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About This Show
McMafia
McMafia is a crime drama that follows Alex Godman, a British-raised son of a Russian family with a past connected to organized crime. He tries to build a legitimate life through business and distance himself from his family’s history. However, when circumstances pull him back toward that world, he is forced to navigate a network that stretches across countries and industries.
The series explores how modern organized crime operates on a global scale, moving through finance, politics, and international connections. It focuses on themes like identity, ambition, and the cost of maintaining control in a system built on influence and secrecy. The tone is calm but tense, with a strong emphasis on realism and character choices rather than action. It presents a measured look at power and the risks that come with it.
CAST
James Norton (Alex Godman), Juliet Rylance (Rebecca Harper), David Strathairn (Semiyon Kleiman), Aleksey Serebryakov (Dmitri Godman), Maria Shukshina (Oksana Godman)PRODUCTION
Cuba PicturesSTREAMING PLATFORM
Netflix
My Opinion About the Show
I found McMafia to be a cold, calculating, and brilliantly executed exploration of the modern criminal underworld, operating on a truly global scale. Unlike traditional mob dramas, the series treats organized crime like a multinational corporation, following a British-raised son of Russian exiles as he is reluctantly pulled back into the world of money laundering and shadow cartels. I was particularly impressed by the show's clinical and sophisticated aesthetic; it swaps dark alleys for glass boardrooms and luxury penthouses, illustrating that today’s most dangerous wars are fought with digital transfers and legal loopholes as much as with violence.
The lead performance is exceptional, capturing a man’s gradual moral erosion with a chilling, understated intensity. I enjoyed how the series maps out the interconnectedness of global corruption, jumping from London and Moscow to Mumbai and Tel Aviv, showing how a single decision in one corner of the world triggers a lethal butterfly effect elsewhere. The writing is incredibly taut, maintaining a high-stakes atmosphere without ever sacrificing its intellectual edge or its grounded sense of realism. It is a sleek, patient, and deeply cynical thriller that feels frighteningly relevant in today’s financial landscape. For those who appreciate a smart, high-production-value look at the evolution of 21st-century crime, this is an absolute masterpiece.
My Rating: 5/5
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