this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2026
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I haven't been watching much in terms of actual shows for a good while, then while listening to a podcast a host casually mentioned they had rewatched Chernobyl, how it still holds up, that there's a reason it got as much acclaim as it did, etc. So I thought I'd give it a go and wow, loved it (still one episode left to watch).

Had me thinking, what else have I missed out on? What are some "absolute cinema" TV shows that still hold up and and are considered must watch?

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[–] skittle07crusher@sh.itjust.works 13 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago) (3 children)

Twin Peaks The Return (aka season 3, which came back with most of the original cast after 25 years) is a masterpiece. 

There is nothing else like it, not even the original 2 seasons. Often considered a “film” and truly is “absolute cinema”. From the wikipedia article on it:

The series garnered critical acclaim, with praise for its unconventional narrative structure, visual invention, and performances.[2] Critics have hailed the show as the best television program of 2017[3] and the 2010s,[4] as well as one of the best series of the 21st century.[5][6][7][8] Some critics also consider The Return a film, with film journal Cahiers du Cinéma naming it the best film of the decade[9] and the 2022 Sight & Sound critics' poll voting it the 152nd-greatest film in history.[10]

Downton Abbey: most shows shuffle away any notion of class struggle and class conflict, which is a shame as it is the defining story of our era, but Downton showcases it. A show that restores your faith in humanity, making nearly every character’s humanity shine through in a beautiful, Dickensian way. I try to watch it at least once a year, ideally around winter holidays. Ironically created by a British conservative.

Century of the Self: although perhaps less a series and more a miniseries, seems to me it’s required viewing for understanding so much of what our lives are now

Eastbound & Down (and The Righteous Gemstones): as long as you like Danny McBride’s sense of humor, these will kill you. Very on the nose in their parodies of sports culture and the evangelical “Christian” movement in the US

Anything with Philomena Cunk

Generation Kill is a show you almost never hear about for how poignant a portrayal it is of American imperialism in the Middle East as experienced by the ‘grunts’ questioning all of it

The Rehearsal (especially season 2): what’s wrong with aviation, and what it’s like (again esp. season 2) to wonder if you are on the spectrum

Rita: a Danish show about a badass cigarette smoking, ‘slutty’ teacher who stops at nothing to take care of her students, sticking up to parents, whatever. The kind of teacher you wish you had to stick up for you, whether against your parents at times, or anyone else who was getting you down

Silicon Valley: in case you didn’t already suspect that all things VC and tech are actually often dumb as hell

Watchmen (HBO series): hardly need to say more than that this show predicted cops (think ICE in the US in the last 2 years) wearing face masks to conceal the identities carrying out increasingly fascistic acts

The White Lotus: possibly controversial here, but that’s really just me speculating. I thought the production value was like almost nothing else, through the roof, the actors were fantastic, the scenes and imagery gorgeous, and the portrayal of wealthy vacationers as just extremely flawed people endlessly chasing real happiness. Super fucked up at times, but arguably worth it.

I also reiterate some of the other mentions in this thread:

Better Call Saul: Bob Odenkirk is the bastard you cannot help but be drawn to. His counterpart Rhea Seehorn also is great, grows and grows on you, even if you’re someone who doesn’t like her at first

Severance: one scene where a dear character ’dies’ in a way no other media has ‘created’ before is unforgettable and will live rent-free frame by frame in your mind for years

Succession, so captivating. Brian Cox, Jeremy Strong, Kieran Culkin, Sarah Snook are all absolute masters

Arrested Development: seems to me the sharpest, wittiest writing of anything I’ve seen. First 3 seasons only, new netflix reboot was a big dud for so many

Louie: often just perfect TV, stunningly human yet weird and sometimes surreal, like real life. Not sure how to feel about the actor though as a person. Heard on a podcast recently that he’s doing his scandalous thing again, after going on an apology tour for years and admittedly doing far more to own up and atone for far less than his sins back then of basically exposing himself to women and using his power to get them to have sexual activities with him, apparently often “just” watching him whack it… But seriously episodes like The Duckling are just peak TV. 

Mad Men: pretty darn good, and I hate the subject of Madison Avenue ad men /advertising industry 

Haven’t ever finished Dark years after starting it, but I do feel drawn back to the ‘vibe’ of it, super unique and idk slow burning and like if rainy gloomy weather was a tv show, in the best way

Band of Brothers: enough said by others in this thread and everywhere else

The Pacific: also enough said by others.

The Leftovers: I’ve only seen 4 episodes and I’m dying to see more. I read again and again it’s “one of the best shows of all time” and that became clear how likely that is by about episode 3. Can’t wait to see what comes next. A philosophical what-if that isn’t about something maybe 100-1000 years in the future like interstellar spaceflight, instead, it’s about what are humans like (with things like cults, family drama, agnosticism, nihilism, and so much more just showing how weird it is to be human).

Patrick Melrose: what it’s like to feel like you can never satisfy your parents who btw abused you, to the point you become a drugs (very plural) addict and almost die like 100 times. Absolute nail biter trip of a show

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 2 points 8 hours ago

Century of the Self should be required viewing. Adam Curtis made the film/series modernity needs.

[–] chiliedogg@lemmy.world 2 points 11 hours ago

The second season of the Leftovers might be the best season of television ever made. It's almost a reboot of the show in a new setting with only a few returning characters with a fascinating blend of hope, despair, grief, joy, and some weird supernatural elements. The show managed to reinvent itself while staying the same and I don't know why it works but it really, really does.

[–] plenipotentprotogod@lemmy.world 2 points 11 hours ago

Seconding Band of Brothers. It's cut from the same cloth as Chernobyl. If OP is looking for more of that specifically, then It's an obvious and excellent recommendation.