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13 Reasons Why: season 2 review – Netflix's teen saga struggles to find purpose second time out


Find out everything you need to know about Netflix's hit high school drama, including plot, trailers, teasers, new characters – and why season two is shrouded in such mystery...

“Their story isn’t over”. 13 Reasons Why season one may have ended where it started with Hannah Baker’s tragic suicide, but Netflix is not done with one of its most successful series ever launched.

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Season two is coming back with 13 brand new episodes. Filming is already finished having started in June 2017, and a release date is now confirmed.

The cast are acutely aware of the tough issues they will be confronting in the new run, recording new content warnings and explaining what viewers can do if they are affected by the series.

However, the series is once again set to be one of the most talked about shows when it returns later this year. Here’s your updated guide to everything you need to know about 13 Reasons Why season 2 on Netflix (updated 17th May 2018).

UPDATE: check out the exclusive first look images from 13 Reasons Why season two

When is 13 Reasons Why season two released on Netflix?

We finally have an air date. The first season of 13 Reasons Why was released on 31st March last year, but one year later there was still no news of a season two release date.

Finally, though, the date has been revealed: 13 Reasons Why season two will be released on Friday 18th May 2018. Expect the series to land around 8am UK time.

It’s arguably unfortunate timing for UK fans, with exam season just getting underway. We talk about that in more detail here, but Netflix has said in a statement that if any parents are concerned about the distraction to revision, they can use PIN controls to limit access to certain shows.

“As 13 Reasons Why is a global show, season two will launch at the same time on the same day in all our 190 markets. In the UK, it coincidentally coincides with exam period, but within regular school term in other countries,” a statement explained.

The release date announcement followed a short tease for the new season along with the tagline, “The truth is developing”. Later trailers and the official season two synopsis confirmed that Polaroid photos would be key to the new episodes, replacing Hannah’s tapes from season one.

The truth is developing. pic.twitter.com/rwCobzhbC0 — 13 Reasons Why (@13ReasonsWhy) April 30, 2018

Showrunner Brian Yorkey and cast members including Dylan Minnette and Katherine Langford recently appeared at a Netflix event in Rome to speak about the new series, and later travelled to Tokyo for a special screening event.

The promotion for the series is set to continue now throughout May – keep checking below for more information about what’s going to happen in season two.

Read more: 13 Reasons Why cast record new content warning video ahead of season two

Is there a trailer?

Yes, a FULL trailer for season two was released on Tuesday 8th May 2018. The spine tingling footage features all sorts of premonitions for what could happen in the upcoming episodes, from mysterious Polaroid photos to Clay possibly drastically taking matters into his own hands.

Watch in full below.

It’s the first proper look we’ve had at the new series after weeks of build-up. The stylish date announcement video below shows all the major players in season two in freeze frame surrounded by polaroid photos, all but confirming that these will be the new “analogue technology” creator Brian Yorkey teased last year.

Oh, and if you’re wondering what the song playing in the 13 Reasons Why trailer announcement above is, it’s Depeche Mode’s 1993 single I Feel You.

Apart from the announcement trailer and the videos mentioned above, Netflix has not yet released a full trailer for season two, but now that the date has been revealed expect much more footage to come. We’ll add the videos as soon as they’re made available.

Who’s in the cast for 13 Reasons Why season 2?

Dylan Minnette as Clay, Brandon Flynn’s Justin Foley and Alisha Boe as Jessica Davis are all set to return, along with Christian Navarro (Tony), Miles Heizer (Alex) and Justin Prentice (Bryce).

The cast is also set to include Ross Butler as Zach and Michele Selene Ang as Courtney.

Even season one star Katherine Langford is set to return, although perhaps not in the central role of the first run.

“The Hannah that we saw in season one, we were able to tell her story fully and she didn’t really come back in the same capacity or sort of as the same Hannah,” she recently told W Magazine. “It’s a different Hannah that you see in season two.”

era A post shared by KATHERINE LANGFORD (@katherinelangford) on Apr 16, 2018 at 5:26am PDT

There are also set to be a number of new faces, both young and established actors. Tony Award-winning Kelli O’Hara makes her show debut as anti-bullying campaigner Jackie, with at least 10 other actors confirmed to be joining the series.

