Prime Video’s long-awaited adaptation of Patricia Cornwell’s forensic thriller series is finally here—and it opens with a body on the tracks, a pocketful of trauma, and a mystery 28 years in the making.
If you came for the Oscar winners, stayed for the gruesome details, and found yourself emotionally wrecked by a subplot involving a widow and her AI girlfriend—welcome to the club. Scarpetta dropped all eight episodes on March 11, and the premiere, titled “Bridge of Time, Part One,” does exactly what it says on the tin: it builds a bridge between a fresh murder and an old case that Dr. Kay Scarpetta thought she’d closed forever .
But let’s rewind. Or, as the show does constantly, flashback.
The Cold Open: A Penny On The Tracks
The episode opens with an image that lingers: a single penny resting on a railway track. A train approaches, its headlights cutting through the darkness to reveal the naked, handless body of a woman sprawled nearby .
It’s haunting. It’s visceral. And it immediately sets the tone for a series that isn’t interested in looking away from the violence inflicted on women.
Enter Dr. Kay Scarpetta (Nicole Kidman), returning to her post as Virginia’s Chief Medical Examiner after what appears to be a significant hiatus. The cops on scene treat her like an outsider, but Scarpetta’s eye for detail is immediate. She notes the severed hands. She notes the coin. And then her longtime colleague Pete Marino (Bobby Cannavale) murmurs something about it being someone’s birthday—Lucy’s—and just like that, we’re hurled back to 1998 .
1998: The Case That Started It All
The flashback structure isn’t just stylistic flair—it’s the show’s emotional backbone. In the late ‘90s, a young Kay (played with quiet fire by Rosy McEwen) is called to the home of Matt Peterson, whose wife Lori has been murdered in their bedroom. She’s unclothed, tied up, and left in a pose that echoes the present-day crime scene .
Young Kay is already sharp, already intuitive, but she’s also human. Before heading out, she calls out to “Yaya” to babysit her niece Lucy. It’s a small moment, but it plants a seed: even then, Kay was the responsible one, the caregiver, the aunt stepping in where her sister Dorothy wouldn’t .
The 1998 investigation reveals that Lori Peterson wasn’t an isolated victim. There were three other murders with similar patterns, suggesting a serial killer was active even then. Matt Peterson’s fingerprints were found on Lori’s body—incomplete, but present. He became the person of interest. But as Kay and her husband, FBI profiler Benton Wesley (Simon Baker in the present, Hunter Parrish in the past), discuss, something feels off. This wasn’t the work of a jealous husband. This was a “barbaric psychopath” .
Back To The Present: Office Politics And Family Wounds
Returning to 2026, Scarpetta isn’t just battling a killer—she’s battling bureaucracy. Health administrator Dr. Reddy forces her to accept a new team member, Maggie, which clearly grates on Kay. She’s a woman who trusts her own instincts and her own people, and having outsiders forced upon her doesn’t sit well .
Meanwhile, the personal drama is simmering. Lucy (Ariana DeBose) is now an adult, and she’s drowning in grief. Her wife, Janet, has passed away, and Lucy’s coping mechanism is… well, it’s a lot. She’s been communicating with an AI-generated version of Janet, a digital replica that looks, sounds, and acts like her late spouse .
If that sounds like Black Mirror meets This Is Us, you’re not wrong. It’s weird. It’s unsettling. And it’s genuinely heartbreaking. DeBose brings such vulnerability to Lucy that even when the premise strains credibility, her performance keeps it grounded.
A family dinner for Lucy’s birthday brings everyone together—Marino (who is now married to Kay’s sister Dorothy, because of course), Dorothy herself, and Kay. And this is where Jamie Lee Curtis enters the chat.
Jamie Lee Curtis: Love Her Or… Tolerate Her?
Let’s address the elephant in the morgue: Curtis’s performance as Dorothy is a lot.
