MGM+ is all set to unbolt the doors to The Institute, a new series conjured from the mind of Stephen King, which will debut this Sunday, July 13, 2025.
Adapted from King’s eponymous novel and shepherded to the screen by executive producers King himself and Jack Bender (From), The Institute boasts a cast headed up by Mary-Louise Parker (RED, Weeds), Ben Barnes (Black Mirror, The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian), and newcomer Joe Freeman, who plays Luke Ellis—a boy whose brilliance can’t save him when strangers come in the night.
One moment, Luke is safe in his own bed. The next, he wakes in a place that calls itself The Institute, though it has little in common with any school. Here, he meets other children with strange talents—sparks in their heads that the grown-ups are determined to harness. And somewhere in a nearby small town, ex-cop Tim Jamieson (Barnes) is trying to forget all the ways he’s failed. But fate has plans to drag him into the fight.
The ensemble includes Simone Miller (Detention Adventure), Fionn Laird (Under the Banner of Heaven), Hannah Galway (Sex/Life), Julian Richings (X-Men: The Last Stand, Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief), Robert Joy (From), and Martin Roach (The Umbrella Academy, The Shape of Water).
Before the series premiered, CinemaChords spoke with regular cast member Mary-Louise Parker about how the show examines a very real psychological affliction: the tendency of individuals who believe they are fighting for justice to become so myopic and deluded that they lose all sense of perspective. As Parker observed, people often cannot see beyond the narrow confines of their immediate environment, forgetting that morality is not something one can selectively apply.
And with King’s novel widely acclaimed as his most harrowing portrayal of children fighting back since It, we asked Parker how she believes The Institute will resonate with today’s generation—especially in comparison to the 1990 It miniseries, which terrified an entire era and remains as potent and unsettling today as it was then. Her response suggested that it will be fascinating to see, as contemporary audiences are far more desensitized, making it significantly more difficult for a story to leave the same kind of lasting impact.