
EPISODE 2.1
Episode 1
Newly released from prison, a brooding young woman named Bonnie
... More sets out to avenge the death of her lover.LessA moody girl connects with a fellow teenager (a boy who believes he's a psychopath) and convinces him to join her on a road trip to search for her real father. Season two won Best Drama at the 2020 BAFTAs as well as Best Supporting Actress for Naomi Ackie (Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker).
When the season ends, you’re left with a strong sense of, “Is that all there is?” There’s no new perspective or deeper point made by season two that wasn’t already conveyed more effectively by season one.
Full reviewSeason 2 is an empty shell of an epilogue that still usurps what it should be propping up.
Full reviewThe new batch of episodes, which Covell has indicated will be the last, is essentially all resolution, a season-long working out of the original story’s loose ends, and while it’s as assured in its execution, it’s ordinary by comparison.
Full reviewThough there are new faces and places involved, it's still got that same dreary dryness and wild unpredictability in play. While the second season doesn't exactly feel necessary, it's still fun to take another aimless ride with the show's resident weirdos and see where we end up.
Full reviewThe good news is that season two of The End of the F***ing World stays true to the vibe of the first season, has a decently good but not great story and manages, by the end of the final episode (of eight in total), to have righted most of the wrongs that came before it.
Full reviewOnce again, it’s a story about the light that slips through the cracks in broken hearts; this time, the light may not be quite as dazzling, but it’s absolutely still worth capturing.
Full reviewIt is gruesome and violent and scatalogical, but then it is funny and pointed and wry, and then it defers to a tender look, or an affectionate touch, and shows its heart.
Full reviewThe End of the F***ing World: Season 2 is available to stream in New Zealand now on Netflix.
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