Published Jun 22, 2026, 6:00 AM EDT
Ben is a Senior Writer on the New TV team at Screen Rant. He graduated from the University of Central Lancashire with a First Class B.A. Degree in English Literature and History.
Born and raised in Ireland, Ben has always had a love for storytelling in all forms of media and operates multiple projects under the name Benjamin Blogs. Ben is a comic book writer and podcast host, in addition to his work as an entertainment journalist. He has worked as both a writer and editor for Screen Rant, Collider, and other media outlets across various departments, including features, news, reviews, and interviews.
HBO has always excelled when it comes to crime thrillers, but one of the latest broke the mold in a number of important ways. A great crime thriller series should do more than just focus on action, criminal dealings, and a game of cat and mouse with law enforcement. Just like any great story, it needs to explore captivating characters.
Character arcs are what compels audiences to engage with and sympathize with leading characters. Even when they may be morally ambiguous, or in many cases downright evil. But despite the presence of flawed characters in crime thrillers, the way these figures are portrayed makes a massive difference in how much someone enjoys and engages with the story.
That is exactly why a show like The Sopranos was so fascinating. Tony Soprano is a mafia boss, and his hands are more than a little dirty thanks to his illicit behavior. However, the show also draws back the curtain on Tony's family, exploring how this figure who inspires fear and panic is also a husband and father, and what happens when his world's becoming harder to keep separate.
Similarly, Scarface saw Al Pacino put on a masterclass performance as an ambitious refugee who manages to climb the ranks of a drug cartel to become a powerful drug lord. In both cases, the characters at the center are complex and engaging, and HBO has managed to strike this balance again with The Penguin.
The Penguin Is A Timeless Crime Thriller
Oz Cobb is a seedy criminal character who operates in Gotham. With the criminal industry being such a massive component of society in Gotham, Oz has struggled to take on a meaningful role as a mob boss in his own right, but after Carmine Falcone is killed, Oz sees an opportunity to gain a little more power for himself, and he begins a campaign of manipulation and lying that sees him climb the ranks,
Like The Sopranos and Scarface, the series is overtly concerned with exploring criminality, but a closer look immediately reveals that the characters at the center of the story are what everything revolves around. This creates a story that can exist and be appreciated and admired by audiences across the board, because the context feels almost decorative, while the characters create a very real and human connection to the audience.
The Penguin Is So Much More Than A Batman Spin-Off
Yes, The Penguin is a spin-off show which was made to expand the world that was first seen in Matt Reeves' The Batman. But the story digs so much deeper than anything that was seen in The Batman, especially when it comes to the depraved and cruel Oz Cobb. Rather than being tied down by the comic book foundations of the story, The Penguin captures the essence of a character like The Penguin, and transforms him into the star of his own show.
At no point was Batman a part of the story, and it is infinitely better because of the way it devotes itself to telling Oz's story. And despite a series of detestable and deplorable actions from Oz, the show inspires a degree of sympathy at times, and makes a point to highlight the challenges he is facing, morally, socially, in terms of his own family, and his personal wants, needs, and desires.
The Penguin is an incredible story that thrives on its own, and when positioned as a part of the wider Matt Reeves Batverse of stories, it provides context and additional layers of meaning that reward the die-hard fans. However, for fans of crime thriller shows in general, The Penguin is a perfect series to pick up, with just eight episodes to unravel the tragic, terrible, and terrifying story of Oz Cobb.
Release Date 2024 - 2024-00-00
Showrunner Lauren LeFranc
Directors Craig Zobel
Writers Lauren LeFranc







English (US) ·