Entertainment

Capture Season 3: Episode three lands Sunday — full schedule and what to expect

capture season 3 has returned, fronted by Holliday Grainger, and episode three lands on Sunday 22 March at 9pm ET alongside a morning release at 6am ET; the run is a six-episode, six-week schedule that pushes the series deeper into surveillance and deepfake territory.

Capture Season 3: Episode schedule and how many episodes there are

Producers have kept the same format as prior runs: this series contains six episodes released across six weeks. New installments arrive each Sunday, with the listed evening broadcast at 9pm ET and an earlier availability at 6am ET on the same day. Episode three is explicitly scheduled for Sunday 22 March at 9pm ET and joins the two episodes already released in the current run.

Immediate developments and what unfolds next

The central story remains anchored on DI Rachel Carey, portrayed on screen by Holliday Grainger. In series three Rachel is serving as Acting Commander of Counter Terrorism Command and is tasked with rebuilding public trust in surveillance through a new initiative known in the series as Operation Veritas, a camera system designed to be resistant to tampering that then unravels after a major incident, leaving Carey as the lone witness.

The series continues to explore technology-driven manipulation: the programme’s earlier seasons introduced a procedure labeled “Correction, ” a government operation that alters live CCTV footage in real time to create false evidence. The narrative arc moves from doctored CCTV in the first run to manipulation of live news transmissions and political damage in the second, and now into the purportedly secure systems of the third.

Immediate reactions

Inside the drama, a fictional on-screen presenter poses the question at the heart of the series: “How do we begin to sort fact from fiction?” — attributed to Khadija Khan, news presenter (in-show).

Commentary outside the episodes has also framed the show as sharply topical. Sophie Sanders, writer, describes the return as feeling “less like fiction and more like a mirror held up to our present reality, ” reflecting concerns the series foregrounds about image manipulation and public trust. Fans quoted in public responses have called the drama gripping and noted its unnerving relevance to real-world technology debates.

The cast and the programme’s plot threads are explicitly tied to these themes: Shaun Emery (portrayed by Callum Turner) and Isaac Turner (portrayed by Paapa Essiedu) are named figures in the series history whose arcs demonstrate the show’s focus on how visual evidence can be weaponized.

Quick background

The Capture first debuted in 2019 and is back for its third series. The new run is set twelve months after the second series ended and again concentrates on surveillance, disinformation and the manipulation of recorded and live footage.

What’s next — what viewers should watch for

Expect the coming episodes to escalate the stakes around Operation Veritas and to interrogate who can be trusted when cameras and recordings are no longer assumed as objective proof. Episode four will follow in the weekly schedule after episode three, continuing the six-week rollout and unfolding the consequences of the recent major incident that leaves Rachel Carey central to the investigation.

For viewers following the schedule closely: capture season 3 continues to drop on Sundays with evening broadcasts at 9pm ET and morning releases at 6am ET, through the six-episode arc. The immediate focus will be on how the series translates its technology-driven premise into answers — or deeper questions — about truth and evidence.

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