Netflix's Black Rabbit review
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Zach Baylin and Kate Susman tell TheWrap about the "Black Rabbit" ending and saying goodbye to Jason Bateman's Vince.
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‘Black Rabbit’ Review: Jude Law and Jason Bateman Lead Netflix’s Blandly Bleak Antihero Drama
Mix 'The Bear,' 'Uncut Gems' and a lot of 'Ozark' and you get this eight-part limited series about two bumbling brothers trying to set things right in Brooklyn.
Black Rabbit will be available on Netflix from Midnight Pacific Time (PT) on September 18, 2025/3 am Eastern Time (ET). You will need a Netflix subscription to stream Black Rabbit. A standard subscription with ads is $7.99 per month, and a standard no-ads subscription starts at $17.99 per month.
Created and written by “King Richard” screenwriter Zach Baylin and co-writer Kate Susan, “Black Rabbit” throws us into the abyss nearly immediately, as Law’s suave restaurateur Jake Friedkin celebrates the opening night of his swanky New York eatery Black Rabbit with,
The sometimes overstuffed thriller also stars Oscar winner Troy Kotsur, Dagmara Dominczyk, Amaka Okafor and Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù.
Jake currently owns the successful New York bar/restaurant/hang Black Rabbit. He’s divorced, and hasn’t seen his brother in years, but otherwise thinks his life is good and that things are looking up.
In many ways, Netflix's "Black Rabbit" is as straightforward as it gets. The limited series follows its leads, estranged brothers Jake (Jude Law) and Vince Friedkin (Jason Bateman), as the latter's debts force them into increasing danger.
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Black Rabbit season 1 episode 6 recap: The robbery's jaw-dropping twist we didn't see coming
In Black Rabbit episode 6, multiple POVs are explored on the night of the deadly robbery shootout, and one of the two robbers will definitely come as a surprise.