
A Good Girl's Guide to Murder Season 2: Release date rumors, cast updates and what to expect next
If you binged A Good Girl's Guide to Murder Season 1 and are still reeling from those jaw-dropping twists, you're not alone! The British teen mystery series, adapted from Holly Jackson's hit novel, had us all hooked with Pip Fitz-Amobi's fearless sleuthing. Now that Season 2 is officially greenlit, fans are dying to know what's next. Here's the latest on the release date, cast, plot, and more to tide you over until Pip's back on our screens. A Good Girl's Guide to Murder Season 2 Potential Release Date
We don't have an exact premiere date yet, but we've got some solid hints. Netflix and the BBC confirmed Season 2 on November 20, 2024, and filming is slated to kick off in the UK on April 13, 2025. Production is expected to wrap by mid-July 2025. Given this timeline, a late 2025 release is possible, but early 2026 feels more realistic to give the team time to perfect those thrilling episodes. A Good Girl's Guide to Murder Season 2 Expected Cast
Emma Myers is back as our favorite amateur detective, Pip Fitz-Amobi, bringing her sharp mind and stubborn heart to the role. Zain Iqbal also returns as Ravi Singh, Pip's trusty sidekick and potential love interest, with fans already buzzing about more 'PipRavi' moments after their sweet chemistry in Season 1. Both actors have shared their excitement, with Iqbal hinting at deeper scenes for the duo.
While the full cast hasn't been revealed, we expect some familiar faces from Little Kilton to return, especially since Season 2 adapts Good Girl, Bad Blood , the second book in Holly Jackson's trilogy. Likely returning actors include: Asha Banks as Cara Ward, Pip's bestie
Yali Topol Margalith as Lauren Gibson
Jude Morgan-Collie as Connor Reynolds
Raiko Gohara as Zach Chen
Anna Maxwell Martin as Leanne Amobi, Pip's mom
Gary Beadle as Victor Amobi, Pip's dad
New characters are joining the story too, tied to the fresh mystery. Recently announced additions include: Eden H Davies as Jamie Reynolds, a key player in the new case
Jack Rowan as Charlie Green
Misia Butler as Stanley Forbes
Since Season 1 wrapped up the Andie Bell case, characters like India Lillie Davies (Andie) and Rahul Pattni (Sal Singh) might not return in major roles, though flashbacks could bring them back briefly. With Holly Jackson co-writing the season, the casting will likely stay true to the books while adding some surprises. A Good Girl's Guide to Murder Season 2 Potential Plot
Season 2 will dive into Good Girl, Bad Blood , the second book in Holly Jackson's trilogy, picking up after Pip's game-changing investigation into Andie Bell's murder. The official synopsis teases a transformed world for Pip, who's reeling from the fallout of exposing dark truths in her small town of Little Kilton. Determined to step back from sleuthing, Pip's resolve is tested when Jamie Reynolds, the brother of her friend Connor, vanishes under mysterious circumstances during Max Hastings' trial.
The season will explore Pip's inner struggles, her evolving relationship with Ravi, and the secrets still lurking in Little Kilton. Expect more twists, moral dilemmas, and high-stakes drama as Pip uncovers clues that someone wants to keep buried.
