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The best Amazon Prime series (November 2024): Prime Video shows, ranked

UPDATED: The best shows on Amazon Prime to watch.

12 October 2024

Amazon spent almost $20 billion on content in 2023, on movies, TV shows and music.

It might not stop us complaining about Prime Video ads, but you do get quite a lot for your money with a Prime subscription. Today we're only interested in the finest cuts on Prime Video, though.

It's a real jumbled selection box. We have some comedy, horror, and a good selection of sci-fi and fantasy, where Amazon Prime Video really excels at the moment.

UPDATE: One of Prime Video's long-standing shows, Supernatural, has left the library in the UK. We have something similarly chunky to fill the gap, though. The Walking Dead is currently available to stream on Prime Video. All 11 seasons of it. We have also added one that may have slipped under your release radar. The 2015 adaptation of Death Note has come to Prime Video. It's one of the best ways to check out this iconic Japanese tale.

This year saw the return of one of Prime Video's most high-profile, and expensive shows. That's The Rings of Power season 2, a prequel to the events of the classic The Lord of the Rings trilogy.

But our first 2024 recommendation to those new to the service? It's probably Fallout. While this is a show based on a video game series, those who never play games are likely to love it too. It's just that good.

Disagree with our selection? Or think we've forgotten a show that deserves a spot in this hall of fame? Let us know in the box at the bottom of this article. And get voting, too. While we have chosen the best TV shows on Prime Video right now - it’s up to you to help rank them.

Best Amazon Prime Series

The beauty of Amazon Prime - and Netflix - is that these platforms breathe life into previously dead shows, like The Expanse. It's a show about what happens when humans colonise the solar system (spoiler: it ain’t great). Syfy cancelled it after three seasons but Amazon gave The Expanse a new home. Why? Well, for one thing CEO Jeff Bezos is a big fan. We’re glad he did - this is stunning sci-fi and universe-building at its best.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream the Expanse on Prime Video here.

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Bosch is a brilliant, easy watch, and is now in its fifth season. It stars Titus Welliver as the titular Harry Bosch, whose acting raises this show above your average police procedural. As does the writing. Overseen by Eric Overmyer, whose credits include The Wire, Treme and Boardwalk Empire, this is a top-quality show.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Bosch on Prime Video here.

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The Jack Ryan series of movies, those starring Harrison Ford at least, were a lot of fun. While a prequel movie with Chris Pine stumbled, this alternate TV take is well worth a watch. John Krasinski is effortless as Ryan, a CIA analyst forced into the field. As is The Wire’s Wendell Pierce as Jack Greer, Ryan’s mentor - a role that once belonged to James Earl Jones. Big shoes to fill, then, but he manages it. It’s a little Mission: Impossible lite in places but well worth a watch, especially in 4K.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Jack Ryan on Prime Video here.

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The Boys is one of the most original takes on the superhero genre we have seen. The concept (based on Garth Ennis' great comic) is that the world is filled with superheroes but they are all, well, dicks. Underneath their shiny, hero image they actually abuse their power and cause havoc in the world. The good news is that there's a team of anti-heroes that can put a stop to them, lead by Karl Urban. This is one gory, violent, hilarious show that's not for the faint hearted.

The second season is darker with the arrival of Stormfront to shake up the superheroes and features an ending of, well, gratuitous portions. As for Season 3 - after a (literally) explosive start, it gets even more surreal from there. Fantastic stuff.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream The Boys on Prime Video here.

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It was about time a show gave Rachel Brosnahan a chance to shine. After bit parts in movies and a stint on House of Cards, The Marvelous Miss Maisel sees her in fantastic form as a 1950s housewife who decides one day to become a stand-up comic. There’s a lot to love about the show, but Brosnahan’s main performance as ‘Midge’ Maisel steals it - her transformation when she eventually gets on the stage is brilliant to watch.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream The Marvelous Miss Maisel on Prime Video here.

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On the face of it, Vikings seems a little one dimensional: a whole show based on the pillaging, conquering and brutal world of Viking Ragnar Lothbrok. But this is definitely not Game of Thrones on a budget. The character development over the first three seasons is beautifully handled, and Vikings tells what is a simple story really well, even all the way to season 6.

Image credit: History Channel

In the US? Stream Vikings on Prime Video here.

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If you’ve been enjoying Susan Bier’s The Undoing, then her earlier work The Night Manager is well worth a watch. Based on late writer John Le Carre’s spy novel of the same name, here we see Tom Hiddleston as Jonathan Pine, a night manager who is enlisted to find a way into the inner circle of a notorious arms dealer. This is a mini series and plays out like a sumptuous Bond movie.

