The cast of 'Scarpetta' in a promotional image
After much anticipation, Patricia Cornwell's iconic character, Dr. Kay Scarpetta, has finally been brought to life on the screen in Scarpetta. In the Prime Video series, Nicole Kidman plays the brilliant forensic pathologist.
Across two timelines, with Rosy McEwen taking on her younger self, Kay uses advanced forensic technology to unravel mysteries and solve crimes in the present, ensuring her answers about the past are correct. If you've breezed through the eight-episode first season, there are a handful of medical and crime thrillers that are destined to keep you equally addicted to mystery. From beloved detective procedurals to modern medical dramas, the titles on this list are perfect follow-ups to the twisty Prime Video series. 'Broadchurch' Broadchurch is, perhaps, one of the greatest crime thrillers of all-time. Starring powerhouse British icons Olivia Colman and David Tennant, the three-season series follows the investigation into the murder of 11-year-old Danny Latimer, found dead on the beach of a small coastal town. Detectives Alec Hardy and Ellie Miller uncover a community's deep secrets through a mystery with unbelievable twists and turns as the close-knit town begins to turn on one another under the circumstances. Created by Chris Chibnall, Broadchurch is an emotional slow-burn whodunit with a profound, emotional examination of grief and the human impact of crime. A properly plotted thriller, Broadchurch keeps the action engaging while keeping you shocked until the final reveal, a testament to the writing and the performances. A solid ensemble, which also includes Jodie Whittaker, Jonathan Bailey, Arthur Darvill, with Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, and Julie Hesmondhalgh in subsequent seasons, lifts the material beyond plot into something profoundly human. A series that remains sensational every time you watch, there has yet to be another show that has ever come close to the brilliance of Broadchurch. And that includes the American remake, Gracepoint, which also starred Tennant as a different version of his British counterpart. 'Criminal Minds' One of the most successful and longest-running police procedural crime dramas is Criminal Minds. Beginning its original run in 2005, the CBS thriller follows a group of criminal profilers who work for the FBI as members of the Behavioral Analysis Unit. The team travels the country analyzing the nation's most dangerous serial killers, known as unsubs, to anticipate their next moves. Focusing on psychological motivations rather than just physical evidence, Criminal Minds pushes the boundaries with intense, sadistic storylines that tend to be gritty in subject matter. All on network television! Perhaps the defining reason for the show's longevity is not the crimes themselves but the found family dynamic among the BAU team. Allowing for a character-driven series that lets circumstances shape the characters, Criminal Minds' ability to focus on the psyches of the individuals in the field simultaneously with the plot garnered a cult following. Across its run, Criminal Minds featured an iconic cast that included Thomas Gibson, Matthew Gray Gubler, Kristen Vangsness, Paget Brewster, Joe Mantegna, Zach Gilford, and many more. Even with cast turnover and shocking deaths, Criminal Minds never lost steam. Though it may fall into the"is that still on?" category of television, its ability to stay fresh while reinventing itself has made it an addictive watch. 'Critical' If there is one medical drama that will keep you stressed out from start to finish, look no further than Critical. The one series run followed the trauma specialists at the Major Trauma Centre at City General Hospital as they treated critically ill patients. With each episode focused on one patient and the efforts to save their life within one hour, Critical is a high-stakes thriller that putsmedical professionals in the driver's seat as they make life-changing decisions. Praised for its real-time feel and technical accuracy, Critical was an hour shift of The Pitt before The Pitt arrived. Led by Lennie James as Glen Boyle, the trauma consultant and team leader, his prowess as a character actor in high-stress situations was on full display here. With such a strong actor to center the series on, it resulted in a fast-paced, adrenaline-fueled show that focused on the critical"Golden Hour." Critical is not for the faint of heart. You feel for the patients and providers. The emotional toll of work in trauma is on full display, so when bad news has to be delivered to loved ones, it's a gut punch. Even with all the goods there, the series didn't draw high enough viewership, causing Critical to be axed after a single 13-episode run. 