The Terror

7.3
201844m

Production

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Logo for Scott Free Productions

A chilling anthology series featuring stories of people in terrifying situations inspired by true historical events.

Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Terror: 'This Place Wants Us Dead' Season Premiere Official Trailer

The Terror: 'This Place Wants Us Dead' Season Premiere Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: The Terror: 'Ridley Scott on Truth Wrestling with Fiction' Behind the Scenes

The Terror: 'Ridley Scott on Truth Wrestling with Fiction' Behind the Scenes

Thumbnail for video: The Terror: 'Meet the Characters' Behind the Scenes

The Terror: 'Meet the Characters' Behind the Scenes

Thumbnail for video: The Terror: 'What Happened?' Official Teaser

The Terror: 'What Happened?' Official Teaser

Seasons

10 Episodes • Premiered 2018

A Royal Naval expedition voyages into unchartered territory as the crew attempts to discover the Northwest Passage. Faced with treacherous conditions, limited resources, dwindling hope and fear of the unknown, the crew is pushed to the brink of extinction.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 1: Go for Broke

1. Go for Broke

7.5

An accident at sea cripples a Royal Navy expedition 200 miles from finding the Northwest Passage, forcing its captains to make dire choices.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 2: Gore

2. Gore

7.2

After a long winter trapped in the ice, scouting parties are sent out in search of open water. One of the teams makes a frightening discovery.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 3: The Ladder

3. The Ladder

7.4

With something now stalking the ships, the captains debate their options, testing their loyalty to one another against their duty to their crews.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 4: Punished, as a Boy

4. Punished, as a Boy

7.2

A cunning attack on the ships proves the men are not battling an ordinary bear and that the region's Inuit culture may hold a key to their survival.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 5: First Shot a Winner, Lads

5. First Shot a Winner, Lads

7.5

A strange illness begins to show itself while another more familiar one jeopardizes the expedition's most valuable resource: its captain's judgment.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 6: A Mercy

6. A Mercy

7.4

With the end of their provisions in sight, officers contemplate a tough, risky strategy while struggling to raise the men's worsening spirits.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 7: Horrible from Supper

7. Horrible from Supper

7.4

As the men make new attempts to find rescue, a series of shocking events underscores how vulnerable and exposed their situation has become.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 8: Terror Camp Clear

8. Terror Camp Clear

7.7

Deaths under mysterious circumstances create paranoia among the men, and some of the crew may be considering mutiny.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 9: The C, the C, the Open C

9. The C, the C, the Open C

7.4

Hope comes in strange forms, and the question of what the men are willing to do to survive begins to be settled in both noble and horrifying ways.

Still image for The Terror season 1 episode 10: We Are Gone

10. We Are Gone

7.7

The expedition's epic journey reaches its climax as men find themselves in a final confrontation with the Inuit mythology they've trespassed into.

Cast

Photo of Derek Mio

Derek Mio

Chester Nakayama

Photo of Kiki Sukezane

Kiki Sukezane

Yuko Tanabe

Photo of Shingo Usami

Shingo Usami

Henry Nakayama

Photo of Naoko Mori

Naoko Mori

Asako Nakayama

Photo of Miki Ishikawa

Miki Ishikawa

Amy Yoshida

Photo of George Takei

George Takei

Nobuhiro Yamato / Yamato-san

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Reviews

N

Peter McGinn

7/10

I only watched the first season of this anthology show, as the plot of the second didn’t grab me. I have read a lot and watched documentaries about polar exploration. I see how this show came about: the author took the skeleton story of John Franklin’s ill fated expedition of the northwest passage, and repurposed it as an original horror story. Cool, I was on board.

And this televised version did a credible job moving the tale to the screen. It is a passable horror story. And then I see near the byline: Based on actual events, or something like that, and I am thinking, why bother with that? Usually a retelling of actual events is at least hanging close to the original tale, not inventing a monster that kills actual historical people in ways other than starvation and scurvy, followed by possible cannibalism. At this point it begs the question, why not just tell this horror story without clinging to the patina of a historical event? (For example, I believe John Franklin died later in the expedition than portrayed here with actor Ciara Hinds. Why?)

Still, my doubts and questions do not detract from the tension and drama of the series. It was entertaining, which perhaps is the main point, even though I was shaking my head thinking about it afterwards.

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