Beginning January 5, Polar+ is bringing American viewers a different kind of true-crime drama with Catch Me a Killer, a South African crime series rooted in real investigations and historical reality. Mixing procedural storytelling with a character-driven portrait of a pioneering profiler, the show is available with two episodes airing each night on Polar+ and as a full-season binge on the CANAL+ app.
What Is Catch Me a Killer About?
Set in South Africa in the mid-to-late 1990s, Catch Me a Killer follows Micki Pistorius, a former journalist who becomes a forensic psychologist and one of the country’s first criminal profilers. As post-apartheid South Africa struggles to rebuild its institutions and law-enforcement systems, Pistorius works alongside the police to identify and capture a wave of serial killers targeting vulnerable communities.
Rather than glamorizing violence, the series centers on the intellectual and psychological puzzle behind each case: reading crime scenes, decoding offender behavior, and fighting institutional resistance in a police system still in transition.
Based on True South African Serial Killer Cases
Every episode of Catch Me a Killer is drawn from real case files connected to Micki Pistorius’s work. Names and some details may be dramatized, but the investigations themselves are grounded in documented crimes:
- The killers and cases are inspired by true South African serial murder investigations.
- Investigative techniques are based on actual profiling and forensic methods used at the time.
- Where possible, the show indicates how the legal process concluded, including arrests and convictions.
This factual backbone positions the series firmly in the narrative true-crime space, while still functioning as a tense, scripted drama designed for fans of shows like Mindhunter or True Detective who want a more global perspective on criminal profiling.
The pacing is deliberately methodical: instead of racing from crime to confession, Catch Me a Killer follows the often slow, frustrating, and procedural reality of building a case in a country still dealing with the fallout of systemic inequality and institutional upheaval.
The Real Micki Pistorius and the Book Behind the Series
The show is adapted from the autobiography of the real Micki Pistorius, a trailblazing profiler who helped shape how serial crimes were understood in South Africa. Her book provides the raw material for the series, and she was actively involved as a consultant, which helps the show avoid many of the clichés common in crime dramas.
That collaboration means the series doesn’t just focus on the killers; it also examines:
- The emotional and psychological toll of working closely with extreme violence.
- Everyday sexism and skepticism she encountered within the police hierarchy.
- The ethical limits of profiling when real communities are grieving and demanding answers.
By keeping Pistorius close to the production, the writers and producers aimed for accuracy not just in the crimes themselves, but in the workplace politics, investigative procedures, and period-specific details of 1990s South African policing.
Recreating 1990s South Africa With a Strong Sense of Place
Catch Me a Killer was shot on location in South Africa and leans heavily into its setting. Rather than using anonymous backlots, the series strives to make the social and political landscape central to the storytelling. Viewers get a grounded look at:
- Police stations and forensic labs in a country rebuilding its justice system.
- Urban and rural backdrops that highlight class divides and community tensions.
- The lingering impact of apartheid-era policies on both crime and policing.
The production design has been singled out for its authenticity, earning recognition for its sets and visual world-building. These details aren’t just cosmetic; they help explain why serial crimes could flourish in a moment of institutional instability and social turmoil.
The series had its French premiere at the 2024 Séries Mania Festival, where critics praised its grounded tone, its focus on investigation over spectacle, and its willingness to engage with complex historical context instead of treating the murders as isolated events.
Cast: Charlotte Hope Leads a Tight Ensemble
British actress Charlotte Hope steps into the role of Micki Pistorius, portraying a woman caught between two battles: catching some of the country’s most dangerous offenders and convincing her colleagues that profiling is a legitimate investigative tool. Her performance balances clinical analysis with vulnerability, showing a professional who is both highly competent and personally affected by the horrors she studies.
A compact supporting cast revolves around Pistorius as she moves from case to case. Key roles include:
- Donna Cormack-Thomson
- Steven John Ward
- Vaughn Lucas
Instead of a large, ever-changing roster of characters, the show keeps its core team relatively small, letting viewers invest in their working relationships and conflicts as the investigations escalate.
Episode Count, Runtime, and Where to Watch in the U.S.
Catch Me a Killer is structured as a single, limited season:
- Season count: 1
- Number of episodes: 11
- Approximate runtime: about 60 minutes per episode
The show originally premiered on the African streaming platform Showmax in February 2024. In the U.S. (and other territories where Polar+ is available), it is now programmed as follows:
- Channel: Polar+
- U.S. launch date on Polar+: January 5
- Broadcast pattern: two episodes each night
- Streaming: entire season available on the CANAL+ app
This dual rollout means you can either follow the weekly appointment viewing model on Polar+ or binge the full story at your own pace via CANAL+.
Why American True-Crime Fans Should Pay Attention
For U.S. audiences used to American-centric true crime, Catch Me a Killer offers something refreshingly different:
- A non-U.S. perspective on serial crime, profiling, and police reform.
- A grounded, less sensational tone than many docudramas or shock-value crime series.
- A focus on process over gore, ideal for viewers more interested in criminology than in graphic depictions of violence.
- Historical resonance, as the show links individual crimes to the broader transformation of South African society in the 1990s.
If you’re drawn to thoughtful, psychologically driven crime series that take their setting seriously, this is a strong candidate for your next binge. The show’s limited, 11-episode run also makes it approachable: there’s a clear beginning, middle, and end, with no need to commit to multiple seasons.
Key Details at a Glance
- Title: Catch Me a Killer
- Genre: True-crime inspired crime drama / profiler procedural
- Country of origin: South Africa
- Based on: the autobiography of forensic psychologist and profiler Micki Pistorius
- Lead actor: Charlotte Hope
- Showrunner / lead writer: Amy Jephta
- Season: 1 (limited series)
- Episodes: 11 x ~60 minutes
- Original platform: Showmax (February 2024)
- Now airing on: Polar+ (two episodes per night)
- Streaming: full season on the CANAL+ app
FAQ
Is Catch Me a Killer really based on true events?
Yes. The series is adapted from the autobiography of real-life South African profiler Micki Pistorius and draws on actual serial killer investigations she worked on in the 1990s. While some elements are dramatized for television, the cases, investigative methods, and historical context are grounded in reality.
How many episodes are there, and is this a limited series?
Catch Me a Killer consists of a single season with 11 episodes, each running around one hour. It is designed as a limited series, so you get a complete story without needing to follow multiple seasons.
When and where can I watch Catch Me a Killer on Polar+ and CANAL+?
The series starts airing on Polar+ on January 5, with two new episodes scheduled each evening. If you prefer to stream, the entire season is available in full on the CANAL+ app from the same date, allowing you to watch at your own pace.
Who stars in the series, and what makes the lead performance stand out?
Charlotte Hope plays Micki Pistorius, bringing a mix of determination, vulnerability, and intellectual intensity to the role. She’s joined by Donna Cormack-Thomson, Steven John Ward, and Vaughn Lucas in key supporting parts. Hope’s portrayal stands out because it emphasizes the emotional cost of profiling and the constant pushback Pistorius faces inside a changing police system, rather than presenting her as a flawless “genius detective.”














