From Tokyo family dramas to Arctic comedies and steamy sports romances, these standout shows promise long nights on the couch — and a polite excuse to dodge the relatives.
For some, the holidays mean togetherness. For others, they’re a rare stretch of uninterrupted screen time — a sanctioned excuse to disappear into a series while the rest of the house debates politics, travel plans or old family grudges. International TV has become particularly good at filling that space.
The Hollywood Reporter‘s annual list of binge-worthy global series offer immersion rather than background viewing: a selecting that includes family dramas that quietly eviscerate, political and crime series that reward patience, and genre swings bold enough to justify staying up far too late. Here are 15 international series to help you travel far beyond the holiday bubble.
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Asura (Stream on: Netflix)
Image Credit: Netflix In late‑1970s Tokyo, Asura dissects the quiet implosion of a family long held together by convention. When four sisters uncover their father’s affair, the carefully constructed facades they present to the world begin to crumble, revealing decades of suppressed emotion and unspoken disappointment. The series unfolds with a patient precision that elevates its interpersonal drama, making every glance and withheld word carry weight.
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Blue Lights (Stream on: BritBox)
Image Credit: BBC/Two Cities Television/Todd Antony Set amid the tense streets of contemporary Belfast, Blue Lights follows a cohort of rookie police officers as they grapple with the day‑to‑day realities of frontline enforcement in a city shaped by its political past. Blue Lights has drawn comparisons to HBO’s The Wire for its grounded portrayal of policing against a backdrop of community pressure and institutional strain. But the real tension in the show comes not from rouge cops defying the system but by fallible officers struggling to do the right thing within the constraints of the law and their own conscience.
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Dandadan (Stream on: Crunchyroll, Netflix, Hulu, Adult Swim, Buy on: Apple, Amazon, Fandango at Home)
A high-octane genre blast from the manga world, Dandadan twists teen romance, ghostly mayhem and alien menace into gleeful chaos. When a shy high schooler and his headstrong classmate bond over the occult, they find themselves embroiled in a cascading series of ghostly encounters and alien phenomena. The result is an effervescent anime that blends kinetic action with heartfelt coming‑of‑age energy.
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El Eternauta (The Eternaut) (Stream on: Netflix)
Image Credit: Marcos Ludevid/Netflix The Argentinian sci-fi classic you never knew you needed. This Lat Am Netflix series follows an alien invasion that follows a lethal snowstorm that blankets Buenos Aires. The series follows the humans who band together in the aftermath, charting their shifting alliances and strategies for survival. This is a story that’s as much about collective resilience as it is about otherworldly menace.
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Exterior Night (Stream on: MHZ Choice)
Marco Bellocchio’s tension-soaked Italian drama revisits the 1978 kidnapping and assassination of Aldo Moro with documentary-like care and moral seriousness. Rather than action or thriller devices, Exterior Night relies on its intricate character work and political texture, earning praise for examining institutional paralysis with a historian’s eye. This is TV that rewards patience and critical engagement.
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Heated Rivalry (Stream on: HBO Max)
Image Credit: Crave/Bell Media Adapted from Rachel Reid’s Game Changers novels, this Canadian hot-and-steaming queer romance set in the world of hockey has been an unexpected breakout hit. Heated Rivalry charts the evolving relationship between two professional hockey players whose rivalry transforms into an intense, secret romance. Spanning years of locker room clashes and personal breakthroughs, the series melds athletic rigor with emotional intimacy, grounded in the pressures of elite sport. And there’s lots of sex.
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Just for Today (Stream on: Hoopla, ChaiFlicks)
In this deeply humane Israeli drama, residents of a halfway house face the impending loss of their shelter, forcing confrontation with past choices and hard-won hopes. The series has earned praise for its richly drawn ensemble and its empathetic, character-first approach to stories about rehabilitation, community and second chances. Quiet rather than sensational, it’s a drama that lingers.
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Ludwig (Stream on: BritBox, Prime Video, Roku)
Image Credit: BBC/Big Talk Studios A puzzle-lover’s delight, Ludwig turns the British mystery formula on its head by centering on a reclusive designer (David Mitchell at his drollest) whose genius for logic helps him untangle real-world crimes. Both cozy and clever, whimsical and bone dry, this is fresh and quirky spin on the classic whodunit, warmth and wit in equal measure.
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Maffia (Stream on: Viaplay)
Maffia charts Sweden’s uneasy slide into organized crime during the 1990s through the intersecting arcs of an ambitious gangster and the lone police officer who foresees the danger. The series foregrounds systemic evolution over spectacle, presenting a measured, wide‑angle look at the societal forces that give rise to entrenched criminal networks.
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Mussolini: Son of the Century (Stream on: Mubi)
Image Credit: Sky/The Apartment Joe Wright’s operatic blow-by-blow of Benito Mussolini’s rise takes bold, stylized swings at power, propaganda and spectacle. Anchored by a ferocious Luca Marinelli performance, the series refracts history through heightened theatricality, underscoring how charisma and chaos can converge in dangerous ways. Audacious and extreme, much like its operatic protagonist, Mussolini can be a trying watch, but as a sweeping chronicle of the rise of fascism, and as a terrifying warning for the present day, it’s hard to beat.
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The Best Heart Attack of My Life (Stream on: Disney+, Hulu)
This Spanish series begins with a literal life-and-death wakeup call: a ghostwriter’s heart attack abroad becomes a catalyst for personal transformation. Balancing humor with heartfelt drama, the show unfolds as a story about interdependence, vulnerability and the unexpected compassion of strangers. The series’ blend of levity and emotional payoff make it a surprising gem in the international lineup.
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The Narrow Road to the Deep North (Stream on: Prime Video)
Image Credit: Amazon Prime Video Jakob Elordi gives a career-high pre-Frankenstein performance in this Australian war drama, adapted from Richard Flanagan’s Booker Prize–winning novel, playing Dorrigo Evans, an Australian doctor turned prisoner of war. Playing out over a lifetime (Ciarán Hinds plays Evans in his senior years), the series weaves together the physical and psychological tolls of war, crafting a narrative that is both sweeping in scope and deeply introspective, confronting memory and consequence with unflinching grace. It’s an elegiac, demanding watch for thoughtful audiences.
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The New Years (Stream on: Mubi)
This deeply human story, co-created by The Beasts director Rodrigo Sorogoyen, follows Oscar (Francesco Carril) and his his ex, Ana (Iria del Río), who spend a decade circling each other’s lives. The New Years is a tender chronicle of choices made and paths not taken. The series charts the emotional terrain of long‑term connection with a patient eye, allowing the rhythms of everyday life and the weight of unspoken regrets to shape its heart.
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North of North (Stream on: Netflix)
North of North sets its sights on a close‑knit Inuit community in Nunavut, where warmth and wit animate stories of identity, belonging and cultural continuity. The comedy situates its humor within lived experience, balancing sharp social insight with character‑driven warmth in a way that feels both specific and universal.
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When Life Gives You Tangerines (Stream on: Netflix)
Image Credit: Netflix Set against the lush backdrop of Jeju Island, this sweeping Korean Netflix drama unfolds as a multi‑decade romance. The series traces 65 years of a slow burning love story between protagonists’ Ae-sun (IU) and Gwan-sik (Rich Ting), who find a million small ways, rarely verbal, to express their devotion to each other, as they weather the four seasons of their lives. Gentle and naturalistic, but deeply movie, this is TV that takes its time, and rewards the patient viewer.
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