68 Best TV Shows Similar to Money Heist (Page 3)

The Spool Staff

Bel-Air

GenreDrama
NetworkPeacock,
Watch afterFrom, Money Heist Mr. Robot Peaky Blinders The 100, WandaVision

Over the course of the first three episodes of Bel-Air—Peacock's downbeat reimagining of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air as a modern, self-serious prestige-adjacent drama flipping the script on the original comedy's inherently sulky premise—new kid on the block Will Smith (played with smooth-as-ever charm by Jabari Banks) plays basketball, dodges a gang hit, and contends with an obnoxious cousin who is seemingly his complete opposite. So is this dramatization really all that different from the culturally-defining '90s sitcom? The answer, like the show itself, is complicated. Continue Reading →

Ozark

GenreCrime Drama
NetworkNetflix
SimilarBrimstone, Broadchurch, Jack the Ripper, Kidnapped, Tientsin Mystic,
Watch afterBetter Call Saul, Dark, Game of Thrones MINDHUNTER Money Heist Peaky Blinders Stranger Things The Handmaid's Tale, Westworld
StudioMRC,

Previous seasons of Netflix’s Ozark followed Martin and Wendy Byrde’s (Jason Bateman and Laura Linney) quest to survive death and prove their family’s worth to the cartel and their violent rivals. Now, in the fourth and final season, the Byrdes must figure out if they can survive without their dark, criminal lives. They sacrificed a lot to get to the top—but what would they sacrifice to stay there? Thanks to this ask and its answers, Ozark Season 4 Part 1 is slow-burn suspense at its finest, with the Byrde’s maneuvering to stay on top, no matter the personal costs.  Continue Reading →

Emily in Paris

NetworkNetflix
Similar3rd Rock from the Sun, All in the Family, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, El Chavo del Ocho, Komi Can't Communicate, Madan Senki Ryukendo, My Demon, That '70s Show,
Watch afterBridgerton, Euphoria Fate: The Winx Saga, Money Heist Riverdale, The Queen's Gambit The Umbrella Academy Wednesday You,
StudioMTV Entertainment Studios,

Full disclosure: I was going to start this review with a Peloton joke given show creator Darren Star’s recent track record. Then out of nowhere, there was an actual Peloton knock-off storyline in this season of Emily in Paris. So my joke told itself. Points to you, Emily in Paris. Continue Reading →

Weihnachten mit Joko & Klaas

KinoKultur is a thematic exploration of the queer, camp, weird, and radical releases Kino Lorber has to offer. Beneath the great Kino Lorber distribution partner family tree, there are a few classic presents worth opening this holiday season. Below is a brief guide to four films that offer interesting things to contemplate during this time of year, films that—in the spirit of the season, invite the audience to consider charity, capital, and country as they were when these pictures were new and today. Kino Lorber Pocketful of Miracles Continue Reading →

The Witcher

NetworkNetflix
SimilarBuffy the Vampire Slayer, In the Land of Leadale, Planet of the Apes Ressha Sentai ToQger, Sám vojak v poli, The Dawn of the Witch, The Munsters,

Everyone’s favorite silver-haired, monster-killing hunk is back, and this time you can call him Daddy. After a ponderous first season that took the long way to find its footing, TheWitcher’s second season boasts both a more assured stride and a more ambitious scope. Thankfully dispensing with the non-linear timelines, we catch up with Geralt of Rivia and company right where ‘Much More’ left off. But while season one was a witty, delightfully horny romp, season two takes on a gloomier tone and delves into stories with uncertain outcomes. Continue Reading →

The Sex Lives of College Girls

NetworkHBO Max,
SimilarStar and Sky: Star in My Mind,
Watch afterFamily Guy Money Heist Only Murders in the Building, Peacemaker, Rick and Morty Sex Education Star Trek: Discovery Stranger Things The Resident, The Umbrella Academy The White Lotus,
Studio3 Arts Entertainment, Warner Bros. Television