Read more: 13 Reasons Why adds new actors to season two cast

New cast member Anne Winters – who’ll play a new high school ‘It’ girl named Chloe in season two of the Netflix drama – has said we should “expect A LOT more answers” ahead.

Speaking to Flare, she said, “The people [in the show] who are doing wrong maybe don’t even understand that it is wrong… this season will explore a little of those grey areas—it’s not as black and white as last season—so that when people raise the question of, ‘Well wasn’t it her fault that she did this or that?’. This season shows a different take on it. You’ll have a lot more answers this season on why people are doing what they’re doing.”

Bts 🌸🌸 A post shared by Anne Winters (@annewinters) on Apr 3, 2018 at 3:57pm PDT

What’s going to happen in 13 Reasons Why season 2?

What we know about @13ReasonsWhy season 2 — so far pic.twitter.com/PMUaIe6Zy8 — Netflix US (@netflix) May 9, 2017

“No more tapes” – yep, those retro cassette tapes are no more. Apparently there will be “a new piece of technology for 13-year-olds to Google”.

The recent teaser and season two synopsis confirmed that that “new piece of technology” will be Polaroid cameras and photography. Check out the trailer above and the new video below.

The truth is developing. A post shared by 13 Reasons Why (@13reasonswhy) on Apr 30, 2018 at 7:10am PDT

UPDATE: creator Brian Yorkey and star Dylan Minnette have been speaking about what season two holds, and how Hannah Baker’s “whole story” has still not been told. Read more

Season two will continue to explore many of the characters’ issues that fans had only just begun to understand at the end of season one.

Netflix has released an official synopsis for season two, teasing a “sickening secret” that is uncovered through a series of Polaroid photos.

Season two picks up in the aftermath of Hannah's death and the start of our characters' complicated journeys toward healing and recovery. Liberty High prepares to go on trial, but someone will stop at nothing to keep the truth surrounding Hannah's death concealed. A series of ominous polaroids lead Clay and his classmates to uncover a sickening secret and a conspiracy to cover it up 13 Reasons Why season 2 synopsis

Star Dylan Minnette told Yahoo that the action will begin “a couple months after season one, and there’s a lot that’s happened to Clay in between.”

Meanwhile, showrunner Brian Yorkey says that he knew very early on that the story could not end with the tapes at the end of season one.

“We realised at a certain point that we would end season one with a young woman who was just beginning to come to terms with the fact that she was a victim of sexual assault; with a young man who was suffering from severe social isolation and thinking of making a pretty tragic choice in response to that; with a character, Clay, who was really just beginning to grieve a girl that he loved and to understand what that grieving process was; and a whole community that had been traumatised in a number of specific ways, most centrally by Hannah’s suicide,” Yorkey said at a recent panel to discuss the show. “In a way it felt that to leave them there would be unfair to the characters and also to the viewers who really had come to care about them.”

Welcome back. A post shared by 13 Reasons Why (@13reasonswhy) on May 2, 2018 at 4:11pm PDT

He said that Jessica’s storyline in particular would be explored more in the new episodes.

“Jessica in particular, her experience continues to be a central part of season two. We wanted very much to look at her recovery. To look at what it is to go from being a victim of sexual assault to being a survivor of sexual assault,” he added.

Mr Porter meanwhile, the school counsellor who questions Hannah’s account of her sexual assault in the days leading up to her suicide, will face the repercussions of his actions.

“Mr. Porter, in particular, will be coming to terms with the mistakes that he made, with the ways that he let her down, and will be, I think, very determined not to let any kids down in the future,” he said.

“In fact, I think that his story is, I think, one of the most sort of compelling to me in season two. And we’ll see a man who is determined to reach every kid who needs to be reached and help every kid who needs to be helped. Whatever it takes.”

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There were plenty of unanswered questions at the end of season one, and with season two picking up where the last episode left off, it’s probably worth reminding yourself of some of those cliffhanger moments below.


The Season 2 premiere of Netflix’s buzzy teen drama “13 Reasons Why” is fast approaching, and the recently released trailer, featuring the returns of main cast members Katherine Langford, Dylan Minnette, Alisha Boe, and more as the Liberty High students grapple with Hannah’s death, has piqued anticipation for the series’ sophomore run.

