"The Pit" (premiere 9/1, HBO Max).
The acclaimed hospital series, which takes place over a workday in a city emergency room in Pittsburgh, is back with a second season, but set ten months later, during Fourth of July celebrations.
"The Night Manager" (11/1, Prime Video).
It's been ten years since the thriller series made Tom Hiddleston a household name. Now he returns as agent Pine, whose target this time is a Colombian arms dealer.
"A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms" (19/1, HBO Max).
A kind of spinoff of "Game of Thrones", also based on George R.R. Martin's stories, set 100 years earlier.
"The Death of Bunny Munro" (30/1, SkyShowtime).
Swedish director Isabella Eklöf is behind the film adaptation of Nick Cave's novel of the same name about an unrestrained, alcoholic womanizer (Matt Smith).
"Harry Hole" (3/26, Netflix).
"Exit" star Tobias Santelmann and Joel Kinnaman star in a new TV adaptation of Norwegian author Jo Nesbø's crime novel.
"Euphoria" (April, HBO Max).
Hollywood stars Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney and Jacob Elordi are back in the series that made them big. But many years have passed in the series. The students have left school and are now trying to cope with adult life.
"Golden Boys" (in the spring, TV4).
The much-talked-about Trustor affair has become a drama series starring Adam Lundgren as the enigmatic Joachim Posener, the man at the center of the allegations of multi-million dollar fraud.
Larry David's new series (premiere not yet determined, HBO Max).
Not much is known other than that Larry David is behind a six-part sketch series for Barack Obama's production company, inspired by the United States' 250th anniversary this summer, and that longtime collaborator Jerry Seinfeld is participating.
"Trion" (not determined, SkyShowtime).
Felix Sandman and August Wittgenstein star in a television adaptation of Johanna Hedman's acclaimed 2021 debut novel of the same name about a love-triangle drama.
"Summer 1985" (not confirmed, SVT).
An unexpected death shakes up some young people in the Stockholm archipelago in the mid-1980s. John Ajvide Lindqvist's thriller is the basis for the series, which is directed by the experienced Björn Stein.
"Until Death Do Us Part" (not confirmed, TV4).
Thriller series about the couple Tobias (Filip Berg) and Malin (Aliette Opheim). When he is suspected of murder, she, a lawyer, fights to prove his innocence.
"The Thin Blue Line" (Christmas, SVT).
The police in Malmö are back one last time, in four episodes at Christmas.