'Dept. Q' In Scarpetta, an old crime resurfaces. In Dept Q., it’s all about unearthing cold cases and unsolved mysteries. The sensational Netflix thriller follows Detective Carl Morck , who, after a traumatic shooting, returns to work only to be relegated to the dredges of the unsolved cases department. As Carl and his motley crew delve into the disappearance of missing prosecutor Merritt Lingard , secrets come to the surface in this twisted story. An enthralling and gritty drama, the dark backdrop of Edinburgh provides an extraordinary atmosphere for the unthinkable crimes that abound. With a central cold case driving the action as Carl faces the trauma of his own attack, the compelling stories intertwine, allowing one to inform the other. As the pieces fall into place, the bigger picture is soon illuminated, revealing just how twisted the first season’s story truly is. With multiple plotlines that ultimately intertwine across congruent timelines and flashbacks, Dept. Q's sharp storytelling becomes its greatest asset. Dept. Q thrives thanks to its exceptional cast. Goode, in a career-best performance, shines thanks to his dynamic with his cohorts: his paraplegic partner, DI James Hardy ; civilian employee Akram Salim ; and the chipper but broken DC Rose Dickson . Other exceptional players include Chief Superintendent Moira Jacobson and Carl’s appointed therapist, Dr. Rachel Irving . Underrated in its first season’s story, with so much to explore in Season 2, Dept. Q is destined to become even better.Would You Work Best In? The Pitt · ER · Grey's Anatomy · House · Scrubs Five hospitals. Five completely different ways medicine goes sideways on television — brutal, chaotic, romantic, brilliant, and ridiculous. Only one of them is the ward your instincts were built for. Ten questions will figure out exactly where you belong. 🚨The Pitt 🏥ER 💉Grey's Anatomy 🔬House 🩺Scrubs FIND YOUR HOSPITAL → QUESTION 1 / 10APPROACH 01 A critical patient comes through the door. What's your first instinct? Medicine under pressure reveals who you actually are. AStay completely present — block everything else out and work through it step by step, right now. BTriage fast and delegate — get the right people on the right problems immediately. CTrust my gut and move — I work best when I stop overthinking and just act. DAsk the question everyone else is ignoring — what's the thing that doesn't fit? ETake a breath, make a joke to cut the tension, and then get to work — panic helps no one. NEXT QUESTION → QUESTION 2 / 10MOTIVATION 02 Why did you go into medicine in the first place? The honest answer says more about you than the one you'd give in an interview. ABecause I wanted to be where it matters most — right at the edge, when someone's life is actually on the line. BBecause I wanted to help people — genuinely, one patient at a time, in a system that makes it hard. CBecause I was drawn to the intensity of it — the stakes, the drama, the feeling of being fully alive. DBecause medicine is the most interesting puzzle there is — and I needed a problem worth solving. EBecause I wanted to make a difference — and also, honestly, I didn't know what else to do with my life. NEXT QUESTION → QUESTION 3 / 10COLLEAGUES 03 What do you actually want from the people you work with? Who you want beside you under pressure is who you are. ACompetence and calm — I need people who don't fall apart when things get bad. BTrust and reliability — I want to know that when I pass something off, it's handled. CConnection — I want colleagues who become family, even if that gets complicated. DIntelligence and the willingness to be challenged — I have no interest in people who just agree with me. EFriendship — people I actually like spending twelve hours a day with, because those hours are going to happen either way. NEXT QUESTION → QUESTION 4 / 10PRESSURE 04 How do you actually perform under extreme pressure? The worst shifts reveal things about you that the good ones never will. AI narrow in — everything irrelevant falls away and I become completely focused on what's in front of me. BI lead — pressure is when I'm at my most useful, keeping everyone else on track while managing my own fear. CI feel it fully and work through it — I don't pretend the fear isn't there, I just don't let it win. DI get sharper — high stakes are clarifying. This is exactly the environment I think best in. EI hold it together in the moment and fall apart slightly afterwards — which I've made my peace with. NEXT QUESTION → QUESTION 5 / 10LOSS 05 You lose a patient you fought hard to save. How do you carry it? Every doctor who's worked a long shift has had to answer this question. AI carry it. All of it. I don't look for ways to put it down — that weight is part of doing this work honestly. BI process it and move — you have to, or the next patient suffers for the one you just lost. CI feel it deeply and lean on the people around me — I don't think you're supposed to handle that alone. DI go back over every decision — not to punish myself, but because I need to understand what I missed. EI grieve it genuinely, find some way to laugh about something unrelated, and try to be kind to myself — imperfectly. NEXT QUESTION → QUESTION 6 / 10STYLE 06 How would your colleagues describe the way you work? Your reputation on the floor is usually more accurate than your self-image. AIntense and completely present — no small talk during a shift, but exactly who you want there. BSteady and dependable — not the flashiest in the room but never the one who drops something. CPassionate and occasionally chaotic — brilliant on the hard cases, prone to drama everywhere else. DBrilliant and difficult — right more often than anyone else, and everyone knows it, including me. EWarm and self-deprecating — not the most intimidating presence, but genuinely good at this and easy to like. NEXT QUESTION → QUESTION 7 / 10RULES 07 How do you feel about hospital protocol and procedure? Every institution