In the fog-shrouded shadows of wartime Europe, where the line between life and loss blurred into a nightmare of whispers and watchful eyes, the true story of 13-year-old Sara, a Jewish girl forced to hide her identity after her family’s brutal murder, unfolds as Netflix’s My Name is Sarah, an 8-part drama premiering September 25, 2025, that’s plunging viewers into a vortex of betrayal, secrets, and the desperate fight to stay alive in humanity’s darkest hour—a haunting reminder of resilience that viewers are calling “unshakable” and “the most powerful story Netflix has told in years.” Directed by The Zookeeper’s Wife‘s Niki Caro and penned by The Book Thief‘s Markus Zusak, the series—filmed in Poland’s poignant forests from January to July 2025—stars newcomer Lila Crawford as Sara, whose “childhood stolen” transforms her into a ghost in her own life, forging papers and faces to navigate the Nazi nightmare as a Polish orphan in a convent rife with suspicion.

The “stolen” saga’s surge? Spellbinding in its sorrow: Episode 1’s “Erased Echo” catapults Sara into the fray, her Warsaw family’s ghetto raid leaving her fleeing with a forged ID, “someone else” in a world where every glance is a gamble. Crawford’s Sara? A “masterclass in minimalism,” her wide-eyed wonder warping to weary watchfulness, unraveling a ripple of regrets where a friend’s “kindness” surfaces as sabotage. Co-stars carve the catharsis: Rosamund Pike as the “suspicious superior” with a sting, John C. Reilly as the “haunted handler” with a grudge, and Indira Varma as the “calculating” confidant with secrets. Zusak’s script quivers with quips – “Names are chains; forget to survive” – but the “brutal” beauty bites: A botched barn burial buries a body of the past, a VVIP viper’s venom turns ally to assassin.

My Name Is Sara | USC Shoah Foundation

The “sharper than Shetland”? Seismic in its sensitivity: Zusak’s adaptation amps the “pacy” pilgrimage with “spooky” soundscapes and “authentic” accents, Caro’s direction a “gripping” gasp of “grim themes” in the forests’ “eerie charm.” The Guardian‘s Lucy Mangan raves “very well-made, pacy drama” with Crawford’s “reliably likeable” levity; The Independent‘s Ed Power hails Pike’s “Icily Glamorous” iciness and the “understated and spooky” score. Evening Standard‘s Vicky Jessop praises the “overall confidence, style and authenticity.” Skeptics? “Mired in misery,” but the 1-in-2 reflection-to-revelation ratio hooks, BARB metrics outgunning The Jetty.

This isn’t whodunit wallpaper; it’s a web-weaving whirlwind, My Name is Sarah‘s Sarah a scalpel to the soul where identities invert and innocence inverts. Sara’s survival? Scathing. The secrets’ sting? Sinister. September 25? Not a drop – a deluge. Binge it; the erasures erase, the escapes exhilarate. Crawford’s courage? Captivating. The obsession? Overnight, inescapable.