best tv shows on max by genre
This article is updated frequently as titles leave and enter Max. *New additions are indicated with an asterisk.
While the headlines have been more about how HBO Max is changing into Max in the wake of Warner Bros.’ merger with Discovery, there’s still so much television greatness on the revised streaming giant. It helps to have the (mostly) the entire catalog of the best cable company in history to pull from to populate a streaming service. HBO changed TV, and they’re using the power of that legacy to try and change streaming too. To keep this list in check, we decided to limit it to shows that are all wrapped up: either mini-series or multi-season shows that have aired their finales. So, yeah, you can use Max to catch up on The Last of Us and Succession too, but they won’t be on here until they’re done. (Although ongoing Max originals like Hacks are included.) Expect regular updates with new gems.
This Month’s Critic’s Pick
Our Flag Means Death
Year: 2022-2023
Length: 2 seasons, 18 episodes
Creator: David Jenkins
Loosely based on a true story, this pirate comedy developed over its first season to become a moving tale of identity and LGBTQ+ representation. It starts as the tale of a gentleman named Stede (Rhys Darby) who decides to become a pirate, crossing paths with the legendary Blackbeard (Taika Waititi, doing career-best acting work), but it becomes a rich ensemble piece about a bunch of people who had to sail the seven seas to figure out who they are. Unfortunately cut short after two seasons, it’s still funny, goofy, and movingly romantic.
Drama
Band of Brothers
Year: 2001
Length: 1 season, 10 episodes
Creators: Tom Hanks, Steven Spielberg
One of the best limited TV series of all time, 2001’s Band of Brothers was a momentous achievement, something that really doesn’t get the attention it deserves for shifting the TV landscape. This landmark in the medium was created by Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg, adapted from the WWII history book of the same name by Stephen E. Ambrose, and it’s quite simply one of the best things that ever aired on TV. Pay tribute to the brave men who fought in WWII in this deeply personal, moving blend of history and filmmaking.
Barry
Years: 2018-2023
Length: 4 seasons, 32 episodes
Creators: Alec Berg, Bill Hader
When it premiered, who could have expected that Bill Hader’s first HBO series would be one of the best in the history of the network? The SNL star plays Barry Berkman, a hitman who ends up in Hollywood when a job drops him there. Somehow, this show that started off promising fulfilled all of its potential, getting more ambitious and brilliant with each season. The TV landscape won’t be the same without it.
Boardwalk Empire
Years: 2009-2014
Length: 5 seasons, 56 episodes
Creator: Terence Winter
After The Sopranos, one of that show’s most prominent voices, Terence Winter, teamed up with Martin Scorsese to adapt Nelson Johnson’s non-fiction book about the chaos of the prohibition era. It’s a mesmerizing drama that hits some peaks that are as high as anything that was on HBO at the time. Steve Buscemi stars as Nucky Thompson in one of the most lavishly detailed period dramas ever to air on television. Buscemi is great, but this one hums because of its supporting cast, including great turns from Michael Shannon, Shea Whigham, Michael Stuhlbarg, Michael Kenneth Williams, and, most of all, Jack Huston.
Chernobyl
Year: 2019
Length: 1 season, 5 episodes
Creator: Craig Mazin
Before The Last of Us, Craig Mazin helmed one of the most acclaimed miniseries of all time in this five-part drama that horrifically details the failure of a world power to respond to an international crisis. It was downright prophetic and feels even more urgent now in the era of Covid and the War in Ukraine. Jared Harris, Emily Watson, and Stellan Skarsgard earned worldwide raves for their work here in a drama that perfectly balances sociopolitical commentary, relatable performances, and historical detail about a disaster made worse by the governmental response to it.
Deadwood
Years: 2004-2006
Length: 3 seasons, 36 episodes
Creator: David Milch
One of the best television shows of all time returned to HBO in 2019 over a decade after its cancellation in the form of Deadwood: The Movie. If you’re wondering why fans were so excited to revisit David Milch’s Western, now is the time for an education. This is one of the smartest, deepest shows in the history of television, a program that takes what we think we know about history and the Old West and uses it to tell human stories that resonate today. It’s also got arguably the best overall ensemble in TV history.
