“Mr. and Mrs. Smith”
The story of the mercenary couple has appeared on screen many times. The first version aired in 1996 as a TV series starring Scott Bakula and Maria Bello, followed by a 2005 film starring Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt. This new interpretation, starring Donald Glover and Maya Erskine, offers a different take on the familiar plot. Their characters are assassins working undercover as a married couple who live together, carry out missions, and gradually become embroiled in a personal relationship. Operations go awry, decisions are made on the fly, and every scene demands a quick reaction. As a result, the tension arises from the instability of the situation and the behavior of the characters themselves.

“Killer”
Another project by Denis Karyshev, in which he again works with the theme of violence and personal choice. The series stars Karina Andolenko and Anna Kotova – the same acting team that migrated to “The Sentence”. And at the center is the character played by Alexander Ustyugov, a former police officer who, after prison, tries to get to the man who ruined his life. Drawn into a dangerous game, he is forced to become a hired killer, but after a serious accident he loses his memory. The action here is built on a situation in which the hero acts without fully understanding who he is and who he is playing against, and this is precisely what adds tension to each episode.

“Amura”
A large-scale international project starring Alena Mikhailova, who plays two sisters and underwent serious physical training, performing her own fight scenes. The story begins in Vladivostok and moves to Japan, where the heroine tries to save her sister, who has fallen into the hands of the yakuza. The action here is focused on physics – strikes, grabs, endurance, body movement in the frame. Filming in different countries adds to the scale, but the main thing is the feeling of a real battle, where every step requires effort, and any mistake can be too costly.

“The Verdict”
This crime action drama starring Anton Vasiliev, Igor Vernik, and his son Grigory revolves around the story of Savva, who, after prison, tries to start a new life, but once again finds himself caught up in a criminal conflict. Two timelines allow us to see how the hero got to this point. From the very first minutes, the series suddenly engages the viewer: the execution scene is composed using contrasting tempos—from sharp bursts of action to slow motion, where attention clings to details and reactions. Director Denis Karyshev uses action as a tool of pressure: the scenes do not let up, because the stakes are felt behind every action.


“Jack Reacher”
The series with Alan Ritchson quickly became popular and continues to develop, with new seasons being released. His character, a former military police major, finds himself drawn into a murder investigation for which he is accused. What follows is undercover work, clashes with criminal structures, and the constant need to act proactively. The action here is based on the physical presence of the hero: Reacher does not hide or avoid the threat, but goes straight towards it. In the new episodes, he faces off against a character played by Oliver Richters, whose sheer size makes every scene a test of his strength.

“Barry”
Bill Hader plays a hitman who accidentally ends up in an acting class and decides to change his life. But the past won’t let him go, and every attempt to escape it leads to new outbreaks of violence. The action in “Barry” is structured unconventionally: it can start abruptly, without preparation, and end just as suddenly. At the same time, Hader himself, as a director, precisely constructs scenes, playing with space, pauses, and unexpected decisions. The series gradually becomes tougher and more serious, but retains that same energy that makes it impossible to watch with half an eye.


Source: hellomagrussia.ru



