Sophie Turner's Bingeable 6-Part Crime Thriller Deserves Its Streaming Success

2 weeks ago 10
Sophie Turner at the London Special Screening Of 'Steal' Jordan Petitt/PA Images/INSTARimages

Published Jan 26, 2026, 12:56 PM EST

Tom is a Senior Staff Writer at Screen Rant, with expertise covering all things Classic TV from hilarious sitcoms to jaw-dropping sci-fi.

Initially he was an Updates writer, though before long he found his way to the Classic TV team. He now spends his days keeping Screen Rant readers informed about the TV shows of yesteryear, whether it's recommending hidden gems that may have been missed by genre fans or deep diving into ways your favorite shows have (or haven't) stood the test of time.

Tom is based in the UK and when he's not writing about TV shows, he's watching them. He's also an avid horror fiction writer, gamer, and has a Dungeons and Dragons habit that he tries (and fails) to keep in check.
 

In recent years, UK crime thrillers have proven they’re far more than regional curiosities, becoming global streaming hits for worldwide audiences craving sharp, character-driven drama. Amazon Prime Video leaned into that appetite with Steal, a tight, six-part bite of pulse-racing suspense that landed on January 21st and refuses to leave viewer playlists.

Starring Sophie Turner of Game of Thrones fame, the premise of Steal is deceptively simple but deliciously compelling: an ordinary office job turns into the heist of the century, upending every expectation of what a thriller can be when character complexity and high stakes collide. Filled with tension without excess, Steal delivers its own distinctive blend of financial intrigue and crime drama.

This grounded yet nailbiting viewing experience, combined with Sophie Turner’s stellar performance, propelled Steal to the #2 spot in the US Prime Video viewing charts (via FlixPatrol), proving global audiences are still audaciously hungry for smart, well-performed thrillers with emotional heft. With a brisk six episodes, it’s an ideal binge-watch for Prime Video subscribers seeking something intense yet digestible.

What Steal Is About

A High-Stakes Financial Heist Twists Ordinary Lives Into A Web Of Crime And Conspiracy

Sophie Turner looking thoughtful in Steal

Steal follows Sophie Turner's Zara Dunne, a mid-level employee at London pension management firm Lochmill Capital. Zara’s workday explodes into chaos when a group of armed robbers takes the office hostage. Forced along with her friend Luke (Archie Madekwe) to execute trades worth billions, Zara quickly moves from helpless witness to reluctant participant in a crime that could ruin countless retirees.

What begins as a harrowing siege becomes a labyrinthine investigation as Steal progresses, where nothing is as straightforward as it first appears. Detective Chief Inspector Rhys Covac (Jacob Fortune-Lloyd) leads the official inquiry while battling his own personal demons as he tries to piece together who engineered the heist and why.

In the tradition of many of the best UK crime thrillers, Steal wastes no time with slow build-up: episode one thrusts audiences into the middle of the action before peeling back layers of motive and consequence. As secrets unfold, the Prime Video show balances physical danger with psychological tension, unveiling deeper conspiracies tied to power, corruption, and personal survival.

Most importantly, Steal isn’t just a robbery story. It’s a study of how ordinary people react under extreme pressure, how systems built to protect can be subverted, and how the truth isn’t always on the side of the law. Through tight pacing and escalating stakes, the narrative pulls viewers into a world where every choice carries risk, and every ally might be suspect.

Strong Performances And Timely Intrigue Push This Thriller Into Must-Watch Territory

Sophie Turner holding her hands up in Steal

The appeal of Steal lies largely in its anchored performances, especially Sophie Turner as Zara. Turner brings nuance to a character who could have been a genre cliché, infusing Zara with vulnerability, grit, and simmering intelligence that keeps viewers invested even when the plot ratchets into chaos.

More than just a showcase for Turner’s range, Steal taps into cultural curiosities about financial systems and inequality without bogging its audience down. It frames the heist around pension funds, money that belongs to everyday people, which gives the narrative weight beyond spectacle, blending social commentary with thriller mechanics.

The timing couldn’t be better. First look images of Turner as Lara Croft in the upcoming Tomb Raider reboot have raised her profile, sparking renewed interest in her range outside of Game of Thrones. That buzz has naturally amplified attention on Steal, encouraging viewers curious to see her in gritty, grounded thrillers ahead of potentially flagship franchise roles.

Supporting cast members add shape to the story’s moral tangle, from Luke’s escalating desperation to DCI Rhys’s conflicted loyalties. The writing leverages those strands to avoid a single-note plot, instead mapping character arcs against the anatomy of a crime that feels both outrageous and eerily plausible.

Critically, Steal is a show designed for binge viewing. With only six episodes, each around fifty minutes, momentum rarely lets up. The pacing allows Steal to explore its twists, betrayals, and ethical dilemmas without overstaying its welcome. That brisk structure, combined with standout performances, is a key part of why the series has climbed the charts so fast.

Everything We Know About Steal Season 2

No Official Renewal Yet But The Narrative Possibilities Remain Open

Sophie Turner crying in Steal

At present, there’s been no formal confirmation of a second season of Steal. The story in season one wraps up most of its central threads, offering clear resolution while leaving the door ajar for future developments should Prime Video choose to continue the story of Sophie Turner's streaming sensation.

The ending sees key players confronting the fallout of the heist and its many revelations, closing the most urgent arcs yet sparking speculation about what might come next. Zara’s journey from bystander to player has positioned her as a compelling focal point for future storytelling, while unresolved questions about broader corruption could easily fuel new conflicts.

There’s always a chance that the high levels of audience interest could push the show toward renewal. Strong streaming performance and a solid critical footprint give Steal the kind of momentum that studios often look for when greenlighting additional seasons. However, nothing is official, and executives may weigh the finite arc of season one against the potential for fresh narratives.

If a second season happens, it could follow Zara and Rhys beyond London’s financial underbelly into new terrain, or pivot entirely to a new story under the same thematic umbrella, a model seen in anthology thrillers like True Detective and The White Lotus.

For now, the conclusion of season one stands on its own, delivering a satisfying arc that doesn’t hinge on cliffhangers. That makes Steal a rare modern thriller that respects its narrative boundaries while leaving enough lingering questions to fuel conversation, and hope for more.

steal-poster-1.jpg

Release Date January 21, 2026

Network Prime Video

Cast

  • Headshot Of Sophie Turner In The Paris Fashion Week Autumn/Winter 2023
  • Headshot oF Jacob Fortune-Lloyd

    Jacob Fortune-Lloyd

    DCI Rhys

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