The Southland Times

Never give up The Good Fight to get the best TV to air here

- James Croot Editor of Stuff to Watch. james.croot@stuff.co.nz

Peaky Blinders fans, I feel your pain. Derry Girls lovers, I too am frustrated by a seemingly interminab­le wait. Both are shows with an army of Kiwi admirers desperatel­y waiting for news of when the final episodes of their beloved shows will finally be available on our shores. They were unleashed overseas months ago.

While we know that the Irish period comedy is slated to turn up here, like many other territorie­s outside Great Britain and the Emerald Isle, on Netflix ‘‘later this year’’, the situation around Peaky is murkier.

The concluding sixth season had a blink-andyou’ve-missed-it run on Sky TV’s BBC UKTV channel and Sky Go in March and April, but failed to show up on Netflix (where the other five seasons are homed) here as expected on June 10.

So while countries everywhere from Nauru to Nigeria know the final fate of Tommy Shelby and company, most New Zealand followers have been left in a strange state of limbo.

Even Netflix itself wasn’t initially aware of the local licensing snafu, as Australia-based officials insisted it should be there. However, despite repeated requests by Stuff to Watch, the exact problem – and who actually holds the rights to screen it (and for how long) – remains a mystery.

The somewhat shadowy world of VPNs aside, the only way to currently legitimate­ly watch the last six episodes of Peaky is to order the DVD or Blu-Ray. Which is precisely how I’ve tried to keep up to date with one of my favourite American dramas, The Good Fight.

Like Peaky, its sixth-and-final season will debut this year. But while viewers across the United States and on the other side of Tasman (as well as those in many other countries) will be able to follow the trials and tribulatio­ns of the indomitabl­e Diane Lockhart (Christine Baranski) and her fellow Chicago lawyers from September 9 (New Zealand time), there’s no sign of it debuting here.

Much of the problem lies in who it is made by. Although touted by some as arriving here at the same time as Australia this time last year, Paramount+ failed to materialis­e and its content was picked up here by a combinatio­n of Sky and TVNZ.

You’d think that such a critically acclaimed, crowd-pleasing, ahead-of-the-zeitgeist political and legal drama (it has a reputation for tackling hotbutton issues before they become part of the regular US news cycle), a spinoff of the equally brilliant The Good Wife, would be top of both networks’ shopping lists.

Sadly, the only service that airs it here is Prime Video – and it only has the first three seasons. A New Zealand spokespers­on said it has no plans ‘‘at this stage’’ to add more episodes, and TVNZ said the title was not available to it.

It’s a similar situation to This is Us. Until late last year, Kiwis had fallen further and further behind the US schedule, as the rights seemingly passed slowly from TVNZ to Prime Video.

Then, magically, just ahead of the concluding season in January, all the previous episodes appeared on two streaming services – Prime Video and Disney+. It was confusing – and bizarre – to say the least.

I’d love for that to happen in The Good Fight’s case – and I’d urge Prime Video to do whatever it can to make all the episodes of the best contempora­ry US drama on television today available to us (or hand the rights to another outlet).

While I feel somewhat resigned to having to wait for it to appear in a physical format sometime next year, that won’t stop me advocating for fans of shows like it to keep up the pressure on streamers, networks and broadcaste­rs to seek out and deliver those series we Kiwis really want to see.

Other hot shows not available on a NZ streaming service Dark Winds

Released in the US in June, this six-part crimedrama currently has a rare 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Set in 1971, on a remote outpost of the Navajo Nation near Monument Valley, it follows Tribal Police lieutenant Joe Leaphorn, as he struggles to cope with a series of seemingly unrelated crimes.

‘‘Gripping, gorgeously shot and propelled by superb performanc­es, Dark Winds is a very good show that also happens to be very important,’’ wrote Time magazine’s Judy Berman.

Gaslit

Julia Roberts plays Martha Mitchell in this eightpart dramatisat­ion of some of the lesser-known stories surroundin­g the early-1970s Watergate scandal that brought down President Richard Nixon’s administra­tion.

Inspired by the first season of Slate’s podcast Slow Burn in particular, it details how Mitchell, a celebrated socialite and the wife of Attorney General John N Mitchell, was one of the first people to sound the alarm about the President’s involvemen­t in the infamous coverup. Sean Penn, Dan Stevens and Betty Gilpin also star.

‘‘Roberts is magnetic as the gossipmong­er turned voice of dissent,’’ wrote Financial Times’ Dan Einav.

While viewers across the United States and on the other side of Tasman will be able to follow the trials and tribulatio­ns of the indomitabl­e Diane Lockhart (Christine Baranski, above) from next month, there’s no sign of it debuting here.

The Girl From Plainville

Elle Fanning, Chloe Sevigny and Colton Ryan star in this eight-part true-crime series. As the tagline suggests, it is inspired by ‘‘the case that shocked the nation’’, when Michelle Carter was charged with ‘‘involuntar­y manslaught­er’’ as part of an inquiry into the death of fellow teenager Conrad Roy III.

‘‘The series is formidably well done and is a serious deep-dive into the adolescent culture of cultivatin­g tragic love,’’ wrote The Globe and Mail’s John Doyle.

Minx

A 10-part, 1970s Los Angeles-set comedy that focuses on an earnest young feminist who joins forces with a low-rent publisher to create the first erotic magazine for women. Elementary and W1A’s Ophelia Lovibond stars opposite New Girl’s Jake Johnson.

‘‘Minx made me think of Glow and Boogie Nights, but it’s very much its own blend of period comedy and social commentary. It’s original – and addictive,’’ wrote The Boston Globe’s Matthew Gilbert.

We Need to Talk About Cosby

Debuting at January’s Sundance Film Festival, this quadruple Emmy-nominated series is this year’s Allen v. Farrow. W Kamau Bell’s four-part documentar­y contrasts Bill Cosby’s incredibly successful 50-year showbiz career (which included educationa­l programmin­g, standup and one of the world’s most beloved sitcoms), with the private hell so many women say he put them through as he abused his power.

‘‘A multi-episode conversati­on that’s thoughtful­ly and sensitivel­y handled, and rightly places emphasis on how Cosby’s downfall has affected the black community,’’ wrote Vulture’s Jen Chaney.

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