You may have noticed that Netflix has turned into an all-Harlen Coben channel. I had never heard of him before tv series based on his novels started pushing out all other content, but probably with good reason. The tv series all have identical plots: a dead loved one, a funeral, someone who vanishes, a amily man or woman's "perfect life" starts to unravel due to the dark secrets that they or a loved one are hiding; and LGBT people do not exist. But some of the family men are hunky, so...
1. Michael C. Hall in Safe: A close-up of family man Mikey's wedding ring as he stands at his wife's funeral with his three daughters, one of whom refuses to hold his hand. A year later, he rushes into surgery, then returns to his secure neighborhood to a community barbecue, with nuclear familys playing paddleball and eating burgers.
His teenage daughter still hates him, but not to worry, she'll soon go missing, and her boyfriend will be dead, and there will be secrets and lies.
3. Hubert Milkowski in The Woods: A Polish production. A bearded man has a gun pointed at him. He flashes back to the summer of 1994, in the woods outside a summer camp, where the police are loading a body while gazes fearfully from his hiding place
4. Draegon Hennessey in Hold Tight: A sequel to The Woods. A depressed woman watches a video of her or someone else frolicking with a baby, then a middle aged man frolicking with a toddler.
5. Mario Casas in The Innocent: Mario, who has a black eye, getting a haircut, flashes back to a nightclub full of big-breasted women. He flirts with one, then tells his friend he's leaving because of a big race tomorrow, but she convinces him to stick around, which makes her brother angry.
6. Finnegan Oldfield in Gone for Good: A mother and daughter in formal outfits are frolicking in the back yard of their palatial house, while husband/father Finn looks on dejectedly. He flashes back to kissing her for about three minutes, and is interrupted by an older guys saying "He's out! I can't stand him any more!" in spite of Mom liking him, and is Finn really giving up music for business school?
7. Jack Shalloo or Connor Calland in Stay Close: A British production. Grinning idiotically, a young man makes his way through a Mardi Gras that is not only gay-free, it's man-free, gawking at the breasts, going to a strip show to gawk at more breasts, then chasing someone into the woods to vanish.
8. James Nesbitt. Cut to a nuclear family mom coming in with groceries to gush over her perfect husband and three kids. Her perfect life will start to unravel as secrets and lies about the missing boy emerge. James Nesbitt and Richard Armitage get top billing.
9. Richard Armitage in Fool Me Once: A British production. In 1996, at a ritzy private school, some guys grab the new kid, tie him up, and frolick around a bonfire, but he has some sort of seizure and probably dies.
Cut to the present, a funeral at a palatial mansion, where the widow thinks about meeting and kissing her husband, Richard Armitage. Then she looks at her two kids, and greets the funeral guests, all of whom sputter about why she invited this other person that has no right to be here.
Her perfect life seems unraveled already, but the secrets and lies are just starting. For one thing, hubbie is not dead. But you already guessed that, didn't you?
There are 13 more Harlen Coben novels optioned but not filmed yet. Coming up in 2025:
10. Rudi Dharmalingam in Missing You: A detective's perfect life starts to unravel when her fiance goes missing but shows up on a dating app, and it's all connected to her father's murder. Starring Richard Armitage and James Nesbitt again, but Rudi gets second billing
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