Here Are 7 Thriller Shows To Watch After Netflix’s ‘Behind Her Eyes’
Ever since its release,
Behind Her Eyes – a supernatural psychological thriller based on the novel of the same name by Sarah Pinborough – has taken the world by storm. And whilst we sit and wait for the streaming giant to confirm if we’ll be getting a second season, here’s a list of similar thriller shows to keep you on the edge of your seat…
The Abraham Accords marked a historic turning point after decades of Arab and Muslim antisemitism. This year, for the first.
Alice meets Sophie Marciano (Lihi Kornowski) randomly on a train. At first, Sophie is a fan who seems like she might want to get a selfie with Alice. But soon, Alice feels like she has to explain herself. Sophie, who is a film student, tells Alice that she has written her first screenplay and that Alice’s husband David (Gal Toren) would be perfect for it.
Since he has abs of steel and is wanted by most women, Alice doesn’t take it seriously until she goes home and finds out that her husband is considering the role. Things get more complicated when Alice thinks she might want to direct the film. And when the actress auditioning for the role opposite David is flummoxed, questions abound about what is really going on.
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Jan. 29, 2021
The opening scene in “Losing Alice,” the latest Israeli television export to wow international audiences, is an homage to Alfred Hitchcock’s 1951 classic thriller “Strangers on a Train.”
It was the image of an encounter between two female characters – one, a middle-aged film director called Alice Ginor (played by Ayelet Zurer) suffering from writer’s block, and the other a young, overenthusiastic fan of her work named Sophie (Lihi Kornowski), bursting with ambition and creative energy – that lit the spark in Sigal Avin to begin her deep dive into the darker sides of the female psyche.
The show is garnering rave reviews globally since debuting on Apple TV+ last week, after first airing on Israel’s Hot cable channel last summer.
Ayelet Zurer, who portrays the title character of an erotic thriller director in the Apple TV+ show, describes her role as a phoenix, who burns everything down in order to create and rebuild.
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Updated: Jan. 27, 2021
If you’d asked me a week ago to name the world’s most famous Amanda, I’d have struggled to come up with anyone other than “Hugginkiss” (thanks, Bart Simpson). And if you’d asked me to pick out a brilliant young American poet, I’d have found it almost as hard as naming a Fox News commentator I admire.
In a sense, the youth poet laureate’s awe-inspiring performance on the steps of the Capitol was the true cultural launch of 2021 – and a welcome and necessary reminder that, even in the darkest of times, talent still emerges when you least expect, and most need, it.