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3 underrated shows on Peacock you need to watch in September 2024

The cast of Kennedy.
NBC

Heading into the fall, Peacock will soon be the exclusive streaming home for all of NBC’s new dramas, comedies, and reality programing. But Peacock is also the place where you can find some series that might have been otherwise lost among the streamer’s network programing. Not even streaming giants like Netflix and Hulu have these programs to draw upon. So it’s time to dive into the three underrated shows on Peacock you need to watch in September.

This month’s picks include a classic TV miniseries about one of the most beloved U.S. presidents, as well as a mystery series from down under, and a British crime show that’s rising in popularity in the United Kingdom.

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Kennedy (1983)

Martin Sheen and Blair Brown in Kennedy.
NBC

Martin Sheen may be best known for playing a fictional president, Jed Bartlet, on The West Wing. But that series is not available on Peacock. Instead, there’s a 1983 miniseries called Kennedy that features Sheen as President John F. Kennedy that was released on the 20th anniversary of Kennedy’s assassination in Dallas.

This was originally a three-part miniseries, but it’s been split into seven episodes that explore Kennedy’s life and his all-too-brief stint in the White House during the fabled Camelot era of American politics. Kennedy’s legacy is more than just the circumstances of his murder, even 61 years later. In the current presidential race, it’s worth looking back at this era even if it’s been endlessly romanticized and embellished.

Watch Kennedy on Peacock.

The Doctor Blake Mysteries (2013-2017)

Craig McLachlan in The Doctor Blake Mysteries.
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Even Australia has its own prestige period mystery drama series. The Doctor Blake Mysteries features Craig McLachlan in the leading role as Dr. Lucien Blake. In the 1950s, he moves back home to Australia to take over his late father’s medical practice. Dr. Blake isn’t a police detective, but he has uncanny instincts when it comes to determining how people died and who or what may have killed them.

While Dr. Blake solves mysteries, he’s haunted by the one case he can’t resolve: the disappearance of his wife and child during the fall of Saigon. Dr. Blake also forms a long-term emotional bond with Jean Beazley (Nadine Garner), a widowed woman who was his father’s assistant before she stayed on for Lucien’s practice. The five-season run of the series is on Peacock, but if you want to see what happened beyond the show then you’ll have to track down the TV movies that followed.

Watch The Doctor Blake Mysteries on Peacock.

Brassic (2019-present)

The cast of Brassic.
Sky One

Brassic hasn’t fully caught on in America yet, but this British crime series is already renewed through its seventh season, even though only five seasons are on Peacock. Joe Gilgun stars as Vinnie O’Neill, a bipolar criminal who has never quite escaped the gravitational pull of his small town, Hawley. Vinnie and his closest pals are always pulling some minor league crimes just to get by.

The problem with Vinnie is that he has a particular knack for getting himself in deep trouble and making enemies who rank a lot higher in the criminal underworld than he does. Sometimes the consequences for Vinnie’s actions come back to haunt him, but the fun part is watching him and his friends figure some way out of the jam without losing their lives.

Watch Brassic on Peacock.

Blair Marnell
Blair Marnell has been an entertainment journalist for over 15 years. His bylines have appeared in Wizard Magazine, Geek…
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3 underrated movies on Amazon Prime Video you need to watch in March 2025
Several workers with bags standing in a remote location looking scared in Severance.

What makes a movie underrated? It might be that critics have panned the film even though it has earned massive box office success and positive reception from audiences. Perhaps it’s the other way around, and critics love it, but audiences fail to see what’s so special. Some underrated movies are fantastic but simply didn’t get the attention they deserved and have slipped into the deep depths of streaming services, only to be unearthed by those who dare to find them.
The three underrated movies on Amazon Prime Video you need to watch in March 2025 fall into varying categories that qualify the movies as underrated. One broke records, yet critics refuse to give it two thumbs up. Another shares its name with one of the hottest shows streaming right now.
Need more recommendations? Then check out the best new movies to stream this week, the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023)
The Super Mario Bros. Movie | Official Trailer

