Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 27 August

By August 27, 2025No Comments

Limitless (Aronofsky/Handel, 2022-25)

It’s been an inter­est­ing couple of weeks for unex­pec­ted new epis­odes drop­ping for shows I thought were all done. The oth­er day, the four-episode sea­son four of the Prime Video com­edy Upload arrived — I thought it had been can­celled after sea­son three — and two weeks ago, three new epis­odes were released of the Liam Hemsworth National Geographic doc­u­ment­ary series, Limitless.

The premise for the show is decept­ively simple. Despite already being a remark­able phys­ic­al spe­ci­men, Hemsworth — Aussie act­or best known as Marvel’s Mighty Thor — is con­cerned about liv­ing as long as pos­sible. To spend as much time as pos­sible with his kids, he tells us.

Each epis­ode is themed around some aspect of men­tal or phys­ic­al per­form­ance, often the kind that isn’t imme­di­ately obvi­ous but can — we’re told — have influ­en­tial long-term effects and there are cine­ma­to­graph­ic­ally pleas­ing chal­lenges involved.

The first is called Stress-Proof and is about learn­ing to cope bet­ter with the dele­ter­i­ous impacts of mod­ern life. Hemsworth trains with the Sydney fire bri­gade and learns to over­come his fear of heights in order to walk out to the end of a crane on top of Sydney’s tallest building.

Other chal­lenges involve fast­ing — quite a big deal for someone who requires so much pro­tein for his day job — extreme tem­per­at­ures, raw strength and memory. This was quite a mov­ing epis­ode as Hemsworth dis­cov­ers through genet­ic test­ing that he has a pre­dis­pos­i­tion to early onset Alzheimer’s and the idea that his brain may fail him long before his body proves both upset­ting and motivating.

The first sea­son ends with a par­tic­u­larly mean­ing­ful exper­i­ment. Hemsworth spends a week with a com­munity of older people but he has to wear an out­fit that mim­ics the effect of age­ing on his own body — as the week goes on, more weight is added and his abil­ity to pre­cisely con­trol his move­ments and his senses is reduced. Handling the inev­it­able phys­ic­al decay isn’t easy for someone who is so defined by their phys­ic­al­ity, but it gets even more exist­en­tial as he is asked to con­front the concept of death itself.

That was a per­fectly sat­is­fy­ing end­ing of Hemsworth’s longev­ity arc and the three new epis­odes — while enter­tain­ing enough in them­selves — don’t add much to our under­stand­ing of either the affable Hemsworth or age­ing. They are like the extra bonus epis­odes you might get in a DVD box set — he learns to cope with pain thanks to an extreme exer­cise with Korea’s spe­cial forces, inter­rog­ates his appet­ite for risk with a solo ascen­sion of the world’s tallest climb­ing wall and tries to improve his brain power by learn­ing a music­al instrument.

Playing drums for Ed Sheeran in front of 70,000 Romanian fans may well be the scar­i­est thing he’s done in the series.


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Where to watch Limitless

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa: Streaming on Disney+

Australia: Streaming on Disney+

Canada: Streaming on Disney+

Ireland: Streaming on Disney+

India: Streaming on HotStar

USA: Streaming on Hulu or Disney+

UK: Streaming on Disney+