Overview
- Apple TV+ has greenlit a second season and signed creator Katie Dippold to a multi-year deal, keeping the showrunner and core creative leadership in place for Season 2.
- Critics and industry outlets have pushed the series into strong awards conversation, highlighting its genre blend and ensemble work as reasons it could earn multiple Emmy nominations.
- Only the first seven of the season’s ten episodes are eligible for this Emmy cycle because the final three episodes missed the Television Academy’s May 31 cutoff, which limits voters’ ability to judge the full season.
- Reviews and coverage single out Matthew Rhys’s lead turn, Kate O’Flynn’s breakout supporting work, and Hiro Murai’s direction as major strengths likely to drive acting, writing, and directing attention.
- The season finale left key supernatural rules and moral questions unresolved, a creative choice that the showrunner and cast say will be explored in Season 2 and that may shape both the show’s direction and its awards narrative.