Eric Bana's Untamed leads best new TV shows to stream this week
We've sifted through the latest offerings from TV and streaming platforms to find the best shows you should be watching this week.
Eric Bana as Kyle Turner and Lily Santiago as Naya Vasquez in Untamed. Picture: Ricardo Hubbs/Netflix © 2025
UNTAMED
NETFLIX
Aussie Eric Bana's steely performance as a damaged, driven special agent is the main reason to seek out this six-part murder mystery set in California's spectacular Yosemite National Park. The ever-reliable Aussie plays Kyle Turner, who has been driven to drink by the memory of his dead son and is jolted into action when a young woman plunges to her death from the park's famous El Capitan rock face.
But did she jump or did more sinister motives dating back decades drive her to do it? Turner's quest for answers, assisted by former LA cop turned rookie ranger Naya Vazquez (Lily Santiago) and his long-time friend and colleague Paul (Sam Neill) will take him deep into the wilds as he uncovers a dangerous secret within the tourist hot spot, as well as forcing him to confront his own troubled past and relationship with ex-wife Jill (an excellent Rosemarie DeWitt).
While the sometimes grisly action unfolds a pace that might be too sedate for some, regular twists and surprises and the thrilling vistas from one of the world's most picturesque parks ensure it's never less that eminently watchable.
The crew of luxury yacht Katina on Below Deck Down Under. Picture: Fred Jagueneau/Bravo
BELOW DECK DOWN UNDER
WEDNESDAY, 8.30PM, CHANNEL 7
Another season, another spectacular location, another collection of ridiculously good-looking crew and another group of very rich and entitled customers with first world problems – it's plain sailing as usual for one of the biggest guilty pleasure viewing experiences around. This week kicks off with day two of a cruise in the Seychelles and chief steward Lara in tears after day one 'shit show' on the luxury yacht Katina. With a beach excursion planned and a Cowboys and Cowgirls BBQ dinner on the menu, Captain Jason needs the team to lift their game to make sure the guests leave happy. Meanwhile things are heating up in the kitchen between head chef Tzarina and reluctant sous chef Anthony, which threatens to spill over into shore-leave dramas.
Tom Ellis and Eddie Karanja in Washington Black. Picture: Disney/Lilja Jonsdottir
WASHINGTON BLACK
WEDNESDAY, DISNEY+
Adapted from Esi Edugayan's 2018 bestseller, this freewheeling and sometimes fantastical eight-part drama tells the story of how 11-year-old George Washington Black flees the nightmare of slavery on a 19th century Barbados sugar plantation to find a life of adventure. Flipping back and forth in time, with the adult Wash still on the run from bounty hunters while trying to forge a new life and find love in Canada, it kicks into gear with the title character's escape from racism and retribution on a flying machine thanks to a kindly English inventor. As they adventure together with pirates on the Caribbean and sled dogs in the Artic, the brilliant young Wash chases his dream of becoming a revered scientist in a society that's determined to keep him in his place.
Robbie Williams is reinvented as a chimp in the biopic, Better Man.
BETTER MAN
SATURDAY, PRIME VIDEO
Australian director Michael Gracey took a huge swing in his Melbourne-shot biopic of Robbie Williams by reimagining the UK pop superstar as a chimpanzee. While the bold move failed spectacularly in the cinemas, it deserves a second life on streaming as one of the best and most inventive movies of its type in recent years. Williams himself was heavily involved (most of the motion capture was done by UK actor Jonno Davies) and he is his usual self-deprecating and unflinchingly honest self, even when recounting his appalling actions at his lowest drug fuelled ebbs. With stunning set pieces – the dance on London's Regent St set to Rock DJ is a knockout – and a scarcely believable true story, it's well worth your time.
Emma Watkins (second from left) in Teenage Boss: Next Level.
TEENAGE BOSS: NEXT LEVEL
SATURDAY, 7.30PM, ABC
Former Yellow Wiggle Emma Watkins has headed to the Apple Isle for the second season of the delightful reality TV show that turns over the household budget to teenagers to see if they can balance their own saving goals with the needs of the family. First up is Caitlyn, who is laser-focused on raising the funds to fulfil her potentially expensive dream of joining a school ski trip to the mainland as well as juggling her school, work and volunteer commitments. Wise beyond her years, Caitlyn's spending choices are smart and practical – but her biggest obstacle might be mother Seher, who takes the Turkish custom of feeding and entertaining friends and family seriously, and whose plans for the coming Ramadan threaten to blow the budget.
There's a new, fairer approach on season 21 of The Block.
THE BLOCK
SUNDAY, 7PM, CHANNEL 9
In its 21st season – and closing in on its 1000th episode – the beloved renovation reality show heads to the rural Victorian tourist destination of Daylesford with a rejigged approach designed to level the playing field. For the first time, each of the five houses is exactly the same size and with exactly the same floor plan, meaning hosts Scott Cam and Shelley Craft and judges Shaynna Blaze, Marty Fox and Darren Palmer will be comparing 'apples with apples' and making each design decision all the more important. There will be tears, tiffs and tantrums among the missteps and masterstrokes, with the fart-joke loving, risqué best mates from South Australia, Robby and Mat, already emerging as the jokers in the pack.
Logie nominated Sally Phillips, Ben Miller and Michael Theo in Season 2 of ABC comedy drama Austin.
AUSTIN
SUNDAY, 7.30PM, ABC
The first season of this gentle comedy-drama was one of the surprise packages of last year, earning well-deserved Logie nominations for its autistic lead actor Michael Theo in the title role, as well as Ben Miller as his possible long-lost father Julian and Sally Phillips as potential stepmother Ingrid. The second season picks up on the season one cliffhanger, with Austin and Julian about to get the results of a DNA that should settle the matter and shape the future of their personal and professional relationships. Meanwhile, Ingrid is still sleeping in the shed and taking notes of her marital positives and negatives – and whether she'd be better of moving to a women's commune.