The new season begins in the throes of a court case that forces its teen protagonists — and antagonists — to delve deeper into their inner struggles and actions that led up to Hannah’s suicide in the Season 1 finale. Here’s everything we know about “13 Reasons Why” Season 2, streaming Friday.

Seven New Actors Joined the Cast

The show’s ensemble cast expands in the second season to include seven new recurring characters played by Anne Winters, Bryce Cass, Chelsea Alden, Allison Miller, Samantha Logan, Kelli O’Hara, and Ben Lawson. Winters plays Liberty High’s newest head cheerleader and beautiful “it girl” Chloe; Cass plays the edgy and mischievous Cyrus; Alden plays Cyrus’ artsy, witty, and outspoken sister Mackenzie; Logan plays respected track star Nina; O’Hara plays a passionate advocate for bullying victims named Jackie; Miller plays a smart and ambitious young litigator named Sonya; and Lawson rounds out the newcomers as Liberty High’s beloved baseball coach, Rick.

Katherine Langford Returns as Hannah Baker

While Langford’s character died by suicide in the Season 1 finale, Hannah will reappear in flashbacks and as a haunting figment of characters’ imaginations in the second season. Earlier this month at Netflix’s annual FYSee Kick-Off event in Los Angeles, newcomer Lawson commented on Hannah’s role in Season 2. “We also see a lot more of what Hannah’s story involved,” Lawson revealed. “That’s not over. You’ll see a lot more of what happened in the lead up to her suicide.” Langford received a 2018 Golden Globe nomination for her portrayal of Hannah in Season 1.

The Writers Heard Viewer Criticisms

The most-tweeted-about show of 2017, “13 Reasons Why” viewers did not hesitate to share their thoughts on Season 1’s handling of difficult topics such as suicide, sexual violence, and bullying. One common critique of the show argued that none of its bully characters faced sufficient consequences for their actions. At the FYSee event, Derek Luke, who plays school guidance counselor Kevin Porter, told Variety that the feedback informed the Season 2 script. “Our Season 2 was affected obviously by the writers’ room, but it was also affected by the outcry of fans who wanted some type of redemption,” Luke said. “We all went in there feeling a burden to deal with the hurt. Some of that hurt is in the shape of an antagonist that I think people will love to see get dealt with.”

Trigger Warnings Will Precede New Episodes

After Netflix conducted multiple studies which found the show had a significant cultural impact, igniting tough conversations and causing viewers to take action in regard to its address of serious issues, the streaming giant announced a formatting change for Season 2 which will feature a warning video to air prior to each episode. In the video, stars Langford, Minnette, Boe, and Justin Prentice warn viewers of potentially triggering topics to come and encourage fans to seek help via crisis resources and a viewing guide to 13ReasonsWhy.Info. Additionally, Season 2 episodes will be followed by new after-show content titled “Beyond the Reasons,” in which actors, experts, and educators will break down each installment’s darker plot threads.

Liberty High Students Face Justice

The new trailer for Season 2 picks up where the first season left off as Clay, Jessica, Bryce, and the rest of the Liberty High crew testify in a court case Hannah’s parents have filed against the school. In the process of recounting details from the events leading up to Hannah’s suicide, the students also have to face their own personal experiences and truths, expanding on each character’s Season 1 demons.

Adult Characters Evolve, Too

It’s not only the teenagers who have to come to terms with their respective knowledge and mistakes. The show’s adults, including parents and school faculty members, cannot avoid the harsh realities of a local teen’s suicide as Hannah’s death becomes increasingly publicized. Luke also commented on adult characters’ new Season 2 outlook at the FYSee event. “The word ‘accountability’ now for the adults is different because in our story the story has gone public,” Luke said. “So, anytime you’re in the media’s eye the emotions and the weight get even heavier. I think this season everyone’s looking [for] who to blame, especially the adults.”

Sheri Grapples With Guilt

Season 1 left Sheri in a fragile emotional state as Hannah’s tapes forced her to confront the reality that she took out a stop sign resulting in the death of a classmate, adding to Hannah’s stress as a passenger. At the FYSee event, actress Ajiona Alexus said Season 2 will continue to explore her character’s damaged psyche as she grapples with the guilt and trauma of her secret. Alexus acknowledged that the solution for bullying comes from consequences and “at the end of Season 1, I think you kind of feel like people got away with it.”

