"It's not usually the brown girls from Jersey City who save the world," the MCU's latest addition says in the Ms Marvel trailer. Queer as Folk premieres on Peacock on 9 June in the US Davies, who is serving as a producer on this reboot, said in a statement: "The 2022 show is more diverse, more wild, more free, more angry – everything a queer show should be." Watch the trailer here. The regular cast includes Devin Way (Grey's Anatomy), Fin Argus (Clouds), Jesse James Keitel (Big Sky), Johnny Sibilly (Hacks), Ryan O'Connell (Special) and newcomer CG – while Kim Cattrall, Juliette Lewis and Ed Begley Jr are among the high-profile guest stars. Set in New Orleans, it follows a group of friends in the aftermath of a tragedy. Following the lives of three gay men living in Manchester, Russell T Davies' comedy drama portrayed their lives "in a frank, funny and explicit way that had never been seen on screens before," as BBC News' Joseph Lee wrote. Having been remade in the US once before, the show has spawned a second transatlantic spin-off. When, in 1999, Queer as Folk first appeared on TV, it was nothing short of revolutionary.
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The Midwich Cuckoos premieres on Sky Max on 2 June, and is released on Now on 3 June, in the UK The suburbs have never seemed scarier,” wrote Katie Rosseinsky in The Evening Standard.
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“This is a fresh and propulsive spin on a familiar story. Starring Keeley Hawes (Bodyguard) as the psychologist helping the families through this odd event, and Max Beesley (The Outsider) as the police officer trying to maintain order – all while a very sinister truth comes to light. John Wyndham’s classic sci-fi novel has been reimagined once again – it was also the base text for both Village of the Damned films – this time for the 21st Century, in this new adaptation by David Farr (The Night Manager, Hanna). Until one sleepy summer's day, that is, when the power and communication lines drop, people pass out in the street and then all women of childbearing age suddenly become pregnant. Midwich is as seemingly normal as any other English suburb, marked by quiet roads, nuclear families and little in the way of drama.