
If you’re one of those thinking, “How action-packed can a funeral wake possibly be?” — buckle up. Because 2026’s most anticipated series — the one that will make you laugh hysterically one moment and go “What the hell just happened?” the next — is about to take off: How to Get to Heaven from Belfast.
Netflix’s dark comedy-thriller hybrid, straight out of Irish skies, is built entirely around friendship, old scores, and secrets that refuse to stay buried — a full-on emotional rollercoaster.
When & Where to Watch?
Mark 12 February 2026 in your calendar. The series will have its world premiere on Netflix, dropping all episodes at once — perfect for mystery hunters who love to binge.
Award Contender?
Still fresh and chưa ra mắt chính thức, so the trophy shelves are empty for now — but the industry whispers have already begun! Thanks to its tone that clearly follows in the footsteps of giants like Derry Girls and Fleabag, it’s already being tipped as one of the strongest contenders for the 2026 festival season and major awards like the BAFTAs. Critics have started calling it “the best female ensemble of the year” even before release.
What’s Waiting for Us? (Funeral or Adventure?)
The story starts very classically: a school friend’s wake. But for our heroines Saoirse, Robyn, and Dara, this ceremony is anything but a simple reunion to reminisce and scatter.
Why Is It Already “Trending”?
This isn’t one of those tiresome dramas preaching “friendship is everything.” It’s brutally honest: friendship can sometimes be a burden, sometimes hatred, but most of all — an inescapable mirror. The reasons this series is generating so much buzz:
Critic’s Final Verdict
How to Get to Heaven from Belfast uses mystery only as a device. The real aim is to expose the shadowy corners of the human soul and the absurdity of female solidarity (and sometimes the lack of it). If you love it when the mystery unravels at the same time as the characters’ inner worlds come apart, this series will feel like your personal heaven.
Get ready — Belfast is about to show us the fastest route to both laughter and existential crisis.





