• [REVIEW] "The Night Manager" season 2 (Variety)

    From Your Name@YourName@YourISP.com to rec.arts.tv on Mon Jan 12 19:07:59 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.tv



    'The Night Manager' Season 2 Isn't Worth the Decade-Long Wait
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    To the extent that "The Night Manager" has survived in the
    cultural memory since the limited series - adapted from the
    John Le Carre novel on the same time -aaired a full decade
    ago, it was as a showcase for pretty people in pretty places.
    (It made sense that director Susanne Bier would go on to helm
    "The Perfect Couple," a murder mystery starring Nicole Kidman
    and set at a destination wedding in Nantucket.) For a while,
    the show seemed like it could kick off a Le Carre revival;
    Korean auteur Park Chan-Wook delivered an underrated take on
    "The Little Drummer Girl" with rising star Florence Pugh the
    following year. But the trend never took off, and "The Night
    Manager" lived on largely as images of Tom Hiddleston, Hugh
    Laurie and Elizabeth Debicki swanning around Switzerland and
    Mallorca. Much like an actual vacation, its transportive power
    was directly linked to its finite end.

    Ten years later, however, "The Night Manager" is back, as is
    Hiddleston's soldier-turned-hospitality-professional-turned-spy
    Jonathan Pine. Screenwriter David Farr has extended Le Carre's
    story past its original conclusion, resulting in an odd hybrid:
    characters like Pine and his handler Angela Burr (Olivia Colman)
    remain the same, while the director (Georgia Banks-Davies), the
    BBC's American production partner (Amazon Prime Video, taking
    over from AMC) and the setting are all new. In shifting the
    action to Colombia, "The Night Manager" can at least continue to
    deliver on stunning vistas and escapist intrigue. But after
    watching all six episodes of Season 2, I still wasn't convinced
    this property - no hotel pun intended - needed revisiting, let
    alone expansion. At least a very dark cliffhanger ending sets up
    an already announced Season 3, even if it somewhat contradicts
    the easy-viewing appeal.a

    Set nine years after the events of Season 1, Jonathan no longer
    works in hotels - the profession that first brought him into
    contact with arms dealer Richard Roper (Laurie), whose body he
    and Angela identify in an opening flashback, and served as a
    compelling, specific hook. (Thanks to Jonathan, Roper owed
    hundreds of millions of dollars to some powerful creditors, who
    kept him captive for years before dumping his corpse in Syria.)
    Instead, Jonathan helps run a remote surveillance squad within
    the Foreign Office known as the Night Owls, spying on targets
    (often in hotel rooms!) remotely and at all hours of the day. But
    despite the new job and a new, assumed name, Jonathan is still
    haunted by his experience with Roper, an amoral hedonist whose
    luxurious lifestyle was bankrolled by bloodshed. When an old
    associate of Roper's resurfaces, Jonathan throws himself back into
    the fray in pursuit of a man billing himself as Roper's spiritual
    successor: Colombian arms magnate Teddy Dos Santos (Diego Calva).a

    Colombia is a country beautiful enough to deliver the stunning
    scenery one expects of "The Night Manager," from lush jungles to
    historic cities, and stable enough to host a major TV production.
    But the memory of decades-long civil unrest, largely ended by a
    peace agreement signed in 2016, is still fresh enough to provide a
    real-life context for Teddy's machinations. Calva is a captivating
    screen presence whose raffish charisma is a solid substitute for
    Laurie's plummy, posh playboy - though the one-time "Narcos:
    Mexico" star deserves more roles beyond the Central American
    underworld, like his naive dreamer in Damien Chazelle's 2022 film
    "Babylon." "The Night Manager" is nonetheless Jonathan's show, and
    while Season 2 has its moments, it's ultimately unable to cultivate
    him into a George Smiley-like figure. Smiley, a more famous Le Carre
    creation, could tie together multiple otherwise unrelated stories
    over multiple books (and subsequent adaptations). Jonathan doesn't
    hold up to the same sustained scrutiny. The same chameleonic
    blandness that makes him so suited to espionage makes for an
    inherently unmemorable hero.

    The shamelessly Bond-inspired opening credits to "The Night Manager"
    - soaring strings over graphics of guns firing and rosaries
    shattering -ano longer align with Jonathan's tortured, traumatized
    mental state. An entanglement with Miami-based shipping broker
    Roxana Bola+os (Camila Morrone) recalls that iconic character's
    revolving door of paramours, and Jonathan's new boss Mayra (Indira
    Varma) could give Judi Dench's M a run for her money in hard-nosed
    severity. But Hiddleston's aged-up, haunted Jonathan is more dour
    than debonair, even if he retains the actor's easy elegance. I can't
    say I spent much time in the intervening years since Season 1
    wondering what became of the reluctant spook, nor did I find him an
    especially enjoyable hang after our reunion. New colleagues Waleed
    (Anil Desai), Basil (Paul Chahidi) and Sally (Hayley Squires) never
    rise above the level of accessories to Jonathan's obsessive pursuit
    of closure, let alone to that of a potential co-protagonist.

    "The Night Manager" eventually establishes a more direct link between
    the two seasons, a blatant bit of revisionism that still facilitates
    a more dynamic back half of this new chapter. By then, however, it's
    a little late. The viewer has long since started to wonder why Farr
    didn't set his sights on another Le Carre yarn, or simply started
    fresh in Colombia without the need for British interlopers. Season 1
    of "The Night Manager" was a success, but not such a world-conquering
    hit that a follow-up is almost economically mandatory, as with "Big
    Little Lies." Season 2 is not without enjoyable intrigue, yet never
    proves worth the risk of opening a closed (literal) book.

    The first three episodes of "The Night Manager" Season 2 will be
    available to stream on Amazon Prime Video on Jan. 11, with remaining
    episodes streaming weekly on Sundays.



    <https://variety.com/2026/tv/reviews/the-night-manager-season-2-review-prime-video-1236626590/>





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