Manny the Movie Guy
Manny the Movie Guy Heads to New York for Exclusive Face-to-Face Interviews with the Cast and Showrunners of Netflix's "I Will Find You"
Hey everybody, Manny the Movie Guy here — and I have to say, sometimes this job takes you somewhere special. Netflix flew me all the way to New York City to sit down face-to-face with the cast and creative team behind I Will Find You, the streamer's gripping new thriller based on bestselling author Harlan Coben's novel of the same name. And let me tell you — spending time with this group of people made me love the show even more.
I Will Find You is streaming now on Netflix. All eight episodes. Clear your weekend.
(Watch our interview above, and click here for our uncut chat)
The Story That Grabbed the World
Before I get into the interviews, let me set the scene for anyone who hasn't started the series yet. Sam Worthington stars as David Burroughs, a former law professor serving a life sentence for the murder of his young son — a crime he has always insisted he did not commit. Five years into that sentence, his former sister-in-law Rachel Mills, played by Britt Lower, shows up at the prison with a photograph that changes everything: his son Matthew appears to be alive, spotted at an amusement park. What follows is a prison break, a cross-country chase, a web of secrets that goes far deeper than anyone imagined, and a father who will stop at nothing to find his child.
As I told my NBC Palm Springs audience: clearing his name is not even the real story. It is about finding his son.
Sitting Down with Sam Worthington
Sam Worthington is one of those actors who carries the weight of a film on his shoulders without ever making it look heavy. In person, he is warm, thoughtful, and completely focused when he talks about David Burroughs.
What struck me most in our conversation was how he described where David begins emotionally. "The story is about a dad who's accused of murdering his son and then finds out that he's alive," Worthington explained. "So he sets out on finding the truth." But he was quick to point out that the journey is about far more than clearing his name. It is about healing. About hope. The twists and turns of the story were what drew him to the project — the way each revelation reshapes everything you thought you knew.
He also talked about David's self-imposed emotional isolation in those first five years in prison — refusing visitors, shutting the world out — and how the photograph of Matthew shatters all of that in an instant. That emotional turn, Worthington said, is what the whole show is built on: a man coming back to life because he has a reason to fight.
Britt Lower: The Heart of the Chase
If Sam Worthington is the engine of I Will Find You, Britt Lower is its heart. You may know her from Severance, where she was nothing short of brilliant, and here she brings that same intelligence and emotional precision to Rachel Mills — a former decorated reporter for the Boston Globe, now lecturing at Quincy College, whose life is turned upside down the moment she walks into that prison.
What I loved hearing from Britt in our New York conversation was how she framed Rachel's impossible position. "The tension that builds for Rachel is that in order to help David find his son, she has to not only break the law — aiding and abetting a fugitive — she also has to reopen these very tender wounds that her sister is only now just healing from," she told me. Rachel is not just risking her career and her freedom. She is risking her family.
What makes "I Will Find You" stand out is exactly what Britt described in our chat: there is no slow-burn romance, no manufactured will-they-won't-they tension between David and Rachel. Just two people bound together by love for the same child — and that is more than enough.
Chi McBride and Logan Browning: The Pursuit
One of the show's most clever moves is the FBI team chasing David. Chi McBride plays Max Williams, a veteran agent on the Fugitive Task Force who is utterly uninterested in David's claims of innocence. Logan Browning plays his partner, Sarah Greer — younger, sharper, and perhaps more open to doubt.
What makes the Max and Sarah dynamic so compelling — and what Hull revealed to me as a deliberate departure from Coben's novel — is that in the series, Max and Sarah are not just partners. They are father and daughter. "It was really just wanting to lean into the themes that Harlan did so well in the novel, which is about parents and children — how do you support your child while also protecting them?" Hull explained. That one creative choice deepens every scene they share and gives the pursuit its own emotional stakes.
Robert Hull and Harlan Coben: Building the World
Sitting down with showrunner Robert Hull and the man himself, Harlan Coben, was a genuine thrill. These two have built an extraordinary partnership with Netflix, and I Will Find You represents a milestone: it is the first Coben adaptation set in the United States rather than the UK, and that shift changes everything about the texture of the show.
Hull told me about a key structural change he made from the novel — one that shaped the entire series. In Coben's book, David and Rachel operate in parallel, following separate threads. Hull merged them into a true two-hander, keeping David and Rachel side by side for the entire chase. That decision, he said, was about giving the audience a constant emotional anchor.
Coben, characteristically playful and razor-sharp, talked about where he always starts with a thriller: the worst possible place. "I wanted him to start in the worst place imaginable," Coben said of David Burroughs. "When he is accused of murdering his own son, he doesn't fight so hard because his son is dead. Even if he's able to prove his own innocence, his son is still not there." The photograph of Matthew alive does not just give David hope — it gives him a reason to be human again.
Coben also teased — with that trademark mischief in his eyes — that Matthew's story may not be entirely finished in the world of his novels. When asked about the boy's future, he hinted that characters from one adaptation have been known to appear in another. Nothing is ever truly over in Harlan Coben's universe.
Why New York Was the Right Place for This Story
There is something fitting about the fact that Netflix held these interviews in New York. Parts of "I Will Find You" were actually filmed around New York City — including around Washington Square Park, Central Park, and Times Square — and the show carries that energy. It is a thriller built on urban momentum, on the feeling that truth is always one corner away, one phone call away, one photograph away.
Walking through those same streets after spending a day talking to this remarkable cast and creative team, I found myself thinking about what Coben said at the heart of it all: every family has a secret. Whether they admit it or not. That universal truth is what makes I Will Find You so impossible to turn off — and what will keep people talking long after the finale.
The Bottom Line
"I Will Find You" is streaming now on Netflix. All eight episodes are available. Sam Worthington, Britt Lower, Milo Ventimiglia, Chi McBride, Logan Browning, Madeleine Stowe, Erin Richards, and the rest of this extraordinary ensemble have made something genuinely gripping — and spending time with them in New York only deepened my admiration for what they pulled off.
From Manny the Movie Guy: this one earns three out of four kisses, and a very strong recommendation to start it tonight.
For more exclusive interviews, reviews, and entertainment coverage, follow Manny the Movie Guy on YouTube, Instagram (@mannymovies), and at NBCPalmSprings.com.
By: Manny Dela Rosa
June 22, 2026


