Apple TV’s Upcoming Psychological Thriller Can Rewrite The Rules Of Hollywood Remakes

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Robert De Niro's Max Cady in Cape Fear Image courtesy of Everett Collection

Published Mar 9, 2026, 4:15 PM EDT

Cathal Gunning has been writing about movies, television, culture, and politics online and in print since 2017. He worked as a Senior Editor in Adbusters Media Foundation from 2018-2019 and wrote for WhatCulture in early 2020. He has been a Senior Features Writer for ScreenRant since 2020.

While Apple TV’s Cape Fear remake might sound like it’s taking a big risk, the series could prove to be a canny and well-timed re-imagining. One look at The Simpsons’ spoof of Scorsese’s Cape Fear proves just how influential the 1990 psychological thriller was, since "Cape Feare” is one of the most popular episodes of The Simpsons ever.

The outing also inspired the award-winning play Mr. Burns, a Post-Electric Play, making the cultural footprint of Scorsese’s movie even bigger. As such, it might seem like Apple TV’s upcoming Cape Fear remake is taking a major risk by revisiting this story. Starring Javier Bardem as Max Cady, Cape Fear will be released in June 2026.

The show tells the story of Bardem’s villainous Max Cady, who seeks revenge on Patrick Wilson’s public defender, Tom Bowden, an attorney who hid evidence that might have exonerated Cady. In the 1990 movie, Bowden knows Cady is guilty and opts to hide evidence that could see him walk free, as he fears Cady will strike again.

Apple TV’s Cape Fear Takes A Major Risk

The cast of Cape Fear at Apple TV press day Photo Credit: Courtesy of Apple

When Cady is released from prison, he makes it his life’s work to hunt down Bowden and systemically target his family. Although little is known about Apple TV’s Cape Fear remake, one major change is that Tom’s wife, Amy Adams’ Anna, is now an attorney, too. It is not yet clear whether she is involved in Cady’s case.

Brand New Cherry Flavor director Nick Antosca is Cape Fear’s show runner, and the writer-producer has plenty of fitting bona fides for the gig. He worked on the acclaimed true crime dramas Candy, A Friend of the Family, and Murdaugh: Death in the Family, as well as executive producing Channel Zero, The Act, and SyFy’s superb Chucky.

However, even with Steven Spielberg and Scorsese himself executive producing the series, Cape Fear’s remake remains a risky proposition. The 1990 movie was an Oscar-nominated critically acclaimed blockbuster that earned a staggering $182 million on a budget of only $35 million, as well as netting its star, Robert De Niro, a Best Actor nomination.

That is a huge achievement for any movie, but a particularly impressive one considering how often the Oscars outright ignore hit horror movies. Cape Fear’s outsized success could be attributed to its mix of horror and noir, and the new Apple TV series may have a hard time recapturing this unique blend.

Cape Fear Can Make Scorsese’s Classic Even Better

Robert De Niro with a cigar as Max Cady in Cape Fear Image by InstarImages.com

Fortunately, Cape Fear’s TV re-imagining can still succeed. For one thing, the show will have a far longer runtime than the 1990 movie, so the series will have much more time to explore its characters in further depth. For another, Cape Fear’s remake arrives after the MeToo movement, meaning the show will explore an entirely different social climate.

Furthermore, for all of its acclaim, Scorsese’s movie is ultimately a pretty garish and campy morality tale. The movie is a lot of fun, but DeNiro’s Cady isn’t a complex character, and his continued survival grows a little ludicrous by the movie’s ending. As such, the show can be more nuanced and grounded, offering viewers a more chilling experience.

Cape Fear is held together by a tour de force performance from DeNiro, but the movie is ultimately a high-end slasher rather than a truly morally complex dissection of the justice system. If shows like HBO’s classic drama The Night Of prove anything, it is that TV’s longer runtimes make the medium better suited to exploring morally ambiguous, difficult topics like this in depth.

From The Wire and The Shield to The Sopranos and even Hannibal, TV shows can humanize even straightforward villains thanks to the added depth afforded by the medium. Thus, Cape Fear can provide a more interesting interpretation of the same story as Scorsese’s movie, which, ironically, is what Scorsese was doing in the first place.

Apple TV’s Cape Fear Has The Perfect Predecessor

max cady hurt in the nature in Cape Fear (1962)

Although readers may not realize this, Scorsese’s Cape Fear was already a remake of a critically acclaimed movie of the same name from 1962, starring Gregory Peck. That tense thriller was based on the novel The Executioners by author John D. McDonald, proving that the same story can be repeatedly revisited from new angles without losing its luster.

What makes the story of Cape Fear so compelling is the fact that its protagonist technically wrongs Cady, but only because he knows Cady is guilty of terrible crimes and liable to repeat these awful crimes if given a chance. As such, the question of whether the attorney was in the right or not is thorny and unresolved, and this hangs over the story.

Robert De Niro's Max Cady looking intensely with wet hair and blood on him in Cape Fear

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In both the 1962 and 1990 movies, Cady is so threatening that it is hard to imagine anyone worrying about his defense attorney’s honesty. However, much like the ‘60s version of Cape Fear feels nothing like the 1990 remake, 2026’s TV version of Cape Fear now has a chance to do something new with the same plot all over again.

Cape Fear Movie Poster

Release Date November 15, 1991

Runtime 128 minutes

Writers John D. MacDonald, James R. Webb, Wesley Strick

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