The Hunting Party Review: NBC’s New Serial Killer Procedural Misses the Mark
NBC’s latest crime drama, The Hunting Party, arrives with the promise of high-stakes thrills: a group of serial killers escapes from a maximum-security prison, and a team of federal investigators must track them down before they wreak havoc. It’s a premise that should be tailor-made for addictive, edge-of-your-seat television. Unfortunately, the execution is anything but gripping. Instead, the series feels like a recycled patchwork of clichés, delivering more yawns than shocks.
A Familiar Premise, Worn Thin
On paper, The Hunting Party has all the ingredients of a compelling network thriller. A “rogue’s gallery” of dangerous fugitives instantly sets up episodic manhunts. Pair that with an ensemble team of investigators, and you have a structure that can sustain years of serialized drama.
This format, at its best, allows for creative reinvention. Each new case could offer fresh moral dilemmas, inventive investigative methods, or richly drawn character arcs. Shows like Mindhunter, Hannibal, and even Criminal Minds have taken similar frameworks and fleshed them out in ways that were stylish, thought-provoking, or chilling.
But The Hunting Party never reaches for originality. Instead, it serves up what feels like a watered-down version of Criminal Minds — only less realistic, less stylish, and far less engaging.
Melissa Roxburgh Can’t Save It
The series stars Melissa Roxburgh, best known for her work in NBC’s Manifest. Roxburgh brings undeniable charisma and commitment to her role as one of the lead investigators. Yet even her presence isn’t enough to lift the material.
Her character is drawn with the same broad strokes as nearly every other network procedural protagonist: haunted by a troubled past, fiercely determined to get justice, and burdened with one-liners designed to sound profound but fall flat. Roxburgh does what she can, but she’s trapped inside a show that gives her little room to explore nuance.
A Supermax Without Substance
One of the supposed draws of The Hunting Party is its setting: a fictional supermax prison where some of the nation’s most notorious criminals are held. When these inmates escape, the setup seems ripe for creative exploration.
Instead, the prison is little more than a convenient plot device. Within the pilot episode, the show races through the jailbreak, assembling its villains with all the depth of a video game character select screen. The escape is neither believable nor tense, and it undermines the premise before the manhunts even begin.
Rather than building richly layered adversaries, The Hunting Party leans on generic archetypes: the calculating mastermind, the sadistic brute, the manipulative femme fatale. None of them stand out as characters worth following week to week.
Style Without Substance
Visually, The Hunting Party offers the muted palettes and moody lighting familiar to network crime dramas. There are plenty of close-ups of determined faces, ominous prison corridors, and high-tech investigative boards plastered with mugshots and red string.
But these stylistic flourishes lack substance. The direction rarely creates genuine suspense, and the dialogue is bogged down in exposition. Instead of drawing viewers deeper into the mystery, the series feels like it’s going through the motions, recycling tropes without a fresh spin.
Why Audiences Might Still Tune In
Despite its shortcomings, The Hunting Party may still draw initial viewers. NBC is strategically launching the show with a sneak preview following the NFL playoffs, guaranteeing exposure to millions of potential viewers. And historically, audiences have shown an insatiable appetite for serial killer stories, even when the execution is mediocre.
Yet the question remains: will anyone stick around once the novelty wears off? With nothing specific or memorable to distinguish itself, the show risks blending into the crowded landscape of procedural dramas that already saturate broadcast television.
Critical Verdict
In many ways, The Hunting Party epitomizes what frustrates critics about network procedurals. The bones of an intriguing concept are there — a serialized manhunt with built-in tension and episodic villains — but the creative ambition is missing. Instead of fleshing out its skeleton with clever twists, complex characters, or fresh perspectives, the show settles for generic storytelling.
As one critic noted, “The Hunting Party is as stripped down and unimaginative a take on this genre as I’ve ever seen.” That assessment rings true: it is a paint-by-numbers procedural in a world where audiences have already seen better, smarter, and scarier versions of this very idea.
Conclusion
NBC’s The Hunting Party had the potential to reinvent the serial killer procedural for a new audience. Instead, it lands as a deadly bore — a show that leans too heavily on genre conventions without adding anything new.
While viewers may initially tune in out of curiosity, or out of habit for crime dramas, there’s little here to keep them coming back. With a glut of options across streaming and cable, audiences expect more than recycled tropes. Unless The Hunting Party evolves quickly, it risks becoming just another forgettable entry in an already oversaturated genre.