Amazon Prime Video has decided that the Texas border isn’t quite stressful enough, so they’ve given a straight-to-series order to the high-octane crime thriller “Calamities.”
The series is the brainchild of David Weil (Hunters, Citadel), who is taking “creative control” to a new level as writer, showrunner, executive producer, and director. Joining him in the carnage is Texas’s favorite son, Twisters and Running Man star Glen Powell, who is executive producing via his Barnstorm banner.
A Recipe for Disaster
In “Calamities,” a drug deal doesn’t just go south—it goes nuclear. When a transaction explodes into a spree of violence, a quiet border town becomes the ultimate “wrong place at the wrong time.”
The series follows a collision course between four very different, very dangerous archetypes:
The Sheriff: A small-town lawwoman digging for answers about her own past while the present burns down around her.
The Hit Woman: A sociopath who probably doesn’t have a “live, laugh, love” sign in her home.
The Fed: An overly eager FBI agent who is about to learn that reality is much messier than the training manual.
The Cartel: A ruthless sect that isn’t particularly fond of witnesses.
The Creative Powerhouse
David Weil is practically the unofficial mayor of Prime Video at this point. His resume with the streamer is a mile long. He’s behind the Nazi Hunting series “Hunters (fantastic), a spy show “Citadel,” and the sci-fi anthology show “Solos.”
With Amazon MGM Studios producing, it’s clear they are betting big on Weil’s ability to deliver what Peter Friedlander (Head of Global TV) calls a “character-rich thriller that doesn’t blink.”
Why We’re Hyped
Between the gritty, “wind-knocking” narrative and the involvement of Glen Powell—who currently has the Midas touch in Hollywood—Calamities is shaping up to be the kind of prestige pulp that thrives on Prime. It’s got all the ingredients: small-town secrets, high-stakes crime, and enough sociopaths to keep things interesting.
If you live in a “quiet border town” in a David Weil script, you might want to consider moving. For the rest of us, grab the popcorn—this is going to be a mess worth watching.













