logo
Amazon Prime adds seasons of 'cult classic' sci-fi series ideal for The Last of Us fans

Amazon Prime adds seasons of 'cult classic' sci-fi series ideal for The Last of Us fans

Daily Mirror04-05-2025
Fans say it was a crime that it ended so soon
Amazon Prime has just dropped several episodes of a lesser-known sci-fi series that could be the perfect binge-watch for The Last of Us fans.
The first two seasons of Jeremiah have now been added to the retail behemoth's streaming service, making the entire series readily accessible for sci-fi buffs to delve into.

The brainchild of filmmaker and comic book writer Joseph Michael Straczynski, who also brought us Babylon 5, Netflix's Sense8, and penned the screen stories for Marvel's Thor and World War Z. The series stars Riverdale's Luke Perry in the lead role, alongside Malcolm-Jamal Warner, with Lord of the Rings and Stranger Things' Sean Astin joining the cast in the second season.

Set in an alternate 2021, Jeremiah is a lone wolf navigating a world populated by survivors of The Big Death, a plague that wiped out nearly everyone over the age of 13. Now, the children who were young enough to survive are grown up and must decide whether to scavenge from the remnants or build a new world.
Jeremiah, meanwhile, has spent over a decade searching for a place known as Valhalla Sector, a potential sanctuary according to his late father. A third season was contemplated by the studio, but Straczynski made it clear he would not participate due to creative differences, reports Surrey Live. Ultimately, Showtime axed the series, shifting away from sci-fi programming.
Despite its relative obscurity, the series has managed to maintain a dedicated fanbase who frequently express their affection for it online. This is despite the fact that only a small number of people seem to recall its original broadcast.
On the Subreddit titled Forgotten Shows, one enthusiast shared: "Been lurking for a little while, but haven't seen anyone talk about this absolutely AMAZING show (Jeremiah). Luke Perry, Malcolm Jamal Warner, and Sean Astin (in Season 2). Amazing performances, great writing by J. Michael Straczynski. An absolute CRIME we didn't get more of this show."
Another Redditor concurred with the initial post, responding: "So many posts on here aren't really forgotten. This one is a bullseye. If I had ever known there was a show with this cast, I'd never have missed an episode. Wonder if I can dig it up somewhere."

A third chimed in: "This show is amazing. The second season is even better than the first. Just talking about it makes me want to watch it all over again for like the 12th time."
Concerns have been raised that some elements of the show, now over 20 years old, haven't aged well. However, one fan who discovered it years after its initial release raved: "I just saw the first season of Jeremiah and I was completely blown away. What an awesome series!"
They continued: "This is another Firefly cult-like classic. Because it was poorly marketed it didn't get the attention it deserved. I would love to see this series take off again! This would be very well received on the sci-fi channel or any other channel for that matter."
Another viewer noted that the opening two-part episode may be a hurdle for some, but advised persistence: "The first two episodes, which set up the premise of the series, were the worst. Seemed very derivative and pretty cheesy. But once they got past the series intro it really started to hit its stride. I consider this one of the great under-the-radar sci fi shows out there."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Every episode of 'masterpiece' TV series now streaming on Amazon Prime
Every episode of 'masterpiece' TV series now streaming on Amazon Prime

Metro

time6 hours ago

  • Metro

Every episode of 'masterpiece' TV series now streaming on Amazon Prime

Every episode of the action drama Station 19 has been added to Amazon Prime Video for streaming. Set in the titular nineteenth station of Seattle Fire Department, the show follows a group of heroic firefighters as they risk their lives and hearts while on and off the job. It was created by Shondaland mastermind Shonda Rhimes, who was also responsible for hit shows Grey's Anatomy and Bridgerton. A number of the show's characters were initially introduced during a 2018 crossover episode of Grey's Anatomy, which served as its backdoor pilot. After airing its first proper episode that same year, it ran for seven seasons before wrapping up in May 2024. As of July 28, the show has been added to Amazon Prime in the UK, where viewers can discover the adventures of Station 19 for themselves. Loyal viewers have continued to heap praise upon Station 19 since the show ended, contributing to its 93% positive audience score on Rotten Tomatoes. Critics were largely positive in their reaction to Season One, with The LA Times describing it as 'a turbocharged melodrama in which twists and surprises transpire with comforting predictability.' Meanwhile, Common Sense Media called it 'soapy, sexy Grey's-Anatomy-in-a-firehouse drama.' This formula obviously connected with viewers, who have enjoyed its combination of high-octane firehouse action and soapy storytelling. Google Reviews user Ειρηνη Μπατρη described it as a 'blazing masterpiece,' writing how it 'keeps the flames of excitement burning from the very first episode to the last.' Meanwhile, Kye May praised its handling of LGBTQ+ issues and representation, describing it as 'more than just a TV show; it is a platform that showcases amazing LGBTQ+ storylines, providing representation that is essential for many viewers. 'I am ABSOLUTELY OBSESSED with this show! I've been into since day one, episode one!' exclaimed Nicole Findlay. The show's cast is led by Jaina Lee Ortiz as station lieutenant Andrea 'Andy' Herrera, who rises through the ranks to become Captain and then fire chief as the series progresses. Other stars include Jason George as Dr. Ben Warren, Grey Damon as Jack Gibson, and Barrett Doss as Victoria Hughes. As a Grey's Anatomy spin-off, the show featured several crossover events over the years, from 2018's backdoor pilot to the Fall City Wildfire of 2024. This comes weeks after the streaming service added the 'sinister' crime thriller Ballard to its catalogue. More Trending Like Station 19, Ballard is a spin-off of a popular USA procedural drama – this one being the gritty crime thriller Bosch. Ballard stars Maggie Q as disgraced LAPD detective Renée Ballard, who leads a team of misfit police officers in their attempt to bring down a well-connected crime syndicate. View More » Station 19 is streaming now on Amazon Prime in the UK. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Jeremy Clarkson reveals extent of 'enormous disruption' caused at farm by TB outbreak MORE: 'One of the smartest shows on television': Your favourite TV spy thrillers MORE: Film hailed as 'one of the greatest of all time' now streaming on Amazon Prime

