





Take a moment to stretch your jaw, which has probably dropped repeatedly over the past year thanks to 2025’s many shocking moments in film and television. So many stories incorporated sudden goodbyes, unexpected endings, and huge plot twists that made us see things in a different way.
These scenes left us either stunned in front of our screens as the credits rolled or frantically scrolling through fan theories about what we’d just seen. Here are 10 of the most shocking moments in Netflix movies and TV shows in 2025. Warning: lots and lots of spoilers ahead.





Season 2 dives straight into the latest at the hair-care dynasty, where former exotic dancer Kimmie (Taylor Polidore Williams) is now COO. Part 1 ends with Bellarie son Charles (Steven G. Norfleet) attempting to dismember the murdered club employees who tried to rob him — to the horror of his attorney, Varney (Terrell Carter) — and then the two of them being mysteriously held at gunpoint. By whom? All will be revealed when the back half of Season 2 debuts on March 19, 2026.

Brotherly love, indeed. This limited series centers on two siblings: Vince (Jason Bateman), a debt-ridden gambler, and Jake (Jude Law), an up-and-coming restaurateur. After mobsters drive them to robbery and murder, Vince sacrifices himself for his brother — but not before confessing to the police so Jake is home free. “We always knew that the show was going to be a tragedy,” said series co-creator Kate Susman, “but I think Vince’s final act is done with love and kindness in his heart.”

The third season of the political drama — starring Keri Russell as Kate Wyler, an American ambassador to the United Kingdom — is bursting with betrayals. But the biggest is that Kate may have been double-crossed by her own husband, the recently appointed vice president, Hal Wyler (Rufus Sewell), with the help of the new president, Grace Penn (Allison Janney). “It’s the time when Kate and Hal’s relationship really falls apart,” said series creator Debora Cahn. “It’s the time when the US–UK relationship really falls apart.”

Sometimes, love is sacrifice. In this sci-fi adventure, Michelle (Millie Bobby Brown) searches for her brother Christopher (Woody Norman), who she’d long believed was dead. She learns instead that Christopher’s still-living body and genius brain is powering the mainframe of a network of robotic weaponry, and she decides to shut down his life functions in order to save the world. “That letting go was very therapeutic and cathartic for her,” said Brown. “It’s exactly what she needed to move forward in her life.”

Multiple murders take place amid the show’s conservative socialite scene, but the central whodunit revolves around teenager Abby (Madison Wolfe). It turns out that Margo (Malin Akerman) killed Abby after Abby accused her of having a relationship with Abby’s boyfriend and secretly getting an abortion. Margo pulled the trigger the same night she and Sophie (Brittany Snow) began their affair. Expect more shockers in Season 2, said executive producer Rebecca Cutter: “I can’t wait to take the audience on another sexy, twisted, batshit crazy ride through Maple Brook.”

Season 9, which brought the dating experiment to Denver, made history as the first season to end without anyone tying the knot. The latter episodes follow three engaged couples, but only two make it to the altar — and none of them say “I do.” “I’m honestly surprised this is the first season where nobody got married,” said series creator Chris Coelen. “We root for them to make the decisions they feel are right for themselves. And I think that’s what happened here.”

Love is on the syllabus for Anna (Sofia Carson), an American student at the University of Oxford. She dates a charming local, Jamie (Corey Mylchreest), only to learn his secret: He’s terminally ill with a disease that also killed his brother, and he’s decided to forgo treatment. Jamie’s death “reaffirms in every frame that life is too short to not live it in love, to not live it in joy, and to not live it in complete and utter fulfillment,” Carson said.

The first season of the sci-fi/horror series begins with Will Byers (Noah Schnapp) vanishing into the Upside Down. Fast forward to the fifth and final season, whose first batch of episodes end on an epic cliffhanger: Will has powers, and he uses them to take control of the Demogorgons and Vecna’s mind in order to rescue his friends. “It felt right for the story to come full circle,” said series co-creator Ross Duffer. “If anyone was going to be the key to ending Vecna, it needed to be Will.” More twists are likely on the way, as the season’s remaining episodes drop on Christmas Day and New Year’s Eve.

Taraji P. Henson stars in this emotional drama as Janiyah, a struggling single mother who is trying to care for her ill daughter Aria (Gabby Jackson) and, as her day goes from bad to worse, can’t seem to catch a break. But there’s a big shocker when Janiyah receives a phone call, revealing that Aria died of a seizure the night before. Janiyah realizes that, out of heartbreak, she’s actually been hallucinating her daughter all day. The twist reframes everything that happened before it.

The cyberbullying started with suspicious texts from a blocked number to 13-year-old Lauryn Licari and her then-boyfriend, Owen, and devolved into a daily barrage of threats and insults. This true crime documentary traces the messages back to Lauryn’s mother, Kendra Licari, who pleaded guilty to two counts of stalking a minor and was sentenced to prison. “This [case] is a crazy circumstance,” said director Skye Borgman, “but kids are getting terrible text messages every single day, and they’re dealing with cyberbullying every single day.”






































































