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AMC has given the green light for a second season of the extraordinary martial arts/western/post-apocalyptic science fiction series Into The Badlands, which should delight the massive fan base of cult TV’s cultiest new hit of 2015. Even better news for UK fans is that AMC Global will be airing the 10-episode second series within minutes of the US broadcast.

Into the Badlands season two will premiere on AMC in 2017. The show delivered the third highest-rated first season in US cable TV history and instantly became renowned for the artistry of its elaborate fight sequences. Read our review of season one here.
“With its deep dive into authentic martial arts, the visually stunning Into the Badlands proved to be unlike anything else on television,” says Charlie Collier, president of AMC. “Co-creators and showrunners Al Gough and Miles Millar, along with a talented team of producers, cast and crew, brought us an artfully crafted series. We’re eager to return to the world of barons and blades and spend even more time with these compelling and evolving characters across an expanded second season.”
“We can’t imagine any other network bold enough to embrace a show like this,” say Gough and Millar in the official press release (they really do talk in unison, you know). “We are incredibly grateful to Charlie, Joel and the entire AMC team for taking this leap of faith with us and we look forward to continuing the journey into the Badlands!”
Into The Badlands stars Wu (Tai Chi Zero) as Sunny; Marton Csokas (The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King) as Quinn; Aramis Knight (The Dark Knight Rises) as MK; Oliver Stark (Luther) as Ryder; Emily Beecham (28 Weeks Later) as The Widow; Orla Brady (Doctor Who, Fringe) as Lydia; Sarah Bolger (Once Upon A Time, The Tudors) as Jade; Ally Ioannides (Parenthood) as Tilda; and Madeleine Mantock (Edge Of Tomorrow) as Veil.
Into The Badlands Season one (six episodes) is available in the UK on Amazon Prime
Created by: Alfred Gough, Miles Millar
Starring: Daniel Wu, Orla Brady, Sarah Bolger, Aramis Knight, Emily Beecham, Oliver Stark, Madeleine Mantock, Ally Ioannides, Marton Csokas
In a post-apocalyptic Southern United States, society is rigidly defined. The Barons rule the country, dividing the vital resources between each other in a truce of necessity. An uneasy truce at that, which is why each Baron employs an army of Clippers. Clippers are soldiers with remarkable martial skill who are enforcers, assassins, bodyguards and marshals depending on the whims of their Baron and the needs of the situation.
Sunny (Yu) runs Baron Quinn’s Clippers. A serious, honourable man Sunny is the moral centre of a community that’s increasingly falling apart. Because Quinn (Csokas) is seriously ill, his wives Lydia and newly arrived Jade are trying to work out which is the bigger threat and his son Ryder (Stark) is starting to rail against his father’s authority. Worse still, other Barons, especially the Widow (Beecham) are plotting against them. Something is coming and Sunny and his troops have to be ready.
Then, one day, he finds a massacre by the roadside and a single survivor, MK, taken by slavers. Sunny rescues the boy and then the trouble really starts…
Picture a crossroads where Chinese opera, martial arts cinema, westerns and post-apocalyptic science fiction meet. Welcome to Into the Badlands.
Created by Gough and Millar, best known for their work on Smallville, this is one of those TV shows that you don’t see coming. It’s a relentless, often beautiful, often brutal story that takes everything I mentioned above and adds in shades of noir and horror to create something that’s frequently extraordinary and always far smarter than you’re expecting.
Sunny, played with huge subtlety and intelligence by Daniel Wu, embodies that. Sunny is a tremendously successful killer and a man who has dedicated his entire life to Quinn. He’s also a father-to-be, a trauma survivor and an increasingly reluctant murderer. Wu’s performance is one of the bravest in a show full of brave performances, appearing taciturn to the point of cold at times. But as the series goes on you see just how subtle his work is and how conflicted he has become about his world. The loyal soldier is also a chained soldier and as circumstances force him to try and break that chain Wu shows us the core of a man whose focus is matched only by his compassion.
It’s an odd thing to say about a character who kills so many people so brutally but Sunny really is a compassionate lead. His relationship with MK (Knight) shows that in the later episodes in particular. This is a man who is emotionally illiterate but whose physical eloquence is unparalleled. He needs the people around him and that’s both a strength and a weakness. It also makes him an immensely likable lead and an actor you hope we’ll be seeing a lot more of in future. Maybe playing Iron Fist on Netflix? It’s a role he both deserves and seems, bluntly, born for.
The rest of the cast are just as nuanced and impressive. There are no simple characters here, no easy agendas and despite the short season the show lets us see all of that. Stark’s Ryder in particular is great, evolving from a whining entitled brat into a man determined to take control of his mutilated destiny as the show progresses. He’s also a beautiful example of just how much the show trusts its audience. We find out why Ryder is like he is relatively late and when we do it changes our perceptions of him. There’s no info dumping, just clever world building and performances that unfold with the same grace that permeates the fight scenes.
Let’s talk about those fight scenes, because they look like nothing else on TV right now. Cheerfully brutal and always in service to plot and character, they punctuate the show the same way violence permeates the Badlands. Picking one that works best is all but impossible as each one fulfils a very specific function. However, an early fight that sees Sunny taking on dozens of men to save a lynched Ryder is a particular standout. Later in the season there’s a fight between Sunny and The Widow that’s equally impressive, the two characters’ physicality expressing the emotional and ideological clash behind each strike that’s thrown.
Speaking of The Widow, Emily Beecham is another impressive member of the cast. The female characters are all complex and interesting but Beecham’s Widow is the one that you remember most. As deadly a combatant as Sunny himself, she’s something truly dangerous: a visionary. Her plans for the Badlands would make her a heroine in any other story. Here she’s a constant threat, always a razor-sharp butterfly away from seizing control of MK and the power that lies within him.
That power is also one of the show’s greatest strengths. Aramis Knight, and Ally Ioannides as The Widow’s daughter, Tilda, both carry a lot of the show’s biggest concepts in their performances. Ioannides’s barely contained dissatisfaction and anger gives every one of her scenes a spark while Knight is especially chilling whenever MK “blacks out”. The blank-faced, black-eyed violence machine he becomes is a monster to some and a weapon to others and it implies huge amounts about the world outside the Badlands. A world that many characters spend the entire season struggling to get to, for better or for worse.
Into The Badlands is completely different to anything else on TV today. That’s recommendation enough all by itself but there’s so many more reasons to watch it. The tremendous intelligence of the scripts and the performances, the bone-crunchingly gorgeous fight scenes and the gradually unfolding puzzle of just what killed the world all combine to create a unique, gripping and unmissable TV series. One of the undisputed must-watches of 2015.
Review by Alasdair Stuart
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