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9 Great Miniseries With 4 Episodes or Less You Can Binge in One Night

I once tried to convince a friend to start a new show on a Tuesday night, and she looked at me the way most adults react to an unexpected calendar invite. Or getting a gym membership. That’s the real tax on television right now. Before you press play, you’re doing the math. How many seasons? How many hours? Whether the latter half holds up or falls apart? A movie asks for two hours and by the time the credits roll, you’re satiated with an answer. A normal series asks for a commitment. But there’s a third option that people don’t talk about enough, and it’s the one I keep coming back to: miniseries.

When I was going through what’s actually stuck with me over the past few years, a pattern emerged. The shows that hit hardest were never the ones reaching for scale or ambition or longevity. There were the ones asking a tight, specific question. What really happened in the garden? What’s it like to sit across the table from your own kid after they did something unthinkable? What does decency cost a 19th-century president? The nine miniseries on this list give all the answers, in four episodes or fewer.

Why You Should Trust Me: I’ve spent six years covering movies and television, with the last three and a half focused on entertainment as my primary beat at MovieWeb. As a viewer, limited series are the format I gravitate toward most. They sit in a sweet spot that movies and ongoing seasons cannot reach, with enough room to actually build a world and sit with characters, but without the bloat that creeps into a show once a network wants five more seasons out of it.

‘Collateral’ (2018)

David Hare’s Slow-Burn London Conspiracy Thriller Rewards Total Attention

Collateral
Collateral
Netflix

Watch This If: Collateral takes a single, seemingly random murder, where a pizza delivery rider is shot dead on a London street, and uses it to pull back the curtain on an entire web of immigration policy, military cover-ups, and political ambition. Carey Mulligan plays a heavily pregnant detective working her first major case with a calm, controlled intensity, and playwright David Hare’s dialogue has a clipped quality that rewards close listening rather than half-watching on a second screen. What I appreciate is how patiently the series reveals that the case everyone assumed was simple is actually connected to people at the very top of British political and military life.

Skip This If: Hare’s background in theater means the dialogue can feel a little stylized and short on the kind of naturalistic chatter you would otherwise get from a typical procedural. Also, the show occasionally tries to cram in more social commentary than four episodes can carry, which includes refugee policy, military sexual harassment, and LGBTQ+ acceptance within the clergy.

‘Olive Kitteridge’ (2014)

Frances McDormand Gives the Most Honest Character Study Ever

Watch This If: Olive Kitteridge spans 25 years of a marriage in a small Maine town, and it does something I rarely see on television. It lets the main character be a difficult person to like, and it never asks you to forgive her for it. Let me elaborate. Frances McDormand plays Olive as sharp-tongued, occasionally cruel, and guarded against her own sadness, and Richard Jenkins stars as her endlessly patient husband, Henry. I find myself returning to certain scenes in this one, particularly a moment in the second episode where Olive talks a suicidal young man down without ever directly acknowledging what’s happening. And the show basically captures something about depression and resilience in the most fearless ways.

Skip This If: Okay, so, this is not a comfort watch, and it does not pretend to be one. Death, depression, and emotional withholding run through every episode, and the show’s pace is deliberately slow, because it is more interested in accumulating small truths than building toward a twist. If you need a likable protagonist or a story with real forward momentum, Olive Kitteridge’s prickly stillness will test your patience.

‘Landscapers’ (2021)

Olivia Colman and David Thewlis Make You Root for Two Confessed Killers

Olivia Colman as Susan Edwards resting her head against the wall in Landscapers
Olivia Colman as Susan Edwards in Landscapers
HBO

Watch This If: Landscapers takes a bizarre true crime case about a mild-mannered British couple who murdered their parents and buried them in the back garden for over 10 years, and tells it through the perspective of the couple’s own shared life. It’s crafted almost entirely out of old Hollywood Westerns and French New Wave movies, and that’s part of the charm. Olivia Colman and David Thewlis are extraordinary together, and director Will Sharpe’s stylistic choices, including elaborate film-pastiche sequences, never feel like empty visual flair. What I personally love is how the series makes you complicit in caring about people you know did something horrific.

Skip This If: There is a formal playfulness that comes with the dream sequences, full Western-movie montages, and soundstage breaks, which can feel like a lot. You might even think it’s getting in the way of the story, particularly by the fourth episode. If you want your true crime delivered straight, without genre experimentation layered on top, this one’s probably not for you.

‘Death by Lightning’ (2025)

Michael Shannon Plays the Most Decent President

Watch This If: Death by Lightning tells the strange true story of President James Garfield and Charles Guiteau, the delusional admirer who assassinated him after becoming convinced he was owed a political appointment. Michael Shannon plays Garfield as this decent, gruff, and reluctant man, which makes his fate land harder, and Matthew Macfadyen’s Guiteau is a masterclass in pathetic, self-deluded menace. He plays the role less like a villain and more like a man convincing himself of his own importance, which is somehow more disquieting. I came away from it knowing far more about Gilded Age politics than HBO’s The Gilded Age.

Skip This If: The pacing rushes through Garfield’s actual assassination and its aftermath, making the series feel compressed. Especially if you consider the time the first three episodes spend on setup. And it feels like there’s a stronger eight-episode version of this story buried somewhere in here that the producers chose not to make.

