Accused: The Karen Read Story

STREAMING/TV REVIEW:

Lifetime;
Drama;
Not rated.
Stars Katie Cassidy, Luke Humphrey, Sebastien Roberts, Morgan Donald, Kurt Evans, Benita Ha.

In the flickering blue light of a streaming Lifetime movie, the January blizzard feels less like a weather event and more like a cover for a conspiracy. Accused: The Karen Read Story takes us into the heart of Canton, Mass., where the air is thick with local politics and old loyalties. The film centers on Karen Read, portrayed by Katie Cassidy, whose performance anchors the entire docudrama.

While Cassidy is often labeled “Hollywood royalty” as the late David Cassidy’s daughter, her path was paved with independence rather than privilege. She famously didn’t meet her biological father until she was in elementary school and was later left out of his will. Her success is entirely self-made; moving out at 18, she self-funded the acting classes that led to her reputation as a modern “Scream Queen.” Many fans will recognize her from her early pivotal role in the 2008 blockbuster Taken, where she played Kim’s ill-fated friend, Amanda — a performance that helped launch her into major television runs like “Supernatural,” “Gossip Girl” and her long-standing breakout as Laurel Lance (Black Canary) in “Arrow.” This tenacity makes her a perfect fit for a character fighting an uphill battle against an entrenched establishment.

The story itself is a “ripped from the headlines” dramatization of the death of Boston police officer John O’Keefe, played by Luke Humphrey. Humphrey, who previously showed his dramatic range in I Was Lorena Bobbitt, brings a sense of gravity to the role, though the on-screen romance between him and Cassidy feels a bit thin. The story begins with a warning that goes unheeded: Karen’s father explicitly tells her not to go out into the impending storm that night. Despite this, scenes unfold into a night of excessive indulgence. As a viewer, you almost feel drunk just watching the sheer volume of shots and cocktails consumed by this group. It is genuinely unsettling to see how much alcohol is poured before these individuals climb into their heavy vehicles to navigate a blinding snowstorm.

As the story progresses, the official version of events — that Karen struck John with her SUV and left him to die — begins to feel increasingly hollow. Instead, the film invites the viewer to look at the shadows within the house on Fairview Road. The tension in their social circle is palpable, fueled by flashbacks to a volatile relationship. The film weaves in the compelling forensic argument that John’s injuries were not caused by a vehicle. Real-life reports from forensic pathologists, such as Marie Russell, highlight that the deep, parallel lacerations on John’s arm are a near-perfect match for a large canine attack. It isn’t hard to imagine a confrontation involving the homeowner, who had been “flirt texting” with Karen weeks prior, spiraling into a fight where the family dog lunged and bit John, leaving him dazed before he was pushed back out into the freezing cold.

The most chilling realization comes during the depiction of the early morning hours. When the group realizes John is lying in the yard, the film highlights the infamous Google search: “How long to die in cold.” In that moment, the narrative shifts from a tragedy to a potential cover-up. It suggests a group of friends realizing they are all suddenly accomplices to a nightmare. To protect their own, they seem to reach a silent, desperate agreement to pin the entire catastrophe on Karen, the grieving outsider.

Ultimately, the film serves as a haunting cliffhanger, fitting given the real-world chaos that followed. It is especially poignant that this movie arrived in January 2026 — exactly four years to the month since that fateful night in January 2022. Since the events depicted, the actual case has taken turns that no screenwriter could have invented. In June 2025, a second trial resulted in a stunning acquittal on the most serious charges of second-degree murder and manslaughter. Today, the real Karen Read is a woman in limbo. In recent January 2026 interviews, she admits she “doesn’t feel safe in Massachusetts” and is struggling with financial ruin. She is currently fighting a wrongful death civil suit from the O’Keefe family while simultaneously pursuing her own explosive federal lawsuit against the investigators and “house defendants” she claims framed her.

Accused: The Karen Read Story leaves us with more questions than answers, ending just as the “Free Karen Read” movement was reaching a fever pitch. With the real-life lead investigator now disgraced and Karen recently launching “The Read Files” — a venture alongside her attorney Alan Jackson to continue exposing what they call the “Canton Cover-up” — the story is far from over. Cassidy has seemingly been off the scene for years since “Arrow,” but this performance ought to earn a way back. Someone like Taylor Sheridan should be casting her as a hot middle-aged fixture in one of his many series; she has the sharp, weathered energy his worlds demand. This film feels like the first volume of a tragedy; perhaps we’ll see a sequel once the civil suits finally drag the rest of the truth out from under the New England snow.