Ahmedabad Plane Crash A Good Girl's Guide To Murder
Aman Shukla is a post-graduate in mass communication . A media enthusiast who has a strong hold on communication ,content writing and copy writing. Aman is currently working as journalist at BusinessUpturn.com
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Los Angeles Times
7 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Go behind the scenes with the ‘Alien: Earth' cast at Comic-Con 2025
SAN DIEGO — Sydney Chandler has wanted to attend San Diego Comic-Con as a fan for years. So it's 'surreal' that the actor's first experience with the annual pop culture expo is to promote her upcoming FX series 'Alien: Earth.' Chandler stars in the 'Alien' prequel as Wendy, a young girl whose consciousness has been transferred to an android. 'To be able to do it in this capacity is just mind-blowing,' she tells The Times in advance of the show's Hall H premiere on Friday. 'It's emotional because we worked on this for so long and I learned so much. … I'm kind of at a loss of words.' She does have words of appreciation, though, including for what she's learned from her character. 'Her journey of finding out how to hold her own and stand on her own two feet taught me so much,' says Chandler. 'I'm an overthinker. I'm an anxious person. I would have run so fast. I would not be as brave as her, but she taught me … that it's OK to just stand on your own two feet, and that's enough. That's powerful.' Even before the show's Hall H panel, fans have gathered on the sidewalk outside of the Hard Rock Hotel San Diego to catch a glimpse of Chandler and her 'Alien: Earth' cast mates Timothy Olyphant, Alex Lawther, Samuel Blenkin and Babou Ceesay, along with creator Noah Hawley and executive producer David Zucker, on their short trek to the bus that would transport them to the convention center for the show's world premiere. On the ride over, Hawley betrays no nerves about people seeing the first episode. 'I really think, in a strange way, it plays for all ages because it is about growing up on some level,' says the showrunner. 'But it's also 'Alien,' and it is a meditation on power and corporate power. ' Huddled together on the bus with Lawther and Blenkin, Ceesay is surprised to learn that this is the first time attending San Diego Comic-Con for all three. There's plenty of good-natured ribbing as they talk about the early interviews they've completed at the event. 'I just sort of want to make jokes with you all the time,' says Lawther as he looks towards his cast mates. 'I find it quite giddy in the experience, and I had to remind myself that I'm a professional.' 'Sometimes the British sarcasm instinct just kicks in,' Blenkin adds. Their playful dynamic continues as they joke about crashing Ceesay's other panel, and also backstage at Hall H as they try to sneak up on each other in the dark. After the panel, the cast is whisked away for video interviews and signing posters at a fan meet-and-greet at a booth on the exhibit floor. ('Timothy, you're the man!' shouts a fan passing by.) Later, Hawley, Chandler and Ceesay will hit the immersive 'Alien: Earth' activation where they will explore the wreckage of a crashed ship. 'It's such a safe space for people who just enjoy cinema and enjoy film,' Chandler says of Comic-Con. 'And that's me. I'm a complete nerd for all this stuff, so just to be around that group — it reminds me of why I love film so much in the first place.'
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Back in Black: Jenna Ortega and Tim Burton Break Their Silence on ‘Wednesday' Season 2
Jenna Ortega and Tim Burton sit down across from you, and there's a lot to take in. The red-hot star and the black-heart director are a study in surface-level contrasts and soon-to-be-revealed similarities. This is their first major sit-down interview together, and both are a bit anxious. Ortega is sometimes fidgety and other times gives you that frozen Wednesday Addams 'I can see your soul' stare. The more freewheeling Burton — with his signature dark carnival-spun cotton candy hair — routinely tries out several sentences before deciding which is best. More from The Hollywood Reporter NewFest Sets New Voices Filmmaker Grant Recipients in Partnership With Netflix 'P.I. Moms' Was a Train Wreck for Lifetime. Now It's a 'Trainwreck' on Netflix Venice Strikes Back: Alberto Barbera on His Powerhouse 2025 Festival Lineup They are, Burton warns, 'two people who speak in 'erms' and 'ums,' that's our language' — sharing a joint discomfort with the obligatory 'Let's sell the show!' interview process as they have battle scars from past press encounters (with Ortega sporting a particularly fresh wound). Not helping matters is that our chat is being conducted in a drab New York high-rise conference room, where Ortega and Burton look like exotic fish out of water, plucked from the more colorful lagoons they typically inhabit. Some background: Ortega is the 22-year-old sensation who went from head-turning roles in ensemble horror franchise films X and Scream VI to starring in Netflix's smash hit Wednesday, which follows the droll Addams Family teen as she attends the Nevermore Academy school for 'outsiders.' Ortega also co-starred in fall's Warner Bros. box office hit Beetlejuice Beetlejuice. Both Wednesday and the Beetlejuice franchise are directed by the 66-year-old Burton, who's enjoying a late-career revival thanks to these back-to-back hits with his Gen Z star. With a list of credits ranging from Batman to Ed Wood to Sweeney Todd, Burton has long been a singularly unique goth artist type who has somehow managed to survive, and often thrive, within the studio system. (Burton doesn't use the word 'goth,' by the way. 