
Why watch Suspicion
Kunal Nayyar trades his sitcom charm for genuine desperation in this propulsive kidnapping thriller that asks a deceptively simple question: if you're innocent, why does the whole world think you're guilty? Suspicion grabs you in the first frame and doesn't let go—four strangers caught in a nightmare that escalates with each accusation, each lie detector, each piece of manufactured evidence.
The show moves with the relentless momentum of a Mindhunter episode, but tighter and meaner. Director Andy Hay orchestrates mounting paranoia across eight episodes that feel like one long exhale: every frame drips with the claustrophobia of being framed, every character moment lands with weight. The cast—especially Campbell and Nayyar—nail the raw panic of people watching their lives implode in real time, no safety net, no escape route.
This is for anyone who binged The Undoing or got hooked on Unbelievable. What Suspicion does differently is refuse easy answers. By the finale, you'll still be arguing about who's actually guilty, and that uncertainty will haunt you long after the credits roll. The final twist alone will have you immediately texting friends to watch it.
— The What2Watch desk · US
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The story
Four ordinary Brits are accused of kidnapping the son of a prominent U.S. media mogul. They embark on a desperate race against time to prove their innocence, but will anyone believe them—and are they telling the truth?
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