While there are plenty of psychological thriller shows on Prime Video, one of the streaming service’s shorter additions to the genre is a must-watch for fans of disturbing, twisty storytelling. The psychological thriller genre is enjoying quite a cultural moment in the 2020s. From the Alice Feeney adaptation His & Hers to Netflix’s latest psychological thriller franchise The Hunting Wives, there is no shortage of dark dramas for fans of the genre to enjoy.
While Netflix might have classics of the genre like You and Mindhunter to its name, Prime Video is no slouch when it comes to creating memorable psychological thrillers, either. In 2023, Donald Glover’s miniseries Swarm took viewers inside the disturbed mind of a deranged pop music stan, while 2025 saw Prime Video adapt the Michelle Frances novel The Girlfriend and significantly improve on the original book’s story in the process. More recently, Prime Video’s 56 Days revived the erotic thriller subgenre with its story of a couple hiding secrets from each other.
However, although HBO secured the promising upcoming psychological thriller Dark Places, one of Prime Video’s best contributions to the genre was quietly released to little fanfare back in April 2023. A loose remake of director Cronenberg’s iconic 1988 Jeremy Irons vehicle of the same name, Dead Ringers was a psychological thriller miniseries that starred Rachel Weisz in dual roles as Beverly and Elliot Mantle. A pair of ambitious, unhinged identical twin gynecologists, Beverly and Elliot share everything in their lives.
Dead Ringers Features Two Of Rachel Weisz’s Best Performances
Unfortunately for the rest of the cast of characters in Dead Ringers, that includes their lovers and drug habits, leading both characters down a road that soon gets increasingly dark as the show’s story unfolds. While 2023’s Dead Ringers sticks relatively close to the original plot, its troubled heroines are more sympathetic than Irons’ protagonists, and creator Alice Birch’s show has a more frenetic tone than Cronenberg’s infamously chilly thriller.
Weisz gives two of the best performances of her career as Elliot and Beverly, differentiating the pair through subtle character choices without resorting to showboating. It would be all too easy for the series to feel like an opportunity for one star to show off, but Wesiz’s measured performances ensure that viewers still get to know the show’s supporting stars and get invested in the rest of the characters just as much as the pair of toxic, but undeniably fascinating, twins at the core of the story.
While Elliot is outspoken, amoral, and mostly interested in pushing the ethics of genetics as far as she can without losing her funding, her twin clashes with her due to Beverly’s sincere commitment to teaching women to advocate for themselves in a broken healthcare system. This leads to some cutting social commentary as Elliot extols the merits of taking funding from questionable sources while Beverly wants to maintain some more purity in the pair’s practice.
Dead Ringers Is One Of Prime Video’s Most Acclaimed Psychological Thrillers Ever
With stellar reviews from critics that highlighted Weisz’s uniquely strong double duty in the lead roles, Dead Ringers swiftly became one of the streaming service’s best psychological thrillers to date upon its release. Unfortunately, since Prime Video’s Invincible and The Boys tend to garner more coverage than smaller, more intimate character portraits like Birch’s show, Dead Ringers still went under the radar for many viewers despite its strong reception. Like 2018’s Homecoming, this psychological thriller wasn’t as big a mainstream hit as it may have been on Netflix.
Since Netflix has long been known as a venue for psychological thrillers, the streaming service has a reputation for putting out regular contributions to the genre, and viewers often flock to Netflix expecting twisty titles with unreliable narrators. In contrast, despite producing shows like The Girlfriend, Swarm, and Dead Ringers, the fact that some of Prime’s biggest shows include Reacher and Cross makes the streaming service feel like more of an avenue for procedural action thrillers and so-called “Dad TV” than twisted portraits of troubled antiheroes.
Dead Ringers Is The Perfect Gender-Flipped Reboot
What makes this uniquely unfortunate is the fact that Dead Ringers might be the best candidate for a gender-swapped remake in a long time, and Birch’s show managed to do something profoundly fresh and different with the same source material as the Cronenberg movie. Unlike a lot of gender-flipped remakes, this one truly justifies its existence since making the protagonists female doctors changes their motivations. This makes Beverly and Elliot both more sympathetic, and, conversely, makes their perversions more disturbing since viewers initially root for them more.
Cronenberg’s movie subtly questions the medical establishment’s entrenched patriarchy with a story of two cold clinicians who treat their patients, and indeed most people in their lives, like walking sacks of organs. In 2023’s Dead Ringers, both Beverly and Elliot are proud feminists who care about the treatment of female-bodied patients, but their clashing approaches to their work lead them to extremes that are almost as dark as the paths tread by the original movie’s protagonists.
Elliot’s attempts to game the broken system to her advantage and Beverly’s desire to keep her hands clean of the amoral monetary side of healthcare both come to a head in unpredictable ways as the story unfolds, and Dead Ringers cuts down on the gruesome gore of Cronenberg’s movie in favor of a more emotionally resonant story of psychological and spiritual decay. Changing the gender of the protagonists changes the nature of their shared life’s work, but this doesn’t make their story any less chilling.
Dead Ringers Ending Explained: What Happens In The Prime Video Series
The Prime Video miniseries Dead Ringers is so much more than a remake of the David Cronenberg shocker, and its ending leaves a lot of questions.
Instead, it ensures that Birch’s show is a thrilling, thoroughly original take on the source story that offers a new angle on a familiar plot. If every gender-flipped reboot could engage this thoughtfully with the original text, viewers would be met with a string of smart, subversive shows that feel vital. However, the fact that Prime Video’s Dead Ringers has been criminally under-seen since its 2023 release sadly proves that this effort doesn’t always pay off when creators are vying for eyes in the packed marketplace of the modern streaming landscape.