'It's lost meaning,' he says. But it's tough to detach his brand from that word — and it's safe to assume he doesn't like the word 'brand,' either.) The duo come bearing some news: Wednesday has scored a renewal for season three, and a spinoff series is in early discussions. Below, they're interrogated about Wednesday season two (which returns Aug. 6; trailer below), the perils of fame (such as — pardon us, we're just quoting — being called a 'cunt whore' in front of one's mother) and a potential Beetlejuice 3 (Warner Bros. film boss Mike De Luca will want to pay close attention to this part). We tried to make this painless, but it wasn't entirely possible. These two feel deep. Let's go back to the start: What initially excited you both about ? TIM BURTON I've never done television, so it was the idea of exploring something on a longer time frame, and she's an interesting character. As much as a middle-aged man could feel like a teenage Wednesday Addams, I feel those things. And she's a character that's all about being subtle because she doesn't really have a huge range of emotions. JENNA ORTEGA She's also one of the few protagonists who is able to get away with that, aside from villains — who tend not to have emotional growth or depth. … I actually did an audition for [a Wednesday animated movie] when I was 14, and I didn't get it. I remember telling my mom, 'That would be cool to be her, though.' Tim, you once said, 'You have to kind of be Wednesday, and that's what Jenna is — whether she likes it or not.' Jenna, how do you feel about that? ORTEGA I think I am? I don't know. I don't know why I got this job. I will say maybe I feel even more attached to her now. BURTON You can become a lot of different things as an actor. But for Wednesday, you have to have it. I don't mean that she's dark. You need this weird internal strength and clarity because you can't manufacture it. Jenna's like a silent movie actor, and what I enjoy about her character is not so much the [dialogue] but the way she presents herself. Before Ortega was cast, Burton had warned Wednesday creators and showrunners Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, 'If we don't find Wednesday, there is no show.' But there was almost no show to begin with. 'We thought the idea for Wednesday was such a no-brainer, but when we went out to pitch it, we only had one bidder,' reveals Millar. After Netflix bit, Ortega auditioned by Zoom while filming X. The showrunners say she brought a sharpness and otherworldliness to her reading that other candidates lacked. 'The easy take on the character is that she's a bitch, that she's cold,' Millar says. 'But Wednesday's not trying to be that way, and you never feel that way with Jenna.' What worked well — and what didn't work so well — that first season? ORTEGA Netflix has a lot more trust this time around. So we were able to do things on a grander scale and were able to spend more time on sequences. There are also a lot of new castmembers like Steve Buscemi and Billie Piper, and doing a scene with them pushes you further because they're so gifted. We also play on the excitement that Wednesday got from having saved the school in the first season. So it's nice to see her shut down again out of pure agony [from the attention]. BURTON The key element always is — and this is where Jenna is crucial — that the show could so easily veer away from what that character is. They could try to give her a bigger arc, make her more emotional. Jenna knows how far you can go. There's a creative freedom when you are clear about that. ORTEGA Sometimes I'll catch a glance of a shot and realize part of why a scene isn't working is because my posture's off, or my chin isn't tilted down enough or that I'm not still enough. Yes, the character is so specific, right down to not blinking. Surely your eyes get tired. ORTEGA You [blink] on everybody else's line. Your eye does start twitching. There were a couple setups in season one that looked like I was crying because I was trying to keep my eyes open. Was there anything about the performance that you look back on that you wished you had done differently? ORTEGA All the time. I don't think I've ever shot a scene in my life that has not kept me up at night and given me nightmares. I can't watch the stuff that I do because I don't think I would ever show my face again. I was 17 or 18 when we started this, and I was so nervous and so scared. The first two weeks of production were some of the most chaotic, stressful