Despite sounding like something one might hesitate to Google outside of a private browser, HBO Max's The Sex Lives of College Girls is a fairly wholesome dramedy about four young women starting off their adult lives as freshmen in college. Admittedly, yes, college freshmen who do have sex, but wholesome just the same. Created by Mindy Kaling and Justin Noble (who also write many of the episodes) TSLoCG quickly overcomes the gimmicky nature of its title.   Continue Reading →

Just Beyond

NetworkDisney+
SimilarFatherhood, HIStory M*A*S*H Murder Most Horrid,
Watch afterArcane Euphoria Foundation, House of the Dragon Money Heist Stranger Things The Wheel of Time, What If...?
Studio20th Television,

R.L. Stine is best known for those iconic Goosebumps books, but those aren’t the only stories he’s written over the years. That used to be easy to forget about, but the entertainment landscape of 2021 has reaffirmed this longstanding truth. Thanks to titles like Stranger Things popularizing youth-friendly horror in modern pop culture, a series of recent adaptations of Stine’s other works (which fit into that mold nicely) has reminded us all of just how many different projects Stine has written for over the years. Continue Reading →

I Know What You Did Last Summer

NetworkPrime Video
SimilarM*A*S*H Planet of the Apes Sám vojak v poli, Sherlock Holmes The Buccaneers, The Lost World
Watch afterChucky, Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba, Hawkeye Loki Money Heist Rick and Morty Riverdale, Squid Game Suits, The 100, The Wheel of Time,

In 1973, Lois Duncan created the perfect premise for a thriller: a group of teens on a midnight joyride run over a pedestrian and make a pact to keep it a secret. They think they're successful in hiding the crime. Then, a year later, one of them receives an ominous note stating simply, "I Know What You Did Last Summer." While the teens try to solve the mystery of who is harassing them, they soon realize that whoever knows their secret wants them dead.   Continue Reading →

You

GenreDrama
NetworkNetflix
SimilarAgatha Christie's Poirot Around the World in 80 Days, Columbo, Kate & Allie, M*A*S*H My Holo Love, Sherlock Holmes The Buccaneers, The Lost World The Summer I Turned Pretty, Wycliffe
Watch after13 Reasons Why, Breaking Bad Elite, Lucifer MINDHUNTER Money Heist Sex Education Stranger Things The End of the F***ing World, The Witcher
StarringEd Speleers,
StudioBerlanti Productions, Warner Bros. Television

The ultimate representation both of making it, and of giving up, the soul-crushing blandness and hidden darkness of suburbia is a well drawn from many, many times. HOAs and smiling politely through block parties and feigning interest in rose bushes, moving to the suburbs is frequently painted as the end of adventure and creativity. What happens when the couple that moves to their shiny new house to start shiny new lives aren’t just leaving the city but also a trail of bodies behind? Can a relationship work when you’re not just newlyweds and new parents but are also trying your darndest not to murder any more people or each other? Continue Reading →

Sex Education

NetworkNetflix
SimilarBates Motel, HIStory Komi Can't Communicate,
Watch afterElite, Euphoria Lucifer Money Heist Riverdale, Squid Game Stranger Things The End of the F***ing World, The Umbrella Academy

The third season of Laurie Nunn’s raunchy, teen dramedy Sex Education kicks off with a montage of the characters engaging in all sorts of sexual activities—some with their partners, some with their secret lovers, and some with themselves. For a show that’s always had a positive attitude when it comes to sex, it’s a fitting choice. However, Sex Education has never been just about hormones and horniness. Since its first season, the show has also proven to be a charming, often heartfelt look at adolescence. In season three, it remains committed to that approach.  Continue Reading →

Doogie Kamealoha, M.D.

