'Servant' First Look Clips: M. Night Shyamalan's Creepy Apple TV+ Series Is Just As Mysterious As You'd Expect

Apple has done a fairly decent job in promoting the numerous series coming to its upcoming streaming service. We’ve seen trailers and clips for shows like “The Morning Show,” “See,” “Dickinson,” and “For All Mankind.” However, up until now, one of the most intriguing shows on the streaming services’ docket, “Servant,” has yet to be teased. Until now.

Thanks to two new clips, we’ve finally got our first look at “Servant,” the new series from producer M. Night Shyamalan. And much like you’d expect from an M. Night project, “Servant” is very much creepy and definitely mysterious.

The first quick clip features a baby swing that is just sitting in the middle of a living room during the day. The camera then switches to the baby in the contraption, and damn if that isn’t the creepiest kid you’ve seen in a long time. Here’s hoping that it’s really a doll and this is just a creepy, realistic doll and not what the kid is supposed to look like.

READ MORE: ‘Dickinson’ Trailer: Apple TV+ Takes A Comedic Approach To The Life Of The Legendary Poet

The second clip features a young woman talking about crickets and how she says that finding a cricket in your home is the sign of something bad about to happen. Great, just what I need to hear. I’m already a terrible coward when it comes to bugs, and now crickets, which “Pinocchio” proved to be generally nice beings, are somehow supposed to signal impending evil? Ugh.

The synopsis for “Servant” also doesn’t help tell much about what to expect with Shyamalan’s series:

From M. Night Shyamalan, Servant follows a Philadelphia couple in mourning after an unspeakable tragedy creates a rift in their marriage and opens the door for a mysterious force to enter their home.

“Servant” is set to star Toby Kebbell, Lauren Ambrose, Nell Tiger Free, and Rupert Grint. The series comes from Tony Basgallop, who is probably best known in the US for being a writer on the two most recent versions of ‘24,’ “Outcast,” “Resurrection,” and “Berlin Station.”

“Servant” doesn’t have an official release date, but it will be available for subscribers of Apple TV+, which launches on November 1.