moments in my career. When I see some of the old footage, I can see the confusion or the stress. Do you ever wonder if you're being too hard on yourself? Isn't there a point in which trying to be that perfect becomes less useful? ORTEGA I get told that all the time, and I can totally acknowledge that. But I've also got this weird thing where every day I change who I am to a certain degree. I will be having a full-blown panic attack about something and then I will end it with, 'I actually don't care.' BURTON She hides it well. All the things she's talking about, I never sensed that. Those feelings never came out. ORTEGA I think it's from starting my career so young and being accustomed to being on a set. I have a lot of respect for people who carry themselves with professionalism. I want to make sure everybody else is comfortable, and it's stressful when you can sense somebody else's stress. Like with Tim, some directors freak out when they're in tense situations, but if anything, he almost gets calmer. That's such a gift because you feel like you have the space to do what you need to do and nothing else matters. BURTON The first time on set, the first day of shooting, I knew from the beginning that Jenna knows everything about what's going on in front of and behind the camera. I could see her watching everybody. ORTEGA I'm a creep. You're never not being watched by me. This seems to be a point of difference between you. Tim, in your early interviews, you talked about how you embrace the flaws in your work. BURTON Have you seen [Beetlejuice Beetlejuice]? Everything is still flawed! That's just part of who I am. I'm a flawed individual. How has your relationship evolved along the way? BURTON For me, it hasn't. ORTEGA Maybe we have a touch more shorthand? Both of us want to do things as quickly and efficiently as possible. So if he has a note, we just kind of look at each other. BURTON My favorite form of communication — not speaking. That's also one of the things that we came up with for the show: If Wednesday doesn't want to be somewhere, she just [abruptly walks away, often in the middle of a conversation]. That's something I always feel. If you go to a party and don't want to be there, you walk out. That reminds me of a line from the new season I liked — 'I don't have FOMO. I have a fear of being included.' ORTEGA That line was hard for me because I didn't know if I wanted to use acronyms. BURTON That's what she questions all the time: 'Would she say that?' and 'Would she do that?' are questions on a daily basis. Ortega taking ownership of her character led to a controversy after the first season aired. The show generated 252 million views globally, becoming Netflix's biggest English-language series of all time. Netflix chief content officer Bela Bajaria says its success 'went beyond analytics: People watched it again and again and brought their parents into it, and it became a multigenerational show. There were soldiers in Ukraine doing the Wednesday dance.' Gough, meanwhile, notes its popularity proved their instincts about it were correct, and that 'everybody identifies as an outcast, no matter who you are.' But during a podcast interview, Ortega accidentally caused an uproar after she said that she spent her time on set 'changing lines' and 'had to put my foot down' because 'everything I had to play did not make sense for the character.' Asked about this, Gough responds: 'Jenna gave notes on the scripts. She's now a producer. She's very involved, and she has a 360-degree view of things that, frankly, you don't find with most actors. I think she'll have a long career.' What was that like for you, personally, to have your first experience of being in a controversy and getting backlash? Every star goes through this at some point. But it doesn't mean it isn't hard while you're in it. ORTEGA I mean, I felt terrible. In no way did I mean to come across that way. I spend a lot of time in my head and I have all these different trains of thought, and all I needed to say was, 'I improvise.' Also, nobody, before, ever cared what I said. It was a good lesson. I was thinking that, too. If you said that two years earlier about another project, nobody would have noticed. BURTON In this new media world, people will find one thing you say and that's it. You can't stop it. It's like a virus. What was that like for you, Tim, as somebody who is protective of your star? BURTON I just felt bad for her because I know her, and I know the media, and I know what happened. I've had certain things happen to me where somebody tried to concoct some kind of story about me. This is why I don't hardly talk to anybody. ORTEGA The amount of times I have seen headlines with quotes that I've never actually said is bizarre. BURTON Then it becomes like the villagers in Frankenstein. Mass hysteria. People with torches. Fear of public persecution is also a theme in your work — like in . BURTON And it's upsetting because you can't really do anything. It doesn't matter if you retract it, or say, 'I didn't mean to say that.' Nobody gives a shit. ORTEGA And I pride myself on