‘Cape Fear’ review: Amy Adams and Javier Bardem’s revival is a brutal summer thriller

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Apple’s “Cape Fear” revival is slick, stylish — and brutal. 

It’s a star-studded crime drama with standout performances from Amy Adams, Patrick Wilson, and Javier Bardem. 

It’s also hard to see why this show exists, when there were two famous earlier “Cape Fear” movies – do we need a third version? But, if you ignore that element, if you just want a sun-drenched, blood-soaked thriller series, it’s a compelling watch. 

Amy Adams and Patrick Wilson in “Cape Fear.” APPLE TV
Javier Bardem in “Cape Fear.” APPLE TV

“Cape Fear” follows affluent lawyer couple, Tom (Wilson) and Anna Bowden (Adams), who live in Savannah, Georgia, with their teen son and daughter. 

Their lives get shaken up when Anna’s former client, Max Cady (Bardem), gets released from prison after 17 years. It becomes a hot news item; he’s dubbed America’s “most famous exoneree.”

Years ago, Cady pleaded guilty to murdering his pregnant wife. Now that he’s apparently been deemed innocent – his mistress claimed that she did the grisly crime – the public sentiment is turning against Anna, who was his lawyer at the time. 

To make matters look worse for her, Tom was the prosecutor who put Max in prison, and Anna and Tom got together during the trial. 

A newly freed Cady is out for revenge on the couple. 

Patrick Wilson and Amy Adams in “Cape Fear.” APPLE TV
Amy Adams in “Cape Fear.” APPLE TV

The series is the third iteration of this story. Every version of the plot follows Cady, an ex con out to menace Bowden, the lawyer who he blames for his incarceration.

It started as a 1957 novel (called “The Executioners”). 

Then, it was adapted into the first “Cape Fear,” a 1962 movie starring Gregory Peck as Bowden, and Robert Mitchum as Cady. In the movie, Cady was a psycho and Bowden was a good guy.

The most famous version is the 1991 “Cape Fear” from Martin Scorsese, starring Robert De Niro as Cady, and Nick Nolte, Jessica Lange, and Juliette Lewis as members of the Bowden family. In this movie, Cady was also a madman, but Bowden was more morally grey.

Robert Mitchum and Gregory Peck in 1962’s “Cape Fear.” Courtesy Everett Collection
Gregory Peck and Robert Mitchum in 1962’s “Cape Fear.” Courtesy Everett Collection

Scorsese is involved in this series as an exec producer, and so is Steven Spielberg (who also produced the ’91 flick).

The new “Cape Fear” is as competent and polished as the star power would suggest.

Still, its’s baffling why there are now three versions of this story. It’s a provocative, sometimes nasty thriller about revenge, guilt, and the justice system. 

But it’s not “Pride and Prejudice” or “Wuthering Heights” – the type of timeless classic where it makes sense to put out a new one every decade.

Robert De Niro in 1991’s “Cape Fear.” ©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection
Martin Scorsese on the set of “Cape Fear” in 1991. ©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

It also works best as a two-hour film. 

The series tries to pump out enough material for ten episodes. It mostly succeeds – give or take feeling drawn out, at times – although, you may question if you want to feel so tense for ten hours, rather than two. 

De Niro’s version of Cady raped a teen girl. Bardem’s version of Cady killed his pregnant wife, and his guilt is called into question.

Amy Adams in “Cape Fear.” APPLE TV
Javier Bardem in “Cape Fear.” APPLE TV

The show removes the rape element and ages up his victim – but, Cady is hardly softened into a kitten. Bardem hasn’t been this menacing since “No Country For Old Men.” 

The “Cape Fear” series also has more adjustments for the modern era. 

The lawyer wasn’t a woman in earlier versions of the story. The show also includes more about the media’s role in all this, and it weaves in the true crime ecosystem, including podcasters who are eager to cover the saga.

Of course, it wouldn’t be a 2026 story if AI wasn’t involved, too. There’s a scene where the Bowden’s teen son also watches a creepy AI video online, of a teenage boy telling the camera, “My name is Adam Cady and I never got to be born. This is how I might look today if my dad didn’t butcher my mom when she was pregnant with me…”

Patrick Wilson in “Cape Fear.” APPLE TV
Martin Scorsese directing “Cape Fear” in 1991. ©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

So, the show does take pains to add new elements, and pepper it with references that couldn’t have existed in the ‘60s or the ‘90s. 

All the while, the music and cinematography make it feel retro and timeless. 

Viewers may question whether we needed this. We didn’t. 

Looking past that “why is it here?” factor, it’s worth a watch if you want a well-made Southern gothic suspense. 

“Cape Fear” premieres Friday, June 5 on AppleTV+.

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