Image credit: BBC

In the US? Stream The Night Manager on Prime Video here.

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Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett’s fantastic book Good Omens gets the TV treatment, thanks to a joint production between the BBC and Amazon Studios. The result is a superb six-part series with one of the best acting pairing seen on TV in recent years. David Tennant and Michael Sheen shine as angels Aziraphale and Crowley, and their job is to stave off the impending apocalypse. Fans of Gaiman will love Good Omens. He was deeply involved, as Terry Pratchett asked Gaiman to write the TV show's script before he passed away. A request we are very glad was fulfilled.

Image Credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Good Omens on Prime Video here.

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The Man in the High Castle was one of the first Prime Video Originals and it ran for four seasons, concluding at the end of 2019. It's a fantastic-looking show that is based on Philip K. Dick's novel where in a parallel universe the Nazis won and the changes this makes to the world. By the end of the show it deviates from the book but it's well worth going the distance.

Image Credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream The Man In The High Castle on Prime Video here.

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It seems a little trite to heap more praise on a show that it is pretty much universally loved but the thing is (looks to camera, with a wry smile), they’re right. Phoebe Waller-Bridge's adaptation of her own one-woman stage show manages to be stunningly crass, utterly hilarious and tear-inducing all at the same time. Yes, Waller-Bridges is perfect as Fleabag but the rest of the cast are just as good, characters rounded with surgical precision.

Image Credit: Amazon Studios

In the US? Stream Fleabag on Prime Video here.

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Carnival Row is a dark fantasy story with some crime thrown in. It follows the story of a faerie refugee (played by Cara Delevingne) and an investigator (played by Orlando Bloom) whose paths cross during the hunt for a serial killer. It's already proved to be such a hit that it's been renewed for a second season.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Carnival Row on Prime Video here.

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What started off as a spin-off of the successful child assassin movie has mutated into something far better. This is a great show that reveals just what you can do when you allow a premise and characters time to breath. Esme Creed-Miles (daughter of Samantha Morton) is the titular teenage assassin. The show has three seasons now and it's just starting to hit its stride.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Hanna on Prime Video here.

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The Wheel of Time feels like Amazon testing the fantasy waters before it unleashes the Lord of the Rings show on to us all but for all its faults, there is a lot to like with this epic saga. Rosamund Pike plays Moraine, a noble who has tasked herself with finding The Dragon Reborn, someone who is the key between light and dark. This was streaming weekly but now all episodes are available.

Image credit: Amazon

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Fresh from The Avengers, Josh Brolin is back in this sci-fi mystery series that focuses on a rancher who finds something strange happening on his land. Although series is yet to end, we're hooked with the mysteries that keep cropping up.

Image credit: Amazon Studios

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Robert Kirkman has done it again with this existential look at superheroes and what these powers do to relationships. Mark Grayson is the son of the most powerful superhero on the planet, Omni-Man. Now 17, Grayson is set to follow in his dad's footsteps as he develops special powers but everything is not as it seems.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Invincible on Prime Video here.

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Two seasons of proof Alan Ritchson is a much more faithful Jack Reacher than Tom Cruise, who took on the role in the Reacher films. This is the Reacher of the source books by Elmore Leonard, where he's an intimidating and gruff mountain of a man. True to this style, the show features lots of baddies getting their heads knocked together and no-nonsense action. Season two is even better than the first in some respects too.

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Amazon announced it has cancelled The Tick, and that can only be because Amazon doesn’t know how to have fun. It is a superhero parody with heart, and a brilliant cast. ‎Peter Serafinowicz is superb as the titular Tick, the superhero without superpowers, playing it without any knowing wink that he is in on the joke. And that’s the brilliance of the show, which really stepped up in the second season. Unfortunately, the show was cancelled after Season 2, despite fans' efforts to get the show revived.

Image Credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream The Tick on Prime Video here.


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This adaptation of the classic William Gibson novel - who helped create the cyberpunk genre - gets off to a slow start but if you can forgive the (literal) world building, there is a lot to like here. The plot? It's convoluted but is essentially about a gamer (Chloe Grace Moretz) who, while helping her brother, gets embroiled in events that are seemingly tied with the future. It's pretty dense stuff but given its showrunners are Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy (WestWorld), there is a steady hand holding the pen.

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Launching with a double episode, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of power is a stunning show that is every bit as cinematic as the Peter Jackson movies. Although it's set thousands of years before the events of LOTR, there are plenty of call backs for die hard fans and a new mythology to sink your teeth into. It's not perfect, but there is not TV show that looks as good as this one right now.