has rules. What you do with them is a choice. AProtocol is the floor, not the ceiling — I follow it until the patient needs something it can't provide. BI respect it — the system is broken in places, but the structure is there for a reason and I work within it. CI follow it until my instincts tell me not to — and my instincts are usually right, even when they cause problems. DRules are for people who haven't thought hard enough about when to break them. EI try to follow it and mostly do — with a few memorable exceptions that still come up in meetings. NEXT QUESTION → QUESTION 8 / 10SPECIALISM 08 What kind of medical work do you find most compelling? What draws your attention when you walk through those doors matters. AEmergency and trauma — I want to see everything, handle anything, and never know what's coming next. BGeneral emergency medicine — breadth over depth, keeping the whole machine running under impossible conditions. CSurgery — I want to be in the room where the most consequential thing happening is happening right now. DDiagnostics — the cases no one else can solve, the symptoms that don't add up, the answer hiding underneath everything. EWhatever needs doing — I'm a generalist at heart and I find something interesting in almost every patient. NEXT QUESTION → QUESTION 9 / 10TOLL 09 What does this job cost you personally? Nobody works in medicine without paying a price. What's yours? AEverything outside these walls — I've given this job my full attention and the rest of my life has gone around it. BMy idealism, mostly — I came in believing the system could be fixed and I've made a complicated peace with that. CStability — my personal life has been as chaotic as the OR, and that's not entirely a coincidence. DMy relationships — I am not easy to know, and the people who've tried to would probably agree. EMy sense of gravity — I use humour as a coping mechanism, which not everyone appreciates in a hospital. NEXT QUESTION → QUESTION 10 / 10PURPOSE 10 At the end of a long shift, what keeps you coming back? The answer to this question is the most honest thing about you. AThe fact that it's real — that nothing else I could be doing would matter this much, right now, today. BThe patients — individual human beings who needed something and got it because I was there. CThe people I work with — I have walked through impossible things with these people and I'd do it again. DThe next unsolved case — there's always another puzzle, and I'm not done yet. EBecause despite everything — the exhaustion, the loss, the absurdity — I actually love this job. REVEAL MY HOSPITAL → Your Assignment Has Been Made You Belong In… Your answers have pointed to one fictional hospital above all others. This is the ward your instincts, your temperament, and your particular brand of dysfunction were built for. PITTSBURGH TRAUMA MEDICAL CENTER The Pitt You are built for the most unsparing version of emergency medicine television has ever shown. The Pitt doesn't romanticise the work — it puts you inside a single fifteen-hour shift and doesn't let you look away. You are someone who needs their work to be real, who finds meaning not in the drama surrounding medicine but in medicine itself, and who has made peace with the fact that this job will take from you constantly and give back in ways that are harder to name. You don't need the chaos to be aestheticised. You need it to be honest. Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center is exactly that — and you would not want to be anywhere else. COUNTY GENERAL HOSPITAL, CHICAGO ER You are the person who keeps the whole floor running — not the most brilliant in the room, but possibly the most essential. County General is built on the shoulders of people who show up, do the work, absorb the losses, and come back the next day without requiring the job to be anything other than what it is. You care deeply about patients as individual human beings, you believe in the system even when it fails you, and you understand that emergency medicine at its core is about holding the line between order and chaos for just long enough. ER is television about endurance, and you have it. GREY SLOAN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, SEATTLE Grey's Anatomy You came to medicine with your whole self — your ambition, your emotions, your relationships, your history — and you have never quite managed to leave any of it at the door. Grey Sloan is a hospital where the personal and the professional are permanently, chaotically entangled, and where that entanglement produces both the greatest disasters and the most remarkable saves. You are someone who feels things fully, who forms deep attachments to the people you work with, and who understands that the most extraordinary medicine often happens at the intersection of clinical skill and profound human connection. It's messy here. You would not have it any other way. PRINCETON-PLAINSBORO TEACHING HOSPITAL, NJ House You are drawn to the problem above everything else. Not the patient as a person — though you are capable of caring, even if you'd deny it — but the case as a puzzle, the symptom that doesn't fit, the diagnosis hiding underneath the obvious one. Princeton-Plainsboro is a hospital that exists to house one extraordinary, impossible mind, and everyone around that mind is there because they are smart enough and