
Netflix has a lot of content. Like, a lot. Sifting through all the TV shows streaming there can cause chronic indecision, leaving us scrolling down the Netflix main page just trying to pick something to watch. Instead of getting overwhelmed and rewatching a Netflix OG classic like
Of course, finding out which ones are good takes time. Let us carry some of that burden and list the best new Netflix original series released in the past 12 months.
1. Wednesday

Credit: Netflix
“What would Wednesday do?” has been a mantra for some of us ever since Christina Ricci dead-panned her way into our hearts in The Addams Family films of the 1990s. Thankfully, Tim Burton’s reimagining brings some of that same gothsploitation magic here to a new generation, with our favorite current
Catherine Zeta-Jones and Luis Guzmán show up here and there as Morticia and Gomez, and Fred Armisen’s Uncle Fester weirds us out for one episode. But the series mainly belongs to the young cast of Potter-adjacent characters at Nevermore, including Wednesday’s alarmingly cheerful roomie
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2. The Sandman
Long considered unadaptable for the screen, Neil Gaiman’s long-running comic series about the Lord of Dreams and his world-hopping adventures (as well as those of his fantastical alliterative siblings Destiny, Death, Destruction, Desire, Despair, and Delirium) did almost get turned into a movie about a decade ago starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Thankfully, that iteration stalled though, because a long-form series is where these stories have always truly belonged.
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3. Copenhagen Cowboy
You’re either all in or you’re not when it comes to the
My recommendation: Turn off all the lights, sink into your couch, and let Refn carry you off into this fresh, weird world of silent assassins and sex-worker tableaus and that old guy from
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4. Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities

Credit: Netflix
Anthology shows are always a mixed bag, like the sack of Halloween candy you used to dump out on the floor when you’d get home from trick-or-treating – you’ve got your gold prize peanut butter cups smashed side by side with half-browned apples. But leave it to the master of horror Guillermo del Toro to top-line a batch of goodies here whose batting average ranks much higher than most. I’d say a full seven of the eight standalone episodes (from the likes of Mandy director Panos Cosmatos and Cube director Vincenzo Natali) rank as truly delicious, with only one moldy fruit in the whole bunch (sorry, “Dreams in the Witch House,” you just didn’t work for me,
Netflix’s ‘Graveyard Rats’ trailer should be avoided at all costs if you don’t like rodents
I’d rank one episode as a bonafide, full-blown, top-notch masterpiece: “The Murmuring” from The Babadook director Jennifer Kent is everything a magnificent ghost story should be. Steeped in an almost unbearable sense of sadness and regret, the episode is about a pair of married ornithologists mourning their dead daughter who head to a remote house to record birdsong. It reunites Kent with her Babadook star Essie Davis and gives The Walking Dead actor Andrew Lincoln his best role ever. Like all hauntings, it sinks deep into your bones and refuses to let go. The series sings in its many moments like this. – J.A.
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5. Love is Blind Season 3
What can we say? As far as dating reality shows go, this one has found a way to continue intriguing, several years in. Piling a bunch of desirables into individual “dating pods” and forcing them to have extensive and deeply intimate conversations with one another, sight unseen, remains hypnotic stuff — as do all of the reveals that come later once the couples-to-be are confronted with their choices. Even as the format has hardened into one we’ve become familiar with, after two full seasons and side-events like “After the Altar,” there’s something irresistibly voyeuristic in it that refuses to lose its juice. It’s the sweetest spot for reality television. Season 4 premieres not nearly soon enough on March 24. – J.A.
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6. Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
Controversial for centering and some argue
Netflix’s ‘Dahmer’ backlash highlights ethical issues in the platform’s obsession with true crime
As for Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, while occasionally as clunky as its weirdly repetitive title, the series does at least try to fight its more lurid instincts and give voice to Dahmer’s victims, even as the families of said victims
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7. You Season 4

Credit: Netflix
If you prefer the fictional to real-life serial killers, then maybe the ludicrously soapy stalker stylings of Penn Badgley’s Joe Goldberg aka Will Bettelheim aka Jonathan Moore are more your jam? Dragging the relationship thrillers of ye olde Lifetime Network into the modern age, this series, based on Caroline Kepnes’ books, has seen our tender-eyed, gorgeous-coiffed bookshop owner with the penchant for most diabolical murder somehow live to kill
So, as Joe-now-Jonathan enters Season 4, he’s ditched his past and hopped ‘cross the pond to jolly old Londontown, where he’s become
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8. Stranger Things Season 4
Perhaps this is a no-brainer and you’ve probably all binged this by now, but if not, hear me out:
Complaints remain that the show has too many characters; an entire parallel storyline that splits off the adults and sends them to a Russian gulag does feel slightly extraneous. But when the Duffer Brothers are so good at introducing new folks and making us adore them within the span of a couple of episodes — such as with this season’s breakout, Joseph Quinn playing rockin’ Dungeon Master
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9. Bridgerton Season 2

Credit: Liam Daniels/Netflix
Yes, technically a second season of a hit show isn’t exactly “new,” but
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10. All Of Us Are Dead

Credit: Yang Hae-sung/Netflix
This South Korean series from Lee Jae-kyoo and Kim Nam-su follows a zombie outbreak that begins at a high school, then spreads ruthlessly throughout the city. As zombie thrillers go,
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11. Murderville
Murderville is not so much a parody as it is a work of cleverly experimental comedy that toys with our mystery-solving expectations by layering in the spontaneity of improvisation. With Will Arnett’s steady hand guiding every episode and the energy shifts each new clueless celebrity guest brings, Murderville carefully splits its time between challenging viewers to follow the clues and leaving them breathless with anticipation and laughter as they watch to see which talented performer breaks character next. —Adam Rosenberg, Senior Reporter
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UPDATE: Feb. 28, 2023, 10:11 a.m. EST This article has been updated to reflect Netflix offerings new from 2022 and 2023.