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Nowadays millions of people from different cultures and walks of life are united by one thing — watching series. Shows can grab your attention for the whole night and you won’t be able to sleep until the end. And what can be better than spending autumn evenings with close people, pizza and new series? Or what is more exhausting than waiting and counting days before the start of a new season of the favorite show? 

We want to make your September cozy and comfortable, and bring some new emotions and topics to discuss with friends at the same time. And maybe even leave you sleepless for a couple of weekends!

There is a list of 15 new and current episodes on your respective calendars that need to be noted now:

“Raised by Wolves” (HBO Max, September 3)

Raised by Wolves
Photo: Coco Van Oppens

For over 50 years, following the first breakdown of several episodes and a pilot who never took part in 2013, Ridley Scott returns triumphantly to TV with the first two episodes. Amanda Collin and Abubakar Salim play two androids that keep people alive in a distant colony. The creator of the 2013 Denis Villeneuve film, Aaron Guzikowski, has also produced “Prisoners.”

“Away” (Netflix, September 4)

Away
Photo: Diyah Pera/Netflix

Fascination by the TV with space travel is the latest entry, which follows the first human-pilot mission to Mars by an international group of interplanetary explorers. The five-person teams are played by Hilary Swank, Ato Essandoh, Ray Panthaki, Vivian Wu, and Mark Ivanir, leading the group behind Earth by Josh Charles. The showcase “The path” Jessica Goldberg serves here in the same capacity, with Jason Katims on behalf of executive producer (“Friday night lights” and “Parenthood”).

“The Boys”, Season 2 (Prime Video, September 4)

the boys
Photo:Amazon Studios, Prime Video

If you want to see a high-flying superhero team in theaters, you’ll still have to wait. So why not embrace the subversive, anti-imperial scuzzfest that flips ideas of heroism on their head? In addition to meeting all the characters who didn’t get lasered to death in Season 1, in this season you will be able to enjoy the presence of Aya Cash on screen, as she is a new addition to the show’s team of “supes.”

“Power Book II: Ghost” (Starz, September 6)

Power Book II: Ghost
Photo:Myles Aronowitz

Starz’s juggernaut ratings get her first (and certainly not the last) series of spinoffs. However, it is not untrue to consider this series as a continuation of the sorts, as about three days after the “Power” finale events. Courtney A. Kemp is also the original series creator. Naturi Naughton and Michael Rainey Jr., rejoined as the “Book II,” are the “Power” casting members, Returning as Tasha and Tariq. The Method Man and Mary J. Blige will also appear in the ever-expanding universe of TV as new additions.

“Woke” (Hulu, September 9)

Woke-Hulu
Photo:Joe Lederer/Hulu

Lamorne Morris stars as Keef, a cartoonist who rises to a star when he reflects on his priorities and rethinks the policeman’s traumatic experience. The series is inspired by Keith Knight’s life as author and co-creator. Maurice Marable also serves as the director and executive producer of this series for Seasons 2 through 4 of “Brockmire.”

“The Phantoms and Julie” (Netflix, September 10)

Julie-and-the-Phantoms-Netflix
Photo: Kailey Schwerman/Netflix

The Director “High School Music,” Kenny Ortega, reconstructs the premise of a Brazilian series with the same name in early 2010: Julie (Madison Reyes), after the loss of her mother, not only discovers that she can communicate to three songs co-opted in the ancient studio of her mother but can also start a band.

A timed soundtrack for the season premiere will feature 15 original tracks, including Reyes and the rest of the shows.

“The Third Day” (HBO, September 14)

Third-Day-HBO
Photo:Yannis Drakoulidis/HBO

Dennis Kelly is one of the creators of this ambitious medium-hybrid theatre on the people of a mystical, remote island, a television vet, and Tony writer. The first is to focus on Sam, who arrives on the island, in three parts, with people already living there. The last section stars Naomie Harris as Helen, who will follow a somewhat different pattern later on the island. The middle section is a one-off, live theatre performance directed at the first week of October by co-creator Felix Barrett to complement the overwhelming intrigue.