stubborn enough to keep up. You work best when the stakes are highest, when the standard answer is wrong, and when the only way forward is to think harder than everyone else in the room. That is exactly what you would do here. SACRED HEART HOSPITAL, CALIFORNIA Scrubs You understand that medicine is tragic and absurd in almost equal measure, and that the only sane response is to hold both of those things at the same time. Sacred Heart is a hospital where the laughter and the grief are genuinely inseparable — where a terrible joke can get you through a terrible moment, and where the most ridiculous people are also, on their best days, remarkably good doctors. You are warm, self-aware, and funnier than most people in your field. You lean on the people around you and you let them lean back. Scrubs is a show about learning to become someone worthy of the job — and you are still very much in the middle of that process, which is exactly right. ↻ RETAKE THE QUIZ 'Dexter' Though that mountain man, lumberjack-chic finale is still a sticking point for die-hard fans, everything that occurred prior was quite sensational. For eight seasons, Dexter was a smash for Showtime. Starring Michael C. Hall, the series centered on Dexter Morgan, a Miami Metro Police blood-spatter analyst who secretly works as a vigilante serial killer. Guided by a strict moral"code" from his adoptive father, he targets and kills murderers who have escaped the legal system. Showcasing Dexter’s struggle to balance his hidden, destructive urges with maintaining a normal, human life, Dexter is a juicy, off-kilter thriller that explores morality, family, loyalty, and the psychological concept of psychopathy. Expertly blending dark humor with intense psychological suspense, Hall’s brilliant anti-hero forces viewers to sympathize with a serial killer. Hall crafts one of the strongest characters of the 21st century, bringing depth and nuance to the duplicitous Dexter. He had sensational writing that helped keep the series compelling, especially through the voice-over narrative, giving viewers a glimpse into the dark passenger inside his mind. Dexter is a bloody good time, offering a unique perspective to a typically formulaic genre. With a prequel and a sequel to add to the lore, there's enough to keep you watching for many weekends. 'His & Hers' One of the first entries into the world of crime thrillers in 2026 was Netflix's twisty His & Hers. Based on Alice Feeney's book, His & Hers follows news reporter Anna Andrews and her estranged husband, Detective Jack Harper , drawn together by a murder in their Georgia town that reopens old wounds and reveals secrets. As shocking twists unravel as their inner circle is drawn into the fray, His & Hers reminds us that there are always two sides to every story. Focusing on broken relationshipsand how grief can bring out dark traits in a person, His & Hers is a family affair, just like Scarpetta. A truly unpredictable story, His & Hers thrives through its atmospheric tension. As the body count rises and the suspect list shifts, the series becomes one you won't be able to stop watching. From a unique storytelling perspective, shifting from unreliable narrator to unreliable narrator leaves viewers uncertain about what is true and what is contrived for someone's particular gain. Thompson and Bernthal are at the top of their game, showing how a single event, namely the loss of a child, can actually split two once-connected individuals. Joining them with strong performances are Marin Ireland as Zoe Harper, Jack's younger sister, and Pablo Schreiber as Richard Jones, Anna's cameraman and her rival Lexy Jones' husband. If you enjoy the familiar drama surrounding the crimes at hand, His & Hers fits the bill. 'Luther' One of the finest actors of the generation is Idris Elba. A truly transformative performer, Elba dazzles in the psychological crime thriller Luther. Created by Neil Cross, the series follows DCI John Luther , a brilliant but self-destructive detective who often breaks rules to catch sadistic killers. Focusing on an intense predator-and-prey duel with criminals and on his complex relationship with the genius psychopath Alice Morgan , Luther goes beyond the detective series through morally ambiguous characters and high-stakes storytelling. Unafraid to be a darker crime thriller than most, Luther presents a moody, gritty portrayal of London that serves as an important character in the hunts. With shorter seasons, the series is contained to smart, fast-paced storytelling without filler content. Elba earned his BAFTA through this iconic character. Brilliant, damaged, and out-of-the-box operative, Elba's portrayal of an individual grappling with his inner demons becomes an instant draw. Though Luther could easily be too over-the-top, the series' villains and antagonists are unsettlingly and deeply human, making them even more sinister. Ambitious and hefty, Luther is the show you may have missed that you’ll surely regret that you did. 