Even before it premiered, The Super Mario Bros. Movie was getting a lot of flak for the choice of Chris Pratt as the voice of the titular character. Following the debut of this adventure comedy film in theaters, critics still weren’t convinced that it was a hit. But The Super Mario Bros. Movie delighted fans and proved naysayers wrong.
The film explored an interesting dynamic whereby Bowser (Jack Black) was a softie with a deep love for Princess Peach (Anya Taylor-Joy). Of course, this brought us that lovely gem of a Peaches song that kids sang for weeks after. The movie's mixed reviews are no match for its tremendous box office success, not to mention the fact that it broke a Guinness World Record to become the highest-grossing movie based on a video game and became the first movie based on a video game to gross more than $1 billion. It’s incredible to learn that with all these huge numbers, The Super Mario Bros. Movie only has a 59% Rotten Tomatoes critics score.
Watch The Super Mario Bros. Movie on Amazon Prime Video. 
Severance (2006)
Severance (2006) Trailer | Danny Dyer | Laura Harris

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3 underrated (HBO) Max movies you should watch this weekend (February 28-March 2)
underrated hbo max movies this weekend february 28 march 2 2025 tom hanks sully

With the start of a new month, Max is getting a new slate of movies added to its library. One of the new additions is Heretic. The creepy thriller starring Hugh Grant arrives on March 7. Sing Sing, one of 2024's most critically acclaimed movies, finally hits Max on March 21. Colman Domingo received an Oscar nomination for his work in the drama about a prison arts program.
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No Sudden Move (2021)

Since coming out of retirement in 2017, Steven Soderbergh has released nearly one movie per year. Hollywood is a better place when an innovative filmmaker like Soderbergh works at such a prolific rate. One of his more underrated offerings during this post-retirement phase is No Sudden Move, a period piece set in 1950s Detroit about a heist gone wrong.
A group of petty criminals — including Curt Jones (Don Cheadle), Ronald Russo (Benicio del Toro), and Charley (Kieran Culkin) — are tasked with stealing an important document. The group is supposed to hold an accountant's family at gunpoint so he can then steal the document from his boss's safe. Eventually, Curt and Ronald learn they've been set up. Why? That's what they need to find out, including who hired them. It's not Ocean's Eleven, but No Sudden Move is a fun time at the movies, thanks to an eclectic cast and a filmmaker who knows this genre inside and out.
Stream No Sudden Move on Max.
Sully (2016)
Sully - Official Trailer [HD]
In your best Michael Rapoport voice, "Are you the pilot, Sully?" Tom Hanks plays pilot Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger in the dramatic retelling of the Miracle on the Hudson in Sully. On January 15, 2009, Sully and First Officer Jeff Skiles (Aaron Eckhart) are piloting a flight from LaGuardia Airport to Charlotte. Shortly after takeoff, a flock of birds crashed into both engines.
With little time to react, Sully successfully executes an emergency landing in the Hudson River. All 155 crew and passengers survived. It's a miraculous accomplishment, but the story doesn't stop there. An investigation into Sully's life-saving maneuver tries to smear the pilot's reputation. With a steady Clint Eastwood behind the camera and a stoic Hanks on screen, Sully is a fitting tribute to a humble hero who deserves praise despite never seeking it out.
Stream Sully on Max.
Reality (2023)

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3 underrated Netflix movies you should watch this weekend (February 28-March 2)
Suzume holding a chair in front of a door in the movie.

Sometimes, the best movies aren't the ones trending on your Netflix homepage — they’re the hidden gems waiting to be discovered. Big-budget blockbusters and buzzy originals from the streamer may be the natural first option, but some movie nights call for lesser-known flicks that can pleasantly surprise and captivate any cinephile.
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We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
Suzume (2022)

Suzume is a great anime movie worth streaming from director Makoto Shinkai. It follows the titular 17-year-old protagonist (voiced by Nanoka Hara) as she stumbles upon a mysterious door that stands alone in an abandoned house. She discovers that the door is a gateway to another realm, unwittingly setting off a chain of supernatural events in the process. As the door begins unleashing calamities across Japan, Suzume joins forces with a young stranger, Sōta (Hokuto Matsumura), a "Closer" tasked with sealing these portals. But when Sōta is transformed into a three-legged chair — yes, a literal wooden chair — their journey takes a surreal turn.
Despite its stunning animation and unique storytelling, Suzume remains criminally underrated compared to its predecessors from Shinkai, Your Name and Weathering with You. Perhaps it's because the 2022 film leans more into Japan's historical wounds — referencing the 2011 earthquake and tsunami — making it feel deeply personal for domestic audiences but less immediate for international viewers. Suzume also subverts expectations with its romantic storyline that defies traditional tropes. Those who appreciate its appeal understand that its moving narrative reflects trauma, growth, and all the messiness that comes with it.
Suzume is streaming on Netflix.
Upgrade (2018)

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