Summary

  • Kate Winslet excels in complex roles such as Mare of Easttown, which has one of her best performances.
  • 2011's Mildred Pierce is a beautifully crafted, emotionally grueling melodrama with a powerhouse Winslet turn.
  • While The Regime reunites Winslet with Hugh Grant, it falls short due to being a toothless, largely unfunny satire.

Kate Winslet's best movie performances reveals she largely avoided big-budget roles or easy paydays, in favor of more challenging material like Holy Smoke, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind or The Reader.

Which isn't to say Winslet hasn't dipped her toes into more crowd-pleasing fare like The Holiday or Avatar: The Way of Water. Winslet's filmography is no doubt the envy of her contemporaries for its wide mix of genres, characters and awards success. While Winslet is largely focused on movie work she has no issue with appearing in TV shows on occasion, be it voicing Mrs. Fillyjonk in Moominvalley or fronting political satire The Regime.

Related
The Regime Ending Explained: What THAT Character's Death Really Means

HBO's political satire The Regime ends on a cynical note, with Kate Winslet's Chancellor Elena forced to make a difficult choice by her enemies.

Kate Winslet's HBO Shows

Rotten Tomatoes Score

Mildred Pierce (2011)

81%

Mare of Easttown (2021)

95%

The Regime (2024)

58%

3 The Regime (2024)

Kate Winslet's most recent HBO series is her weakest

The Regime TV Show Poster Showing Kate Winslet Sitting in a Chair Next to a Tiger
The Regime
Release Date
2024 - 2024-00-00

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming
7/10

The Regime is an HBO/Max mini-series that takes place over the course of one year and follows a failing dictator as her fictional empire begins to crumble around her. The show sees the beginning of the end of the dictatorship and the challenges that the Chancellor faces to keep her unsustainable rule afloat.

Cast
Hugh Grant, Martha Plimpton, Matthias Schoenaerts
Showrunner
Will Tracy
Directors
Stephen Frears
Seasons
1
Where To Watch
MAX

The Regime's cast includes Winslet, Hugh Grant and Andrea Riseborough, with the show being created by Will Tracy (The Menu, Succession). So, on paper at least, the show should be incredible. Instead, The Regime is a lukewarm black comedy that is neither as funny nor insightful as it wants to be. Needless to say, Winslet is incredible, with her character Chancellor Elena Vernham being a vain, selfish monster who, against all odds, is still likable. The issue with The Regime is just how toothless it all feels.

The Regime reunited Kate Winslet with Hugh Grant, 29 years on from their first collaboration in Sense and Sensibility.

The Regime is set in a fictional, unnamed nation, with Vernham being an amalgam of several real politicians but she is not directly based on one person. By design, the show keeps its distance from real-world political affairs or the bloody consequences of Vernham's actions. Instead of leaving a space for audiences to draw their own conclusions, this has the unintended consequence of making it appear the showrunners didn't want to commit to what the show was actually trying to say.

The miniseries still has a lot in its favor, from a quality cast to great production design. Even so, there is a hollow center to The Regime that is disappointing, considering the wealth of talent involved. The satire is both too dry and too vague to truly land, and in seemingly wanting to avoid courting controversy, it lacks any genuine insight or bite.

The Regime is streaming exclusively on Max.

2 Mildred Pierce (2011)

Winslet's first HBO collaboration won the star an Emmy

Kate Winslet as Mildred Pierce in HBO's 2011 Mildred Pierce miniseries

Major film stars appearing in television shows was once a career no-no, but the so-called Golden Age of Television changed all that. The best material for actors could often be found on series like The Sopranos or Breaking Bad, so in turn, it became possible to lure names like Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey to miniseries such as True Detective. HBO's Mildred Pierce is another prime example of this trend, as this novel adaptation contains arguably Winslet's most heartbreaking performance as the titular character.

Mildred Pierce was previously adapted in 1945, with Joan Crawford playing the role.

Todd Haynes' miniseries follows Mildred, a Depression-era housewife struggling to run a restaurant amid a messy home life. In addition to Winslet, Mildred Pierce's cast is an embarrassment of riches, with Evan Rachel Wood playing Mildred's troubled, borderline demonic daughter Veda while Guy Pearce and Melissa Leo play ing roles. The series also recreates the look and feel of the classic Douglas Sirk melodramas of the 1950s, though Haynes pumps up the soapy tone considerably.

Mildred Pierce is a messy, emotionally grueling ride, but also an intensely rewarding one that is fronted by two phenomenal performances by Winslet and Wood.

Mildred Pierce takes its time, allowing viewers to soak up the period detail and various crises the main character suffers through. Author Stephen King once praised the HBO series (via Newsweek) but stated it was "too damn long," which is a complaint other reviews leveled at it. While a valid critique, Haynes' adaptation works so well because it doesn't rush or take shortcuts. Mildred Pierce is a messy, emotionally grueling ride, but also an intensely rewarding one that is fronted by two phenomenal performances by Winslet and Wood.

1 Mare of Easttown (2021)

This 2021 thriller may contain Kate Winslet's best work as a performer

Kate Winslet as Mare in Mare of Easttown doing a little skeptical active listening while in a park
Mare of easttown tv poster
Mare of Easttown
TV-MA
Release Date
2021 - 2021-00-00

Mare of Easttown is a mystery crime-drama that stars Kate Winslet as a detective attempting to solve a murder as her life crumbles around her. Marianne "Mare" Sheehan is assigned to investigate the murder of one girl while trying to tackle a cold case of another missing girl. Having recently lost her son, Mare's world is steeped in chaos as she attempts to reclaim her life in the eyes of the town - and herself.

Network
HBO Max
Cast
Angourie Rice, Kate Winslet
Showrunner
Brad Ingelsby
Directors
Craig Zobel
Seasons
1
Streaming Service(s)
MAX

Winslet's second HBO miniseries Mare of Easttown arrived a decade on from Mildred Pierce. It swapped the gothic soap opera of the latter for a modern-day crime drama, with Winslet playing a detective looking into a murder in a small town. Mare of Easttown bears some comparison to Mildred Pierce in that it can be quite bleak and dour, with Winslet's Mare looking and feeling like she has the entire world weighing down on her. There is a case to be made that the miniseries contains Winslet's best work, with Mare being one of her most complex, fascinating characters.

Like Winslet's other HBO collaborations there's a wealth of great ing players, with Evan Peters playing Mare's naive new partner, and Jean Smart, Guy Pearce and Cailee Spaeny filling out the ensemble. Inspite of how oppressive the story and setting can feel, Mare of Easttown is expertly paced, with the central investigation used as a way to explore the characters within the tight-knit community.

Related
Mare Of Easttown Season 2: Will It Happen? Everything We Know

The hit HBO crime drama Mare of Easttown ended its first season in 2021; there have always been rumblings about season 2 so here's everything we know.

Mare of Easttown was showered with praise, being nominated for numerous awards (with Kate Winslet nabbing an Emmy and Golden Globe for her work), and it received a near-perfect Rotten Tomatoes rating. There is occasional talk of a potential Mare of Easttown season 2, though the limited series itself is such a well-crafted piece of television, it's perhaps best left alone.

Source: Newsweek, Rotten Tomatoes