Image credit: Amazon Studios

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If you're a fan of Neil Gaiman's work, you're in for a real treat with an Amazon Prime subscription. Now not only can you enjoy American Gods, but Good Omens too. Both TV shows make our list because they're prime examples of deliciously addictive storytelling, rich characters and mind-bending fantasy. Neil Gaiman played a bigger part in the development of Good Omens, but that doesn't mean American Gods isn't a dark and binge-worthy series with some truly excellent performances.

Image credit: Amazon

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The Handmaid's Tale is a faithful-ish adaptation of Margaret Atwood's fantastic dystopian classic novel that has outgrown the plot of the book. Now in its fifth season we are nearing completion of the story of June's rise from humble Handmaiden to freedom fighter. Thanks to Amazon's buyout of MGM, all 5 seasons are now available to stream right now

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The sumptuous show stars Reece Witherspoon as a housewife in the 90s who has swapped her career as a journalist. On the surface everything looks perfect but the addition of a new mother and daughter to the neighbourhood shifts this narrative. Witherspoon is fantastic, as is Kerry Washington and Joshua Jackson. This feels like a show that will end after the first season and it's all the better for it.

Image credit: Amazon

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You can't go wrong withe seeing Simon Pegg and Nick Frost on the small screen together. It's been some 20 years (since Spaced!) and they are a lot of fun in this funny and pretty damn scary look at some part time paranormal investigators who start seeing actual ghosts. Pegg's not in it much but when he does turn up it's welcomed and Frost is fantastic as the main thrust of the show.

Unfortunately, this one is just one season only as it hasn't been picked up for a second.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Truth Seekers on Prime Video here.

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Citadel is one of Amazon's most expensive TV shows ever, behind The Rings of Power. It's also a riot, an action-packed show that takes inspiration from movie series including James Bond and Mission Impossible. Richard Madden and Priya Copra Jonas star as spies who have had their memories wiped, but are called back into service .

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It's pretty rare that a show has been inspired by something other than a book, but this one is based on the paintings of Simon Stålenhag. It's a great premise - each painting is like a jumping off point for an episode, a glimpse into a bigger narrative. It's a lot of fun - a time-travelling series that has hints of Twin Peaks and its big streaming rival's hit show Stranger Things.

Image credit Amazon

In the US? Stream Tales From The Loop on Prime Video here.

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A show that perhaps hasn't attracted as many eyeballs as it deserves. Upload looks at a world where people can upload themselves to a sort of digital afterlife. The show was created by Greg Daniels, a key force behind the US The Office and Parks & Rec. It's smart and funny, and becomes a sharp social satire over its three seasons.

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Both Peter Capaldi and Jessica Raine shine in this psychological thriller which is about a woman who wakes up each night between 3-4am - also known as the devil's hour. This mystery leads her to becoming involved in a number of grizzly murders in her town. It's been announced that we are getting a second season of this show, so definitely worth watching the first now.

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Alongside The Last of Us, Fallout stands out as one of the best video game adaptations made to date. Missed the games? Fallout is set in a world ravaged by nuclear war, where civilisation has been decimated but some survivors live on. And the most radiation-wrecked of them become ghouls, as played by Walton Goggins in the show. It’s a blast, and a recommended watch whether you are familiar with the games or not.

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The newest show on our list is also one of the best. Hacks stars Jean Smart (24, Legion) who is a Las Vegas comedian. She teams up with a younger comedy writer to try and revive her career and freshen up her act. This one is a must watch!

Image Credit: Hulu

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Paper Girls is an Amazon Original and a fantastic adaptation of the comic book of the same name. Given it is set in the 80s, there is more than a hint of Stranger Things to the show but its time-travel tale is much more its own show, thanks to an ensemble cast that's just fantastic. Anyone who is a fan of The Goonies and other 80s action flicks should be right at home here.

Image credit: Amazon Studios

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Not many spin-offs make it into consideration for our best-of lists. But Gen V certainly does. This is a The Boys spin-off, in which the action moves to Godolkin University, where the next generation of superheroes are raised and trained. It’s no cosy “young adult” alternative to The Boys, though, with the same black streak of violence and oddness struck through its core. Definitely one for fans of the original series to check out.

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The second season of Hunters, released in early 2023, sees Al Pacino’s Meter Offerman hunt down Hitler, after finding he is still alive. This show is gory, silly and clearly a little ridiculous. However, it is also engaging, in the vein of a B-movie revenge thriller. A little uneven in spots, but Al Pacino as a Nazi hunter? Surely worth a crack.