'The Outsider' Now, for something that leans into the science fiction realm: The Outsider. Based on Stephen King's novel of the same name, the series follows Detective Ralph Anderson as he investigates the brutal murder of 11-year-old Frankie Peterson in Georgia. While DNA and witness evidence point to little league coach Terry Maitland , an airtight alibi forces investigators to confront a sinister, shapeshifting supernatural entity. Joined by unorthodox private investigator Holly Gibney , the duo uncover the truth, discovering similarities to other unsolved, horrific child murders. From crime thriller to supernatural horror, The Outsider uses the surreal as a tool to explore grief. The Outsider masterfully merges the mundane terrors of a police drama with King's brand of supernatural horror. The series does a fabulous job of easing into the genre shift in a plausible way. Thanks to the unique dynamic between Mendelsohn and Erivo, they carry the series to victory across its ten episodes. Like a good King adaptation, the atmosphere is created through tense cinematography. There’s nothing more creepy than a still shot to send a chill down your spine. Though a second season was written, it never came to fruition. Thankfully, the single season served as a faithful adaptation of an underrated King piece. 'True Detective' The 2010s ushered in the rise of the anthology series. One of the exceptional entries was HBO's True Detective. Created by Nic Pizzolatto, each season follows a dark, often occult-themed murder investigation across different locations and time periods. Focusing heavily on the psychological scars, personal flaws, and deep philosophical conflicts of the detectives involved rather than just the crime itself, True Detective is a dip in and dip out style series, but if you watch them all, you'll be highly addicted. With each season self-contained, featuring a new ensemble of characters and stories, True Detective soars thanks to its gritty narratives and its ability to keep commonality through individuality. Subscribe to the newsletter for top crime and medical picks Keep the mystery alive—subscribe to our newsletter for curated crime and medical thriller recommendations, smart next-watch suggestions, and editor-picked titles to guide your binge choices. Get Updates By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime. Thus far, True Detective has presented four distinct stories. Season 1, the Southern Gothic, tells the story of detectives Rust Cohle and Marty Hart investigating ritualistic murders in Louisiana over 17 years, spanning 1995 to 2012. Season 2's crime noir tells the story of three detectives. When California Highway Patrol officer and war veteran Paul Woodrugh discovers the body of corrupt city manager Ben Caspere on the side of a highway, Vinci Police Department detective Raymond"Ray" Velcoro and Ventura County Sheriff's Office Criminal Investigation Division Sergeant Antigone"Ani" Bezzerides are called to assist in the following investigation. Meanwhile, Career criminal Francis"Frank" Semyon attempts to legitimize his business with his wife Jordan by investing in a rail project overseen by Caspere. In Season 3, the story takes place in the Ozarks over three decades as partner detectives, Wayne Hays and Roland West , investigate a macabre crime involving two missing children. And finally, the fourth season, subtitled Night Country, follows detectives Chief Liz Danvers and Trooper Evangeline Navarro as they investigate the disappearance of researchers from a remote station in Alaska. Each of the four seasons is remarkable on its own. Watch in chronological order or start with your favorite star. However you begin, True Detective is an excellent series. With top-notch performances and cinematic-quality filmmaking, True Detective satisfies the crime bug. With such a focus on character-driven stories, True Detective is quite a heavy, intellectual show that dives deep into the individual psyches during the investigations. With a range of themes, including morality, religion, and the nature of time, True Detective changed the vision of thrillers forever. 'Watson' Finding that intersection of crime and medical drama comes Watson. The relatively new CBS series is a modern riff on the Sherlock Holmes mythology. Set one year following Sherlock's death, Dr. John Watson runs a Pittsburgh clinic treating rare, complex diseases. Leading a team dedicated to treating these diseases, Watson is a modern adaptation of a classic concept that blends detective-style drama with a medical thriller. Giving the beloved sidekick the spotlight, Watson elevates the House tropes, lending a more optimistic tone in which medical mysteries must be solved. A unique take on the medical detective story, Watson engages Sherlock Holmes fans while still finding its own identity in modern television. Through a familiar case-of-the-week format, the series seamlessly marries crime and medicine, with Watson playing a detective as a patient's life serves as clues to help save their lives. Chestnut is a formidable lead, proving you don't need Sherlock after all. Like Follow Followed Watson TV-14 Drama Mystery Release Date January 26, 2025 Network CBS Showrunner Craig Sweeny Directors Larry Teng, Bille Woodruff, Jeffrey W. Byrd, Jennifer Lynch, Kristin Lehman, Mario Van Peebles, Ron Underwood, Tara Nicole Weyr, Christine Moore, Clara Aranovich Cast See All Writers Craig Sweeny, Jason Inman, Charly Evon Simpson, Shardé Miller, Anna Mackey Main Genre Mystery Seasons 2 Producers Scott Graham, Geoffrey Hemwall Creator Craig Sweeny Executive Producer Morris Chestnut, Aaron Kaplan, Sallie Patrick Powered by Expand Collapse
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