Entertainment
Maya Hawke’s 6-Part Netflix Horror Miniseries Is a Perfect Weekend Binge
Nature documentaries are often marketed as comfort viewing. You put one on, learn a few facts, admire the visuals, and maybe fall asleep halfway through. Nightmares of Nature is very much not that kind of show. While Netflix‘s documentary series Nightmares of Nature is about the natural world, it portrays it as a sinister place, like a scary movie. And for the most part, it is. Predators are lurking in the dark, waiting to catch their next meal. Safety can be short-lived, and luck is usually the decider of who survives.
Told via two speedy seasons and narrated by Maya Hawke, Nightmares of Nature makes animals’ lives seem anxiety-filled, often violent, and highly binge-watching-worthy. This isn’t a series that you just turn on to have in the background; it captures your attention and does a great job of holding it.
‘Nightmares of Nature’ is a Horror Lens on the Natural World
Produced by Blumhouse Television alongside Plimsoll Productions, Nightmares of Nature is built around a simple yet effective idea: to tell real animal survival stories in the language of horror cinema. Each season consists of three episodes set in a single environment, following several animals as their paths overlap. In Season One: Cabin in the Woods, the subjects are trapped in a decaying rural cabin that appears safe until it becomes highly dangerous; in Season Two: Lost in the Jungle, the setting shifts to a dense Costa Rican jungle, with an abandoned research facility as the series’ focal point. The intent is to use horror iconography as the basis of the series because it works.
The series uses close-ups, point-of-view shots, ominous sound cues, and slow pacing to prolong unsafe moments for as long as possible. There is an upfront disclaimer stating that some scenes are staged for clarity and safety, but the behavior itself is real. When an animal is caught, it is caught completely; there is no use of computer-generated imagery to smudge the edges.
Maya Hawke Sets the Tone
Hawke’s narration contributes significantly to the series’ success. The voice is slow and careful, with enough acting to convey the horror context without making the animals appear as cartoon villains or heroes.
Hawke has become a popular name after playing Robin Buckley in Stranger Things and has become one of Netflix’s more recognizable voices, so here she emphasizes the atmosphere over the exposition. She doesn’t rush with the explanations and keeps the stakes high — she usually does not tell the audience that things are okay, since in many cases they are not.
There are times when the narration almost oversteps and tells the audience how they should feel. More often than not, the narration gives added significance to moments that would otherwise have faded into one another in a standard wildlife documentary.
Sam Neill gives a scene-stealing performance in this twisty thriller.
‘Nightmares of Nature’ Was Designed for Short, Intense Viewing
One of Nightmares of Nature’s smartest choices is its length. The series has only six episodes, so it does not feel drawn out. Each season tells a story with a defined arc and escalating tension, rather than disconnected vignettes. The series is visually appealing, with macro photography that gives viewers an extreme close-up of the creatures’ claws, fangs, and swift movements. The slow-motion shots allow the viewer to absorb critical moments of life or death and create an impression of gore without exceeding the bounds of a TV-PG rating. The series depicts the violence of the animal kingdom in a realistic manner.
The horror framing may not appeal to all viewers; some may find the dramatization overdone, and purists may prefer a more documentary style. However, this creates friction that interests the viewer. It’s trying to attract an audience that might not otherwise watch this kind of show.
Nightmares of Nature isn’t the scariest thing Netflix has ever released, but it is one of the more inventive. By borrowing horror’s structure and rhythm, it gives familiar animal stories new urgency and emotional stakes. It’s the kind of show that works best in short bursts — an episode or two at a time — before you realize you’ve finished an entire season. For viewers looking for something different from the usual true crime or slasher rotation, this is an easy recommendation.