‘DTF St. Louis’ HBO Release Date, Cast, And What To Know

Jason Bateman and David Harbour appear together in “DTF St. Louis,” the HBO Original limited series
Photograph by Tina Rowden/HBO
Jason Bateman and David Harbour in “DTF St. Louis,” the HBO Original limited series
Photograph by Tina Rowden/HBO

HBO is leaning all the way into dark, messy, midlife chaos with its new limited series “DTF St. Louis.”

What starts as a complicated love triangle ends in death, and no one walks away clean.

Created by Steven Conrad, the mind behind “Patriot,” this series is positioning itself as a quiet thriller that creeps under your skin rather than announcing itself loudly.

Jason Bateman in “DTF St. Louis,” the HBO Original limited series
Photograph by Tina Rowden/HBO

“DTF St. Louis” What To Know Before Watching

  • Title: “DTF St. Louis”
  • Premiere Date: Sunday, March 1
  • Network: HBO
  • Streaming: HBO Max
  • Episode Count: 7 episodes
  • Format: Limited series
  • Release Schedule: Weekly
  • Finale Date: Sunday, April 12
  • Genre: Drama, psychological thriller
Richard Jenkins and Joy Sunday in “DTF St. Louis,” the HBO Original limited series
Photograph by Tina Rowden/HBO

Release Date & Where To Watch

“DTF St. Louis” premieres Sunday, March 1 at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT on HBO and will be available to stream on HBO Max.

The seven-episode series will roll out weekly, with the finale airing Sunday, April 12 at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT, scheduled ahead of the Season 3 premiere of “Euphoria.”

Linda Cardellini in “DTF St. Louis,” the HBO Original limited series
Photograph by Tina Rowden/HBO

The Cast

Jason Bateman, David Harbour, Linda Cardellini, Richard Jenkins, Joy Sunday, Arlan Ruf, Peter Sarsgaard, Chris Perfetti.

David Harbour in “DTF St. Louis,” the HBO Original limited series
Photograph by Tina Rowden/HBO

What “DTF St. Louis” Is About

At its core, “DTF St. Louis” is a story about middle-age malaise, desire, and the emotional recklessness that comes from realizing life did not turn out the way you expected.

The limited series centers on three adults caught in a love triangle fueled by dissatisfaction, longing, and poor decisions.

As boundaries blur and tensions rise, the relationship spirals into something far darker, ultimately leaving one of them dead.

Rather than focusing on the crime itself, the series appears more interested in the emotional unraveling that leads there, making the tension psychological rather than procedural.

Your Thoughts

HBO thrives when it lets uncomfortable stories breathe, and “DTF St. Louis” feels firmly in that lane.

With Steven Conrad’s introspective storytelling style and a cast known for grounded performances, this could be a slow-burn standout for viewers who appreciate character-driven drama.

If you enjoy shows that explore moral gray areas and emotionally messy choices, this one belongs on your watchlist.

Will you be watching “DTF St. Louis”?

Drop down in the comments and let me know.

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