The Terminal List: Dark Wolf (2025) delivers a raw, relentless dive into the origins of Ben Edwards, long before the events that set James Reece on his violent path. The series strips everything down to bone and grit, showing how betrayal in Iraq pushes Ben out of the SEALs and into the CIA’s shadows, where morality blurs and survival depends on instinct.

Taylor Kitsch commands this darker chapter with a haunted intensity that anchors every scene.
The narrative unfolds like a slow-burn fuse. Episode one detonates with a dust-choked ambush that sets the tone, while episode four’s interrogation in Baghdad peels back layers of truth until everything collapses into moral blackness. Ben’s journey is brutal not just physically, but emotionally, revealing the fractures that shape the man he becomes. Chris Pratt’s brief appearance as James Reece ties the timeline together with precision, offering a cameo that hits with the force of suppressed fire.
The supporting cast amplifies the tension. Robert Wisdom embodies quiet authority as Cort, guiding Ben deeper into the covert world with steady menace. Tom Hopper’s Raife is unpredictable and volatile, adding constant pressure to every mission. Dar Salim’s Mo brings emotional weight, his performance grounded in the trauma and loyalty of an interpreter caught between worlds. Each character feels sharpened by conflict, adding to the show’s immersive intensity.

Antoine Fuqua’s directing style gives the series its heartbeat. Night-vision raids hum with dread, markets twist into pulse-pounding chase sequences, and the landscape of post-war Iraq becomes a maze of sand, shadows, and unspoken threats. Ludwig Göransson’s score grows underneath it all like a low, feral growl, heightening the sense of danger in every frame.





