Cam boy scammers. Piles of dead bodies. A sinister conspiracy.
From these elements alone, you might think Apple TV‘s Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed is a salacious crime caper. That’s not entirely off, but it’s so, so much more thanks to the person who stumbles onto all these dirty secrets: newly divorced mother Paula Sanders (Tatiana Maslany).
What’s Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed about?
Tatiana Maslany and Brandon Flynn in “Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed.”
Credit: Apple TV
When we first meet Paula, she’s nearing the end of her tether. She and her ex Karl (Jake Johnson) are on the verge of a custody battle over their daughter Hazel (Nola Wallace). On top of that, she’s finishing up a grueling apartment move, and her boss at her fact-checking job seems allergic to giving her a promotion.
With all this stress weighing on her, Paula seeks companionship and release with cam boy Trevor (Brandon Flynn). Their virtual conversations primarily focus on getting each other off, but they go deeper than that. Paula regularly tells Trevor her frustrations with Karl and her job. Between her candor and his understanding responses, you might think their intimacy goes deeper than physicality.
Then Trevor gets kidnapped during one of their calls.
From there, Paula must face one of two unsettling realities. Either she just witnessed a bloody crime, or Trevor is pulling a scam on her, meaning their connection was just a means to an end. For a woman whose entire life is in flux, neither option is reassuring. So begins Paula’s independent investigation into the truth, the sordid details of which clash with her personal life in a relentless spiral of blackmail and violence.
Mashable Top Stories
What follows is a dizzying, adrenaline-fueled ride. Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed careens from dark comedy to crime thriller to custody drama, sometimes over the course of a single scene. Frantic jump cuts and Wynne Bennett’s pounding techno score throw viewers into Paula’s stressed state of mind, while grisly cliffhangers keep the gasps rolling in. Anchoring it all is Maslany’s magnificent performance as Paula.
Tatiana Maslany kills it in Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed.

Tatiana Maslany in “Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed.”
Credit: Apple TV
If you’ve watched any of Maslany’s performances — her Emmy-winning clone work in Orphan Black, her devilishly funny turn in She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, her smaller but unforgettable role in The Monkey — then you should know to expect excellence from her. She delivers that and then some in Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed.
As Paula’s hunt for the truth gets underway, her life splinters in two. There’s the part of her that is investigating strangers’ houses and buying a gun for protection. Then there’s the part of her that’s trying to make life as normal as possible for Hazel post-divorce.
Maslany excels in both modes, bringing physical comedy to everything from jumping off roofs to goofy mother-daughter TikTok dances. But it’s when the two halves of her life collapse into one another that she really shines. A ticking time bomb of rage and desperation, Maslany makes sure Paula’s anxieties are never far from the surface. Occasionally, they burst out in fierce monologues directed at coworkers or lawyers or detectives. Even then, though, Maslany pulls back, as Paula is abundantly aware that any emotional outburst from her could backfire on her chances of keeping custody of Hazel.
Yes, Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed is filled to the brim with intense plot twists and juicy conspiracies. But the most maddening aspect of the series is the judgment placed on Paula as a mother. When Karl finds out about her chats with Trevor, his immediate reaction is to use them against her in court — and he’s far from the only one who hopes to punish her for acting on her desire. No wonder Paula feels like her whole life is chaos. Like every mother, she’s expected to do it all: Coach her daughter’s soccer team, host pizza parties, and look put-together the whole time. The one moment she tries to do something for herself, it backfires, and everyone judges her for it. Meanwhile, does Karl get flamed for his prior infidelity? Of course not. Maslany walks the tightrope of Paula’s anger at that double standard and her reluctant adherence to it spectacularly.
Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed surrounds the fraying Paula with an impressive ensemble, ranging from oddballs to downright menaces. Flynn is a slippery fantasy as Trevor, while The White Lotus‘ Murray Bartlett shows off how scary he can be as a sinister fixer. Elsewhere, Johnson and Jessy Hodges bring buttoned-up maliciousness to Karl and his new wife Mallory. Rounding out the crew are two very different pairs. There’s the no-nonsense, sports betting fanatic Detective Gonzalez (Dolly de Leon) and her sweet partner Detective Baxter (Jon Michael Hill), as well as Paula’s snarky but deeply invested coworkers Rudy (Charlie Hall) and Geri (Kiarra Hamagami Goldberg). Both pairs’ dynamics allow for some offbeat breaks from Paula’s panic, further fleshing out the show’s freewheeling genre tendencies.
Of course, though, it’s Paula’s show through and through. Maslany and series creator David J. Rosen have crafted a compelling trainwreck of a character, one whom you’ll want to follow to the ends of the earth — or at the very least, the end of 10 pulse-pounding episodes.