NetworkDisney+
SimilarOranges Are Not the Only Fruit Studs Lonigan,
Studio20th Television,

Hollywood’s love for familiar brands has long since transcended parody and probably reached that point when a generic Transformers knock-off got slapped with the name Battleship. It’s almost scary how unsurprising the thought of somebody reviving the 1990s TV show Doogie Howser, M.D. as a streaming show is despite there being no clamor from the general public for such a property. As far as I know, no die-hard Doogie stans are taking to the streets demanding more stories about teenage doctors getting into shenanigans.  Continue Reading →

Baby

KinoKultur is a thematic exploration of the queer, camp, weird, and radical releases Kino Lorber has to offer. Dinosaurs are the ultimate symbols of The Past. They represent deep time, natural history, and the chaos of the wild. It's no wonder that cinema has always been fascinated by them. One of the first exhibitions of what we might now call "cinema" was presented in 1922 by Sherlock Holmes' own Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, “footage of moving dinosaurs” from the exhibition at the center of his 1912 novella, The Lost World. From the very beginning of the medium, creatives have sought to reanimate the awesome creatures on the silver screen. When dinosaurs appear on film, they frequently bring with them a host of cultural and ideological anxieties. Dinosaurs threaten humanity's imperial dominance on the planet. When they appear, we become prey. And they remind us that even the mightiest powers can be reduced to dust. Continue Reading →

Loki

NetworkDisney+
SimilarBatman: The Animated Series, Doctor Who Future Man, GoGo Sentai Boukenger, HAPPY!, HIStory Justice League Action, Love, Timeless, Marvel's Inhumans, Planet of the Apes Ressha Sentai ToQger, Shuttle Love Millennium, Space Sentinels, Thunderbirds, Ultraman Ginga,
StarringEugene Cordero Ke Huy Quan, Owen Wilson, Sophia Di Martino, Tom Hiddleston, Wunmi Mosaku,
StudioKevin Feige Productions, Marvel Studios

Blaise Pascal invented a philosophical concept that came to be known as Pascal’s Wager. He presented a pragmatic argument for belief in God. Pascal held that if you believed in the Lord and He did, in fact, exist, you would gain the infinite rewards of Heaven. And if He turned out to be a myth, well then you’ve lost nothing, or comparatively little. If you don’t believe, though, and the Creator is real, you risk the infinite horrors of Hell, the prospect of which would, in Pascal’s estimation, outweigh any meager reward disbelief might grant you on this mortal coil. Continue Reading →

Ted Lasso

Created byBill Lawrence, Brendan Hunt, Jason Sudeikis, Joe Kelly,
NetworkApple TV+
SimilarBlack Books Brazil Avenue, Executive Stress Fawlty Towers, Great News Is It Legal? Protectors, The Cara Williams Show The John Larroquette Show The Knight in the Area, The Office, The Thin Blue Line,
StarringAnthony Stewart Head, Billy Harris, Brendan Hunt, Brett Goldstein, Cristo Fernández, Hannah Waddingham, James Lance, Jason Sudeikis, Jeremy Swift, Juno Temple Kola Bokinni, Nick Mohammed, Phil Dunster, Toheeb Jimoh,
StudioDoozer, Ruby's Tuna, Universal Television Warner Bros. Television

Eleven months ago, nearly exactly to the day, I first fell in love with Ted Lasso—the show and, I suppose, the man too. As several people, including myself, have proclaimed, it seemed the perfect show for a population battered by the isolation and fear of what felt like a possibly endless pandemic at the time and, for Americans especially, the ugliness of a looming election. Lasso proved the wonderful good-hearted surprise so many of us were so in need of. Continue Reading →

Panic!

