The Night Manager Season 2 review: Tom Hiddleston returns in a sluggish, steady and sizzling spy thriller – Firstpost
The Night Manager, back when it was released, felt complete. There was a man who lost his love, felt responsible for it, and began to hunt down the man he believed was responsible. In that personal journey, he uncovered something bigger and helped take it down as well. But with that personal vendetta missing, where does Season 2 stand?
Well, it turns out there is still a lot that Tom Hiddleston’s Jonathan Pine (or whatever alibi he is using) has to straighten out, a lot of monsters he needs to fight, and a lot of ghosts he has to chase. Because despite it being four years since he helped Angela Burr (Olivia Colman) pull off the near-impossible task of putting Richard Roper (Hugh Laurie) behind bars, Pine continues to live under the shadow of his past.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
That is precisely why, when he spots Jaco (Gijs Naber) while working surveillance at Night Owl, where he is now employed, something clicks. Pine is compelled to dig deeper. And thus begins a fresh journey, with Teddy Dos Santos (Diego Calva) at its centre. The result is a series of explosive twists and turns, that unravel slowly as you progress into the series.
More from Entertainment
Netflix’s Adolescence at Golden Globes: Owen Cooper becomes the youngest winner for supporting actor in TV series
Golden Globe Awards 2026 full list of winners: Timothee Chalamet, Owen Cooper honoured, One Battle After Another, Adolescence win substantial
One of the biggest USPs of the first season of The Night Manager was the constant fear that Pine might get caught. This time around, Pine is bolder, often luring danger towards himself. His dynamic with Teddy is particularly striking, charged with a dangerously delicious tension that even flirts with the sexual. Hold on tight while watching, because some moments will genuinely surprise you. However, this heightened confidence occasionally dilutes the thrill.
Games
View AllNumber Chain PlayScrambled Letters PlayWord Grid PlayHeadliner PlaySTORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The espionage here is less about relentless twists and more about psychological tension. The show slows down deliberately, trusting its audience to sit with unease rather than demanding attention through shock. Power continues to move through conversations, glances, and withheld information, a reminder that The Night Manager has always been more interested in manipulation than action.
Season 2 does occasionally struggle with purpose. Without the immediate menace of Richard Roper looming over the narrative, the stakes feel more diffuse. The conflict is broader, but also less personal. Some supporting characters feel functional rather than fully realised, existing primarily to move the plot forward. That mentioned, a few twists will make you sit up, especially a bomb, not literally, that is dropped at the end of Episode 3.
What ultimately holds the season together is its understanding of tone. The Night Manager does not chase relevance; it relies on consistency. It assumes viewers are willing to engage with moral ambiguity, slow-burn tension, and characters who do not announce their inner turmoil.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Season 2 may not carry the same electric urgency as its predecessor, but it offers something rarer in contemporary television: confidence in its own pacing and intelligence. It reminds us why Jonathan Pine was compelling in the first place, not because he is loud or reckless, but because he is quietly watching, calculating, and enduring.
In an era of overstimulation, The Night Manager Season 2 chooses restraint. However, it also promises that there is much more thrill to come, only if you show the patience to sit through the first few episodes as the makers build Pines’ world a second time.
The first three episodes are now streaming on Prime Video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LY1AJ48O0Y
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
P.S - the review is based on the first three episodes.
TagsHollywood movie reviewsHomeEntertainmentThe Night Manager Season 2 review: Tom Hiddleston returns in a leisurely, steady and sizzling spy thrillerEnd of Article