She’s loud. She’s brash. She wears light-up earrings and talks about losing her FUPA . At the dinner table, she hounds Lucy to “move on” from Janet’s death and get back to work, demonstrating precisely zero emotional intelligence .
Reviews are split down the middle. Some critics find her “overbearing” and “tiring,” arguing that she turns every scene into a shouting match . Others see the method in the madness: Dorothy is supposed to be grating. She’s the narcissistic sister who abandoned her daughter, leaving Kay to raise Lucy. Curtis and Kidman have undeniable chemistry, and their confrontations crackle with decades of resentment .
Personally? I’m choosing to be entertained. Curtis is clearly having a blast, and in a show this grim, a little chaotic energy goes a long way.
The Episode 1 Cliffhanger: A Familiar Fingerprint
Just when you think the premiere is winding down, it delivers a gut-punch.
The murdered woman from the train tracks is identified as Gwen Hainey, a biomedical engineer . When the team searches her home, they find a kettlebell covered in fingerprints. The prints belong to Matt Peterson.
Matt Peterson. The same Matt Peterson from 1998. The man who was suspected—but never definitively proven—to be the killer in those earlier murders.
If Peterson is still alive and his prints are on a murder weapon in 2026, then either he’s been active all along, or the wrong man was caught three decades ago. And if the wrong man was caught, that means the real killer is still out there. And he’s copying his old work.
Fan Reactions: The Internet Is Divided
As with any high-profile adaptation, the fans have opinions.
On Reddit and X/Twitter, book purists are furious. One fan on IMDb lamented, “How to ruin my love of Patricia Cornwell… it feels like whoever adapted this has not ever read the books” . The casting of Kidman—at 5’11” and of Irish-Australian heritage—as the “diminutive Italian” Scarpetta has drawn particular ire .
But there’s also a vocal contingent of new viewers who are here for the star power. “Brilliant start,” one fan wrote. “Ignore bad reviews from people who prefer the books. Strong characters, brutal murder mystery, intense scenes” .
The Rotten Tomatoes score sits at a respectable 80%, though audience scores are more volatile . The Guardian called it a “dire mess,” while other outlets praised its ambition even when acknowledging its flaws .
The Weirdest Subplot On Television
We have to circle back to AI Janet.
This isn’t just a quirky character detail—it’s a full-blown B-plot. Lucy interacts with this digital replica constantly, treating it as therapy. And while the show clearly wants to explore grief in the age of artificial intelligence, the execution is… odd .
One critic noted, “This has to be the strangest TV subplot in years, like a Black Mirror episode but played totally straight” . Another pointed out that Dorothy eventually softens on AI Janet—but only after the AI showers her with attention, raising uncomfortable questions about how easily humans are won over by flattery, even from a machine .
It’s divisive. It’s ambitious. And honestly? It might be the thing that keeps people talking long after the murder mystery fades.
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Should You Keep Watching?
Scarpetta Episode 1 is a lot to process. It’s gory, it’s emotionally dense, and it’s juggling multiple timelines, a sprawling cast, and a sci-fi subplot that feels like it wandered in from a different show.
But it’s also compelling. Nicole Kidman anchors the series with a controlled, watchful performance that makes you believe in Kay Scarpetta’s genius, even when the script doesn’t always show it . The mystery has genuine stakes, and the connection between past and present gives the investigation a weight that standalone procedurals lack.
The biggest question coming out of the premiere: Is Matt Peterson the killer, or is someone setting him up? And what happened in those 28 years between cases?
If you’re a fan of Patricia Cornwell, brace yourself—this isn’t a faithful translation, and the changes (especially the timeline compression) may frustrate you . But if you’re here for Oscar winners doing dark, twisted things in a prestige TV sandbox, Scarpetta delivers.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I need to go stare at a wall and process AI Janet for a while.
Also Read: Tommy Lee Jones Joins ‘The Lowdown’ Season 2 in His First Scripted TV Role in Decades
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