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Supernatural: The Complete Series

BLU-RAY REVIEW:

Street Date 5/25/21;
Warner;
Fantasy;
$329.99 86-DVD set, $359.99 58-disc Blu-ray;
Not rated.
Starring Jared Padalecki, Jensen Ackles, Misha Collins, Alexander Calvert, Katie Cassidy, Lauren Cohan, Mark A. Sheppard, Mark Pellegrino, Jim Beaver, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Samantha Smith, Adrianne Palicki, Kathryn Newton, DJ Qualls, Felicia Day, Osric Chau, Lauren Tom, Alaina Huffman, Courtney Ford, Sterling K. Brown, Kurt Fuller, Curtis Armstrong, Ruth Connell.

It may be a cliché to say they don’t make ’em like they used to, but it’s an idiom that certainly applies in the case of “Supernatural.”

The series stars Jared Padalecki and Jensen Ackles as Sam and Dean Winchester, brothers who spend the show traveling the country in a black 1967 Impala hunting monsters, demons, ghosts and other supernatural beings. Their quest to find their father (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and find their mothers’ killer introduces them to a wider world of demon hunters, magic and divine beings who hold the fate of reality in their hands. At one point, the characters even become animated for a crossover with Scooby-Doo (in season 13).

Running an amazing 15 seasons and 327 episodes, the series began in 2005 on the old WB network, its last year before it merged with UPN to become what’s now known as The CW. Airing on the lowest rung of the network ladder certainly helped it flourish, as it became the longest-running American sci-fi/fantasy TV series in history with its 11th season, surpassing WB/CW sister series “Smallville,” which had run for 10 seasons and 217 episode, outpacing another 10-season sci-fi series, “Stargate SG-1,” by three episodes. The British side of the genre has produced “Doctor Who,” of course, with separate runs of 26 and 12 seasons (and an upcoming 13th), but with shorter episode lengths in the classic era and fewer episodes per season in the modern.

That’s the kind of output the TV industry just isn’t interested in sustaining anymore, beyond the handful of legacy procedurals that are sticking around on the networks. Between cable and streamers and the short attention spans of audiences, three- to four-season runs of 10 episodes apiece are much more the norm now.

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The massive complete-series Blu-ray disc set efficiently repackages all the previously released individual season sets, as well as the new 15th and final season set, and all the bonus material that entails.

The set comes in the form of a handsome outer box housing seven thick Blu-ray cases, packed two seasons per case, except for the seventh case which contains the final three seasons. Each of the first six cases house eight discs (except for case two, which has seven discs for seasons three and four), while case seven has 10 discs in total. This distribution pattern left no room for the season 15 bonus disc, which is instead housed in its own separate cardboard sleave at the end of the stack, alongside a booklet containing an episode guide, photos from the series, production artwork, and notes to the fans from series creator Eric Kripke and executive producer Robert Singer.

It’s a slightly awkward configuration but seemingly unavoidable without either splitting up one of the seasons into two separate cases, inventing an 11-disc case, or putting the four discs of season 15 in its own case and making the overall box bigger. All in all it’s just a minor infringement on any OCD some fans or collectors might have.

Among the extras on that final disc are a featurette about the series finale, a documentary about the show’s strong themes of family, and a look at the Winchesters as American heroes in the vein of folklore archetypes. There’s also a gag reel, a retrospective of all 15 seasons, and highlights from the show’s 2019 San Diego Comic-Con panel, which due to COVID-19 canceling the 2020 event turned out to be the show’s last.

In the final extra, a lucky fan wins a replica of the show’s iconic Impala.

The set does not include Supernatural: The Anime Series, which was released on Blu-ray in 2011.

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‘Arrow’ Season Seven on Disc Aug. 20

Warner Bros. Home Entertainment will release Arrow: The Complete Seventh Season on Blu-ray and DVD Aug. 20 (order date July 16).

The season deals with the aftermath of Oliver Queen’s surrendering to the FBI and publicly admitting to being the vigilante Green Arrow.

The Blu-ray and DVD includes all 22 episodes, plus highlights from the show’s panel at the 2018 San Diego Comic-Con International, deleted scenes, a gag reel, a “Villains: Modes of Persuasion” featurette, and a featurette about the season’s “Elseworlds” crossover event with other DC TV series.

The Blu-ray will also include the “Elseworlds” episodes from “The Flash” and “Supergirl.”

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The cast includes Stephen Amell, Katie Cassidy, David Ramsey, Emily Bett Rickards, Echo Kellum, Rick Gonzalez, Juliana Harkavy, Colton Haynes, Kirk Acevedo and Sea Shimooka.

The seventh season is currently available to own digitally, and a digital copy is included with the Blu-ray.

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