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Who would have thought back in 1996 when the movie Fargo came out that over 25 years later a TV show based on it would have been on for a decade? Fargo the TV show doesn't share characters with the film, but is based in the same world and has that unmistakeable Fargo vibe. It's now five seasons long, each one critically acclaimed. Each season also tells its own story, although we still recommend watching them in order if you're game for the ride.

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Those craving a Twin Peaks sized hole will love Homecoming. Now in its second season (with singer Janelle Monáe taking over from Julia Roberts in the first season). The show centres on the Geist Group, a wellness company that has rather unorthodox methods of making people better. And, as you can imagine, all is not what it seems.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Homecoming on Prime Video here.

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No, it’s not a show about Mel Gibson’s big-screen vehicle but a darkly comic show about a spy who needs to stop Iran from going nuclear. Unfortunately there are only two seasons as it was cancelled by Amazon but they are a refreshing watch, balancing fun and frenetic action and, to be honest, we’ll watch RoboCop’s Kurtwood Smith in anything.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream The Patriot on Prime Video here.

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One of the newer series on this best Amazon Prime Series list, The Rig is a great old-school supernatural shocker that follows the exploits of a group of oil riggers who may have drilled into something that's from out of this world. The cast is great and also a who's who of UK TV, with Iain Glen, Mark Bonnar and Martin Compston all starring.

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The 80s is a TV gold mine. Stranger Things used the era of Walkmans and shell suits as a backdrop for some crazy stuff. Red Oaks tempers the craziness but ramps up the warmth and fun, creating a wonderful coming-of-age story that needs to be seen. It is a show that doesn’t shirk big issues, but they are wrapped in a lot of affection for the era and its characters.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Read Oaks on Prime Video here.

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One of the big Amazon Prime Video shows of 2023, The Continental is a John Wick spin-off that focuses on the group of assassins that operates out of the hotel of the movies. It's set long before the John Wick films, so no Keanu. And some may raise an eyebrow at the inclusion of Mel Gibson. But it's taut and stylish, and thrilling in all the right ways. It's an unusually short series too, with just three episodes.

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Even if you don’t have a high opinion of Jeremy Clarkson, there’s a good chance you’ll love Clarkson’s Farm. It’s the behind-the-scenes story of Diddly Squat Farm, which the TV host bought all the way back in 2008. The show itself, though, only began in 2021, after the previous proprietor of the farm retired. It’s funny and touching, and has a broader appeal than Top Gear follow-up The Grand Tour.

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Mr. And Mrs. Smith is no longer just a minor cheesy classic movie. It’s also a Prime Video TV show. But instead of being a real-life married couple, as in the movie, Donald Glover and Maya Erskine play agents who have to play as a married couple. By flip-reversing matters, we get to see their relationship develop over the first season. Plus, y’know, there’s plenty of spy action too.

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This series is based on a YA novel co-written by three authors. It’s a fictional take on the real story of Lady Jane Grey, who was the Queen of England for just nine days. The show takes that one line summary and runs with it, injecting a period piece premise with supernatural elements, sharp comedy and YA charm.

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It's so good to see Annie Murphy on the small screen again after Schitts Creek and this is the perfect show for her. Kevin Can F Himself is about a 'sitcom wife' who shows just what happens when you are pushed to the absolute edge. Amazon hasn't bigged up that it has this show and it's a massive shame as we are huge fans.

Image credit: Amazon

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You may not think of a show like Takeshi's Castle when searching for stuff to watch on a streamer, but maybe you should. It's a chaotic Japanese gameshow where contestants take part in madcap games. The original series was broadcast from 1986 to 1990, but has just been resurrected in 2023. Takeshi Kitano even returns as the bizarro cohost of the show.

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After the brilliance of Bojack Horseman for Netflix, creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg headed to Amazon for Undone, an animated show that uses rotoscoping to create its unique look. Undone tackles some of the same themes of Bojack, albeit in a much more dramatic way - its trippy visuals give the whole thing an unreal feel and the likes of Bob Odenkirk, Daveed Diggs and Rosa Salazar star.

The second season of Undone is streaming now and is just as trippy as the first. This show is shaping up to being one of the very beat Amazon Prime series around.

Image credit: Amazon

In the US? Stream Undone on Prime Video here.

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There's a trend for bringing back classic animated series, and we're here for it. Caped Crusader feels like a continuation of Batman: The Animated Series, which began in 1992. This Batman is a detective, and the style is pure noir. Bruce Time is at the head of this one. He worked on the key 1990s Batman animated series and it basically the main man of DC's animated output.

