March TV Preview
by Jason Dietz —

"Daredevil: Born Again" (Jojo Whilden/Marvel)
The month ahead will bring the returns of Daredevil: Born Again and The Comeback, a pair of promising HBO newcomers, two more Taylor Sheridan shows, a follow-up to Jury Duty, and more. To help you plan your viewing options, our editors have selected the most interesting TV and movie titles debuting at home in March, listed in order by premiere date.
American Classic
1 / 16
70
MetascoreGenerally favorable

Photo by David Giesbrecht/MGM+
New Comedy Series
Premieres March 1 on MGM+
Kevin Kline, Laura Linney, Aaron Tveit, Stephen Spinella, and Jon Tenney star in an original comedy series about a narcissistic Broadway star (Kline) who returns to his hometown and his family's dinner theater after a public meltdown, only to trigger even more crises at home. Jessica Hecht, Mark Linn-Baker, Jane Alexander, Len Cariou, and Tony Shalhoub also star in the first season, which kicks off with a two-episode premiere followed by weekly installments through April 12.
DTF St. Louis
2 / 16
70
MetascoreGenerally favorable

Photo by Tina Rowden/HBO
Limited Comedy/Drama Series
Premieres March 1 on HBO and HBO Max
A love triangle triggered by midlife crisis leaves one of its members dead in this humorous, seven-episode HBO miniseries from Steven Conrad (Patriot, Ultra City Smiths) that deftly blends genres ranging from murder mystery to surreal comedy. Jason Bateman, Linda Cardellini, and David Harbour lead a cast that also includes Richard Jenkins, Chris Perfetti, Peter Sarsgaard, and Joy Sunday. Early reviews suggest the offbeat, one-of-a-kind series is yet another winner for HBO, with critics comparing it to fellow HBO titles like The White Lotus and The Chair Company.
Marshals
3 / 16
57
MetascoreMixed or average

Photo by Sonja Flemming / CBS
New Drama Series
Premieres March 1 on CBS
The latest spinoff from Taylor Sheridan's cable hit Yellowstone is the first for broadcast television and finds Luke Grimes reprising his role of Kayce Dutton, the Navy SEAL turned cowboy who is now a member of an elite group of U.S. Marshals in Montana. Newcomers include Logan Marshall-Green, while Brecken Merrill, Gil Birmingham, and Mo Brings Plenty join Grimes in returning from the original series.
Young Sherlock
4 / 16
65
MetascoreGenerally favorable

Photo by Daniel Smith/Prime
New Drama Series
Premieres March 4 on Prime Video
Amazon's new Sherlock Holmes origin story promises "all the wit and charm of Guy Ritchie's Sherlock Holmes feature films," which you can take as either a sign of encouragement or a threat, depending on how much those films appealed to you. (Critics didn't really care for them.) Ritchie is among the directors for the series, which stars Hero Fiennes Tiffin as the famed detective as he embarks on his first ever investigation in the 1870s. Colin Firth, Joseph Fiennes, Natascha McElhone, Max Irons, and Donal Finn also star. All eight episodes stream at launch.
Vladimir
5 / 16
64
MetascoreGenerally favorable

Photo by Netflix
Limited Comedy/Drama Series
Premieres March 5 on Netflix
Adapted from the 2022 novel of the same name by Julia May Jonas (who also serves as writer and producer on the series), Vladimir finds an unhappy, middle-aged English professor (Rachel Weisz) developing an increasingly unhinged obsession with a younger, married colleague (Leo Woodall) at the same time her own husband (John Slattery), who also teaches at their small liberal arts college, faces a sexual assault charge. Directors include the team of Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini. It's the first of two new college-set series this week, with the other being ...
Rooster
6 / 16
67
MetascoreGenerally favorable

Photo by Katrina Marcinowski/HBO
New Comedy Series
Premieres March 8 on HBO and HBO Max
The latest comedy series from Bill Lawrence (Scrubs, Ted Lasso, Shrinking) finds him reteaming with his fellow Scrubs producer Matt Tarses for a comedy set at a West Coast college, where an author (Steve Carell) visits his professor daughter (Charly Clive) to help her navigate a personal crisis but winds up getting sucked into the collegiate lifestyle. Phil Dunster, Lauren Tsai, Danielle Deadwyler, and John C. McGinley also star, while guests include Connie Britton, Rory Scovel, Alan Ruck, Robby Hoffman, and Annie Mumolo. The 10 episodes air/stream weekly.
Scarpetta
7 / 16
54
MetascoreMixed or average

Photo by Connie Chornuk/Prime
New Drama Series
Premieres March 11 on Prime Video
Nicole Kidman stars as the titular medical examiner who returns to her Virginia hometown and attempts to track down a serial killer in a Blumhouse-produced series adaptation of the Patricia Cornwell book series. Also starring in this first season are Jamie Lee Curtis, Bobby Cannavale, Simon Baker, and Ariana DeBose, while Rosy McEwen plays a younger version of Kay Scarpetta in recurring flashbacks set during the 1990s. The TV adaptation comes from Barry and Deadwood alum Liz Sarnoff, while David Gordon Green (who previously worked with Curtis on 2018's Halloween) directs five episodes, including the opener. Amazon has already ordered a second season.
Sunny Nights
8 / 16
77
MetascoreGenerally favorable

