Showing posts with label yellowjackets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yellowjackets. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 May 2025

YELLOWJACKETS renewed for Season 4

Showtime have renewed their hit TV show Yellowjackets for a fourth and potentially penultimate season.

The renewal had not really been in doubt, with the show's third season debuting with significantly higher ratings on Showtime than the second and picking up a lot of streams via its international distribution on Paramount+ (including setting record viewership for its finale). However, the third season had been renewed ahead of the second, whilst this time around Showtime made fans wait until six weeks after the third season had wrapped up.

The show has a planned five-year story arc, but Showtime declined to renew the show for its final two seasons in one go, suggesting they still want to see how Season 4 does in viewership before ordering the finale.

The show tells a story divided into two time periods. In 1996 a high school soccer team are marooned in a remote part of Canada by a freak plane crash, and have to survive in the wilderness for almost two years before they are rescued. Twenty-five years later, the few now-adult survivors are trying to get on with their lives and forget the trauma they experienced, but the past has a nasty way of constantly coming back into their lives.

The show stars Melanie Lynskey, Christina Ricci, Tawny Cypress, Sophie Nélisse, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Sophie Thatcher, Samantha Hanratty, Courtney Eaton, Liv Hewson, Warren Kole, Sarah Desjardins, Elijah Wood and Hilary Swank. Season 4 is expected to go into production later this year for a potential late 2026 debut.

Monday, 19 December 2022

YELLOWJACKETS renewed for a third season

Showtime has renewed its hit show Yellowjackets for a third season, three months ahead of Season 2's planned debut. It's hoped the early renewal will allow them to get production rolling on the third season quickly enough to minimise the wait between the next two seasons. They also confirmed that Season 2 will debut on 26 March 2023.


Yellowjackets' first season told two distinct stories involving the same set of characters. In 1996, a plane carrying a New Jersey female high school soccer team crashes in a remote part of Canada. Several of them died, and it took nineteen months for them to be rescued. The second story is set in 2021, with the survivors, now in their forties, drawn back together again by a series of unusual events, suggesting the events of 1996 are catching up with them. The show switches back between the two time periods, mining tension from the fact that we know several of the crash survivors do make it back home, but the fates of the others remains unknown.

The show attracted considerable critical acclaim for the two sets of actors playing the same characters, and the casting of heavyweights like Christina Ricci, Melanie Lynskey and Juliette Lewis for the older roles and Ella Purnell and Courtney Eaton for the younger. The show was also praised for setting up a complex mystery in a compelling manner, with some drawing comparisons to Lost's structure (which also featured a plane crash in a remote location). Season 2 will add more 1990s/2000s names to the cast, with Lauren Ambrose (Six Feet Under) and Elijah Wood (Lord of the Rings) joining the fray.

Season 1 of Yellowjackets was nominated in seven categories at the Emmys but didn't pick up a trophy, possibly a result of its unfavourable positioning right at the start of the eligibility period.

Tuesday, 3 May 2022

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS & HALO hitting British and Irish television in June

Paramount+ has confirmed its launch date in the UK and Republic of Ireland: 22 June. The service will launch both as a stand-alone service and also as part of a Sky Cinema subscription.


The launch roster for the channel will include Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, Halo, City on a Hill and The Man Who Fell to Earth. Legacy shows that were formerly on other services will also transfer over, including Star Trek: Discovery, Billions and Yellowjackets.

The stand-alone subscription will be a reasonable £6.99 with the first seven days free, significantly cheaper than Netflix and slightly more expensive than Apple TV+. Pricing for the Republic of Ireland has not yet been confirmed.

The launch date does leave UK and RoI SF fans holding out for Halo (which began airing in the US on 24 March) and Strange New Worlds (which launches this week) some considerable amount of time behind the curve, which is likely to drive up piracy in the meantime.

There have been complaints about the addition of yet another streaming service to the roster. The UK and Ireland currently enjoy using Netflix, Amazon Prime TV, Disney+, NowTV, BritBox and Apple TV+ (alongside the free, homegrown BBC iPlayer and All 4). This isn't as bad as the US, which has several more options (including Paramount+, Peacock and Hulu), but is getting up there. With the recent, significant cost of living increases, viewers are getting choosier about what platforms to keep using and which to drop. It'll be interesting to see if Paramount+ can pick up a significant UK viewer base.

Wednesday, 30 March 2022

ARCANE and YELLOWJACKETS star Ella Purnell joins the FALLOUT TV series

British actress Ella Purnell has joined the Fallout TV project at Amazon.


Purnell is definitely having a career moment. Last year she played Jackie on Showtime's breakout mega-hit Yellowjackets and voiced Powder (aka Jinx) on Netflix's Arcane. She also voices the character of Gwyn on the well-received Star Trek spin-off Prodigy. She also popped up in Zack Snyder's Army of the Dead last year.