Enlightened
Years: 2011-2013
Length: 2 seasons, 18 episodes
Creators: Mike White, Laura Dern
With Big Little Lies and Marriage Story, everyone finally fell in love with Laura Dern. It was about time. If you’re late to the Dern Train, do yourself a favor and check out her brilliant character work as Amy Jellicoe on Mike White’s two-season dramedy from over a decade ago now. Dern and White completely reinvented the cliché of the character who hits rock bottom with this razor-sharp dramedy, which co-stars Luke Wilson, Diane Ladd, Jason Mantzoukas, Robin Wright, Molly Shannon, and Dermot Mulroney. It’s a shame we only got two seasons, but they’re both perfect.
ER
Years: 1994-2009
Length: 15 seasons, 331 episodes
Creator: Michael Crichton
It’s hard to explain to young people how massive this NBC hit was in its prime. People now may write it off as a standard medical drama, but this was must-see television that transcended its old-fashioned structure to perfectly balance character work and moving case studies. It won 23 Emmys (along with almost 100 other awards), and made George Clooney a star. And it’s so easily rewatchable, a perfect drama for a streamer like Max.
I May Destroy You
Year: 2020
Length: 1 season, 12 episodes
Creator: Michaela Coel
Arguably the best thing to air on TV in all of 2020, this mini-series stars Michaela Coel (who also wrote and co-directs the show) as Arabella, a modern young woman who is raped one night, and spends the series trying to piece together the details about what happened to her. The masterstroke here is one of tone with Coel never taking her subject matter anything less than seriously but also not leaning into traditional melodrama or case-of-the-week clichés. She taps into something modern and true in this moving, funny, riveting experience.
The Leftovers
Years: 2014-2017
Length: 3 seasons, 28 episodes
Creator: Damon Lindelof, Tom Perrotta
One of the best shows of the 2010s is this Damon Lindelof adaptation of the book by Tom Perrotta. It only ran for three seasons, but it had such an impact on those who watched it that it made most lists of the best dramas of the last decade. This is a show that people are going to discover and rediscover for years to come and will soon be recognized among the best in HBO history, if it’s not already.
The Knick
Years: 2014-2015
Length: 2 seasons, 20 episodes
Creators: Jack Amiel, Michael Begler
There have been rumblings that this landmark drama will return soon under the guidance of Barry Jenkins. He’s reportedly going to bring the great Andre Holland back as Dr. Algernon C. Edwards, continuing the story that abruptly ended when Cinemax canceled this critical darling back in 2017. Go back and watch the first two seasons and marvel at one of the smartest shows of the 2010s. Clive Owen plays a doctor at the turn of a medical revolution. His arc is fascinating, but it’s the world-building and richness of the entire ensemble that made this show so memorable.
Mare of Easttown
Year: 2021
Length: 1 season, 7 episodes
Creator: Brad Ingelsby
Kate Winslet does some of the best acting work of her career as a Philly detective investigating a murder in her small town while battling the demons of the unsolved case that haunts her. Winslet won an Emmy for her work in a show that also won Outstanding Supporting Actor for Evan Peters, Outstanding Supporting Actress for Julianne Nicholson, and Outstanding Limited Series. It’s a perfectly calibrated mix of mystery and character work. One only wishes there were more shows like it.
Oz
Years: 1997-2003
Length: 6 seasons, 56 episodes
Creator: Tom Fontana
HBO’s reshaping of the TV landscape didn’t start with The Sopranos. While David Chase’s wildly successful show often gets credit as an influencer, it feels like not enough people recognize that Tom Fontana’s Oz came before it and was really one of the key programs to make it clear that “It’s not TV, it’s HBO” was more than just a slogan. Still a program that would be powerful and searing if it aired two decades later, Oz is one of the cable network’s most essential building blocks.
Pushing Daisies
Years: 2007-2009
Length: 2 seasons, 22 episodes
Creator: Bryan Fuller
The creator of Hannibal also gave us this twisted genre gem, a show that blended morbid humor and genuine character work into a mix that was just too weird for ABC. Lee Pace is fantastic as Ned, an ordinary pie-maker who just happens to be able to resurrect dead things with his touch. Working with characters played by Anna Friel, Kristin Chenoweth, and Chi McBride, Ned solves murder mysteries in a show that was unlike anything else on TV then or now.
