Ready for some backstabbing, lies, romance or murder? Not for real, of course, but to watch with some high-quality shows in May?
These seven drama series on Amazon Prime Video all feature fantastic actors and twisty storylines that will keep you glued to your screen.
Check out these great shows that Watch With Us is recommending you stream this month.
Need more recommendations? Then read Best New Shows to Watch on Netflix, Max, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video and More, Best Comedy Shows to Stream Right Now and Best Shows on Amazon Prime Video Right Now.
'Downton Abbey' (2010-2015)
With six seasons, two movies and a third on the way, Downton Abbey might be one of the most successful period dramas of all time — and with good reason. The story of the Crawleys, a wealthy family who run an estate in the English countryside, is full of upstairs-downstairs drama, romance, scandal and history. It begins in 1912, and the story continues all the way through 1926.
At the heart of this PBS series is the romance between Lady Mary Crawley (Michelle Dockery), the eldest daughter of the family, and distant relative Matthew Crawley, (Dan Stevens), who becomes the heir to the estate (which is not allowed to pass to a woman) when the previous heir dies aboard the Titanic. Mary’s two younger sisters, Edith (Laura Carmichael) and Sybil (Jessica Brown Findlay), are also seeking marriages and daring to dream bigger as rights for women begin to expand.
The staff of Downton also experiences its fair share of romantic drama, especially between valet Mr. Bates (Brendan Coyle) and lady’s maid Anna (Joanne Froggatt). Perhaps the most memorable character of all is Lady Violet, the snarky and sharp Dowager Countess, played by the late, great Maggie Smith. Downton earned 69 Primetime Emmy nominations during its run — the most of any international series.
‘The Boys’ (2019-Present)
If superheroes were real, what would they be like behind the scenes? According to The Boys, not very nice. (That’s an understatement.) This gory, funny and shocking show is based on the popular comics by Garth Ennis and follows Hughie Campbell (Jack Quaid), an ordinary man whose girlfriend is accidentally killed by a speedster superhero. Desperate to get justice, Hughie goes down a rabbit hole that takes him behind the facade of superheroes, which are all controlled by a Marvel-esque corporation called Vought. At the head of the “Supes” is Homelander (Antony Starr), the narcissistic and super-strong head of the crime-fighting team, “The Seven.”
Hughie gets recruited by Billy Butcher (Karl Urban) into a rebel group seeking to expose the collateral damage and excessive harm caused by the Supes and take down Vought. The Boys is one series that seems determined to outdo itself in every episode, and it’s never failed yet. Each season is more grotesque, yet strangely more insightful, than the last. The fifth and final season is on its way, so now’s the perfect time to catch up.
‘Invincible’ (2021-Present)
People who complain about “superhero fatigue” probably aren’t watching Amazon Prime. Not only does the streamer feature The Boys and its spin-off Gen V, which are both excellent, but it also streams the animated drama Invincible, some of the most unique and captivating superhero content we’ve ever seen.
Invincible is the story of Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun, The Walking Dead), a seventeen-year-old boy whose father is Omni-Man (J.K. Simmons), the world’s greatest superhero. When Mark finally develops superpowers of his own, he can’t wait to join his father in saving the world — but Omni-Man’s vision of saving the world turns out to be much darker than Mark could ever have predicted. While The Boys takes a cynical view of almost all superheroes, Invincible presents its genuinely heroic characters with moral dilemmas and complicated questions about family, loyalty and ethics. The stellar voice cast also includes Walton Goggins (The White Lotus) as a ruthless government official, Gillian Jacobs (Community) as powerful heroine Atom Eve and a truly scene-stealing Sandra Oh (Grey’s Anatomy) as Mark’s mother, Debbie. Don’t let the fact that it’s animated fool you — this series is as dark and thoughtful as it gets.
‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’ (2024-Present)
The series adaptation of Mr. and Mrs. Smith has little in common with the movie starring Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt, but it builds on the “married spies” concept and still manages to feel like a worthy successor. “John” (Donald Glover, who co-wrote the series with fellow Atlanta writer Francesca Sloane) and “Jane” (Maya Erskine, Pen15) are recruited to a mysterious spy program that requires them to live as a married couple 24/7. It turns out that there is an entire network of “Johns and Janes” in this program, but the more they learn about the organization they’re working for, the more they doubt whom to trust. All this is complicated by the fact that they find themselves falling in love for real.
Glover and Erskine are engrossing to watch in this spy thriller romance, which has a second season coming sometime in early 2026.
‘A League of Their Own’ (2022)
Though it was an unfortunate victim of COVID-19 cancellations and therefore only ran for one season, this series adaptation of the 1992 film is an underrated gem.
Abbi Jacobson (Broad City) wrote and stars in a new story about the Rockford Peaches, the real-life women’s baseball team who were part of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League during World War II. The series explores elements of the time period that were omitted from the film, like the relationships between queer women on the team.
Carson’s (Jacobson) romance with teammate Greta (D’Arcy Carden, The Good Place) is one of many beautiful and complicated love stories in the show. In a parallel story, Chanté Adams reflects the experience of Black female players at the time in her role as Maxine "Max" Chapman. The witty, warm and complex series is a home run.
'Chuck' (2007-2012)
This spy-dramedy series was originally cancelled after only two seasons, but it developed such a cult following that the fans successfully campaigned for Subway to sponsor the series and bring it back on the air. Chuck follows a college dropout and computer whiz named Chuck Bartowski (Zachary Levi), whose hum-drum life in the “Nerd Herd” at a tech superstore is upended when he accidentally downloads the world’s most sophisticated computer database into his brain. (Don’t worry, it’s less confusing than it sounds.)
Because there’s no way to extract the database, known as the Intersect, from Chuck’s head, he gets recruited by CIA agent Sarah Walker (Yvonne Strahovski) and NSA Major John Casey (Adam Baldwin) to join them on missions and save the world. Packed with action, romance and humor, this series is a wild ride with a warm heart.
‘The Tudors’ (2007-2010)
Ever since Henry VIII started cycling through wives like he was swiping on Bumble, the world has been fascinated with the Tudors. This sensual drama depicts Henry’s (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) many romantic liaisons, as well as the political mores of the era after the establishment of the Church of England. Meyers is intense and magnetic as the young king, and the series also launched the careers of several phenomenal British actors, like Natalie Dormer (who would go on to play Margaery Tyrell on Game of Thrones) and Henry Cavill (who would star in Man of Steel and The Witcher).
The sumptuous costumes and sets are captivating, the drama is delicious and any historical inaccuracies just make the drama more juicy. The Tudors is a period drama turned soap opera, and it's irresistible.
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