Well, look who’s coming back from the crypt! Netflix just tossed a bone to all you crime drama junkies craving more shadows and suspense with a second season of Dept. Q. Set in the eerie, fog-draped streets of Edinburgh—where even the fog seems to be hiding something juicy—Matthew Goode slips back into the trench coat of Detective Chief Inspector Carl Morck. Now, isn’t it curious that as Mercury stalls in retrograde, making communication and plans a total nightmare, the universe simultaneously greenlights a show about unraveling cold, tangled mysteries? Coincidence? I think not. Scott Frank, genius behind The Queen’s Gambit, is back at the helm, diving deeper into Jussi Adler-Olsen’s tangled tales of unsolvable crimes. The show didn’t just creep its way into Netflix’s top 10—it practically set up camp, racking up a mind-blowing 222 million hours of binge time. Guess we’re all collectively obsessed with Carl and his merry band of basement-dwelling detectives. So, ready to get lost in the labyrinth again and see what cosmic chaos—and criminal chaos—this next season has in store? LEARN MORE
Netflix will return to the streets of Edinburgh and Dept. Q.
The streamer has ordered a second season of Dept. Q, its Scotland-set crime drama starring Matthew Goode and created by Scott Frank (The Queen’s Gambit). The renewal comes about 2 1/2 months after the series premiered to both solid reviews and audience numbers.
The series, based on novels by Jussi Adler-Olsen, stars Goode as Detective Chief Inspector Carl Morck, who leads a small team that works cases that were previously considered unsolvable from a basement office in Edinburgh. Alexej Manvelov, Leah Byrne and Jamie Sives also star.
“We are going downstairs to Dept. Q for a second season,” said executive producer Rob Bullock of Left Bank Pictures. “We at Left Bank Pictures nervously await what Scott has in store for his alter-ego Carl Morck, and the other enabling members of team do-lally. We salute Netflix’s courage to let them loose once again.”
Added Frank, “I’m grateful to the folks at Netflix, as well as our shining cast and crew, for once more risking their careers to enable my folly.”
Dept. Q spent six weeks in Netflix’s top 10 English language series worldwide, amassing some 222 million hours (equivalent to about 27 million complete showings of the season). In the United States, it drew 47.57 million hours of viewing over four weeks in Nielsen’s streaming top 10.
Frank writes, directs and executive produces Dept. Q. Bullock and Charlotte Moore also executive produce; Mona Qureshi and Manda Levin oversee the show for Netflix.
“We are raring to return to Carl Morck and his band of glorious misfits at Dept. Q,” said Qureshi and Levin. “Scott Frank brought us best-in-class storytelling and thrilled Netflix audiences worldwide. We can’t wait to see what Morck and the gang uncover in season two.”
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