Tulsa King (2022)

★ 8.3 4 Seasons 2,557 votes IMDb
Sign in to rate this film

New York mafia capo Dwight "The General" Manfredi is released from prison after 25 years and exiled by his boss to set up shop in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Realizing that his mob family may not have his best interests in mind, Dwight slowly builds a crew.

Tulsa King

Where to Watch

Netflix Netflix Watch
Amazon Prime Video Amazon Prime Video Watch
Disney Plus Disney Plus Watch
Max Max Watch
Hulu Hulu Watch
Paramount Plus Paramount Plus Watch
Apple TV Plus Apple TV Plus Watch
Peacock Peacock Watch
Crunchyroll Crunchyroll Watch
Tubi TV Tubi TV Watch
Pluto TV Pluto TV Watch
Plex Plex Watch

Rent / Buy

Rent

Apple TV Apple TV Rent
Google Play Movies Google Play Movies Rent
Amazon Video Amazon Video Rent
YouTube YouTube Rent
Vudu Vudu Rent
Fandango at Home Fandango at Home Rent

Buy

Apple TV Apple TV Buy
Google Play Movies Google Play Movies Buy
Amazon Video Amazon Video Buy
YouTube YouTube Buy
Vudu Vudu Buy
Fandango at Home Fandango at Home Buy

Cast

Sylvester Stallone
Sylvester Stallone as Dwight 'The General' Manfredi Age 79 · New York City, New York, USA Sylvester Gardenzio Stallone (born July 6, 1946) is an American actor and filmmaker. In a film career spanning more than fifty years, Stallone has received numerous accolades, including a Golden Globe...
Martin Starr
Martin Starr as Lawrence 'Bodhi' Geigerman Age 43 · Santa Monica, California, USA Martin James Pflieger Schienle (born July 30, 1982), known professionally as Martin Starr, is an American actor. He is known for the television roles of Bill Haverchuck on the comedy drama Freaks and...
Jay Will
Jay Will as Tyson Mitchell Greenville, South Carolina, USA Jay Will is an American actor, rapper and musician. He is known for his role as Tyson on the Paramount+ series Tulsa King (2022) alongside Sylvester Stallone..
Annabella Sciorra
Annabella Sciorra as Joanne Age 66 · Wethersfield, Connecticut, USA Annabella Sciorra (born March 29, 1960) is an American film, television, and stage actress. Sciorra received an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Female Lead for the 1989 film True Love, an...
Neal McDonough
Neal McDonough as Cal Thresher Age 60 · Dorchester, Massachusetts, USA Neal McDonough was trained at the London Academy of Dramatic Arts and Sciences. His theatre credits include 'Cheap Talk', 'Foreigner', 'As You Like It', 'Rivals', 'A Midsummer Night's Dream', 'Bald So...
Robert Patrick
Robert Patrick as Jeremiah Dunmire Age 67 · Marietta, Georgia, USA Robert Hammond Patrick is an American actor best known for portraying intense antagonists and authority figures. He broke out in 1991 with his iconic performance as the T-1000 in James Cameron’s Termi...

Audience Reviews

MovieGuys 6/10 Nov 14, 2022
I have to confess I stumbled across this, quite by chance. I don't watch a lot of US entertainment these days. I did however, grow up watching my share of Stallone action films, so a dash of nostalgia and curiosity, drew me in.

There's nothing terribly original by now about the plot of Tulsa King. Its Mafia style antics are noting new. I think it was a smart move, playing this as a dark comedy. It fits the well worn character, Stallone, inhabits.

That said, I guess the key question is, is it entertaining? I'd say "sort of". I like seeing Stallone back on the small screen. Regrettably, thus far and I appreciate its early days, the story is a little basic. Even for a comedy, it stretches credulity at times and lacks an intelligent wit and charm, that would have rendered it, more appealing.

In summary, Stallone's star power will probably draw people in but will viewers keep watching? Unless it ups the stakes, by crafting a more witty, clever tale of a long in tooth mobster, I for one, have my reservations.
Emily 9/10 Sep 03, 2025
It's not Shakespeare but it's a fun show to watch after you get home from work or school. Plus it's nice to see a show that is set somewhere other then usual: NYC or LA. I really liked it and I'm looking forward to next season.
Marco-Hugo Landeta Vacas 8/10 Apr 01, 2026
(CASTELLANO) Tulsa King me ha encantado. No será la serie más profunda, más innovadora ni más perfecta del mundo, pero tiene algo que muchas otras no tienen: carisma, ritmo y una forma muy consciente de divertirse con su propio planteamiento. Y eso, en un panorama lleno de series que van de importantísimas sin serlo tanto, se agradece muchísimo. Aquí se nota desde el principio que la serie sabe muy bien lo que quiere ser y no pierde el tiempo fingiendo otra cosa.