The Sopranos
Years: 1999-2007
Length: 6 seasons, 86 episodes
Creator: David Chase
Often cited as the best TV show of all time, David Chase’s award-winning masterpiece can truly be credited with altering the landscape forever. Who knew when Tony Soprano sat down to talk to his therapist about panic attacks that a cultural phenomenon would come from it? The first season of The Sopranos is a perfect season of television. Just watch it and try not to be hooked enough to watch it all. Maybe even twice.
Succession
Years: 2018-2023
Length: 4 seasons, 39 episodes
Creator: Jesse Armstrong
Maybe you’ve heard of it? The most acclaimed HBO show since the end of Game of Thrones, this drama only got more popular with each passing season, ending at the top of its game in 2023. Its final season has become one of the most Emmy-nominated in history, as creator Jesse Armstrong concluded the story of the Roy family (at least for now) with a hysterical, moving season.
The Sympathizer
Year: 2024
Length: 1 season, 7 episodes
Creators: Park Chan-wook, Don McKellar
The director of Oldboy and Decision to Leave co-adapts the 2015 novel of the same name by Viet Thanh Nguyen, and beautifully directs the first three episodes. Hoa Xuande stars as the unnamed protagonist, a North Vietnamese plant in the South Vietnam army in the final days of the war. After moving to Los Angeles, he becomes an advisor on a problematic war film and continues to convey information back to his homeland. Sharply made and the rare modern program that feels like it was written for adults, it co-stars recent Oscar winner Robert Downey Jr. in multiple memorable roles.
Tokyo Vice
Years: 2022-present
Length: 2 seasons, 18 episodes
Creator: J.T. Rogers
Much was made of the fact that the legendary Michael Mann directed the pilot of this Max original, but it has moved away from his creation, anchored more by the great Alan Poul as it’s developed. Based on Jake Adelstein’s non-fiction novel about being an American reporter in Japan, it stars Ansel Elgort and Ken Watanabe in a story of corruption and the criminal underworld. It’s still kind of finding its voice, but it’s the kind of show that deserves the time to do so.
True Detective
Years: 2014-
Length: 4 seasons, 30 episodes
Creators: Nic Pizzolato, Issa Lopez
They may have never quite topped the brilliance of the first season, which stands as one of the best mystery mini-series of all time, but this anthology show has arguably never faltered, and got new life in 2024 with the arrival of Night Country, a sort of spiritual spin-off with excellent work from Jodie Foster and Kali Reis. Some fans of the original three seasons may not like it, but True Detective is undeniably back and changing for a new generation.
The West Wing
Years: 1999-2006
Length: 7 seasons, 154 episodes
Creator: Aaron Sorkin
It’s amazing how quickly this NBC hit has become almost comforting in its view of a rosier time on the political scene. Escape one of the most divisive times in this country’s history to what’s widely considered one of the best TV dramas of all time. There’s a reason that the Writers Guild of America put The West Wing in the top ten of the best-written shows ever.
Warrior
Year: 2019-2023
Length: 3 seasons, 30 episodes
Creator: Jonathan Tropper
For way too long, this show was in a kind of limbo, airing on Cinemax but not playing on HBO Max before it was called Max. (Sigh.) Fans of this show based on a treatment by the legendary Bruce Lee caused enough of a stir that it was eventually renewed for Max exclusively, airing a third season on the streaming service. It’s a sharply made piece of action television that unfolds in the late 19th century in San Francisco, a hotbed of violence between warring Chinese factions.
The Wire
Years: 2002-2008
Length: 5 seasons, 60 episodes
Creator: David Simon
Television doesn’t get more ambitious than David Simon’s five-season examination of life in a modern city. Using Baltimore as his template, Simon looks at every aspect of urban life, starting with what first seems like a simple-but-smart look at cops and criminals and expanding the canvas to include dock workers, educators, journalists, and politicians over the course of the series run. There’s a reason some people consider this the best show in the history of television.
Comedy
Friends
Years: 1994-2004
Length: 10 seasons, 236 episodes
Creators: David Crane, Marta Kauffman
One of the things that put Max on the map was gaining exclusive streaming rights to one of the biggest comedies of all time. A previous smash on Netflix, this is just a perfect show for streaming. It’s easy to zone out to the familiar comedic rhythms of Ross, Rachel, Chandler, Joey, Monica, and Phoebe. Some of the comedy is undeniably dated now, but it’s easy to still appreciate the chemistry of this incredible cast.