Purnell's character is "upbeat and uncannily direct with an all-American can-do spirit," with a hint of danger in her intensity. Purnell is joining the already-cast Walton Goggins (Justified) who will be playing a Ghoul, a human made effectively immortal by radiation at the cost of their appearance.

The Fallout show is executive produced by the Westworld team of Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, and is currently in pre-production.

Monday, 24 January 2022

Yellowjackets: Season 1

Four women deal with the shared trauma of an event that destroyed their lives. In 1996, as members of a New Jersey female high school soccer team, they were in a plane crash in a remote part of Canada. Left to fend for themselves for nineteen months with sixteen fellow survivors, horrific events took place, the details of which remain unclear. Twenty-five years later, they reunite when they discover that someone is trying to learn the truth of what happened, and is even willing to resort to murder and blackmail to achieve it.


Yellowjackets is two TV series wrapped in one. It is a survival-horror story about the twenty survivors of a plane crash and the struggles as they waited more than a year and a half for rescue. It is also the story of the dysfunctional relationship between four of those survivors a quarter of a century later, as they navigate their own complicated lives and the attempts by an unknown adversary to dredge up the past for their own benefits. If you wanted to find a buzz-phrase, it's basically if Lost and Desperate Housewives were the same show.

The dual structure and the inter-cutting between the two timelines (with roughly a 50-50 split between the two) gives the show an immediate sense of identity and mystery. We know that four of the survivors of the plane crash made it home and we are told that some of the others survived as well, but not who or how many. This gives the flashbacks a sense of tension because almost anyone can die or be seriously injured. There's also a real sense of interlinking between the two stories: what happened to people in their late teens can still have a drastic impact on them as apparently mature adults in their early forties even without a traumatic plane crash, the horrors of surviving starvation and wild animals, and years of being minor celebrities with morbid people constantly asking them what happened.

The show also makes absolutely no bones that the survival story is going to get extremely bleak. Lost fudged its premise a little bit by giving the survivors of Oceanic 815 plentiful food and water and only stranding them for ninety days before being rescued (kind of); Yellowjackets gives no such easy assurances to the stranded survivors and apparently more time passes in Yellowjackets' first season than in Lost's first three. One of the survivors, Taissa, has gone into politics and one of her opponents' most constant attack lines is that she and the other survivors resorted to cannibalism to survive, which they fervently deny, but the flashbacks suggest this might not be entirely true. The shadow of nascent horror lurks over every minute of the show, particularly in the flashback story.

The secret of Yellowjackets' success, without which the show would not be viable, is the casting. In almost every case, the show does a tremendous job in casting the right actress for both the younger and older version of the character. Helped by excellent wig work, Sammi Hanratty and Christina Ricci nail the two versions of Misty Quigley (the team's equipment manager and free-roaming agent of random chaos) so perfectly it's hard to believe they're not the same person and they've not just filmed the two sides of her story 20+ years apart. Sophie Nélisse and Melanie Lynskey are almost as perfect as Shauna (a former sidekick to a homecoming queen who finds her niche in the woods, and now is an apparently quiet housewife), as are Jasmin Savoy Brown and Tawny Cypress as Taissa Turner (the team's most hardcore and dedicated member, now running for State Senate). Sophie Thatcher and Juliette Lewis, playing Natalie Scatorccio (a troubled teen turned troubled adult), are probably the least physically well-matched of the four, but nail the character's attitude perfectly. Of course, casting the four older versions of the characters with well-known teen actresses from the 1990s is another masterstroke.

The rest of the cast is also excellent, particularly high-ish profile actors Ella Purnell (Arcane) as Jackie Taylor and Courtney Eaton (Mad Max: Fury Road) as Lottie Matthews, two prominent members of the soccer team and the survivors. Their apparent absence in the 2021 storyline makes viewers fear the worst for them, so it's an interesting twist when some of the other survivors do show up or are revealed in dialogue to have survived.

Despite the sprawling nature of the cast and the story, the show keeps a tight rein on its pacing and scope. By using the four main characters in both time periods as our POVs and containing its first season in just ten episodes (Lost's first season had a mind-boggling twenty-five episodes, to compare), the show tells a big story with an admirable sense of focus. Surprisingly, the present-day story is as compelling as the story of survival, involving by itself political intrigue, blackmail, scandal and murder, which is where the Desperate Housewives-on-steroids comparison comes into play. In the wrong hands Yellowjackets could be miserable and grim, but the writers also bring compassion and humour (albeit sometimes very dark) into the mix, alleviating some of the darker moments of the series.

The story in both timelines builds through the season and the finale acts as a gamechanger, rewriting the rules of the game and upending what we thought we knew about the characters.

One of the most striking debut seasons of recent years, Yellowjackets (****½) is William Golding's Lord of the Flies where we ask what happens when the survivors get home, and find that their experiences in the wild have followed and defined them for the rest of their lives? The first season is available to watch on Showtime in the United States and on NowTV in the UK. A second season will air later in 2022.