
Industry: Season 3
HBO's ferocious finance drama returns with its most ambitious season, following Harper, Yasmin, and Robert as they navigate a post-Pierpoint world where the real currency is leverage and the stakes are existential.
“The most electrifying, underrated drama on television. If you watched Succession and wished it were meaner, faster, and younger, Industry is waiting for you. Season 3 is the best entry point the show has ever had.”
Industry has always been underseen and underappreciated, but Season 3 makes a case for being the sharpest drama on television. The show follows young bankers in London's financial district, but calling it a finance show is like calling Succession a show about media. Industry is about what happens to human beings when every relationship becomes transactional.
This season expands the canvas dramatically. Kit Harington joins as Sir Henry Muck, a green-energy magnate whose public virtue conceals private ruthlessness, and his scenes with Myha'la's Harper crackle with the energy of two predators sizing each other up. The show's signature style, dense with jargon and shot with an almost documentary handheld intensity, has never been more confident.
What sets Industry apart from its prestige peers is its refusal to moralize. These characters are not antiheroes being punished for their sins. They are young people operating within a system that rewards exactly the behavior it claims to condemn, and the show is honest enough to show that some of them are genuinely good at it.
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