‘Emma’ (2009)

The BBC’s Jane Austen Adaptation Is Cozy Without Being Lazy

Emma TV series 
Emma TV series
BBC

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Watch This If: This four-part BBC adaptation of the Jane Austen novel remains the gold standard Emma for a reason. And for me, the reason is Romola Garai’s Austen, who is a notoriously difficult-to-like heroine with real wit and self-awareness, and she lets you see exactly how Emma’s matchmaking schemes spring from boredom and unchecked privilege and not from malice. Michael Gambon is a delight as her hypochondriac father, and the four-episode length gives the story room to breathe in a way a two-hour movie never could. Particularly in how it handles Emma’s slow, dawning realization about her own feelings for Mr. Knightley.

Skip This If: If you like funny shows, this is it. Emma is, fundamentally, a leisurely Regency comedy of manners, so the stakes rarely rise above misunderstood social cues and slightly wounded feelings. If you need plot urgency or anything resembling tension or suspense, the gentle pace of Highbury society will not shake things up for you.

‘When They See Us’ (2019)

Ava DuVernay’s Central Park Five Series Is as Devastating as It Gets

Jharrell Jerome and Asante Blackk, standing in court, in When They See Us Netflix

Watch This If: I put this one-off for almost a year after it came out because everyone I know warned me how heavy it was, and they were right, and I still think about it more than anything else on the list. With When They See Us, Ava DuVernay tells the story of the Central Park Five. There’s a steadiness that never tips into melodrama, which doesn’t help because when the blows land, there’s nothing to soften them. The episode that actually broke me is the fourth one, which follows Korey Wise’s years in adult prison. Jharrel Jerome plays both the teenage and grown versions of him so precisely that I had to repeatedly remind myself it was one actor. He won an Emmy at 22 and became the youngest person ever to take that category at the time.

Skip This If: Like I said, there’s no twist coming to make this story easier to process, and DuVernay doesn’t even want you to. Coerced confessions, a kid in solitary, a system working against five children at every turn – it’s a lot, and it doesn’t let up for four hours. If you’re after something to put on as background noise, this is worth saving for a night you can actually sit with it.

‘Adolescence’ (2025)

Each Episode Is Filmed in a Single Unbroken Take, and That’s Not Even the Best Part

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Watch This If: I was super excited about this one. When it debuted on Netflix, I watched the first episode of Adolescence convinced I had figured out the gimmick within 10 minutes, and then I kept not figuring it out for the next 50. Each episode is one unbroken take. No cuts, no edits, just the camera following people through doors and down stairwells and into cars in real time. And honestly, that stops being a technical flex because you’re too busy being trapped inside it with everyone else.

The series opens with the police breaking down a door to arrest a thirteen-year-old, and Stephen Graham, who also co-created the show, plays the father you cannot shake off afterward. The best part, however, is that Adolescence is less interested in solving the crime and more interested in sitting in the wreckage of a single act of violence and asking honest questions about online radicalization, toxic masculinity, and what parents can and can’t see.

Skip This If: This miniseries is not built for relief. There’s no scene where the tension lets up so you can catch your breath, because the format physically won’t allow it, and there’s nowhere to cut away to. If you want a crime drama with a release valve somewhere in the middle, Adolescence doesn’t have one, and that’s clearly the point.

‘All the Light We Cannot See’ (2023)

A Visually Stunning WWII Story That Critics and Audiences Couldn’t Agree On

Louis Hofmann with dirt all over his face as Werner in All the Light We Cannot See
Louis Hofmann in All the Light We Cannot See
Netflix

Watch This If: Based on Anthony Doerr’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, All the Light We Cannot See is a four-episode Netflix series that follows a blind French Teacher and a young German soldier as their lives intersect during the Nazi occupation of Saint-Malo. Aria Mia Loberti, a legally blind actress making her acting debut, carries the show with a lived-in conviction, and it’s truly remarkable to watch.

The production values are sweeping, James Newton Howard’s score is propulsive, and the battle sequences look quite expensive. I’ll admit upfront that critics were considerably harder on this one than audiences were, with reviewers who’d read the novel coming to it with greater expectations. But I found that the four hours moved efficiently and were spaced out with several moving moments.

Skip This If: If you’ve read and loved Doerr’s novel. Be warned that the adaptation changes plot points, the fate of the characters, and entire relationship dynamics in ways that might frustrate a devoted reader. Also, the decision to have every character speak English regardless of nationality strips out some of the book’s linguistic texture. The villain is also fairly cartoonish by the standards of prestige WWII drama.

‘Toxic Town’ (2025)

Jodie Whittaker Leads the Real-Life British “Erin Brockovich” Story

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Watch This If: I went into Toxic Town knowing next to nothing about the Corby toxic waste case, and I came out wondering how a scandal this significant stayed under the radar for so long. The series follows a group of mothers in a former English steel town whose children were born with limb deformities after a council redevelopment project sent contaminated dust through their neighborhoods for years. Jodie Whittaker and Aimee Lou Wood are incredible, with Lou Wood working in a much heavier register than her White Lotus or Sex Education role. I also adored how unhurried the legal fights felt. The show is okay with letting you watch ordinary women slowly build an impossible case against a council that keeps stonewalling, and it’s gripping enough without needing a single courtroom theatrics moment.

Skip This If: This is not a light watch in any sense. It touches on topics of toxic waste, birth defects, and the kind of institutional cover-up that makes you angry on these women’s behalf. The show also jumps years between episodes to cover the case’s real thirteen-year timeline, which works given it’s a true story, but can feel like it’s skipping over chapters you’d have liked to spend more time in. If you need your based-on-a-true-story dramas to be spaced out more, don’t bother with this one.



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