Freddie Highmore and Keeley Hawes in The Assassin.
THE ASSASSIN
STAN
Former Spooks star Keeley Hawes is fantastic in the title role of this action-packed, unashamedly bloody, six-part crime thriller from the creators of the Australian-shot The Tourist. Audiences first meet her character Julie as a one-woman killing machine leaving a huge body count and copping a hellacious beating on a mission in Eastern Europe. Three decades later, she's living a booze-soaked and grumpy retirement on a Greek Island when she's visited by her estranged son (Freddie Highmore), now engaged to be married and with questions about his past she's reluctant to answer. But when someone claiming to be her former handler approaches her with her job she can't refuse, she's dragged back into her old violent ways as her professional and personal worlds collide.
Keeley Hawes in the ABC historical drama Miss Austen.
MISS AUSTEN
SUNDAY, 9PM, ABC
This gorgeous, four-part period drama, adapted from Gill Hornby's novel of the same name, purports to answer the question that has long haunted lovers of literature – why did Cassandra Austen burn her famous sister Jane's letters? In a very different role from her turn in The Assassin, the versatile Keeley Hawes plays the older Cassandra, who is trying to rescue the correspondence from her odious sister-in-law Mary to prevent their use in a biography of her husband (and Cassandra's brother), James, while also trying to help free family friend Isabella (Game Of Thrones' Rose Leslie) from the limitations and expectations of unmarried women of the era. As she re-reads the leaders, viewers are taken back to Cassandra's own heartbreak and challenges as a younger woman, as well as those of her talented sister, Jane. It's all bonnets and bows, matchmaking and merriment, tall hats and turns around the room – and right up there with the best Austen adaptations.
Chef Guillaume Brahimi hosts Plat Du Tour on SBS
PLAT DU TOUR
MONDAY, 8PM, SBS FOOD
Now in their sixth season, French chef Guillaume Brahimi's bite-sized Plat du Tour episodes make a tasty side dish to the Tour de France each year and this half-hour special highlights the best of country's northern region. Starting in Lille and moving through culinary centres including Boulogne-sur-Mer and Rouen, the enthusiastic and affable Brahimi shows how to rustle up the region's signature dishes such as Moules-Frite, Le Carpeaux de Valenciennes and a delicious looking French version of the Aussie pie called Tourte Meyennaise by using the best Australian produce. Along the way he also throws in historical titbits about the food and the regions and chats to celebrated Australian chefs.
Actor Ryan Reynolds with Ray Liotta in Smokin' Aces.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT …
SMOKIN' ACES
Streaming, Tubi
EVERYBODY wants to get their hands on Buddy 'Aces' Israel (Jeremy Piven).
Having negotiated an immunity deal with the FBI that would see him serve up
evidence against various Las Vegas underworld figures, Israel is put under the
protection of special agents Messner and Carruthers (Ryan Reynolds and Ray
Liotta) as assorted thugs and contract killers (played by the who's who of Hollywood)
come looking to capture the magician turned mobster. Featuring Jason Bateman as
a dodgy lawyer, Chris Pine as a neo-Nazi, Alicia Keys as an assassin and Ben
Affleck as a laid-back bail bondsman, this film is a rollercoaster of rapid-fire dialogue
and action sequences.
Originally published as 'Thrilling': Eric Bana dazzles in new must-watch Netflix series
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Don't miss out on the headlines from Royals. Followed categories will be added to My News. Queen Mary was stung by a wasp during a royal walkabout in the town square of Gråsten, Denmark, while greeting locals alongside husband King Frederik. Also joining the couple was two of their children, Princess Isabella, 18 and Prince Vincent, 14. The Royal Family was there to officially kick off their summer holiday at Gråsten Palace in southern Jutland. The Tasmanian-born Queen, 53, smiled as she spoke with onlookers and well-wishers, accepting a bouquet of colourful flowers in the process. King Frederik, 57, delivered a short speech, confirming their two other children not in attendance - Crown Prince Christian, 19, and Princess Josephine, 14 - would be joining the family later as well. While the Royal Family stood on stage, the Queen suddenly flinched and touched her leg in clear distress. Both her children and husband rushed over to see what was wrong as she rubbed at her leg. According to Sky News, the Queen asked her family to continue greeting locals while she was quietly escorted into a nearby hotel by security. 'Princess Isabella and Prince Vincent delivered the goods together with King Frederik, and shortly afterwards, Mary came out again from Hotel Det Gamle Rådhus,' Danish media outlet Billed Bladet. 'The queen certainly did not seem to be badly affected by the encounter with the stinging wasp, and she, together with the king, Isabella and Vincent, made sure to greet the many citizens who had gathered in the square.' After footage of Queen Mary being stung started circulating on social media, many commenters quickly praised gracefully how she reacted. 'Queen Mary is just so cool .. no fuss at all! Love her!' wrote one commenter. 'The kids are so polite and lovely shaking hands with everyone and smiling. And poor Mary I hope she's okay!' wrote another. 'She came out after she was bitten by a wasp… so graceful.. love the Royal Family.. they are the best in the world,' was another comment. 'She's an Aussie, of course she's not only beautiful she's tough,' observed another. Queen Mary seemed to recover quickly from being stung and rejoined her family outside. From there, the Royals made their way to Gråsten Palace, where they will spend the next few weeks. Originally published as Queen Mary's shock moment during public event