Watching: A beachy Italian series

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Watching
For subscribersJune 6, 2025

A sun-dappled Italian mystery

A man in a T-shirt that says "Winter Sicily / Brivido Caldo" and flip flops stands next to and a man in a blue jacket holding a pink bag.
Domenico Centamore, left, and Claudio Gioè, in a scene from Season 3 of "Màkari." MHz Choice

Dear Watchers,

One of TV's most reliable food groups is the light mystery set in a sumptuous locale populated by eccentric townspeople. The Italian series "Màkari" (in Italian, with subtitles) is a hearty serving, with plenty of Sicilian vistas and pastas to go around. Season 1 is available on Amazon, MHz Choice and the Roku Channel; Season 2 and the recently released Season 3 are on only MHz Choice.

Our hero here is Saverio (Claudio Gioè), a former government employee who slinks from Rome back to Sicily, where he hopes to find enough inspiration to write his novel. Boy, does he! Mishaps and misdeeds abound, as does town gossip. Murder, he wrote, as people divulge all kinds of secrets. They occasionally balk at Saverio's interview requests only to be won over by his earnest curiosity — or by his persuasive flattery. A character in a novel based on little old me? Well, now that you mention it. …

The show is based on a series of books by Gaetano Savatteri and comes from some of the same writers as "Detective Montalbano," which is also set in Sicily and has a similar aesthetic. Technically, Saverio is not a detective and thus does not have a partner. Practically, he totally is, and his partner is the excitable Peppe Piccionello (Domenico Centamore), who ropes him into schemes and side gigs and frequently offers philosophical musings and sauce-making guidance. Saverio also immediately strikes up a romance with a local waitress (Ester Pantano), though his reputation as a womanizer precedes him.

"Màkari" is not quite as snappy as the Caribbean-set British procedural "Death in Paradise," but it follows in that show's sandy footsteps. As in "Paradise," it's best for both the show and the viewer not to dwell too much on the loss of human life but instead to revel in those gem-blue waters and clever deductions. "Màkari" has all the requisite real estate porn and some jazzy cars, too; every rock is sun-dappled, every table set with stylish yet unfussy serving ware. Let's brainstorm theories of the crime while bobbing romantically in the ocean, why don't we.

There's a languid ease to everything here, a comfy absence of real tension, and even the pace of the installments is relaxed. Although there are only four per season, each is just under two hours long, which can feel leisurely, a way to unlearn one's internal "Law & Order" clock of when suspects should be confessing.

Your newly available movies

Two men in sharp suits lean against a red automobile from the 1930s.
Michael B. Jordan plays twin brothers, Smoke and Stack, in "Sinners," set in 1930s Mississippi. Warner Bros. Pictures

After directing three franchise hits with "Creed" and the "Black Panther" movies, Ryan Coogler opted to cash his chips on "Sinners," a wildly ambitious and exhilarating vampire thriller that doubles as a potent commentary on race relations. Nicolas Cage fans, meanwhile, may want to add on "The Surfer," which strands Cage in a beach scene with hostile locals.

Unless otherwise noted, titles can generally be rented on the usual platforms, including Amazon, Apple TV, Google Play, Fandango at Home and YouTube. SCOTT TOBIAS

'Hurry Up Tomorrow'

The film, directed by Trey Edward Shults, who wrote the screenplay with [Abel Tesfaye], primarily amounts to an overextended music video that shrinks and cheapens the universe that the Weeknd's songs gesture toward. — Brandon Yu (Read the full review here.)

'Magic Farm'

At points, "Magic Farm" idles so heavily that one wonders whether [Amalia Ulman] suffered her own preproduction blunder, stranding her cast and crew in South America without the material to back up her vision. But by pairing the loose subject matter with a curlicued visual style — at one point, she straps the camera to a dog's head — Ulman suggests that she knows what she's doing. — Natalia Winkelman (Read the full review here.)

'Sinners' (A Critic's Pick)

Ryan Coogler's "Sinners" is a big-screen exultation — a passionate, effusive praise song about life and love, including the love of movies. Set in Jim Crow Mississippi, it is a genre-defying, mind-bending fantasia overflowing with great performances, dancing vampires and a lot of ideas about love and history. — Manohla Dargis (Read the full review here.)

'The Surfer'

Some successful actors start to downshift when they hit their 60s, but Nicolas Cage, 61, still works with the frequency of a man who has a hellhound or a collections agency on his trail. Cage is the best reason to watch "The Surfer," a deliberately punishing drama in which he plays the title role. — Glenn Kenny (Read the full review here.)

Also this weekend

A bearded man with his finger in a small jar stares at pencil sketches on round paper.
Alan Tudyk in a scene from the season premiere of "Resident Alien." James Dittiger/USA Network
  • All 10 episodes of the new season of "Phineas and Ferb" are available now, on Disney+.
  • "Resident Alien" returns for its fourth season starting on Friday at 11 p.m., on Syfy.
  • A live broadcast of the Broadway production of "Good Night, and Good Luck," starring George Clooney, airs on Saturday at 7 p.m. on CNN, on the CNN website, and on Max.
  • The Tony Awards air on Sunday at 8 p.m., on CBS. You can follow along with our coverage here.

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