
In this new chapter set within Netflix’s expanding universe of high-concept franchise storytelling — from fantasy spinoffs like The Rats: A Witcher Tale to global crime phenomena — Berlin returns stronger than ever. And this time, Seville is the canvas. Sunlit plazas, historic palaces and aristocratic power circles replace vault doors and diamonds as the backdrop for a new masterstroke: the theft of a Da Vinci. Beauty, danger and pure criminal elegance define the mission, as the gang reunites for what may be its most refined operation yet.
Netflix has unveiled the teaser trailer for Berlin and the Lady with an Ermine, confirming a story that pivots from brute-force spectacle to art-world illusion. What appears to be a priceless masterpiece robbery is only the surface of a far more calculated deception. The real objective is to outmaneuver an aristocratic couple who believe they can manipulate Berlin, pushing him toward a darker and more vengeful edge. Here is everything to know about Berlin and the Lady with an Ermine before it arrives – from the plot and cast to themes, early buzz and release date.
Berlin and the Lady with an Ermine: All the key details
- Title: Berlin and the Lady with an Ermine
- Series: Berlin (new chapter)
- Format: Series
- Episodes: 8
- Genre: Crime, heist thriller, drama
- Country of production: Spain
- Original language: Spanish
- Release date (U.S. and global): May 15, 2026
- Creators: Álex Pina, Esther Martínez Lobato
- Writers: Álex Pina, Esther Martínez Lobato, David Barrocal, Lorena G. Maldonado, Itziar Sanjuán, Humberto Ortega, Luis Garrido Julve
- Directors: Albert Pintó, David Barrocal, José Manuel Cravioto
- Production company: Vancouver Media
- Setting: Seville, Spain
- Platform: Netflix
What Berlin and the Lady with an Ermine is about
Berlin and the Lady with an Ermine follows Berlin and Damián as they reunite the crew in Seville for a “perfect” robbery: the apparent theft of Leonardo da Vinci’s Lady with an Ermine. But the season’s central move is misdirection. The theft is designed as a convincing illusion because Berlin’s real target is the Duke of Málaga and his wife, an aristocratic couple who think they can blackmail him.
The teaser frames the story as a pressure-cooker game of power, image, and humiliation, where the point is not just to win, but to make the other side realize too late that the board was rigged from the start. When the couple’s challenge escalates, it awakens Berlin’s darkest side and a thirst for revenge that threatens to fracture the plan from within.

Cast: who returns and who’s new
Pedro Alonso returns as Berlin, the character whose mix of elegance, ego, and volatility made him one of the franchise’s defining presences. The spinoff has always depended on Alonso’s ability to make Berlin simultaneously charming and dangerous, and the new installment leans into that contradiction by placing him in a setting where reputation and control are currency.
Tristán Ulloa is back as Damián, Berlin’s key partner in the operation and the figure who helps translate impulse into strategy. Damián’s role matters here because the con requires discipline: the theft must look flawless, even as the true objective unfolds beneath it. The crew also includes returning series regulars Michelle Jenner (Keila), Begoña Vargas (Cameron), Julio Peña Fernández (Roi), and Joel Sánchez (Bruce). Together, they bring continuity from the first chapter of Berlin, while the new mission reshapes their dynamic into something more public-facing and socially elevated.
Among the new additions, Inma Cuesta joins as Candela, a Sevillian presence positioned to alter both the emotional and tactical balance of the heist. The season’s antagonistic force comes through José Luis García-Pérez as the Duke of Málaga and Marta Nieto as the Duchess of Málaga, the couple whose attempted leverage over Berlin sets the revenge engine in motion.

Early buzz and what the teaser signals
Because the season has been introduced through a teaser-first rollout, reactions are still forming, but the premise has immediate franchise appeal: Berlin’s most “cultured” job yet, with art as the headline and revenge as the subtext. The teaser’s tone suggests a slicker, more psychological kind of tension, where appearances are weaponized and the biggest danger is losing control of the narrative.
Behind the scenes and production notes
The eight-episode season is created by Álex Pina and Esther Martínez Lobato, with the writing team including David Barrocal, Lorena G. Maldonado, Itziar Sanjuán, Humberto Ortega, and Luis Garrido Julve. Directing duties are shared by Albert Pintó, David Barrocal, and José Manuel Cravioto. The story is set in Seville, aligning the series with a brighter, more architectural backdrop that contrasts with the colder urban energy of many heist dramas.
Why it’s worth adding to your watchlist
This upcoming Netflix heist thriller stands out because it uses a famous painting as a narrative decoy, shifting the suspense from “can they steal it?” to “who are they really stealing from?” The Duke-and-Duchess angle pushes the story into a social arena where status, pride, and leverage shape every move. If you enjoy Money Heist or character-driven crime dramas built on deception, this upcoming release should be on your radar.
Release date and where to watch
Berlin and the Lady with an Ermine premieres on Netflix on May 15, 2026, with eight episodes releasing on the platform.