my professionalism, so that was a weak moment for me. There's a scene in the new season where Wednesday gets a letter from her editor on a book she wrote, and the editor says she's difficult to work with and won't take notes. Was that deliberately poking fun of this? BURTON It's always fun to have life and art intermingling. Jenna, you're furrowing your brow like, 'Wait a second …' ORTEGA No, I'm just trying to remember it. I don't know how meta it was for me. But I do think the great thing about the Wednesday character is she's constantly making societal remarks and just kind of degrading the public. So I think that that was a funny bit to touch upon and acknowledge it. Jenna, you once asked a great question of Natalie Portman that I wanted to ask you back: As far as the public persona of you goes, do you think it's accurate? ORTEGA Not at all. I think that's part of my struggle with that side of this job, because you feel incredibly misunderstood. It's almost to a point where it feels like your name doesn't belong to you. I almost don't even resonate with it anymore. I hate assumptions, and a big part of this job is that people are going to make assumptions about you. What do people assume that's not right? ORTEGA I don't know. Yes, I have qualities similar to Wednesday, but I'm not … BURTON You know what I miss? I miss the days of mystery. I miss when you didn't know how much a movie cost and when you didn't know everything about actors. So when people have a misunderstanding, it's like, why is it their business? ORTEGA That's the discussion on 'the death of the movie star,' and that's exactly it. We know too much. And the people feel entitled to those bits and pieces of your life where if they were put under the same microscope, they wouldn't feel nearly as comfortable. But there's an expectation on creative people, who half the time should not be speaking publicly. They're supposed to become salesmen for their brand. But they should just lock them in a room and let them create their art. BURTON I go further. I still love people. But I work with people I like working with, and I don't want to go out to dinner with them. The more I know about them, the less it's helpful for me as a director. Jenna, are you still able to go out and about at this point? ORTEGA Sometimes you go out, and it's a mess. And other times, I could be walking for hours and no one gives a shit. If you really want to go unseen, you can do it. I'm sure 99 percent of fan encounters are positive, but have you had any that are scary? ORTEGA I'm always scared. Somebody shouting your name in public is insane. Sometimes I feel uncomfortable when it's grown men approaching me. Also, sometimes people shout vile things. Like, you don't stop for somebody because you're going to be late for something and they're calling you a 'cunt whore' in front of your mother. It's horrific. Then I'm sure you're like, 'Oh, I wish I would have stopped for you.' ORTEGA Yeah! Let me go back … The dancing scene in season one was a huge breakout viral moment. Was there any sort of pressure going into season two of, 'Well, we probably can't top that, but can we find something that will stand out?' BURTON This sums up what I like about working with Jenna. We didn't do a big Broadway rehearsal. We didn't hire a choreographer. I picked the song and said, 'You just go do it.' She showed up on the day — I think she even had COVID — and we just did it. It was the most fun I had on the show because we just let it go. But to your question: No, we didn't think about it this time because we didn't think [about the dance number being a big deal] to begin with. It gets dangerous to say, 'We have to do something like this again.' How many seasons is this show, ideally? BURTON I don't think that way. You're talking to two of the worst people to ask that question. It might seem odd to ask how long a show will continue when its second season hasn't aired, but Ortega has hinted she's eager to explore other projects as well as make her own. Gough and Millar hope to keep Wednesday enrolled through the character's Nevermore tenure, which lasts seven years (or seasons). Yet ditching school early — like abruptly walking out of a conversation — would be such a Wednesday thing to do (Ortega stepped out of the Scream franchise after two films, but that was a unique situation; the actress has pointed to the project's collapse after her onscreen sister, Melissa Barrera, was ousted for social media posts and director Christopher Landon quit). The Wednesday team is exploring a spinoff, the details of which remain top secret for now. 