Gran parte de su encanto está en ese toque socarrón que la recorre de arriba abajo. Dentro del universo de Taylor Sheridan, que tantas veces tiende a la gravedad, al gesto seco y a la dureza constante, Tulsa King entra con una energía más juguetona, más ligera y bastante más graciosa. No renuncia al crimen, a la violencia ni a los ajustes de cuentas, pero lo mezcla con un humor muy agradecido que hace que todo entre mejor y que la serie tenga una personalidad propia muy clara.

Y luego, claro, está Stallone. La serie funciona porque él la sostiene de maravilla. Tiene presencia, tiene oficio, tiene ironía y ese tipo de carisma que no se puede fabricar. Su personaje tiene algo de viejo lobo, algo de dinosaurio desplazado y algo de superviviente con más tablas que todos los demás juntos. Y Stallone sabe jugar con todo eso sin caer en la autoparodia. Está muy bien porque no solo impone, también tiene gracia, vulnerabilidad y una forma muy natural de ocupar la pantalla.

Además, la serie sabe rodearlo bastante bien. Los secundarios acompañan, el tono está bastante controlado y la mezcla de drama mafioso, comedia seca y choque cultural funciona mejor de lo que podría parecer. No todo es brillante, eso sí. Hay momentos algo caricaturescos, algunas situaciones bastante inverosímiles y cosas que dependen más del encanto general que de una escritura impecable. Pero, sinceramente, en una serie como esta eso pesa menos si el conjunto te atrapa.

Lo importante es que Tulsa King se deja ver con un gusto tremendo. Tiene ese punto de serie clásica, de personaje central fuerte, de conflictos directos y de entretenimiento bien servido. No quiere reinventar el género, pero sí darle un giro más simpático, más relajado y más disfrutable. Y eso le sienta muy bien. En cierto modo, hasta se agradece que no aspire a parecer más trascendente de lo que realmente es.

Por eso me gusta tanto. Me parece una serie con muchísimo encanto, muy entretenida y con un Stallone enorme al frente, que demuestra que todavía puede cargar con una producción entera sobre los hombros. Esa mezcla de mafia, humor, veteranía y mala leche le da una identidad muy especial. Ojalá estrenen pronto la temporada 4, porque es de esas series con las que uno está muy a gusto y siempre quiere seguir un poco más.

(ENGLISH) Tulsa King really won me over. It may not be the deepest, most innovative, or most perfect series in the world, but it has something many others do not: charisma, pace, and a very clear sense of how to have fun with its own premise. In a landscape full of shows trying very hard to seem important, that is genuinely refreshing. From the beginning, it is obvious that the series knows exactly what it wants to be and does not waste time pretending otherwise.

A big part of its charm comes from the sly, wry tone that runs through the whole thing. Within Taylor Sheridan’s world, which so often leans toward severity, dryness, and relentless heaviness, Tulsa King arrives with a more playful, lighter, and much funnier energy. It does not abandon crime, violence, or underworld tension, but it mixes them with humor in a way that makes everything go down easier and gives the show a very distinct personality of its own.

And then, of course, there is Stallone. The series works because he carries it so well. He has presence, experience, irony, and that kind of charisma you simply cannot manufacture. His character feels like part old wolf, part displaced dinosaur, and part survivor with more street knowledge than everyone else put together. And Stallone plays all of that without slipping into self-parody. What is nice is that he does not just project toughness, but also humor, vulnerability, and a very natural way of occupying the screen.

The show also knows how to support him. The secondary cast works well, the tone is mostly under control, and the mix of mob drama, dry comedy, and culture clash comes off better than it might sound on paper. It is not flawless, though. There are some cartoonish moments, a few very implausible situations, and things that depend more on overall charm than on impeccable writing. But honestly, in a series like this, that matters less when the whole thing is this watchable.

What matters most is that Tulsa King is tremendously enjoyable. It has that classical-series feeling built around a strong central character, direct conflicts, and entertainment delivered with confidence. It is not trying to reinvent the genre, but rather to give it a friendlier, more relaxed, and more enjoyable twist. And that suits it extremely well. In a way, it is even refreshing that it does not pretend to be more transcendent than it really is.

That is why I like it so much. To me, it is a very charming and highly entertaining series with a terrific Stallone at the center, proving that he can still carry an entire production on his shoulders. That blend of mafia, humor, experience, and sharpness gives it a very special identity. I really hope Season 4 arrives soon, because this is exactly the kind of show you are happy to stay with for a while longer.

Similar Movies