17-year-old Joshua "J" Cody moves in with his freewheeling relatives in their Southern California beach town after his mother dies of a heroin overdose. Headed by boot-tough matriarch Janine "Smurf" Cody and her right-hand Baz, who runs the business and calls the shots, the clan also consists of Pope, the oldest and most dangerous of the Cody boys; Craig, the tough and fearless middle son; and Deran, the troubled, suspicious "baby" of the family.
Ratings
Curator score: 5.6/10
IMDb: 8.2/10
Rotten Tomatoes: 89%
Metacritic: 65
TMDB: 7.7/10
Production
John Wells Productions, Warner Bros. Television, Royal Ties Productions, Warner Horizon Television
Cast
Finn Cole, Shawn Hatosy, Ben Robson, Jake Weary, Leila George
Where to watch
Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Netflix Standard with Ads, Amazon Prime Video with Ads, Amazon Prime Video Free with Ads
Curator Review
Verdict
A slick, sun-bleached crime family drama with strong momentum, memorable characters, and a nasty streak. It’s at its best when it leans into sibling power struggles, shifting loyalties, and pressure-cooker heists; later seasons stay watchable even when the plotting gets more repetitive.
Best for
fans of crime-family sagas
viewers who like tense, morally gray antiheroes
people who want a bingeable series with heists and betrayal
audiences drawn to Southern California noir
Skip if
you want a hopeful or uplifting crime story
you prefer procedural structure over serialized chaos
you dislike characters making self-destructive choices
you need every season to feel equally fresh
Overview
Animal Kingdom is a lean, propulsive family-crime saga with a strong sense of place and a constant undercurrent of danger. The beach-town California setting gives the series a glossy surface, but the show is really about control, dependency, and the way a criminal matriarch keeps her sons orbiting her like satellites.
Worth noting
The early seasons are the sweet spot: the power dynamics are sharp, the heists are tense, and the ensemble has enough friction to keep every episode charged. Shawn Hatosy is especially effective as Pope, and the series gets a lot of mileage out of making every family alliance feel temporary.
Bottom line
As it goes on, the show becomes a bit more repetitive and melodramatic, but it remains easy to watch because it understands momentum and escalation. If you like crime dramas that are stylish, ruthless, and built for bingeing, this is a solid pick.