Q Wave’s Watchlist: March 2026

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Daredevil: Born Again (Disney+)
Hell’s Kitchen is calling him back. Daredevil: Born Again marks the long-awaited return of Matt Murdock to the spotlight, bringing Charlie Cox’s fan-favorite vigilante fully into the Marvel Cinematic Universe in a gritty new chapter streaming on Disney+ starting March 4th.
Cox reprises his role as the blind lawyer by day, relentless street-level hero by night, once again walking the razor-thin line between justice and vengeance. Across from him stands Vincent D’Onofrio’s Wilson Fisk, whose quiet, calculating menace looms larger than ever as he maneuvers his way back into political and criminal power. Their rivalry, one built on ideology as much as fists, remains the dark, beating heart of the series.
While Born Again reconnects with the tone that made the original series a standout, moody corridors, bone-crunching fight choreography, and moral complexity, it also pushes the story forward. Matt is older, wearier, and questioning whether the mask still helps or only deepens the cycle of violence. As corruption tightens its grip on the city, alliances shift, old faces resurface, and the cost of being a hero feels steeper than ever.
Balancing legal drama with bruising action, Daredevil: Born Again proves that even in a universe of gods and super-soldiers, sometimes the most compelling battles happen in the shadows.
You’d like this if you enjoyed: The Punisher, The BatmanRuntime: 9 episodes
Genre: Superhero, Crime Drama
Rooster (Crave)
On March 8th, Steve Carell returns to television comedy in Rooster, a new HBO Max series streaming on Crave from Ted Lasso creator Bill Lawrence. Set on a chaotic college campus, the show follows Greg Russo, a once-celebrated novelist who unexpectedly finds himself embedded in university life after arriving to support his daughter through a rough patch. What begins as a short visit quickly spirals into something far more complicated.
Greg is known for writing a beloved fictional character named “Rooster,” and students cannot separate the author from his creation. Suddenly, he is navigating faculty politics, student drama, generational clashes, and his own fading cultural relevance, all while trying, and often failing, to be the steady parent his daughter needs. The result is a comedy that balances sharp academic satire with emotional undercurrents about aging, identity, and second chances.
Carell feels right at home here. The role leans into the awkward sincerity and emotional volatility that made him unforgettable on The Office, but with a more seasoned edge. Bill Lawrence’s involvement suggests a blend of heartfelt character growth and fast-paced humor, closer in tone to Shrinking or Ted Lasso than a traditional laugh-track sitcom.
You’d like this if you enjoyed: Ted Lasso, ShrinkingRuntime: 10 episodes
Genre: Comedy
Jury Duty Presents: Company Retreat (Prime Video)
After the breakout success of Jury Duty, the hidden-camera comedy that turned an unsuspecting juror into a viral hit, Prime Video takes the concept out of the courtroom and into the corporate world with Jury Duty Presents: Company Retreat. The new season flips the script by dropping one real person into an entirely staged company offsite, where every colleague, activity, and awkward interaction has been carefully orchestrated by actors.
This time the focal figure is Anthony, a recently hired temp who believes he has been brought on to help organize a team retreat for a family-owned hot sauce company. What he does not realize is that the retreat is not real. It is an elaborate hoax designed to see how far they can push the traditional workplace comedy setup, with scripted bosses, bizarre team-building exercises, and an evolving corporate power struggle playing out around him.
The social experiment returns on March 20th.
You’d like this if you enjoyed: Jury Duty, The Rehearsal
Runtime: 8 episodes
Genre: Comedy
Young Sherlock (Prime Video)
Prime Video brings a fresh take on a timeless literary figure with Young Sherlock, an eight-episode mystery series that explores the origin story of Sherlock Holmes before he became the legendary detective. Adapted from Andrew Lane’s novels and directed by Guy Ritchie, the series blends action, wit, and period adventure.
Set in 1870s Oxford, the story follows a 19-year-old Sherlock Holmes who is intelligent but unpolished and far from the master detective fans know so well. When a murder at the university threatens his freedom, he sets out to clear his name and uncovers a conspiracy that stretches beyond the campus. Along the way, he begins developing the skills and instincts that will one day define him.
The cast includes Hero Fiennes Tiffin as Holmes, alongside Joseph Fiennes, Natascha McElhone, Colin Firth, and Max Irons.
All eight episodes will be available to stream on March 4th.
You’d like this if you enjoyed: Sherlock, Luther
Runtime: 8 episodes
Genre: Mystery, Adventure
Imperfect Women (Apple TV+)
Imperfect Women arrives on Apple TV+ as a tense psychological drama built around friendship, secrets, and the fallout from a shocking crime. Based on the novel by Araminta Hall, this eight-episode limited series stars Elisabeth Moss, Kerry Washington, and Kate Mara as three lifelong friends whose lives begin to unravel when one of them is at the center of a devastating death.
Premiering March 18th with two episodes and rolling out weekly through April 29th, the series dives into the emotional aftermath of tragedy. As the investigation unfolds, hidden motives and unresolved tensions surface, forcing each woman to confront guilt, betrayal, and the fragile bonds that have held them together for years.
Alongside its central trio, the cast includes Joel Kinnaman, Corey Stoll, Leslie Odom Jr., Sandrine Holt, and Ana Ortiz.
You’d like this if you enjoyed: Big Little Lies, The Undoing
Runtime: 8 episodes
Genre: Thriller, Drama