'It's something we're definitely noodling; there are other characters we can look at,' says Gough, while Bajaria says — and one might consider this a hint — 'There's a lot to explore in the Addams Family.' Jenna, you've said that part of the reason studios are freaking out about Gen Z is because nobody knows why things hit the way they do. So not to put you on the spot with 'how to save Hollywood,' but what do you think it would take to get Gen Z into theaters? ORTEGA The emphasis on integrating Gen Z slang and behavior in films is so forced that it turns people off. I think studios are trying way too hard. Just give the new guy a chance, give the original script a chance, allow people to be creative and maybe step back a little bit. With Gen Z, it's hard to grab their attention. You can't show them stuff that they've already seen. I see Tim nodding along … BURTON Strongly agree. I'm a perfect example of that. I always worked with studios, but everything I did was kind of a surprise. I did movies that were on 10 Worst Movies of the Year lists — like [the original] Beetlejuice was. It surprises, it confuses people and then it clicks. And if you want somebody to do something, then let them do it. Otherwise it's like you're a star athlete and they break your legs and say, 'Go win the race.' Another thing you guys have in common is you both have criticized AI. James Cameron recently said that AI could make blockbusters financially viable. Could you ever see using it as a tool? BURTON I don't know that much about it. All I've seen is when people have done AI versions of my characters, and that I didn't like. I felt like something had been taken away from me. I'm sure there are a lot of great uses for it. Every new technology has the potential to be good or bad. ORTEGA I just see what's happening to young people and the kind of content AI is creating. It's taking out the humanity and we're getting further from the truth. You wonder why people are anxious and depressed, and it's because not everything that they're seeing is meant to be digested. It's junk food for the brain. It's not real. It's not attainable. It creates a great sense of isolation. And the beauty about film is that it comes from people with stories and personal experiences — and a computer can never replicate that. We've never not taken something too far. I feel like people never know when to draw the line. In April, Mike De Luca development on is starting 'imminently.' BURTON Really? Nobody told me. Maybe I've been replaced. ORTEGA Maybe I've been, too. Maybe [her character] Astrid dies and goes to heaven instead [of the films' Netherworld]. They should just take Baby Beetlejuice on tour and send him to Hawaii. BURTON It took 35 years to make the second one, so by that time I'll be 105. I know those odds are not good. I really, really enjoyed making this one, and [Warner Bros.] didn't even really want to do it. We did it the same way I did the first one, with the actors doing improv. It was beautiful to see some of the old cast and have Jenna. But it's like trying to re-create the Wednesday dance scene. I love the characters, but I don't necessarily see it. But it's tough for me to imagine you being like, 'Let somebody else do it.' BURTON No. I feel very proprietary about everything I do, even if I don't own the characters. When they did the [Beetlejuice Broadway musical], I got pissed. And Jenna, if they said, 'We want , but Tim is not directing it …' ORTEGA Oh, I would never. I also think anybody would be really wrong to get behind that project. Without him involved, what is it? It is what it is because of Tim. There's no other film you can compare Beetlejuice to. So why would you do that? That would be a tad disrespectful. Tim, we heard you might be doing a movie for Sony? BURTON I don't talk about anything until I'm doing it. I've had projects that I thought I was doing [like his scrapped Superman Lives movie starring Nicolas Cage], and it got canceled. When that happens, it's a soul destroying moment in life. I'll let you know when I'm on the set making a movie. Even then, you never quite know. ORTEGA I would love for you do to something based on the Japanese monster, though… BURTON Oh, don't worry, that could be happening. Jenna, as somebody with ambitions to direct yourself, is there anything about the way Tim directs that has inspired you? ORTEGA The way Tim carries himself on set. He's so polite. He knows everybody's names. He trusts the team. When I initially started working with him, I would ask him for notes and critiques. He wouldn't give any. It's not because he wasn't trying to be helpful, but he was allowing me the space to find what was going to work for me. It created a greater confidence in myself. I think he really brings out the best in people and allows them to think out of the box, so you want to get weirder and weirder with it. It's such a joy when someone brings that out of you. So what do you both hope to do over the next few years? ORTEGA I don't even have plans for tomorrow. It's a waste of time. BURTON Me either. This story appeared in the July 23 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Netflix's The Sandman ends (for now) on a disjointed note
