Loved the Twists in I Will Find You? These Ten Shows Deliver the Same Gut-Punch Mysteries If Sam Worthington's twisty mystery in I Will Find You left you hooked, these ten shows, from The Undoing to The Outsider to Defending Jacob, bring the same unreliable narrators, shocking reversals and messy family secrets. Netflix's crime thriller has become one of the platform's biggest launches of the year, and it also happens to be the thirteenth series the streamer has built from a Harlan Coben novel, with at least one more Coben adaptation already lined up, this time expected to pair the author with television veteran David E. Kelley. The show in question, I Will Find You, follows Sam Worthington as David Burroughs, a man imprisoned for murdering his own son, only to learn five years into his sentence that the boy might still be alive. It is exactly the kind of setup built for unreliable narrators, jaw dropping reversals and messy personal fallout, and audiences clearly cannot get enough of it. Anyone who tore through the series and wants more of that same nervy, secrets under the surface energy has plenty of company to turn to, most of it unrelated to Coben's own bibliography. The Undoing (2020) David E. Kelley produced this twisty psychodrama, adapted from Jean Hanff Korelitz's bestseller You Should Have Known. Nicole Kidman stars as Grace Fraser, a Manhattan psychologist married to oncologist Jonathan, played by Hugh Grant. Grace keeps running into a woman named Elena, whose increasingly strange behavior unsettles her, and matters only get worse once that woman turns up murdered. Things become truly alarming when Grace tries to reach Jonathan and finds he has vanished, dragging her into a web of secrets and lies that turn out to be far closer to home than she expected. The show is less interested in whether an accusation is false than in a much simpler and scarier question, who can actually be trusted. It streams on HBO Max. The Beast in Me Claire Danes plays Aggie Wiggs, a grieving mother and author who is struggling to write her next book in the aftermath of a tragedy. She redirects her frustration toward her neighbor, a decision that is obviously unwise, especially given that the man was previously accused of murdering his first wife. Matthew Rhys plays that neighbor, Nile Jarvis, and gets pulled deeper into the story as Aggie's investigation grows into something far larger than a single death. It streams on Netflix. Big Mouth This Korean crime drama trades in a mystery that runs more operatic than I Will Find You's, but it plays in a similar sandbox of deception and mistaken identity. Park Chang-ho, played by Lee Jong-suk, is a third-rate lawyer with an abysmal win record, nicknamed Big Mouth by colleagues who see him as all talk and no substance. He gets tangled up with a loan shark and loses a case tied to a scam that he himself ends up a victim of, which sends him crashing to rock bottom. Then, suspiciously on cue, he gets a big break, the mayor wants him to handle a high-profile case. In the process he is mistaken by police for a mysterious con man known as Big Mouse, and finds that the only way to clear his name is to push straight through the danger rather than run from it. It streams on Disney+ and Hulu. The Innocent Another Harlan Coben production, this Spanish-language thriller follows the unexpectedly intertwined lives of two very different people in Barcelona. Mateo Vidal, played by Mario Casas, accidentally killed a man years earlier, a fact that resurfaces to haunt him once his new wife disappears. At the same time, Detective Lorena Ortiz, played by Alexandra Jimenez, is assigned to investigate the death of a nun. The two storylines eventually converge through a string of satisfyingly twisty plot developments. It streams on Netflix. The Outsider This one takes the wrongly accused trope and turns it genuinely brutal, building an apparently impossible mystery. A child is horrifically murdered, and the evidence points decisively to Little League coach Terry Maitland, played by Jason Bateman. It should be an open and shut case, except Maitland was out of town at a conference when the murder happened, and even appeared on a news broadcast from miles away at the time. As more tragedies pile up, it becomes clear the threat at the center of the story is not entirely natural, which makes sense given that the series adapts one of Stephen King's more disturbing recent novels. Cynthia Erivo co-stars as Holly Gibney, one of King's recurring characters. It streams on HBO Max. Presumed Innocent (2024- ) This David E. Kelley legal thriller, adapted from Scott Turow's bestseller and previously turned into a film starring Harrison