We are who we are” (HBO, September 14)

We-Are-What-We-Are-HBO
Photo: Yannis Drakoulidis/HBO

Another international love story, Director Luca Guadagnino, returns to Northern Italy as “Call Me By Your Name,” One of the most enigmatic film-makers today. The US military base in Venice “We Are Who We Are” is an eight-part series following two young adolescents (Jack Dylan Grazer and Jordan Kristine Seamón). The parents of the two main characters are Chloë Sevigny, Alice Braga, and Kid Cudi.

“Pen15”, Season 2 (Hulu, September 18)

Pen15-Season-2-Hulu
Photo:Erica Parise/Hulu

Maya and Anna are back from the world of early secondary school life for more beautiful and terrifying stories. Season 2 builds on early teenagers’ anxiety in the opening season with episodes of billboards, crushes, sleeping, and even playing in the school. Sam Zvibleman is back as the show’s director, and each episode in this season is written by the stars, Anna Konkle and Maya Erskine.

“Ratched” (Netflix, September 18)

Ratched-Netflix
Photo:Saeed Adyani/Netflix

This look at Mildred Ratched, the iconic nurse of the famous One Flyover Cuckoo’s Nest, is the latest series in the increasing Netflix collection from Ryan Murphy, which took place in one of the most strangely-selected regulations of recent times. In Jon Jon Briones, Cynthia Nixon, Finn Wittrock, and Corey Stoll, which Louise Fletcher made famous on-screen, Sarah Paulson will join the cast. The co-creator Ian Brennan of “Glee” and “Scream Queens” is also a film writer.

“Filthy Rich” (Fox, September 21)

Filthy-Rich-Fox
Photo:Alan Markfield/Fox

This year the fall televised slate will not be known, but we won’t have at least one new soapy Fox theatre this year. This latest look at the top class’s excess focuses on a Southern family, whose fortunes are based on televangelism. In this American version of the series from 2016-17 in New Zealand, Kim Cattrall and Gerald McRaney will be the family heads. The new version of the series was developed and directed by Director Tate Taylor, “The Help.”

“Utopia” (Prime Video, September 25)

Utopia-Amazon-Prime-Video
Photo:Elizabeth Morris/Amazon Studios

An “unless you know, the better” approach is used in this original “Utopia” range, released in the United Kingdom from 2013-14, so let’s say this American update follows a group of fans of comics who think they’ve trodden into something far more significant than their shared fandom. This adaptation’s casting will finally be led by Sasha Lane, Rainn Wilson, Desmin Borges, and John Cusack to the screens after the initial HBO project has begun. The executive producer and showrunner of this series were Gillian Flynn, whose last effort to bring a known British property into a new Chicago environment led to one of the lowest-rated films in the previous decade.

“Error’s Wildness” (FX, September 25)

A-Wilderness-of-Error-FX
Photo:FX

Marc Smerling directs this five-part true crime at a condemned assassin serving life in jail. In addition to Errol Morris’ book’s TV adaptation for 2012, Smerling is also presenting “Morally Indefensible,” a podcast companion for Jeffrey MacDonald. He releases new episodes in advance of the TV premiere.

“Rule of the Comey” (Showtime, September 27)

The-Comey-Rule-Showtime
Photo:Ben Mark Holzberg/CBS

A two-part drama about events that lead to the firing of FBI Director James Comey appears to be an odd use of all time and energy for the creative team. If you go fantasy, you can take the titles at the beginning of 2017 worse than Jeff Daniels as Comey and Brendan Gleeson as Donald Trump, followed by the growing credits of “Joe Lo Truglio as Jeff Sessions,” “Peter Coyote as Robert Mueller,” and “Scoot McNairo as Rod Rosenstein.” “The Last Tycoon” of Scott Fitzgerald.

“Fargo”, Season 4 (FX, September 27)

Fargo-Season-4-FX
Photo:Elizabeth Morris/FX

At the beginning of this season, the production was stopped in the spring. A continuation of one of the most exciting TV series anthology shifts its focus towards Kansas in the 1950s, as rival criminal forces in the city. This is another deep-bench ensemble led by Chris Roch, Jessie Buckley, Ben Whishaw, and Jason Schwartzman, with the creator Noah Hawley returning once again to the dual chairs this year. Episodes are released on FX and part of the growing list of shows with Hulu available day after day.

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