This time around, Netflix's The Sandman adapts Neil Gaiman's magnum opus The Kindly Ones. The original work boasts multiple intriguing plot points and character arcs, polishing off the comic series (which ran for seven years) as a cohesive narrative that benefits from repeated readings. The series is less successful and more disjointed, primarily due to its haphazard approach to the material. Morpheus (Tom Sturridge) is dealing with the consequences from having ended his son Orpheus's (Ruairi O'Connor) life. It's a serious offense in the Endless to 'spill family blood,' and Desire (Mason Alexander Park) had tried to trick Morpheus into doing just that. Of course, Orpheus wanted to die—he had lived too long already and was just a head, which is limiting socially. Yet, despite inflicting deliberately crueler fates on others who have crossed him, Morpheus' undoing might come from his most selfless, compassionate act. The narrative doesn't actually address or question the arbitrary absurdity of these rules for long and instead leaps directly into Greek tragedy. The Eumenides, also known as the Furies, were the Greek deities of divine vengeance and retribution. The Greeks often referred to them as 'the Kindly Ones,' out of both polite deference and abject fear. These were not ladies you wanted to annoy, and Dinita Gohil, Nina Wadia, and Souad Faress are suitably creepy as the less-than-kind Furies. It's appropriate for a tale modeled off Greek tragedy that Morpheus clumsily sets in motion his own downfall. He seeks out Loki (Freddie Fox), who's hiding on Earth in a disguise that's tasteless yet fitting and hopes to enlist his aid against the vengeance-seeking Furies. Loki owes Morpheus his current freedom, but the god of mischief is not someone who pays his debts. He'd sooner eliminate whoever holds the IOU. So Loki, with his partner Puck (Jack Gleeson), sets out to frame Morpheus for an unimaginable crime. He doesn't manipulate or trick Morpheus into committing the act himself, a true Oedipus Rex-worthy twist. However, Loki's machinations produce two tragic heroes in one story. Lyta Hall (Razane Jammal) is easily convinced—too easily, in fact—that Morpheus has horribly wronged her, and her immense grief is forged into a weapon of destruction. Her frustrating gullibility makes it hard to sympathize with her, and it's just no fun to watch a thoroughly stupid antagonist. Fortunately, Fox is delightful as the dastardly Loki—a very different spin on the character if you're mostly familiar with Tom Hiddleston's more benevolent version in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Fox even resembles a young David Bowie, who was the model for Gaiman's Lucifer. It's not hard to imagine Fox's character as the more comics-accurate former ruler of Hell, even if he can't own a nightclub on this particular Netflix show. Loki is often mythically linked to fire, which he demonstrates in some shocking moments when the series swerves into horror. Meanwhile, Gleeson is especially compelling as a morally conflicted Puck. The series offers his character deeper layers than those found in the source material, and he delivers admirably. However, the season's undisputed standouts are Jenna Coleman as Johanna Constantine (the show's version of DC's occult detective John Constantine) and Boyd Holbrook as the Corinthian, a reformed foe from the first season. Coleman brings excitement to the screen wherever she's present, and her chemistry with Holbrook is electric. His character is a literal nightmare, but hers has dated worse. Alas, Sturridge is as placid and intentionally one-note as ever, even when facing life-altering events—and Johanna Constantine is sadly correct when she pegs Morpheus as having no sense of humor. Classic tragedies involve the flawed hero desperately seeking to avoid his preordained fate. There is some of that here but also far too much standing in place. Morpheus often delivers ponderous monologues to characters who function more like emotional brick walls. These scenes go nowhere and are incredibly tedious. Catharsis is also a pivotal part of a good tragedy, and the series denies us this from Morpheus in any authentic way. He says at one point, 'I am not a man and I do not change,' and while we're told that this isn't true, we don't actually see it. The show's limited visual imagination has been noted on this site already, but this remains an issue. In the comics, Morpheus' world was often as unpredictable and fantastic as Willy Wonka's chocolate factory. In the show, it all feels like a supernatural The Tudors but with far less sex. (Douglas Booth, as the magically handsome Cluracan, too often seems like he's auditioning for that Showtime series.) Realms that should astound our senses are instead depicted with moody lighting and uncomfortable furniture. And with the exception of Merv Pumpkinhead (humorously voiced by Mark Hamill), most of the mythical creatures wouldn't look out of place on a London city street during business hours. Ultimately, The Sandman spends two seasons building to an epic conclusion that maddeningly lands (for now) with a thud. (The show drops a bonus episode on July 31.) This batch can come off as endless, with characters simply telling us what they feel, which will only make viewers angry or, at best, bored. For decades, it's been said that Gaiman's work was unfilmable, and this series only backs up that idea. The Sandman just fails to dream. 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