Review: Netflix’s ‘North of North’ offers a fresh and authentic look at Inuit life

The show is Netflix’s first original Canadian series, co-commissioned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in association with the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network. (Netflix)
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Updated 17 April 2025
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Review: Netflix’s ‘North of North’ offers a fresh and authentic look at Inuit life

Netflix’s new “North of North” series offers a fresh and authentic look at Inuit life, blending humor with emotional depth and cultural richness.

It is Netflix’s first original Canadian series, co-commissioned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in association with the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network.

Set in the fictional Arctic town of Ice Cove, Nunavut, the series follows Siaja, a 26-year-old Inuk woman who publicly steps away from her marriage to a clueless husband, choosing to carve out a new space within her community and finding her own path while navigating the complexities of personal reinvention and staying rooted at home. 

While some of the slapstick comedy feels clumsy and redundant, it adds a sense of familiarity that ties together the everyday dynamics of life in a small community. 

The “we don’t need white saviors” theme is both timely and valid, though it leans on a somewhat cliche delivery.

However, the series makes up for this with rich cultural details — indigenous hand tattoos, handmade earrings and authentic Inuit clothing.

The elders speaking in their native tongue as part of everyday life, and Siaja’s responses in English, reflect the reality of balancing multiple identities and languages.

Written by Inuit writers Stacey Aglok MacDonald and Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, “North of North” presents an essential narrative told from an indigenous perspective. Their voices bring nuance and authenticity, ensuring that the series accurately represents the complexities of Inuit life. 

Siaja’s relationship with her young daughter, who is also discovering the world, as well as the adults in her life adds emotional richness to the series.

Anna Lambe’s portrayal of Siaja captures the character’s vulnerability and resilience, making her journey relatable. You feel you could be her friend. 

Overall, “North of North” is a fun series that balances humor with heartfelt moments.

While some elements may feel predictable, it seemingly succeeds in authentically portraying Inuit culture, according to early feedback from the indigenous community. 

The show cleverly explores themes of personal reinvention and community dynamics which are universal, while keeping the culture central to the unfolding story.

It is grounded, relatable and necessary. Definitely binge-worthy. While the characters are constantly surrounding — and occasionally engulfed — by snow, its warmth is felt all around.


Cast, creators discuss the latest outing of award-winning drama ‘Industry’ 

Updated 15 January 2026
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Cast, creators discuss the latest outing of award-winning drama ‘Industry’ 

DUBAI: In its fourth season, now airing on OSN+, the acclaimed financial drama “Industry” switches lanes, evolving into an ambitious corporate thriller about money, power and the human condition. 

Co-creators Mickey Down and Konrad Kay — both former investment bankers — push back on the idea that “Industry” is simply about monsters in suits. 

“The reductive view of the show is that all of the characters are sort of sociopaths,” Kay told Arab News. “I think that’s not entirely true. A certain kind of transactional relationship is bred into these people; some arrive with it fully formed, some of them don’t have it come naturally to them, and then are put into that situation, and then they see the human cost of it.” 

Season four, he said, is “slightly darker,” following the “capitalist OS” as it bleeds into politics and media, but it also makes space for tenderness. 

“The world can be quite cold, but at the edges there is this kind of innocence, this kind of romance, that could be transformative for a lot of them.” 

Down is keen to stress that no one in “Industry” thinks of themselves as a villain. 

“I don’t think anyone on Earth thinks of themselves (that way),” he said. “They’re constantly self-justifying. Their morality has become more complex. They know that some of the things they’re doing are wrong. Characters are behaving in ways that they think will lead to their survival, but there’s a lot more self-awareness.” 

Season four finds Myha’la Herrold’s Harper Stern and Marisa Abela’s Yasmin Kara-Hanani — the show’s central characters — at both their most ruthless and most vulnerable. 

Now that Pierpoint, the London investment bank that defined the series’ early identity, is gone, both are operating with new levels of power.  

“She’s using the survival skills we’ve seen her accumulate over the last three seasons,” said Abela, pointing to the trauma of Yasmin’s father’s death as a hardening force.  

The emotional connection between Harper and Yasmin remains the show’s beating heart. Abela describes them as fighting on opposite sides of a battle, bound by shared trauma and an almost compulsive need to let the other see them at their most exposed. Yasmin, she notes, often invites Harper in at her lowest points precisely because she knows Harper will confront her with uncomfortable honesty. 

Asked about their favorite moments from season four, Abela selected a Christmas-themed episode centered on Yasmin’s faltering marriage to Henry (played by “Game of Thrones” star Kit Harington – that gives her “a clear, emotionally charged objective.” 

Herrold picked the entire latter half of the season, when she and Abela are back in each other’s orbit. “I missed her a lot, so when we were finally back together… that’s always a highlight for me,” she said. 

Harington shed some light on his working relationship with the creators. Arriving on the show after a decade-long run on “Game of Thrones,” he was used to older showrunners. On “Industry,” he said, “they’re actually younger than me, which is bizarre.”  

Still, he said, they share a key trait with his ‘Thrones’ bosses David Benioff and D.B. Weiss: “They orchestrate everything in a way which encourages everybody to make the best thing,” while remaining “the sun that everyone orbits around.” 

Its creators see “Industry” as a kind of Russian doll: from trading floor to global politics to tech and media. But they insist it remains a character study, particularly of Harper and Yasmin’s “pathological friendship.” 

Season four leans hard into mystery and thriller territory, drawing on films like “Michael Clayton” and “The Insider.” 

“We wanted to Trojan-horse what we’re interested in into ‘Industry,’” said Kay. “A thriller engine allows you to have speed and velocity without shirking the complexity. It’s still ‘Industry’ — all the characterization that we’re hopefully good at by now — tacked onto a plot mechanism that we haven’t done before.” 

For all the genre trappings, Down says what matters is that the characters end up somewhere seismic and unsettling. 

“Ultimately, there are no clean wins in this show. Everything is some kind of compromise. That makes it stop feeling procedural and makes it feel gnarly and real.”