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After 11 seasons and more than a decade since the first episode, The Walking Dead concluded in 2022. The entire run is available on Prime Video. And while fans will tell you it goes off the boil in at least the last few seasons, it was electric TV in those early years. If you’ve somehow missed this TV institution, The Walking Dead follows Rick Grimes’s (Andrew Lincoln) and collaborators attempts to survive in a zombie apocalypse. It’s based on a series of graphic novels by Robert Kirkman.

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A fab palate cleanser for those who want a break from heavy drama series. Nathan For You is a comedy reality show first aired a decade ago. Nathan Fielder talks t real people and real businesses, as a sort-of awkward business coach whose ideas are plain horrible. It sounds like a Kitchen Nightmares pastiche on paper, but Fielder’s unique, awkward and deadpan style makes Nathan for You a true original.

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The Power is a 10-part series, adapted from the best-selling novel by Naomi Alderman. It's a thriller with a cracking premise: teenage girls the world over gain the power to electrify things. What ensues is a shift in how the world is run and the implications of this. While it doesn't quite 'spark' as well as the book does, it's a great watch.

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A dramatisation of real-world events. Hugh Grant stars as a politician, Jeremy Thorp, accused of planning to murder his gay lover. It’s set in 1979, just over a decade after the decriminalisation of homosexuality. Ben Whishaw stars as Norman Scott, the man Thorp is accused of having conspired to murder. There are fantastic performances all-round, and the story is fascinating. UK viewers can check this one out on BBC iPlayer.

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It’s easy to get lost in the adaptations of Death Note, which was originally a manga about a book with the supernatural ability to kill people. Just write their name it in, and they will die. This adaptation is the Japanese live action show, an 11-part drama that is a fan favourite among the live action versions of the story. It’s certainly much better-regarded than the Netflix adaptation from 2017.

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This singular, slightly surreal show is a coming-of-age story about a 13-foot-tall teenager called Cootie. He lives in Oakland, California. It deals in the everyday trials of the character, laced with strange fantasy. This show comes from the mind of Boots Riley, director of the brilliant Sorry to Bother You.

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We are surprised as you are that The Exorcist show is decent but it really is. Taking its cues from the William Peter Blatty novel but reimagining it for a modern audience, each season takes on a different exorcism tale. The first season is closest to the novel (in terms of the characters in the series) but both season are equally great and packed with chills.

Image credit: Fox

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Resurrecting a classic is always dangerous, but Dead Ringers takes the classic David Cronenberg film in a different direction. First, it's a TV show, not a film. And the twin gynaecologists once played by Jeremy Irons are now represented by Rachel Weisz. She's the main draw here, sizzling away on screen in a darkly funny and feminist series.

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Jungle is a near-future crime drama set in inner city London. It's a dystopian thriller with some of the UK's rap talent swapping the mic for the screen - the show is backed by a blistering drill and grime soundtrack. Its visually impressive - thinks Blade Runner with a touch more London grit - and the interweaving stories work well.

Image credit: Amazon Studios

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NOTE: the above shows are available on Prime Video in the UK. Please check your region for availability.


How we choose our best Amazon Prime Video TV show list

Image Credit: Prime Video

Like all guides on ShortList, this best Amazon Prime series list was chosen by the editorial team. We started by sifting through the thousands of TV shows available on the service, and distilled these shows by their IMDb ranking which is an indicator that Prime Video uses (Amazon owns IMDb).

Then using our own editorial expertise, where we have near 20 years' of reviewing experience, we watched hours upon hours of shows - many more than what are on this list. If a show hasn't grabbed our attention by the third or fourth episode, then it is unlikely to be on this list.

On the flip of this, sometimes we add in shows that are being shown weekly on the service. They may go into this guide from episode 1 but if there is a severe drop-off in quality then we will reassess their insertion in the round-up and take them out if necessary.

The final say is done by the editor and creator of this list, Marc Chacksfield. He has nearly 20 years experience reviewing movies and show, both online and in magazines. You can read his bio for more information.

For the most part, this Prime Video show list is made up of scripted TV shows - there are some episodic fact-based shows on the site, but we are mainly focusing on prestige television here.

We haven't added any FreeVee content to this list. While the shows on their are decent, they are ad-funded and don't make up this list. And we haven't added anything from any of the Prime Video 'channels' you can get. This is because these are usually paid-for additions to the main Prime Video service.

Finally, the editorial team doesn't have a say on the ranking of this list. It is done by you, the reader. By simply voting a show up or down, you are having your say. Don't panic if a show is new to the list, either. It may not have the thousands of votes of others but our algorithm will match it in the list accordingly.

And if your fave show isn't one of our current pics, then let us know below!


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Tell us about it, and if enough people agree we'll add it in.