“‘Malice’: Prime Video’s New Twisted Thriller Promises Wealth, Secrets, and Revenge — Starring Jack Whitehall and David Duchovny”
Power. Privilege. Deception. Malice — Prime Video’s latest UK original series — is about to expose the dark underbelly of the elite in what’s already being called “the next White Lotus.”
Created by James Wood, best known for the BAFTA-winning sitcom Rev., the six-part psychological thriller swaps laughs for tension, exploring the fine line between charm and manipulation. The series, set between London and Greece, follows a magnetic stranger whose obsession with a wealthy family spirals into obsession, deceit, and destruction.
A Sun-Soaked Nightmare
The story begins with Adam Healey (Jack Whitehall) — a seemingly harmless and charismatic private tutor. When he encounters the glamorous Tanner family during their luxury holiday on the Greek coast, he appears to be the perfect companion: intelligent, attentive, and impossibly charming.
But as Malice quickly reveals, Adam is far more dangerous than he seems. When the family’s nanny falls suddenly and mysteriously ill, he seizes his opportunity — insinuating himself deeper into the Tanners’ lives and ultimately following them home to London.
What begins as curiosity soon turns into something sinister. Adam’s motives are not kindness, but vengeance. Beneath his polished charm lies a long-buried resentment toward Jamie Tanner (David Duchovny), the family patriarch — a powerful businessman whose spotless reputation hides decades of questionable decisions.
“Adam isn’t just trying to fit in — he’s out for blood,” teases creator James Wood. “This is about envy, power, and the lengths people will go to for retribution.”
The Family That Has Everything — Except Peace
The Tanner family embodies wealth and influence — but also secrecy and emotional decay. Jamie, portrayed by David Duchovny (The X-Files, Californication), is a man used to being in control. His wife, Nat Tanner (Carice van Houten) of Game of Thrones fame, hides her own web of guilt and frustration. Together, they maintain a carefully curated image of luxury and unity — until Adam arrives.
Gradually, Adam’s manipulations begin to fracture their lives. He pits husband against wife, parent against child, until the Tanners’ world of privilege begins to crumble under paranoia and distrust.
When Jamie starts connecting the dots — mysterious accidents, whispered lies, business deals gone wrong — he begins to suspect that Adam is behind it all. But by then, it might already be too late.
“It’s a story about how fragile power really is,” says Wood. “When your world is built on image and money, it only takes one lie — one person — to bring it all crashing down.”
A Cast of Complexity and Charisma
Casting Jack Whitehall — known primarily for his comedic roles — as a psychological villain was a bold choice, and one that’s already generating buzz. Whitehall’s portrayal of Adam reportedly taps into something viewers haven’t seen from him before: quiet menace masked by wit and elegance.
Opposite him, David Duchovny brings his signature blend of charm and cynicism, embodying a man forced to confront both his own corruption and the threat that’s slipped into his home.
Meanwhile, Carice van Houten adds emotional gravity as Nat, the morally torn wife who begins to suspect that the family’s newest “friend” may not be who he claims to be.
Supporting roles include Lydia Leonard (Gentleman Jack), Toby Stephens, and Jessica Gunning — rounding out a cast that blends British prestige with Hollywood pedigree.
Glamour, Deceit, and the Illusion of Control
Shot across London’s high society enclaves and the sun-drenched cliffs of Greece, Malice is visually striking — a sharp contrast between paradise and corruption. The series explores themes of class, obsession, and identity through a lens of shimmering luxury.
“It’s beautiful on the surface, but everything underneath is rotten,” says Wood. “That duality is what makes Malice so compelling.”
Cinematographer Rob Hardy (Mission: Impossible – Fallout, Ex Machina) brings his trademark tension and visual precision to the project, creating a world that feels both seductive and claustrophobic — a paradise that slowly becomes a prison.
The Next Great Streaming Obsession?
Early test screenings and critical previews suggest Malice could be one of Prime Video’s biggest hits of the year. The series has been described as a “sunlit thriller with a pitch-black heart,” combining the glamour of The White Lotus with the slow-burn psychological tension of You and Gone Girl.
Fans have already begun dissecting the trailer online, with theories swirling about Adam’s true past and the nature of his connection to the Tanners.
“Everyone’s hiding something,” says Carice van Houten. “That’s what makes it addictive — no one is innocent, and every episode twists the knife a little deeper.”
A Modern Parable of Power and Payback
At its core, Malice is about how power corrupts — and how resentment festers in the shadows of privilege. It’s a story of revenge disguised as redemption, told through lavish settings and morally fractured characters.
For Jack Whitehall, it’s a career-defining turn. For David Duchovny, a return to form. And for viewers, it promises to be six hours of suspense, betrayal, and breathtaking deceit.
“It’s the kind of show that makes you question every smile,” Wood says. “Because in Malice, nothing — and no one — is what they seem.”
Premiere Details
Malice premieres this spring exclusively on Prime Video, streaming in over 240 countries and territories.
Whether it becomes the next White Lotus or something darker entirely, one thing’s certain: this is not a show to watch casually.
Because in the glittering world of Malice, beauty hides danger — and revenge never sleeps.