Hacks
Year: 2021-present
Length: 2 seasons, 18 episodes
Creators: Lucia Aniello, Paul W. Downs, Jen Statsky
Star Jean Smart is two-for-two on Emmy wins for Best Actress in a Comedy for this Max series about an aging comedienne who is partnered with a writer from a different generation (the underrated Hannah Einbinder) to rejuvenate her career. Smart is the center of a show with very smart writing in every episode, and she’s giving one of those all-timer performances, perfectly capturing the blend of ego and insecurity that comes with aging in Hollywood.
Veep
Years: 2012-2019
Length: 7 seasons, 65 episodes
Creator: Armando Iannucci
When people write the history books about television comedy, Julia Louis-Dreyfus’s performance as Selina Meyer will need its own chapter. When someone dominates a genre so much that they win multiple Emmys, it can often feel like overkill, but it’s impossible to deny that JLD has deserved every single one. Her comic timing here is literally perfect, and she’s supported by one of modern TV’s best ensembles too.
Horror, Sci-Fi, and Fantasy
Fringe
Years: 2008-2013
Length: 5 seasons, 100 episodes
Creators: J.J. Abrams, Alex Kurtzman, Roberto Orci
After the massive success of Lost, J.J. Abrams delivered his riff on The X-Files in this smart, creative sci-fi show on FOX that never really became a huge hit but developed a very loyal fan base. Anna Torv (recently seen in The Last of Us) plays Olivia Dunham, an FBI agent who becomes involved with a mad scientist named Walter (the spectacular John Noble) and his troubled son Peter (Joshua Jackson). They work in the Fringe Division of the FBI, where, well, weird things happen.
Game of Thrones
Years: 2011-2019
Length: 8 seasons, 73 episodes
Creators: David Benioff, D.B. Weiss
It ended in a flurry of thinkpieces and complaints but there are definite peaks in the run of Game of Thrones, particularly in early seasons. And now you can sit back and take in the entirety of this fantasy epic, something that feels a bit like an end of a TV era. Our very own Matt Zoller Seitz even suggested as much when the finale ran. Will there ever be another Game of Thrones? There certainly isn’t one yet (although The Last of Us came close).
Station Eleven
Years: 2021-2022
Length: 1 season, 10 episodes
Creator: Patrick Somerville
Deep in the peak of a variant spike in the pandemic, Max dropped its best original offering to date, a timely examination of the need for hope in a decimated world. Mackenzie Davis stars in the story of what happens after the end of civilization, which may have seemed too familiar or too current for some people, but this is a remarkably rewarding examination of the power of connection and the need for expression, even after everything has fallen apart. We need to put some things back together to stay sane.
Watchmen
Year: 2019
Length: 1 season, 9 episodes
Creator: Damon Lindelof
One of the best shows of 2019 was this Damon Lindelof mini-series adaptation of the classic graphic novel by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons that serves more as a sequel than a classic interpretation. Regina King is mind blowing as a Tulsa police officer thrust into an investigation about the death of her superior that leads her to confront the very racist past of our country. Visually striking and thematically powerful, this is about as good as TV gets.
Documentary
Conan O’Brien Must Go
Year: 2024-
Length: 1 season, 4 episodes
Creator: Conan O’Brien
One of the funniest men in the world had a moment in early 2024 thanks to an hysterical Hot Ones appearance, but that was promotion for his latest reality/comedy series, the incredibly funny and twisted Conan O’Brien Must Go. Recalling the great remotes he did on his talk shows, the series takes O’Brien to Norway, Argentina, Thailand, and Ireland. Goofy hijinks ensue.
Ren Faire
Year: 2024
Length: 1 season, 3 episodes
Creators: Lance Oppenheim, David Gauvey Herbert
Imagine Succession at a Renaissance Festival, and now imagine it’s all true. The director of Some Kind of Heaven helmed this fascinating three-part docuseries about the country’s largest such event, and the founder who is having trouble letting it go. Produced by the Safdie brothers, it’s the tale of an octogenarian named George Coulam, who berates his employees when he isn’t online dating at Olive Garden. Ren Faire is like nothing else on TV.