Your next obsession has arrived.
AMC+ is diving deep into the supernatural shadows of the 1970s Southwest with a show so haunting, so beautifully tense, it feels carved straight from the red rock of Monument Valley itself.

Led by the phenomenal Zahn McClarnon and Kiowa Gordon, this Navajo noir masterpiece plunges into a world of ritual murders, missing children, and buried uranium secrets that threaten to tear a community — and two men — apart.


A Crime Story Written in Dust and Blood

Set against the breathtaking backdrop of the Navajo Nation, the series follows Lt. Joe Leaphorn (McClarnon) and Jim Chee (Gordon) as they confront not just crime, but the ghosts of their pasts.
Every case unearths something older — something sacred, dangerous, and forgotten by the outside world.

Under the desert’s searing sun and star-filled nights, clues lead to ritual killings, corporate greed, and government lies — all wrapped in a web of Navajo spirituality and moral reckoning.


🌑 Mysticism Meets Modern Horror

This isn’t your typical cop drama. It’s spiritual noir — a genre that breathes, sweats, and prays under the weight of history.
Beneath every crime scene lies a deeper truth: that the land remembers, and the spirits don’t rest easy.

Dreams, omens, and ancient symbols haunt both Leaphorn and Chee as they struggle to balance duty and identity, law and belief.
Each revelation feels like a curse being lifted — or unleashed.


💔 Family, Faith, and the Desert’s Silent Grief

What truly elevates the series beyond murder and mystery is its raw humanity.
Leaphorn’s journey through grief, guilt, and revenge is nothing short of mesmerizing, anchored by Zahn McClarnon’s career-defining performance.
Critics are already calling it “electrifying,” with one headline screaming:

“Give Zahn McClarnon an Emmy. Now.”


🔥 A Show That Refuses to Be Forgotten

Every episode simmers with tension — cinematic, spiritual, and deeply personal.
It’s a world where justice isn’t black and white, where every choice echoes through generations, and where the land itself watches in silence.

If True Detective met Reservation Dogs and was shot through a mythic lens, this would be it.