Photo by Stan/Lisa Tomasetti
New Comedy/Drama Series
Premieres March 11 on Hulu
Making its American debut after first airing on Stan (to positive reviews) in late 2025, this comedic Australian crime drama centers on two siblings (Will Forte, D'Arcy Carden-and, no, neither of them are Australian) who attempt to start a spray tan business but instead find themselves involved with the criminal underworld. All eight episodes stream at launch.
The Madison
9 / 16
57
MetascoreMixed or average

Photo by Emerson Miller / Paramount+
New Drama Series
Premieres March 14 on Paramount+
The rare new series to get a Saturday night debut—blame tomorrow's Oscar ceremony— The Madison is Taylor Sheridan's latest spinoff from his now-departed cable hit Yellowstone. Like the latter, this show, too, was originally headed to cable's Paramount Network (under the title 2024) before a late change converted it into a streaming-only series. Michelle Pfeiffer, Kurt Russell, Matthew Fox, and Patrick J. Adams head the cast of the intimate family drama, which follows a New York family that relocates to Montana's Madison River valley, with the series splitting time between both locales. Season 1 runs only six episodes, but a second season (or possibly a second part of Season 1—the numbering hasn't been officially confirmed) has already been filmed. And just because there have now been two Yellowstone spinoffs this month alone, don't think there won't be a third one this year: The Dutton Ranch is expected later in 2026.
Imperfect Women
10 / 16
53
MetascoreMixed or average

Photo by Apple
Limited Drama Series
Premieres March 18 on Apple TV
Annie Weisman (Physical) adapts Araminta Hall's novel Imperfect Women into an eight-episode Apple thriller with an impressive cast led by Elisabeth Moss and Kerry Washington (who both also serve as producers) and also featuring Corey Stoll, Kate Mara, Joel Kinnaman, and Leslie Odom Jr. Billed as an "unconventional" thriller, the series follows three women whose decades-long friendship is shattered by a crime and its resulting investigation. Episodes stream weekly through April 29 following the two-episode premiere.
tbd
Metascore

Photo by Prime Video
Returning Comedy Series
Premieres March 20 on Prime Video
The second season of the Freevee-turned-Amazon mockumentary hit Jury Duty retains the basic setup—everyone on screen is an actor in on the joke, save for one real person who has no idea all of the events are being staged for a TV comedy—but uses a completely different setting. Instead of following another trial, the new season is set at a corporate offsite retreat for a family-run hot sauce concern, where the newly hired temp Anthony bears witness to an unusual battle for control of the company. The episodes will roll out over three consecutive Fridays beginning with a three-episode premiere on March 20th.
60
MetascoreMixed or average

Photo by Netflix
Streaming Movie
Premieres March 20 on Netflix
Cillian Murphy, Rebecca Ferguson, Stephen Graham, Tim Roth, and Barry Keoghan head the cast for a feature-film follow-up to Steven Knight's historical crime drama series, which originally ran for six seasons on the BBC and Netflix while collecting numerous awards in the UK along the way. Written by Knight, the film advances the story by nearly a decade to the middle of WWII, and eventually it will be followed by a pair of six-episode sequel series set in the 1950s.
The Comeback S3
13 / 16
80
MetascoreGenerally favorable

Photo by Erin Simkin/HBO
Returning Comedy Series
Premieres March 22 on HBO and HBO Max
It's another comeback for The Comeback. Returning for a third and reportedly final season 12 years after it last aired (and 21 years since its debut season), the Lisa Kudrow comedy once again follows former TV sitcom star Valerie Cherish (Kudrow) as she attempts to revive her career—this time, as the star of an AI-written sitcom. Also returning from past seasons are Damian Young, Laura Silverman, and Dan Bucatinsky, while new faces include Andrew Scott, John Early, Tim Bagley, Abbi Jacobson, Barry Shabaka Henley, Brittany O'Grady, and Kudrow's real-life son Julian Stern. The eight episodes air/stream weekly.
Daredevil: Born Again S2
14 / 16
tbd
Metascore

Photo by Jojo Whilden/Marvel
Returning Drama/Sci-Fi Series
Premieres March 24 on Disney+
The second of what will be at least three seasons of the rebooted Marvel series streams weekly beginning March 24th with an episode directed by Aaron Moorhead & Justin Benson (returning from S1). Joining the returning cast led by Charlie Cox and Vincent D'Onofrio is Krysten Ritter, who reprises her role of Jessica Jones from the same Netflix Marvel television universe that also first spawned Cox's Daredevil.
Bait
15 / 16
tbd
Metascore

Photo by Prime
New Comedy/Drama Series
Premieres March 25 on Prime Video
Riz Ahmed (who serves triple duty as writer/creator and producer) stars as a struggling actor whose life begins to spiral out of control over a four-day period after learning he has a chance to audition for the role of a lifetime—James Bond—in this six-episode British dramedy also produced by Ben Karlin (The Daily Show).
tbd
Metascore

Photo by Netflix
New Horror/Drama Series
Premieres March 26 on Netflix
The first new Netflix series produced by the Duffer Brothers following the end of Stranger Things, this original horror series comes from TV writer Haley Z. Boston (Brand New Cherry Flavor) and follows an engaged couple (Camila Morrone, Adam DiMarco) whose wedding—just five days away—is threatened by a series of unusual events. And the Duffers will be busy in the coming weeks, following this newcomer with an animated Stranger Things sequel due in April and a new live-action horror series, The Boroughs, arriving in May.
Want more TV?
For a full list of upcoming TV titles, visit our frequently updated TV Premiere Calendar.