Film & TV / NewsFilm & TV / NewsWatch: Nicolas Winding Refn shares trailer for new Netflix seriesThe Neon Demon director will premiere Copenhagen Cowboy at the Venice Film Festival later this weekShareLink copied ✔️September 6, 2022September 6, 2022TextDazed Digital Netflix has released a trailer for Nicolas Winding Refn’s upcoming series Copenhagen Cowboy, which will premiere at the Venice Film Festival on September 9. Described as a “poetic neo-noir”, Copenhagen Cowboy is a six-part series that follows a young heroine, Miu (Angela Bundalovic), who is looking to take revenge on Copenhagen’s criminal netherworld. She quickly encounters her nemesis Rakel and the two “embark on an odyssey through the natural and the supernatural”. The filmmaker told Variety that the new series had a fantasy element, “along the lines of what Hans Christian Andersen would do, a fairy tale that reflects everything around”. He says the “hero” of the show, Miu, is “almost based on on his wife, “at least when it comes to her powers”. The Netflix series marks the director’s first project set in his native Denmark in over 15 years. It also stars Refn’s daughter Lola Corfixen, alongside Zlatko Buric, Andreas Lykke Jorgensen, Jason Hendil-Forssell, Lili Zhang and Dragana Milutinovic. This is the Neon Demon director’s second television series, following Too Old To Die Young for Amazon Prime released in 2019. Copenhagen Cowboy is set to be released on Netflix later this year. Watch the trailer above. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREGetting to the bottom of the Heated Rivalry discourseMarty Supreme and the cost of ‘dreaming big’Ben Whishaw on the power of Peter Hujar’s photography: ‘It feels alive’Atropia: An absurdist love story set in a mock Iraqi military villageMeet the new generation of British actors reshaping Hollywood Sentimental Value is a raw study of generational traumaJosh Safdie on Marty Supreme: ‘One dream has to end for another to begin’Animalia: An eerie feminist sci-fi about aliens invading MoroccoThe 20 best films of 2025, rankedWhy Kahlil Joseph’s debut feature film is a must-seeJay Kelly is Noah Baumbach’s surreal, star-studded take on fameWatch: Owen Cooper on Adolescence, Jake Gyllenhaal and Wuthering Heights