Nostalgia is eating us alive. Instead of building a new world, we're regurgitating a past that never existed
Nostalgia is eating us alive. Instead of building a new world, we're regurgitating a past that never existed

The Guardian

time7 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Nostalgia is eating us alive. Instead of building a new world, we're regurgitating a past that never existed

There has been much talk about our hunger for a 'return to optimism'. Our world has been too real for too long, and we all just want a bit of shelter from the storm. We look back in patronising nostalgia at Obama's Hope poster in the same way we insist music hasn't been real music since about 1986 (or since 1966, or since the Great American Songbook, or since Mozart, depending who you talk to). Movie theatres are propped up by two monolith tent poles: DC's umpteenth Superman and Marvel's Fantastic Four reboot, both attempting a full factory reset of their flagship properties. It offers a return to the originals – AKA, the 'good old days'. But this isn't so much a yearning for a new optimism as it is a resuscitation of an old one. The Fantastic Four is even set in a 1960s Jetsons-style alternate reality (the first comic was published in 1961). Remember this? This is Things As They Should Be™. The great irony in this regurgitation of old aesthetics is that, they themselves looked forward. The joy and optimism of the space age showcased the marvellous and fantastic possibilities of technology and science, before we knew that those same industries would slowly start choking our own atmosphere. We want to go back to that time, when we could feel good about driving our big shiny bubble cars and tease our hair up guilt-free – without thinking about the ozone or whatever. This perceived collective optimism was never real, of course. But now, after decades of doom storytelling and hope erosion, we want the dream back. What's happening in the culture is more than the good honest fun of theme park recreations, 1950s diners and old west camera filters. This is an earnest but somehow deeply sad defibrillation of dead worlds, built around a hollow craving that can never ever be filled. We are birds constantly regurgitating and eating our own upchuck. Same flavour but different colour, different flavour but same chunks. Its passion looks inspirational, but its sniff is grief. It works, but not quite — as fresh as microwaved leftovers. It's the cultural equivalent of Maga – the lie that there was some glorious past where things were flourishing and wholesome and if we can just get back there we'll be on track again. But there never was that past. It's a distortion of immature childhood memories and historical rewriting by big corporations. This is the multiverse made real by an increasingly small cabal of conglomerates leveraging their various assets, stuffing each storytelling turducken full of old money-makers to reduce the risk in anything new. It's not so much the multiverse as the IP-verse. Every brand everywhere all at once. Over time this starts to feel like a photocopy of a photocopy. The AI boom is quite literally sampling and recycling things that already exist. When I see a brand-new building proudly inspired by the art deco movement of 100 years ago, I wonder if the great deco designers knew way back then that they were on the blind precipice of the future, or were they recreating their own nostalgic past? I wonder, as typography and graphic design trends cycle through recreations of past 'vintage' ideas, what the concept of 'vintage' meant to people back when it was, to them, modern? Having lost hope for the future, we have always looked back for comfort. We have to be cautious of the reasons why. Why did Nazi aesthetics have such a fetish for ancient Rome? Why did Soviet culture idolise modern industrial style? Even in The Handmaid's Tale's Gilead, they revere the natural and organic by insisting on non-GM and high-fat foods. The world around us tells us a lot about our beliefs. We are all potential victims of this ideological myth-making. It's invisible but everywhere, and it's difficult to tell if people in power aim to manufacture a world that matches their values or if it's some kind of naturally developing, laissez-faire attraction. We're all dreaming of a better time from the past, since there is no future. We've stopped dreaming about building – now we dream of recreating. It's not recreating the actual thing that we want, it's the yearning to recreate the feeling we had back then. In my local city centre, I drive past heritage-protected sandstone buildings with the names of the original shopfronts still carved at the top. The mason etching that date in the rock was doing it for the future, so as time stretched on his mark would stay there, even for me now as I whip past the exact same building in a space shuttle machine he could never even dream of. Imagine a shop front named something like, 'Nolan and Sons Merchants, est. 1861.' And on the shop front awning below it, computer-printed on laminate in an deliberately old-timey font, 'Buzz'd Cafe, est. 2025.' Take a sledgehammer to the wall of this cafe. Pierce the membrane of lino wallpaper printed to look like rustic bricks and find sterile chalk-white plasterboard from the previous shop, which was itself once added to modernise and cover the rustic brick walls beneath. You can find these rings of a tree in everything: generations on top of generations of us each trying to make our own existence matter and either cover or recover the ones before us. So, do we seek comfort in the baby blanket of our past myths – or do we try to create our own new ones? Martin Ingle is a writer and film-maker

