This weekend, Kaleidoscope.
This weekend, Netflix won’t see much The Walking Dead. All eyes, then, will be on the original content ing the fun this weekend, with a documentary series about the largest Ponzi scheme in history, season 2 of a comedy-drama, a TV series created by Nicolas Winding Refn, and a mystery thriller movie starring Christian Bale. Here are the best movies and TV shows coming to Netflix this weekend - January 6.
MADOFF: The Monster of Wall Street
MADOFF: The Monster of Wall Street is a four-part documentary series exploring the truth behind Bernie Madoff’s $64 billion-dollar global Ponzi scheme, which became the largest in history and shattered the lives of countless investors who placed their trust in the revered Wall Street statesman. With the help of never-before-seen videos and interviews with employees, investigators, victims, and more, the series traces Madoff’s rise from his humble beginnings to one of the most influential power brokers on Wall Street, uncovering how the fraud was not just the product of one evil mind, as many people came to believe.
Ginny & Georgia – season 2
Ginny (Antonia Gentry) will have to figure out how to live knowing that her mother is a murderer. Burdened with the new understanding that her stepdad, Kenny, didn't die of natural causes, Ginny must deal with the fact that her mother, Georgia (Brianne Howey), not only killed, but she killed to protect Ginny. Georgia, on the other hand, would much prefer that the past be left in the past, mostly as she's got a wedding to plan – but what Georgia is ignoring is that the past never stays buried for long.
Copenhagen Cowboy
Copenhagen Cowboy is a noir-thriller TV series created by Nicolas Winding Refn. It follows Miu (Angela Bundalovic), who after a lifetime of servitude and on the verge of a new beginning, traverses the ominous landscape of Copenhagen’s criminal netherworld. In search of justice and enacting vengeance, Miu encounters her nemesis, Rakel (Lola Corfixen), as they embark on an odyssey through the natural and the supernatural. The past ultimately transforms and defines their future, as Miu and Rakel discover they are definitely not alone.
The Pale Blue Eye
Edgar Allan Poe (Harry Melling), to pursue the case, but he’s an eccentric cadet with a disdain for the rigors of the military and an obvious penchant for poetry.