The Bandi series arrives on Netflix on April 9, 2026 with eight episodes and a clear ambition: to tell a Martinique story without reducing the island to a mere backdrop. The starting point is brutal. After the death of their mother, eleven brothers and sisters aged 7 to 23 have to stand their ground, protect the younger ones, pay what they have to pay, and decide how far they’re willing to go to stay afloat. For some of the siblings, trafficking becomes a temptation. For others, it’s a red line.
Created by Éric Rochant and Capucine Rochan, the series is based on strong family material. It’s not a drama built solely around violence. It’s a story about grief, solidarity, coping, social pressure and the way a family can fall apart when the central pillar disappears. This basis gives the project more depth than a simple crime drama. It also allows the series Bandi to enter into a Martinican reality where questions of the future, precariousness and transmission can never be treated lightly.
Martinique filmed from the inside
One of the most interesting aspects of the series is its territorial anchoring. The series was shot in Martinique, making the island a dramatic space in its own right. The streets, the working-class neighborhoods, the vegetation, the social contrasts and the tension of everyday life are all part of the story. The series Bandi is not based on a tourist image of Martinique. Instead, it chooses a rougher, denser framework, closer to the realities that run through part of the territory.
This choice gives the series a real visual identity. It also avoids the common pitfall of filming the Caribbean as a postcard backdrop. Here, the island weighs on trajectories, choices and power relationships. Martinique is not behind the story. It’s in the story. This is what gives the series its special significance for Caribbean audiences, who are increasingly looking for works that show their territories in ways other than worn-out clichés.
Martinique faces in the foreground
The Bandi series also stands out for its cast. Netflix features Djody Grimeau, Rodney Dijon, Ambre Bozza, Hay-Lee-Jah Caloc, Amah Fofana, Kahela Borval, Cédric Camille, Teyvan Misat, Liyem Lostau and Nahël Demar. At the Madiana preview, other names associated with the series were also highlighted, including William Paul Joseph, Jonathan Zaccaï, Lucas Pernock, Evan Lienafa, Steeven Mornet and Souane Rosamont.
The strongest fact remains elsewhere: 75 of the 82 speaking roles are played by local actors, not to mention 1,500 extras recruited locally. This profoundly changes the scope of the project. The Bandi series not only shows Martinique, it also gives it its own faces. For some of these actors, this production represents unprecedented exposure, in a series destined for international circulation.
A shoot that left its mark on the local audiovisual landscape
The series Bandi is not limited to its on-screen results. The filming was also important for the local audiovisual industry. Martinique’s talents were mobilized in front of and behind the camera, and the production created a working environment rare in its scope. For a region where opportunities at this level are still limited, a series like this is also worthwhile as an experience, as accelerated training and as a point of support for the future.
A few lines in Creole also contribute to this anchoring. This detail is not incidental. In a production aimed at a very wide audience, keeping a portion of the local language helps to preserve texture, rhythm and truth. The series thus gains in cultural density, while remaining accessible to a global audience.
Madiana, a preview that lives up to expectations
The preview organized on March 19, 2026 at the Madiana cinema in Martinique gave a glimpse of what the Bandi series already represents for the territory. The first episode was screened there before going online worldwide, in an evening that brought together crew, actors and audience. The symbolism is strong: before traveling the world, the series first met the people whose faces, voices and tensions it bears.
The preview also confirmed that the Bandi is more than just a platform novelty. It is already part of Martinique’s recent cultural history, because it links several dimensions rarely found together on this scale: worldwide distribution, a largely local cast, filming rooted on the island and a story that takes the risk of tackling sensitive social realities.
A series that's already making a difference in the Caribbean
The Bandi series may mark a turning point. Not because it will single-handedly settle debates on the image of the Antilles, but because it opens up a wider space for Caribbean stories on screen. It shows that ambitious fiction can be shot in Martinique, supported by local talent, and then broadcast far beyond the island. In this way, the series is not just a Netflix release. It becomes a test, a signal, and perhaps the beginning of a new stage for Martinique’s audiovisual visibility.
Bandi is an eight-episode drama series shot in Martinique. The story follows a sibling confronted with the death of his mother, precariousness, family tensions and survival choices that can turn a life upside down. The interest of the series lies not only in its plot, but also in its ability to place Martinique at the center of a story broadcast internationally.
The Bandi series is attracting attention because it gives Martinique rare visibility on a global platform. It showcases local actors, extras and technicians, while using real sets on the island. It also generates interest because it raises an important question: how can Martinique be portrayed on screen with intensity, without confining it to a reductive image?
The Bandi series was shot in Martinique. This local anchoring gives the project a real identity, as the island is not used as a mere visual backdrop. Landscapes, neighborhoods, atmospheres and some of the local language all play their part in the narrative. This reinforces the sense of authenticity and gives the series a texture closer to the territory.
The Bandi series features several actors, with a strong presence of Martinican talent in the speaking roles. This aspect is essential, as it enables the production to bring out the faces of the region in a drama that is destined to travel far beyond the island. The casting thus contributes to the cultural scope of the series as much as to its audiovisual impact.
The Bandi series is important for the Caribbean audiovisual industry, because it shows that an ambitious project can be filmed in Martinique with strong local involvement, and then broadcast on a large scale. Beyond its release on Netflix, it represents a signal for the industry: more visibility, more filming experience, and the possibility of opening the way to other Caribbean narratives carried by the territories themselves.