NetworkPrime Video
Watch afterBridgerton, Elite, Loki Manifest, Money Heist The Good Doctor, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power

Now streaming on Amazon Prime Video, Panic is a new series about doing whatever it takes to break free from your dead-end, small-time town without dying in the process. Adapted from Lauren Oliver's eponymous 2014 YA novel, Panic is an exciting, gripping teen drama that blends the small-town delirium of Riverdale with the high-stakes plotting of Pretty Little Liars, then adds in a light dash of The Hunger Games to produce something a bit more unique and interesting than all these comparisons might immediately suggest. The show takes place in Carp, Texas, a small town with some big secrets. One of them being a dangerous game called "Panic," where every year, the graduating high school class competes in a series of death-defying stunts and challenges to win a massive prize. Most of these kids have no other way of exiting Carp for greater things, so an influx of cash is just about their only ticket out. The challenges themselves are essentially a more advanced, devil-may-care take on Fear Factor, with huge emphasis on how the teens need to form shaky alliances and ultimately screw each other over, sometimes literally, because like I said, this show wants to be a sharper, more grounded version of Riverdale with a less heightened tone. Because it's on Amazon, it does leave a little extra room for swearing and sex, but nothing too gratuitous. Continue Reading →

The Handmaid's Tale

NetworkHulu
SimilarCigarette Girl, Millennium, Nightmares & Dreamscapes: From the Stories of Stephen King, Roswell Soul Land 2: The Peerless Tang Clan,
Watch after13 Reasons Why, Dark, Game of Thrones Money Heist Stranger Things Westworld

In the spirit of full disclosure, I need to say this: I’m not a big fan of The Handmaid’s Tale. There’s something about a show that is so unrelentingly grim—without even the occasional glimmers of light—that just makes me feel like I’ve been ground down into a salty meat paste. This is why I checked out of Game of Thrones before I even knew the words “Red Wedding,” because I couldn’t bear to watch Sansa Stark beaten, humiliated, and tortured anymore. So while I can say that Handmaid’s has strong writing and still boasts some of the most gorgeous photography of any show out there, I still don’t enjoy it. Can anyone say they actually enjoy it?  And when did the incessant castigation of women become primetime entertainment? Continue Reading →

La Femme Nikita

By the time the 1990s rolled around, the action film genre in America was in a bit of a doldrums. The same figures who had dominated the previous decade were still making movies, but their efforts were becoming more forced and listless. Even masters of the form like Walter Hill and Clint Eastwood were coming up with duds like Another 48 Hrs (1990) and The Rookie (1990), chasing past glories with sequels and knockoffs rather than attempting anything new. Sure, the Hong Kong scene was thriving with the works of John Woo and Tsui Hark, but few in the US outside of film circles were familiar with them. Continue Reading →

Good Girls

In the first three episodes of Season 4 provided to critics, Good Girls one begins to feel a creeping sense of the same. The “girls”—Ruby (Retta), Beth (Christina Hendricks), and Annie (Mae Whitman)—are still jockeying for power with Rio (Manny Montana). Beth is finding herself, once more, in a sexually charge situation with a known felon—this time a hired killer named Mr. Fitzpatrick (Andrew McCarthy)—while her husband Dean (Matthew Lillard) is left in the dark in that and so many other ways. Ruby and Stan’s (Reno Wilson) child, this time their son, is getting in trouble, the kind of trouble their criminal endeavors make both easier and harder to deal with. A zealous federal agent, Phoebe Donnegan (Lauren Lapkus), is closing in on them all, too. Continue Reading →

Young Rock

Like any human being, I am predisposed to like Dwayne Johnson, aka The Rock. The man is charisma incarnate, a shockingly charming person who has proven to have not just skill, but that ineffable something that true stars possess. So know I don’t take lightly what I am about to say. Continue Reading →

MINDHUNTER

If anybody could find something new to add to pop culture’s fixation with serial killers and true crime, it would likely be David Fincher. Se7en announced him as a major director while Zodiac revealed him as a master. The Fincher style – dark lighting and sickly colors, obsessive attention to detail, unblinking looks at violence – has served as a template not just for other movies, but also for TV shows of both the prestigious and potboiler variety and for the ever-increasing number of investigative podcasts and Netflix documentaries. In 2017, Fincher returned to the serial killer subgenre by taking his project Mindhunter to the streaming service. Continue Reading →