loss of his brother. "Young Millionaires" (FR) (Netflix series) Four teen friends in Marseille win the jackpot and see their peaceful lives spiral into chaos — who knew that being young and rich could be a nightmare? AUGUST 14 "In the Mud" (AR) (Netflix series) Five women in a ruthless prison forge a unique bond after a near-death experience... until corruption and turf wars threaten to destroy them. "Miss Governor" season 1 part 2 (Netflix series) As she tries to shine in politics, Mississippi's first Black lieutenant governor must manage her zany family and overcome a boss who's stuck in the past. "Mononoke The Movie: Chapter II - The Ashes of Rage" (JP) (Netflix anime) The Medicine Seller returns as the Edo harem faces a new crisis, with family feuds, inner turmoil and fiery envy igniting the birth of a raging spirit. AUGUST 15 "The Echoes of Survivors: Inside Korea's Tragedies" (KR) (Netflix documentary) This documentary series reveals the harrowing tales of those who survived Korea's gloomiest chapters, shedding a light on long-hidden truths. "Fit for TV: The Reality of the Biggest Loser" (Netflix documentary) Fit for TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser is a three-part documentary series that takes an inside look at the making of the hit reality TV competition, exploring the good, the bad, and the complicated. Featuring interviews with former contestants, trainers, producers, and health professionals, the documentary examines the show's approach to transformation, the support systems in place, and the unique challenges of filming reality television. The series explores how the experience shaped the lives of those involved with the show long after the cameras stopped rolling and invites viewers to reflect on the balance between entertainment and well-being, and what it truly means to pursue lasting change. "Night Always Comes" (Netflix film) Based on the best selling novel by Willy Vlautin, Night Always Comes follows Lynette, a woman who risks everything to secure the house that represents a future for her family. On a dangerous odyssey through a single night, Lynette is forced to confront her dark past in order to finally break free. AUGUST 16 Leaving 8/15/25 "Ballers" seasons 1-5 Leaving 8/16/25 "Baby Mama""Ouija: Origin of Evil" Leaving 8/17/25 "Thanksgiving" Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button. Malcolm has been with Tom's Guide since 2022, and has been covering the latest in streaming shows and movies since 2023. He's not one to shy away from a hot take, including that "John Wick" is one of the four greatest films ever made. Here's what he's been watching lately:

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