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The lead is now a ghost (of plot devices past), and though it still tackles big issues, the structure of this high-school teen drama has crumbled

When Hannah Baker killed herself, she left behind a box of cassette tapes explaining why she’d done it. That was the first series of 13 Reasons Why, adapted from the book by Jay Asher.

Originally destined to become a film, Netflix got hold of it and gave it the Netflix stretch. It did attempt to explore important issues – not only suicide but rape, self-harm, bullying, high-school sexism – sensibly and seriously, even if any messages to emerge came across as simplistic and a bit preachy: be nice to people, be a real friend, otherwise bad shit goes down. It meandered, but the cassettes and the 13 reasons in 13 episodes gave it a structure of sorts. The performances, especially from Katherine Langford and Dylan Minnette as Hannah and her friend Clay, were good.

The second series continues to explore the same big issues sensitively, as well as taking on board some of the criticism and controversy the first generated (it now comes with a public service announcement, delivered by the actors, links to relevant resources, plus the parents – Clay’s especially – are more aware of what their kids are going through). And that’s about all that’s good about series two.

It’s a few months later, and there’s a civil lawsuit going on against the school for failing to protect Hannah. There’s a lot of dragging through the same stuff all over again. But this time without the framework of the tapes and the reasons. The trial, of which there isn’t much, perhaps provides the crumbliest of structures, and some photos are turned up that show Hannah wasn’t alone in suffering bullying and abuse. But if the first series meandered, then this circles aimlessly with its head to the ground.

Some of the acting remains decent, though Langford, the stand-out in the first season, now has to do hers as a ghost. The ghost of Hannah. The ghost of a lame device past.

I’ve only watched three episodes. But that was enough. It’s like being locked in a room with a bunch of self-obsessed teens, occasionally saying things like “the truth can free you if you let it” or “sometimes it seems that no matter what you do people see you the way they want to”.

I know teenagers are only concerned with what others think of them. I know if I was one I might connect better with this (it would be interesting to hear from them). I know the issues are very real, very important and, in fact, deadly serious. But they deserve a better vehicle. As drama this is pointless, cumbersome, baggy, badly written, ponderous and boring. That’s less than half of the 13 reasons why you shouldn’t bother.

In the UK the Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is on 13 11 14. Other international suicide helplines can be found at www.befrienders.org.




Share. Could have used a few more reasons. Could have used a few more reasons.

Note: this is a spoiler-free advanced review of 13 Reasons Why's second season, which premieres on Netflix on Friday, May 18.

There was a lot of collective head-scratching when Netflix announced a second season of 13 Reasons Why. Not because the first season wasn't a well-crafted teen drama (you can see my review here), or because its apparently massive viewership numbers didn't warrant a follow-up. The confusion came from the fact that Season 1 told a largely finite and self-contained story. The goal was to show us why troubled teen Hannah Baker (Katherine Langford) committed suicide, and the first season definitively answered that question. In the process, it used up the entirety of the Jay Asher novel. What is there to be gained from revisiting Hannah Baker's story?

That's a question that's very much at the forefront of the series as Season 2 begins. There's a self-aware quality to the series, as creator Brian Yorkey and his crew openly acknowledge the criticisms leveled against Season 1 and the lingering concerns over the existence of a sequel. Multiple characters hammer home the notion that there are more sides to Hannah's story and other points of view to consider. But despite all that, Season 2 never makes an entirely convincing case for its own existence.

13 Reasons Why: Season 2 Photos 10+ IMAGES Fullscreen Image Artboard 3 Copy Artboard 3 ESC 01 12 RJ Brown, Christian Navarro in 13 Reasons Why: Season 2 01 12 RJ Brown, Christian Navarro in 13 Reasons Why: Season 2 13 Reasons Why: Season 2 Photos Netflix Download Image Captions ESC

It's not that there aren't loose ends worth exploring. Season 2 opens several months after the finale, with Hannah's suicide still casting a shadow over the town and her parents' lawsuit against the school dominating the local conversation. That trial replaces Hannah's audio tapes as the season's basic framing device. Where Season 1 positioned Hannah as narrator and guide for Clay Jensen (Dylan Minnette) on his journey of discovery, Season 2 makes Clay and his peers the narrators. Each character, in turn, delivers new revelations about their relationship to Hannah and further complicates the picture of her that was established in Season 1.

