Netflix has ordered “Trigger Point,” an eight-episode action crime drama led by Joel Edgerton, giving the project a straight-to-series pickup after a competitive bidding war, according to TheWrap. The show will be produced by A24, continuing its push into premium television for streamers, and positions Edgerton at the front of a story that mixes covert-ops skill sets with organized crime.
“Trigger Point” follows a tight group of former Tier One Special Forces operators who have left official service and now sell their expertise to the criminal underworld. They operate behind the cover of a private military contracting firm, taking jobs that range from protection to targeted violence. As their work pulls them deeper into illicit networks, an FBI agent begins tracking the unit, setting up a pursuit that frames the series with both tactical action and legal pressure. Edgerton will play Red, the unit’s leader and primary tactician.
Harrison Query will serve as writer, showrunner, and executive producer. Jeremy Saulnier, known for spare, hard-edged thrillers that prize tension over spectacle, is set to direct and executive produce the series. Producers Joe Hipps and Patrick Macdonald will executive produce through Hipps’ banner Cut To, which holds an A24 development deal that has already generated other high-profile projects.
No release window has been announced, and more casting is expected in the coming months. The order adds another marquee title to Netflix’s slate of adult-leaning crime dramas at a time when the service is chasing event series with clear genre hooks. It also marks a new collaboration between Edgerton and Saulnier, pairing an actor who has moved from studio franchises to character-driven indies with a filmmaker who often centers moral pressure and messy consequences.
Industry watchers see the premise as timely. Stories about privatized force and the afterlife of elite military training speak to public debates about accountability and the blurred line between security work and profit. At the same time, the series may draw scrutiny over how it portrays veterans who turn to crime and the real-world systems that enable private combat services.





















