Emma Corrin is seen for the first time as Elizabeth Bennet on the set of Netflix's Pride and Prejudice
Emma Corrin is seen for the first time as Elizabeth Bennet on the set of Netflix's Pride and Prejudice

Daily Mail​

time8 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Emma Corrin is seen for the first time as Elizabeth Bennet on the set of Netflix's Pride and Prejudice

It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single woman in possession of a good fortune must surely be in want of a… dog? What Jane Austen would have made of this is anyone's guess. But these exclusive pictures show Emma Corrin for the first time as Elizabeth Bennet in Netflix's new production of Austen's Pride And Prejudice – and they suggest The Crown star is taking the character's sharp wit and independent spirit to heart. Emma, in period costume and curly wig, was seen cuddling beloved dog Spencer between takes on set – proving, just as in the novel, that important relationships can take many forms. The star was later spotted on a rooftop looking even less like a Georgian heroine, laughing with Freya Mavor, who plays Elizabeth Bennet's sister Jane, and eating a banana. Emma also appeared to grimace with trepidation while gingerly descending some scaffolding. The 29-year-old, who won plaudits playing a young Princess Diana in The Crown, is often seen walking Spencer near their home in Margate and in north London, where the actor shared a £5million home with Bohemian Rhapsody Oscar winner Rami Malek, 44. But like Lizzy Bennet, the star's love life has become tangled, splitting with Malek earlier this year and now said to be dating Zachary Hart, who appeared with Emma on stage in a production of Anton Chekhov's The Seagull. The hotly anticipated adaptation of Austen's 1813 novel is also set to star Slow Horses actor Jack Lowden as eligible Mr Darcy and Olivia Colman as Emma's determined mother Mrs Bennet. Other star names released by Netflix include Rufus Sewell as Mr Bennet and Killing Eve's Fiona Shaw as Lady Catherine de Bourgh. Sadly for some, Jack Lowden will not replicate Colin Firth's famous scene from the 1995 TV adaptation, which saw him emerge dripping wet from a lake – getting female viewers' hearts racing. This year marks 250 years since Austen's birth. The six-part Netflix series, written by Dolly Alderton, will be on screens early next year. However, Netflix recently sparked uproar after releasing a first look at the casting for the new Pride & Prejudice series - with some fans now threatening to boycott it altogether. On Friday, Netflix shared a picture on social media of the Bennet women on set. The films stars shared a quiet moment as they took in the view below Freya and Emma smiled at each other and giggled as they filmed the first scenes as the two eldest Bennet sisters Freya was seen holding a vintage monocular telescope amid filming The actress looked out of the telescope while Emma watched on 'We know you've been yearning for a sneak peek. Pride & Prejudice is officially in production,' the post read. 'Here's a first look featuring Emma Corrin, Freya Mavor, Olivia Colman, Hopey Parish, Rhea Norwood and Hollie Avery as the Bennet women.' But fans immediately rushed to the comments to express their distaste at the prospect as one wrote: 'Not to self: unsubscribe from Netflix immediately, today,' someone wrote. 'This casting is awful what the f**k,' another added. 'You cannot be serious,' someone else said. 'Oh help… praying this isn't a cock up like Persuasion. 'Actually scratch that… this is a reminder to me to unsubscribe,' another shared. Other members of the cast include Jamie Demetriou as Mr Collins, Daryl McCormack as Mr Bingley, and Louis Partridge as Mr Wickham, per Variety. While Freya had no issues with the steps, Emma appeared to be much more trepidatious More actors include Rhea Norwood as Lydia Bennet and Siena Kelly as Caroline Bingley, while Hopey Parish and Hollie Avery are making their acting debuts as Mary Bennet and Kitty Bennet respectively. The director and screenwriter of Heartstopper, Euros Lyn and Dolly Alderton, respectively, are taking on the series. 'Once in a generation, a group of people get to retell this wonderful story, and I feel very lucky that I get to be a part of it,' Alderton said in a statement, per the outlet. 'Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice is the blueprint for romantic comedy – it has been a joy to delve back into its pages to find both familiar and fresh ways of bringing this beloved book to life.' The limited series will finish filming in the UK at the end of 2025, per What's On Netflix.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store