As you might expect, the results from this approach are mixed, at best. The idea of there being more than one side to every story makes for obvious narrative fodder. And it is intriguing to see Hannah's relationships with her friends, lovers, fellow students and parents explored from new angles. But often, the series seems to be straining to add new layers to an already well-defined story. Picture Lost circa-Season 3, where that series found it increasingly difficult to find meaningful new ground to cover in the recurring flashbacks. Some episodes even strain credulity as they attempt to forge closer bonds between Hannah and her classmates. It becomes hard not to wonder why none of this material was referenced in her 13 original tapes.

The new season also struggles to play up the mystery/conspiracy angle. Season 1 itself was a little forced in that regard, especially when it came to characters like Tony (Christian Navarro) who seemed devoted to being vague and mysterious for the sheer sake of it. The new season tries to keep that ball rolling, with new conspiracies involving threatening notes, mysterious stalkers and cryptic warnings like, "Hannah wasn't the only one." The harder the series leans on these elements, the more melodramatic it becomes. And frankly, there's enough going on here that the series really doesn't need that Lost-inspired conspiracy element.

If anything, Season 2 tries to bite off more than it can realistically chew. There's nary a hot-button topic concerning modern high school life that isn't addressed, whether it's sexual assault, bullying, gun violence, the opioid epidemic or homophobia. The show also makes a concerted effort to spotlight its large supporting cast. Clay is still the anchor and lead protagonist of the series, but more time is devoted to exploring the trials and tribulations of characters like Tony, Jessica (Aisha Boe), Alex (Miles Heizer), Justin (Brandon Flynn), Zach (Ross Butler) and Tyler (Devin Druid). That added storytelling ambition is appreciated, but the result is that the new season feels much more unbalanced and unfocused than its predecessor. Some characters like Skye (Sosie Bacon) and Courtney (Michele Selene Ang) never seem to be given the attention they deserve.

Exit Theatre Mode

Despite all of these issues, Season 2 still carries some of the weight and emotional heft of the first. Clay's struggle is no less compelling the second time around. His journey is less about understanding why Hannah died and more reconciling these new revelations with the person he believed her to be. His story is also about learning to finally move on. Minnette was among the strongest cast members last year, and that remains true now. The fact that his performance is often so stoic and reserved only highlights those moments where Clay's facade cracks and the angry, confused, tormented teen beneath bubbles to the surface.

And unfocused or not, the new season does generally make good use of its supporting cast. Kate Walsh is always dependable as the emotionally devastated Mrs. Baker. Padilla is given more to work with now that Tony is less the sage advice-giver and more an active participant in this conflict. Butler is given far more to do as Zach struggles with his uncertain place in the high school hierarchy. Boe also shines as her character goes through one of the most pronounced and difficult character arcs of the season. The first season received plenty of criticism for its graphic depiction of sexual assault. And while there are still concerns on that front (arguably even more so this time around), I do appreciate how much the story of Jessica and other women becomes about reclaiming their power and agency.

Perhaps no character benefits more from this increased exposure than Druid's Tyler. The Season 1 finale left the character in a very dangerous place, and Season 2 continues following his troubled journey through depression, bullying, and social isolation. The character is at once repellent and deeply sympathetic, serving as an uncomfortable reminder that Hannah was hardly the only one in her school dealing with depression and suicidal thoughts.

Exit Theatre Mode

The new season also does manage to build some momentum as it goes along and the trial nears its conclusion. Can Clay make peace with the ghost of Hanna? Will the victims of Bryce (Justin Prentice) and his ilk finally receive some semblance of justice? Those questions propel the final few episodes along, as does a more general sense of unease. There's a mounting sense that the series is marching towards some new tragedy, even if it's not entirely clear what that might entail.

Unfortunately, the series trips over itself in the final episode. That episode seems maddeningly unsure of whether it wants to function as a full-fledged series finale or a bridge to an eventual third season. It attempts to provide closure and catharsis for the previous 25 chapters of heartache, and largely succeeds in that aim. These moments come closest to making Season 2 seem like a necessary companion to the first. But at the same time, several last-minute developments come out of nowhere to ensure the season ends on a muddled, unsatisfying note. The idea of a second season was a tough sell as it is. A potential Season 3 seems even less appealing at this point.

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