Ford, spends more time in the courtroom than I Will Find You does, but the underlying setup is strikingly similar. Jake Gyllenhaal plays Rusty Sabich, a prosecutor assigned to investigate the murder of a colleague. His efforts to steer that investigation blow up in his face once it comes out that he had been having an affair with the murdered woman, and that she was pregnant. Rusty quickly becomes the prime suspect, a position his own history of shady behavior does nothing to help. It streams on Apple TV. Defending Jacob Based on the novel by William Landay, this series has a premise that is as clever as it is harrowing. In an upper-class Massachusetts suburb, Andy, played by Chris Evans, and Laurie, played by Michelle Dockery, learn that a classmate of their fourteen-year-old son has been murdered in a local park. What follows is even more shocking, their own son is arrested for the killing. The show is less concerned with a wrongful accusation than with what people are willing to do to protect the people they love, even if those people may genuinely have done something terrible. Strong performances anchor a compelling central mystery that builds to several jaw dropping twists in its final act. It streams on Apple TV. The Night Of Riz Ahmed plays Naz Khan, a Pakistani-American student in New York City. After a night out, Naz wakes up to discover that the woman he spent the night with has been stabbed to death in her bedroom. He flees the scene, gets picked up over a traffic violation, and is quickly identified by witnesses, with the murder weapon still in his coat pocket. He is fairly certain he had nothing to do with the killing, even though his memory of the night is full of holes. He has little of a defense until a worn-out lawyer named John Stone, played by John Turturro, takes the case on a why not basis and finds himself drawn far deeper into it than expected. It streams on HBO Max. Surface The question of how far we can trust our own instincts gets a literal treatment in the story of Sophie Ellis, played by Gugu Mbatha-Raw, who survives an apparent suicide attempt and comes away with huge gaps in her memory. She settles back into life with her husband, only to be shocked to learn that she had been having an affair, and that her husband may have been embezzling money, among other unsavory things. Everything hinges on how much she is willing to trust the men in her life over her own broken memories. It streams on Apple TV. The Staircase Inspired by a documentary of the same name, this series sidesteps standard true crime beats with an almost meta approach to its own story. Colin Firth plays real-life crime novelist Michael Peterson, alongside Toni Collette as his wife, and possibly his victim, Kathleen, who dies after falling down a flight of stairs. Peterson was convicted of murder, a charge later reduced to voluntary manslaughter, but plenty of questions about the case linger, and the drama spends real time on the tangential figures around it, including lawyers, family members, and the French film crew that shows up to document everything, offering a glimpse of what life looks like caught inside that kind of whirlwind. It streams on HBO Max. What this means for you If you have already finished I Will Find You and are stuck deciding what to watch next, this list gives a direct answer. • For viewers: these ten shows are spread across Netflix, HBO Max, Apple TV and Disney+/Hulu, so whichever subscription you already pay for, there is something ready to stream immediately. Questions & Answers 1. Who does Sam Worthington play in I Will Find You and what is the story? He plays David Burroughs, who is imprisoned for murdering his son but learns five years later that the boy might still be alive. 2. Which Harlan Coben adaptation is I Will Find You? It is the thirteenth series Netflix has built from a Harlan Coben novel, with at least one more adaptation already in the works. 3. Which other show on the list is also based on Harlan Coben's work? The Innocent is another Harlan Coben production, a Spanish-language thriller set in Barcelona. 4. What do The Undoing and Presumed Innocent have in common? Both are legal-tinged suspense series produced by David E. Kelley and adapted from bestselling novels. 5. Which show on the list is based on a real-life documentary? The Staircase is inspired by a documentary of the same name and follows the real case of Michael Peterson. 6. Where can these ten shows be streamed? They are available across Netflix, HBO Max, Apple TV, and Disney+ and Hulu. https://trendkia.com/en/entertainment/i-will-find-you-ke-tvista-pasnda-ae-ye-dasa-shoza-bhi-denge-vaisa-hi-saspensa-7723 TrendKia — Har trend, sabse pehle.